Media Mantra: Unhappy
Holidays
Pessimism about holiday sales went right
through Christmas this year.
By Noel Sheppard
Free Market Project
Jan. 4, 2006
    By October, due to hurricane-related rising energy
prices, predictions turned so pessimistic that one media outlet
reported: “…for the first time since 1996, we may actually sell less
this season, this holiday season, than we did the previous year.
That’s unheard of.” The gloom was so pervasive that extremely solid
results on the “Black Friday” after Thanksgiving, with some
estimates showing as much as a 22-percent increase in sales over the
same period in 2004, didn’t deter headlines like “Malls See Troubles
in Sales Data.”
    This pessimism continued right through Christmas day,
even when the news began to come out that sales through December 24
were quite respectable. As
Reuters reported on December 26: “U.S. consumers spent 8.7
percent more during the just ended holiday shopping period than in
the comparable period a year ago, according to a report from an
affiliate of MasterCard Inc., the Wall Street Journal reported in
its online edition on Monday.”
    Yet, the same day this data came out, CNN’s John
Zarella on “Live Today” offered this: “And you know, retailers are
saying that the pre-Christmas sales in general, nationwide, were a
little bit sluggish, at least that at first blush appears to be the
case, before the holiday. And many of them are really relying on
what's going to happen now in the aftermath of Christmas.” CBS’ “The
Early Show” was just as sullen that morning: “Retailers are hoping
deep discounts could lure shoppers back into the stores after a slow
shopping season.”
    National Public Radio was even worse. Steve Inskeep on
the “Morning Edition” December 26 invited retail consultant Kurt
Barnard on to spread more gloom:
“[The Christmas shopping season] ended on a very lackluster note,
and it is really not too surprising that this should be the case,
because remember one thing: Consumers have a lot of things to worry
about these days. First of all, it is true, the price of gasoline
has come down, but it is still more than 40 percent above where it
was a year ago at this time. So consumers really are worried about
spending money very much so, and they are very cautious consumers
these days.”
Forecasts to the Contrary
    So, who’s right? The final sales numbers won’t be out
until later in January. However, the range of predictions at this
point goes anywhere from a low of a 3-percent gain forecast by the
International Council of Shopping Centers
reported by Bloomberg, to a high of an 8.7-percent gain
according to MasterCard’s Spending Plus data service.
    Maybe most importantly, the National Retail Federation
– the retail trade organization that has been better at forecasting
final sales data than anybody else in recent years, and forecast a
6-percent gain for this holiday season in late November – remains
very optimistic. NRF spokesman Scott Krugman told
CNN/Money on December 27 that the final numbers will be a
“pleasant surprise for a lot of people.” “We are seeing some
conflicting reports right now. But at the end of the day, this was
the same pattern as last year,” he said. “Consumer spending has been
up more than anticipated going into the holidays. This leads us to
believe that we'll have a strong holiday season.”
    If Internet sales are any indication, the season was
anything but slow. Nielsen/NetRatings
announced on December 29 that online Christmas sales increased
by a whopping 30 percent this year. This was right in line with the
expectations of the Shop.org/BizRate Research 2005 eHoliday Mood
Study reported by the
NRF (which owns Shop.org, an association of
retailers online) before Thanksgiving:
“According to results released last month, all of the companies
surveyed expect to see online sales increases from 2004. Some
retailers are expecting big gains, with 57 percent of online
retailers expecting holiday sales to increase by 30% or more
compared to last year.”
Drumbeat Continues
    Before Christmas, audiences couldn’t have foreseen
those brisk sales because the media were delivering such sullen
reports. Martin Crutsinger of the Associated Press logged this
cheery
report on December 22: “The holiday shopping season has turned
in a mixed performance so far with the nation’s retailers expected
to increase discounting in the final days before Christmas in the
hopes of making up for slower-than-expected sales since
Thanksgiving.”
    As the big day approached, America’s media turned into
one collective Ebenezer Scrooge. The New York Times published the
following on Christmas Eve:
“The after-Christmas push, originally intended to lure holders of
gift cards into stores, may turn into more of a salvage effort. In
addition to lackluster sales gains, retailers endured a transit
strike in New York City that damped business at crucial flagship
stores, turning the post-holiday period into one of the most
important in years.”
    The same day, Reuters published an
article entitled “Late Sales Rush Not So Merry”:
“Analysts said retailers cut prices more this year than they did
last year in the hope of luring cost-conscious consumers, many of
whom are grappling with steep gasoline prices and bracing for bigger
winter heating bills.
“Although oil prices have retreated from record highs notched after
Hurricane Katrina hit the Gulf of Mexico, they remain higher than
they were a year earlier, putting pressure on household budgets.”
    Even after the season ended, the economic
downers kept coming. The New York Times’ Michael Barbaro reported
the
following on December 27:
“Many retailers hoping for a big finish to the holiday season
instead had lighter-than-expected crowds over the long Christmas
weekend, according to anecdotal reports, leaving stores to rely
heavily on the next few days to pump up December sales.
“Explanations for the lackluster finish varied: an unusually warm
winter hurt cold-weather clothing sales, greater gift card use
delayed purchases and higher energy costs discouraged splurges.”
    The Los Angeles Times was gloomier that
day. In an article entitled “Retail
Store Closures to Follow Sales,” the Times gave the impression
that holiday sales were so poor this year that many storeowners will
be forced out of business. The article began:
“Just as post-holiday sales are sure to follow Christmas, there's a
long tradition of store closings following the big year-end sales as
weak and struggling retailers call it quits.
“This year will be no different, with what looks to have been a
less-than-stellar holiday retail season combining with a flurry of
industry mergers to put even more stores than usual on the
endangered list.”
Who’s Worried?
    Such concerns appeared to be weighing more on America’s
media than on its citizens. On December 28, the Conference Board, an
independent research organization,
released data regarding December “consumer confidence.” Despite
all the media’s fretting about rising energy costs impacting
America’s holiday shopping, this gauge of consumer sentiment had a
dramatic increase in December. CNN Money reported:
“The board's consumer confidence index rose to 103.6 for the month
from a revised 98.3 in November. Economists had expected a rise to
102.5, according to Briefing.com.
“‘Consumer confidence continues to bounce back and is now at its
highest level since Hurricane Katrina struck the Gulf Coast,’ Lynn
Franco, director of the Conference Board Consumer Research Center,
said in a statement.
“‘The resiliency of the economy, recent declines in prices at the
pump, and job growth have consumers feeling more confident at
year-end than they felt at the start of 2005,’ Franco said.”
    This boost in confidence flies in the face
of all this media pessimism, and strongly supports the NRF’s view
that final holiday sales will be a “pleasant surprise for a lot of
people.”
Noel Sheppard is an economist, business owner, and contributing
writer to the Free Market Project. He is also contributing editor
for the Media Research Center’s NewsBusters.org. Noel welcomes
feedback at
nsheppard@costlogic.com.
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