Lodi News-Sentinel

Holidays are mostly over, but many are still shopping

- By Lauren Zumbach

CHICAGO — The holidays are over. Gifts have been exchanged. But retailers’ cash registers are still ringing.

The turn of the year has traditiona­lly been a time for retailers to dump unsold holiday merchandis­e onto sale racks. Most shoppers on State Street in downtown Chicago the day after Christmas said they had come in hopes of scoring a deal. But increasing­ly, stores are also putting new merchandis­e out after the holidays to encourage shoppers with gift cards or returns to splurge on full-priced merchandis­e.

Jeanine Konopelski, 53, said she is willing to forgo a discount “if it’s what we really want.” She and her daughter Taylor, 16, of California, were shopping at Anthropolo­gie on State Street while visiting family in Chicago. After-Christmas shopping is one of their traditions, and they had gift cards to redeem.

Shoppers enthusiast­ically cracked open their wallets this holiday season, according to early sales data. Consumers spent more than $850 billion between Nov. 1 and Dec. 24, boosting U.S. retail sales 5.1 percent over the same period last year, according to Mastercard SpendingPu­lse, which tracks spending in stores and online. Online sales rose about 19 percent, Mastercard SpendingPu­lse said.

But there’s still more shopping activity to come, analysts say.

Of the 10 days in the holiday season expected to bring the most shoppers to stores, two are after Christmas — Dec. 26, the eighth-busiest day, and Dec. 29, the 10th busiest, said Brian Field, senior director of retail consulting practice at ShopperTra­k.

Shoppers visiting stores on State Street on Wednesday said browsing the sales was a holiday tradition, or a chance to reward themselves after spending on family and friends.

“It’s a bargain hunt,” said Kathie Winkelmann, 56, of Lake Zurich, Ill., while shopping after Christmas this week at the Banana Republic Factory store at Block 37 on State Street.

Others were dealing with the aftermath of gift exchanges: gift cards and returns.

Linda Bialek, 63, of Oak Lawn, Ill., stopped at Macy’s on her lunch break in hopes of exchanging a sweater before the shelves grew picked over. The size she wanted was already sold out but she said she’d found two possible substitute­s.

“They run out so fast,” she said.

UPS said post-holiday gift card spending and returns mean its busiest season extends into the new year. Although returns were predicted to peak before Christmas thanks to an earlier start to the holiday shopping season, with 1.5 million packages sent back on Dec. 19, UPS still expected to handle 1.3 million on Jan. 3, said Kat Marran, UPS’ vice president of U.S. marketing.

 ?? TERRENCE ANTONIO JAMES/CHICAGO TRIBUNE ?? Water Tower Place mall in Chicago bustles with activity on Wednesday.
TERRENCE ANTONIO JAMES/CHICAGO TRIBUNE Water Tower Place mall in Chicago bustles with activity on Wednesday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States