For Retailers It is Black Tuesday
Tom Van Riper, Forbes Online
For major retailers, the week of darkness has arrived. With $4 gasoline and
tight credit keeping consumers' wallets shut, it's time to announce dismal
profits. Unless you're a discounter or a seller of hip clothing really ahead of
the fashion curve, forget about it. Wall Street is braced for the worst.
Here's one sign of how bad things are: "Coupon redemption is at an
all-time high," says Britt Beemer, president of America's Research Group, which
studies shopper behavior. Beemer's research shows that 59% of shoppers last
month showed up at stores with specific lists of items they were limiting
themselves to buying. The historical average over the 29 years he's been
surveying: 33%. Also, more people are reporting plans to shift their shopping
from chains to independent stores, where they think price haggling is more
accepted.
And he finds that half of women shoppers have no opinion of this season's
spring apparel lines, simply because they haven't bothered to look closely at
them. Better to postpone buying decisions for now. "That's unusual because
winter to spring is always the most dramatic seasonal fashion change,"
Beemer says.
Note: The Administration has shafted the ordinary citizen.
The big mistake was discouraging the citizen as CONSUMER.
The retailers now join the consumer led recession parade.
Been seeing a lot fo this.Not seniors but young people also.