Black Friday shoppers back to stores, set record online

Shoppers returned to stores on Black Friday, with a strong increase in brick-and-mortar foot traffic and record online shopping that shows consumers have altered their approach the busiest spending season.

In person visits to stores edged up 2.9% on Black Friday compared to last year despite decades-high inflation, according to retail analytics provider Sensormatic Solutions.

Visits to physical stores on Thanksgiving Day, moreover, leaped 19.7% from 2021, as more retailers opened their doors on Thursday than last year.

Far fewer stores are open on Thanksgiving than on Black Friday, so the surge is a bit misleading, Brian Field, senior director of global retail consulting for Sensormatic, told The Post.

“If I look at the past few seasons, when Thanksgiving Day stores were open, the mix of traffic on those days is so small compared to even a regular Thursday,” Field said.


Black Friday shoppers.
Online Black Friday sales hit a record high, with more people opted to shop for holiday deals on their smartphones than ever before.
Paul Martinka

Field added that the uptick in in-store shoppers on Black Friday is a better indicator to predict how the rest of the holiday season will go. “We’re expecting good things today and for the rest of the weekend,” he said. “Plus 2.9% is a great start to the holiday season.”

The National Retail Federation is expecting holiday sales during November and December will grow between 6% and 8% over 202 to between $942.6 billion and $960.4 billion. But how much of the increase will reflect inflation rather than more gifting is unclear at this point. Inflation cooled slightly in October but still registered 7.7%, pressuring cash-strapped households.

Holiday retail sales have increased an average 4.9% over the past 10 years, the NRF said, with pandemic spending in recent years accounting for considerable gains. Last year’s holiday sales grew 13.5% over 2020 and totaled $889.3 billion, shattering previous records.


Macys and the 34th street area was quiet for Black Friday on Friday morning after thanksgiving. (Daniel William McKnight)
In person visits to stores edged up 2.9% on Black Friday compared to last year despite decades-high inflation, according to retail analytics provider Sensormatic Solutions.
DANIEL WILLIAM MCKNIGHT

But a huge chunk of the growth is now coming from consumers who let their fingers do the shopping.

Online Black Friday sales hit a record high, with more people opted to shop for holiday deals on their smartphones than ever before.

Cyber spending on Black Friday reached $9.12 billion this year, up 2.3% from last year and topping the previous record of $9 billion in 2020, with the major drivers for this increase being electronics, toys and exercise equipment, according to Adobe Analytics.


Macys and the 34th street area was quiet for Black Friday on Friday morning after thanksgiving. (Daniel William McKnight)
A huge chunk of the growth is now coming from consumers who let their fingers do the shopping.
DANIEL WILLIAM MCKNIGHT

It was not just the amount spent online that set records this year, but also the ways in which shoppers made their purchases.

Nearly half of online sales were made via a smartphone, 48%, marking an all-time high in mobile shopping, up from 44% last year.

The data also gives insight into how shoppers are coping with inflation-driven prices, with drastic increases in the popularity of “Buy Now, Pay Later” plans.


A woman walks past a shop offering Black Friday deals in Manchester, Britain, November 26, 2022.
It was not just the amount spent online that set records this year, but also the ways in which shoppers made their purchases.
REUTERS/Phil Noble

The total number of buy now pay later orders shot up 78% last week compared to the week prior. Revenue from those orders soared 81% during the same time period.

“As Black Friday hit record spending online, we’re also seeing more prominent signs of a budget-conscious consumer this year,” Vivek Pandya, lead analyst at Adobe Digital Insights, said. “Shoppers are embracing the Buy Now Pay Later payment method more this year to be able to buy desired gifts for family and friends.”

Financial concerns also plagued in-store shoppers, with 42% saying that the timing of discounts and promotions will affect their shopping schedules.

“I don’t think we asked that question in other years,” Field said. “That question came out of the fact that they were saying finances were playing a big role.”

One shopper who wasn’t on the hunt for bargains was President Joe Biden, who spent an hour and a half shopping on tony Nantucket Island with the first lady, Jill Biden, his daughter, Ashley Biden, son Hunter and his wife Melissa Cohen and grandson Beau.

The first family stopped in at least nine stores for Small Business Saturday, at one point exiting luxury boutique David Chase to the cheers of a small crowd gathered outside on a windy, 46-degree afternoon. One person shouted “love you” as the Bidens crossed the street, and POTUS responded “Thank you!” as he waved to the group.