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Holiday sales 2009: how the East Coast snowstorm helped

Data released Monday show that online holiday sales skyrocketed 鈥 probably because many people on the East Coast stayed home to shop on a snowy 鈥楽uper Saturday.鈥

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Brendan McDermid/Reuters
Snow covers a street in Brooklyn, New York on December 20.

The storm that hammered the East Coast on the last shopping weekend before Christmas was a boon for online shopping.

That鈥檚 one of the findings in data released by MasterCard Advisors鈥 SpendingPulse Monday 鈥 the first glimpse at the 2009 holiday shopping season. SpendingPulse, which analyzes national retail and service sales, reported that 6 of the 10 retail sectors it tracks showed positive growth between Nov. 1 and Dec. 24.

The greatest gains came from online commerce, which enjoyed a 15.5 percent increase during the past two months. After 鈥Black Friday,鈥 the day after Thanksgiving that retailers use to kick-off special sales and promotions, sales increased 18 percent.

The overall trend helped avoid last year鈥檚 poor holiday sales, which declined 3.4 percent from 2007 to a historic low. Various media reports suggest that sales increased 3.6 percent in November and December, but SpendingPulse could not confirm the number.

The 'Super Saturday' snowstorm

Retailers had worried that the snowstorm that hit on 鈥淪uper Saturday鈥 鈥 considered the second heaviest holiday shopping day after 鈥淏lack Friday" 鈥 would hurt their sales. But the storm likely pushed sales 鈥渢o online shopping and acted like a big shock absorber,鈥 which may also have pushed brick-and-mortar sales to late in the week, says Kamalesh Rao, director of economic research at MasterCard SpendingPulse.

鈥淭he storm created a last-minute surge; it delayed shopping that weekend,鈥 he says, adding that the unstable weather conditions illustrated to retailers the value of catering to online shoppers.

Seasonal sales growth in other retail sectors was much more modest, ranging from 0.8 percent (luxury retail) to 5.9 percent (electronics).

The increases are not a result of price wars. The majority of retailers refused to knock down prices as dramatically as they did last year, when price reductions averaged 15 percent. Thinning inventory from last year meant 鈥渢hey didn鈥檛 need to price cut this year,鈥 Mr. Rao adds.

Sales also may have benefited from an extra shopping day this year; Christmas fell on a Thursday in 2008.

Data 'as good as you can expect'

Although results 鈥渁re a bit more positive鈥 than last year, last season鈥檚 sales 鈥渉ad shrunk so low, any sort of growth is pretty decent,鈥 Rao says.

This year鈥檚 numbers do not signal that an immediate recovery is underway, he adds. 鈥淭hese numbers are as probably good as you can expect given the economic climb we are in,鈥 he says. 鈥淭he key number here that continues to weigh on sales is unemployment.鈥

ShoppingPulse is one of several companies that track holiday sales. Others, including the National Retail Federation, the International Council of Shopping Centers, and ShopperTrak have yet to come out with their post-holiday figures.

Retailers no doubt relish the positive numbers, hoping they point to an economic turnaround. But consumers are still wary. In a late December poll by CNN/Opinion Research Corp., the greatest share of respondents 鈥 42 percent 鈥 said the economic conditions in the country today are 鈥渧ery poor.鈥

Many economists consider optimism a key factor in getting consumers shopping.

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