US holiday spending has the
potential to shatter previous records, as the National Retail Federation (NRF)
forecasts sales during November and December will grow between 8.5-10.5% over
2020.
The forecast from the NRF expects US holiday sales to
range between US$843.4bn and $859bn. The numbers, which exclude automobile
dealers, gasoline stations and restaurants, compare with a previous high of
8.2% in 2020 to $777.3bn and an average increase of 4.4% over the past five
years.
“There is considerable momentum heading into the
holiday shopping season,” says NRF president
and CEO Matthew Shay. “Consumers are in a very favourable position going into
the last few months of the year as income is rising and household balance
sheets have never been stronger. Retailers are making significant investments
in their supply chains and spending heavily to ensure they have products on
their shelves to meet this time of exceptional consumer demand.”
NRF expects that online and other non-store sales, which are included in
the total, will increase between 11-15% to a total of between $218.3bn and
$226.2bn, driven by online purchases. In comparison, that number is up from
$196.7bn in 2020.
Last year saw extraordinary growth in digital channels
as consumers turned to online shopping to meet their holiday needs during the
pandemic. While e-commerce will remain important, households are also expected
to shift back to in-store shopping and a more traditional holiday shopping
experience.
“The outlook for the holiday season looks very
bright,” NRF chief economist Jack
Kleinhenz notes. “The unusual and beneficial position we find ourselves in is
that households have increased spending vigorously throughout most of 2021 and
remain with plenty of holiday purchasing power.”
Kleinhenz adds pandemic-related supply chain
disruptions have caused shortages of merchandise and most of this year’s
inflationary pressure.
“With the prospect of consumers seeking to shop early,
inventories may be pulled down sooner and shortages may develop in the later
weeks of the shopping season. However, if retailers can keep merchandise on the
shelves and merchandise arrives before Christmas, it could be a stellar holiday
sales season.”
While it appears new Covid-19 infections and
hospitalisations are down, a variant surge could potentially sidetrack the
current trajectory of spending. Kleinhenz said strong household fundamentals
provide optimism amid uncertainty. Income is growing from wage compensation,
and household wealth has reached another record high. These together support
strong spending this holiday season.
NRF expects retailers will hire between 500,000 and 665,000 seasonal
workers. That compares with 486,000 seasonal hires in 2020. Some of this hiring
may have been pulled into October as many retailers encouraged households to
shop early to avoid a lack of inventory and shipping delays. With the earlier
start retailers have announced thousands of open positions in bricks-and-mortar
stores and warehouse and distribution centres.
Weather traditionally factors into holiday sales, and
the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration is predicting a high
likelihood of a La Niña pattern of cooler and wetter weather in the north and
warmer and drier weather in the south. This climate phenomenon has in the past
correlated with stronger retail sales and could be a factor in 2021.
NRF‘s holiday forecast is based on economic modelling that considers a
variety of indicators including employment, wages, consumer confidence,
disposable income, consumer credit, previous retail sales, and weather. NRF defines the holiday season as 1 November through
31 December.
The methodology used to calculate holiday retail
employment in 2020 was changed to accommodate the sizeable impact of Covid-19
on overall industry employment. In 2021, NRF returned
to a traditional employment buildup method.
By Just Style