US consumers plan to spend an average of $682.74 during the upcoming holiday season, a 3.2% drop from last year's $705.01, according to NRF's 2009 Holiday Consumer Intentions and Actions Survey, conducted by BIGresearch:

Key findings:

  • The NRF expects 2009 holiday sales to decline 1.0% to $437.6 billion.
  • Holiday sales in 2008 declined 3.4% to $441.97 billion, the first year NRF had
    seen a decline since it began tracking retail industry sales in 1992. On average,
    holiday sales have increased 3.39% per year for the last 10 years.

The Economy's Impact

Two-thirds of Americans (65.3%) say the economy will affect their holiday plans this year, with the majority of these consumers saying they will adjust by simply spending less (84.2%). People will also be shopping for sales more often (55.0%), using more coupons (41.7%), and putting up last year's decorations without buying new ones (34.0%).

Many Americans will also make changes in gift-giving, planning to buy more practical gifts (36.0%), buying a joint gift for kids or parents (17.3%), and making more gifts (16.7%).

Additionally, more than one-fourth of Americans (28.6%) say the economy is forcing them to travel less or not at all for the holidays.

Where People Will Shop

According to the survey, more than half of holiday shoppers say that sales and price discounts (43.3%) or everyday low prices (12.7%) will be the most important factor when deciding where to shop:

 

Factors like selection (21.0%), quality (11.8%), convenience (4.9%), and customer service (4.4%) declined in importance for consumers from last year.

Given the economy's widespread impact, it's not surprising that a strong majority of holiday shoppers (70.1%) will purchase from discounters this year, though more than half (55.8%) will also shop at department stores. Grocery stores (45.0%), the Internet (42.4%), clothing stores (33.8%), and electronics stores (31.8%) will be other popular destinations:

One in 10 holiday shoppers (11.4%) will buy gifts or other holiday-related merchandise at thrift stores or resale shops.

Why They Shop Online

According to the results of the 2008 eHoliday Study, conducted by Shopzilla for Shop.org, 58.6% of consumers in 2008 cited convenience as the reason they shopped online. Other factors they cited:



Retailers are compensating for soft sales this holiday season by cutting back on inventory. According to NRF's Port Tracker report, released in September, traffic to the nation's ports has scaled back to levels not seen since 2003.

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Low Prices Will Rule 2009 Holiday Season

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