Total US Black Friday spending in stores and online rose 3.4% year-over-year, data shows
Written by Black Hot Fire Network on November 30, 2024
By Ananya Mariam Rajesh
(Reuters) -Total Black Friday U.S. retail sales online and in stores rose 3.4% year-over-year as shoppers snapped up merchandise the day after U.S. Thanksgiving, according to preliminary estimates by payments processor Mastercard.
Black Friday U.S. e-commerce retail sales increased by 14.6%year-over-year as consumers shopped for deals online, while in-store sales increased by 0.7%, according to Mastercard SpendingPulse, a metric measuring U.S. retail sales across the Mastercard payments network combined with estimates for cash and check payments.
Black Friday kicked off the holiday shopping season for retailers and competition has intensified to win shoppers seeking discounts.
Shopper Corey Coscioni, 58, looked for bargains online as well as in Chicago-area stores on Friday, seeking “gifts for everyone: my wife, my daughter, and myself.” His stops included Bloomingdale’s, Macy’s and Anthropologie. “While we’re waiting in line, I’ll be shopping.”
Spending during the holiday season overall, from November 1 through December 24, is expected to be up 3.2% year-over-year, according to earlier estimates from Mastercard SpendingPulse. SpendingPulse excludes automotive sales and is not adjusted for inflation.
“Black Friday was a good indicator of how the holiday season is positively shaping up,” said Michelle Meyer, chief economist, Mastercard Economics Institute.
Department store chains such as Macy’s and Kohl’s, as well as big-box retailer Target, could see muted sales this season, which is shorter with only 26 days between Thanksgiving and Christmas.
Sales at Best Buy and Target on Friday were relatively flat year-over-year, according to data firm Facteus, which analyzes swipes of consumer credit and debit cards to measure shifts in spending patterns.
U.S. shoppers made more purchases online from mobile phones, laptops, desktops and other devices, a trend that potentially favors e-commerce giants such as Amazon.com and Walmart. Walmart, which operates 4,700 U.S. stores, has invested heavily in store-to-home deliveries for the holiday season to boost e-commerce.
E-commerce retailers including Shein, PDD’s Temu, and TikTok Shop, of Beijing-based ByteDance’s TikTok social media platform, also showed strong growth in sales in the seven days through Friday, compared to a year earlier, Facteus said.
An updated tally from Adobe Inc on Saturday showed that Americans made roughly $10.8 billion in online purchases on Friday, up 10.2% from a year earlier. Top-selling merchandise online included makeup, skincare and haircare products, as well as bluetooth speakers and espresso machines, according to its Adobe Analytics tally. Adobe keeps track of devices that use its software to help power more than 1 trillion visits to U.S. retail sites.