Shoppers hit the stores to find holiday bargains
Early risers seek to nab specials on retailers’ big day
CNBC VIDEO |
Black Friday frenzy Nov. 24: In Pennsylvania and California, shoppers hit the stores early, including one who started waiting outisde the store at 8 a.m. Thursday — and may profit off it. CNBC |
Interactive |
Hot, and cool, holiday gifts BusinessWeek looks at what the luckiest people will be unwrapping this year. |
Slideshow |
Cartoons: The holiday shopping season Click to view our cartoonists' wry look at Black Friday and beyond. more photos |
Free video: Holiday retail |
Cool gifts or the gadget geek Nov. 29: The Washington Post's Rob Pegoraro gives Msnbc's Alex Witt a rundown of some of the hottest tech gifts for the holiday shopping season. |
It was cold, it was dark and in some places it was foggy. None of that would stop millions of bargain-seekers from climbing into their cars for a pre-dawn raid on their local malls, electronics retailers and discounters for the official start to the holiday season.
“Great deals. I’m shopping for everybody today. We hit Target. We’re going to Meijer. We hit Sears. We started shopping at 5 a.m.,” Joanne Dosant, a 36-year-old legal assistant from Windsor, Ontario, said Friday as she loaded her SUV with two cartloads of items from a Target store in Madison Heights, Mich.
The aggressive tactics used to lure shoppers out before sunrise on Black Friday apparently worked. Based on early reports, the expanded hours, increased discounting and free money as gift cards drove hordes of shoppers to stores to buy flat-screen TVs, computers and toys.
“Large crowds drive me nuts, but this was my Christmas present to myself,” said Mark Demers, 23, of Bristol, Conn., who had camped out overnight in front of the Best Buy store in West Hartford, Conn. for the 5 a.m. opening after seeing a TV commercial late Thursday touting $500 off on the $1,500 price tag for a 42-inch LCD TV made by Westinghouse.
Clearly, Black Friday is “becoming the biggest sport,” said Marshal Cohen, chief analyst at NPD Group Inc., observing that shoppers this year bought fewer, but pricier items than a year ago.
A growing number of stores such as KB Toys opened at midnight. Some, like CompUSA Inc. and BJ’s Wholesale Club opened on Thanksgiving Day for the first time.
Overall, the biggest draws were consumer electronics, particularly flat-screen TVs, laptop computers and digital cameras. Toys fared well too. In addition to the hard-to-find Fisher-Price TMX Elmo, shoppers snapped up other items like anything Dora, robot toys, Fisher-Price’s Kids Tough Digital Camera and Jakks-Pacific FlyWheel XPV, according to toy merchants.
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Wal-Mart Stores Inc., which promised the most aggressive pricing strategy ever, set the tone by plying shoppers with one-time offers such as a $988 Viore 42-inch plasma TV set. The discounter declined to comment Friday about business; it’s slated to announce estimated sales results for November on Saturday.
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Toys “R” Us and KB Toys Inc. also reported increased traffic from a year ago.
Karen McDonald, a spokeswoman at Taubman Centers Inc., which operates or owns 23 malls in 11 states, said a handful of malls surveyed on Friday reported traffic and sales gains over last year.
“The line was literally wrapped around the building. I haven’t seen that in years,” said Terry Lundgren, chairman and CEO of Federated Department Stores Inc., who surveyed the crowds at the 6 a.m. opening of the flagship Macy’s in New York as the chain began its first holiday season as a national brand. The hottest draws were discounted cashmere, $50 luggage sets and $100 one-carat diamond necklaces, Lundgren said.
The Best Buy store in West Paterson, N.J., had almost 2,000 people waiting for Friday’s 5 a.m. opening — nearly 24 hours after they started lining up.
“They had turkey sandwiches,” said Chuck O’Donnell, a district service manager for Best Buy, which sold out of all the early morning specials advertised in its circular, including the 42-inch Westinghouse TVs and $80 digital cameras.
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