Cyber Week Gets Solid Start for Brick-and-mortar and Online Retailers

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The holiday season continues to be on track, with another round of rosy updates from researchers and retailers on Monday.

Simon Property Group, the nation’s largest operator of retail and mixed-use centers, reported a 6.4 percent gain in shopper traffic for the three-day Black Friday to Sunday stretch.

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Placer.ai, a consumer behavior and foot traffic analytics firm, said U.S. downtowns saw Black Friday pedestrian traffic rise by 2.6 percent from a year earlier. Placer.ai also reported that shopping malls saw foot traffic rise 8 percent on Black Friday, suggesting price promotions succeeded in attracting consumers. Small Business Saturday also saw a strong year-over-year performance, with downtown traffic rising by 4.8 percent and shopping mall traffic by 9.2 percent, Placer.ai reported.

At Amazon, “We had our biggest Black Friday ever, both based on sales as well as the number of customers who shopped,” said Jenny Freshwater, vice president of fashion and fitness, who spoke to WWD on Cyber Monday from the e-commerce giant’s fulfillment center in Robbinsville, N.J. “The theme of the year has been the viral favorites have been selling, so the social media products, the creator products, have really been flying off the shelves.”

Freshwater said brands like Naadam and the new-to-Amazon Kate Spade have also performed well. And Amazon Merch on Demand, where shoppers can upload their own artwork to be printed on goods, was up more than 20 percent on Black Friday.

“Tens of millions of customers worldwide” shopped Amazon on Black Friday with fashion, beauty, home and kitchen and toys among the bestselling categories, the company said.

Amazon
Amazon had its “biggest” Black Friday ever, the company said.

Adobe expects consumers will spend a record $13.2 billion online during Cyber Monday, up 6.1 percent year-over-year, and $750 million more than last year. Between the hours of 8 p.m. and 10 p.m. Monday, online spending was expected to peak with $15.7 million spent every minute. The software giant also reported that this past weekend (Nov. 30 and Dec. 1), consumers spent $10.9 billion online, up 5.8 percent year-over-year.

“Discounts remained elevated across categories including computers, electronics, apparel, toys, appliances, and televisions,” Adobe said in a statement.

On Wall Street, investors were feeling bullish about retail and fashion and seemed to be spurred on by the start of the holiday season.