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Tough Holiday Season Ahead: Can Retailers Pull a Rabbit Out of a Hat?

Christmas is full of doubt.

Between managing inventories and costs and getting a handle on the consumer mind-set, holiday planning this year for retailers has been trickier than ever. Decision-making has turned acutely cautious amid this year’s pile up of uncertainties over whether the country enters recession, and if so, will it be a deep one; whether gas prices continue to gradually decline or spike to new highs, and how the pandemic, the war in Ukraine, the U.S. mid-term elections and labor availability all play out.

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There are just so many variables and unknowns. With inflation at a 40-year high, exceeding 9 percent, and consumer confidence at a two-year low, Americans began curtailing discretionary spending in the second quarter, further dampening the outlook.

“Whether we end up 5 percent ahead or down 2 [percent], we just don’t know,” said one retail chief executive officer, who requested anonymity. “Agility is key. It’s about hedging some, being flexible and being able to react to what the customer is engaged with or excited about. The news could be bad, but they could see retail as a form of escape. You just don’t know.”

Based on interviews with retailers, vendors, consultants and industry analysts, holiday 2022 will be an extended season like last year’s, but far more promotional with price breaks starting in earnest before Halloween, drawing early shopping and siphoning sales from Black Friday, Cyber Monday and Super Saturday. Some consumers already got a jump on holiday gift shopping, taking advantage of Amazon Prime Day and initial back-to-school promotions.

The top line overall for the industry, sources told WWD, will range from slightly negative to slightly positive, due to tough comparisons to last year’s strong gains and consumers feeling tapped out and worried about the economy. In 2021, U.S. retail sales rose 14.1 percent from Nov. 1 to Dec. 31, according to the National Retail Federation.

But that buying spree seems a distant memory, with store traffic and spending decelerating in the second quarter.

“We had a fantastic year and first quarter, but we’ve seen a slowdown in the past six to seven weeks, pretty much across the board,” said Jim von Maur, president and CEO of Von Maur, the Davenport, Iowa-based department store chain. “Sales have become more erratic. They could be up 20 percent at a store and the next day it’s off, but another store could be up. It’s really fickle business out there.