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The Retail Apocalypse Accelerates: Collapsing Holiday Sales Are A Signal That A Recession Is Coming

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Retail sales during the four day Thanksgiving weekend were down a whopping 11 percent from last year.  This is a “make or break” time of the year for many retailers, and if things don’t turn around during the coming weeks we could see a tsunami of store closings in January and February.  As you read this article, there is already more than a billion square feet of retail space sitting empty in the United States.  Many have described the ongoing collapse of the retail industry as an “apocalypse”, and this apocalypse appears to be accelerating.  Yes, the shift to online retailers is a significant factor, but as you will see below even online retailers struggled over the holiday weekend.  The sad truth of the matter is that U.S. consumers are tapped out and are drowning in debt at this point, so they simply do not have as much money to spend as they once did.

According to the National Retail Federation, 5.2 percent fewer Americans shopped online or at retail stores over the past weekend.  Those that did shop spent an average of 6.4 percent less money than consumers did last year.

So if less people shopped, and they spent less money on average, that means that total retail sales must have been way down.

And indeed they were.  As the New York Times has reported, total retail sales were down an astounding 11 percent…

Sales, both in stores and online, from Thanksgiving through the weekend were estimated to have dropped 11 percent, to $50.9 billion, from $57.4 billion last year, according to preliminary survey results released Sunday by the National Retail Federation. Sales fell despite many stores’ opening earlier than ever on Thanksgiving Day.

And though many retailers offered the same aggressive discounts online as they did in their stores, the web failed to attract more shoppers or spending over the four-day holiday weekend than it did last year, the group said. The average person who shopped over the weekend spent $159.55 at online retailers, down 10.2 percent from last year.

No wonder there was less violence on Black Friday this year.

Traffic at retailers was way down.

Of course some analysts are trying to put a positive spin on all of this.  For example, the CEO of the National Retail Federation says that this could actually be a sign that the economy is improving

As the WSJ reports, NRF’s CEO Matt Shay attributed the drop to a combination of factors, including the fact that retailers moved promotions earlier this year in attempt to get people out sooner and avoid what happened last year when people didn’t finish their shopping because of bad weather.

Also did we mention the NRF is perpetually cheery and always desperate to put a metric ton of lipstick on a pig? Well, hold on to your hats folks:

He also attributed the declines to better online offerings and an improving economy where “people don’t feel the same psychological need to rush out and get the great deal that weekend, particularly if they expected to be more deals,” he said.

And of course the sprint vs marathon comparisons, such as this one: “The holiday season and the weekend are a marathon not a sprint,” NRF Chief Executive Officer Matthew Shay said on a conference call. Odd how that metaphor is never used when the (seasonally-adjusted) sprint beats the marathoners.

So there you have it: a 11% collapse in retail spending has just been spun as super bullish for the US economy, whereby US consumers aren’t spending because the economy is simply too strong, and the only reason they don’t spend is because they will spend much more later. Or something.

The retail industry is absolutely brutal at this point.  It is flooded with very large competitors that are chasing fewer and fewer disposable dollars.

In order to thrive, retailers need financially healthy consumers.  But over time, U.S. consumers have been getting deeper and deeper into debt.  The chart posted below shows that consumer credit in the United States has doubled since the year 2000…

Meanwhile, the long-term trend for real median household income since the year 2000 has been down…

In order for Americans to spend money, they have to make money first.

Unfortunately, the quality of our jobs continues to plummet.

As I have written about previously, 50 percent of all American workers currently make less than $28,031 a year at their jobs.  And here are some more numbers from a report that the Social Security Administration recently released…

-39 percent of American workers made less than $20,000 last year

-52 percent of American workers made less than $30,000 last year

-63 percent of American workers made less than $40,000 last year

-72 percent of American workers made less than $50,000 last year

So in order for a typical American family to bring in $50,000 a year or more both parents usually have to work.

Sometimes they both have to work more than one job.

And with the cost of living constantly rising, family budgets are being squeezed more than ever.  That is why families have less money to spend at retail stores these days.  For even more on the current financial condition of American families, please see my previous article entitled “Are You Better Off This Thanksgiving Than You Were Last Thanksgiving?

It is time for retailers in America to face the fact that economic conditions have fundamentally changed.  U.S. consumers simply are not in as good shape as they used to be.

In addition, online retailers are going to continue to steal sales from traditional retail locations.  This means that more stores are going to close and more retail space is going to be abandoned.

As I mentioned above, more than a billion square feet of retail space is aleady sitting vacant in the United States.  And retail consultant Howard Davidowitz is projecting that up to half of all shopping malls in the U.S. may shut down within the next couple of decades

Within 15 to 20 years, retail consultant Howard Davidowitz expects as many as half of America’s shopping malls to fail. He predicts that only upscale shopping centers with anchors like Saks Fifth Avenue and Neiman Marcus will survive.

In the years ahead, it is going to become normal to see boarded up strip malls and abandoned shopping centers all over the country.

The golden age of retail is over, and now most retailers will have to work incredibly hard to survive the apocalypse that is unfolding right before our eyes.

The post The Retail Apocalypse Accelerates: Collapsing Holiday Sales Are A Signal That A Recession Is Coming appeared first on The Economic Collapse.

Michael Snyder is the publisher of The Economic Collapse Blog, The American Dream Blog and The Truth. You can follow him on Twitter right here.


Source: http://theeconomiccollapseblog.com/archives/retail-apocalypse-accelerates-collapsing-holiday-sales-signal-recession-coming


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    • Dustdevil

      QUOTE “here are some more numbers from a report that the Social Security Administration recently released…

      -39 percent of American workers made less than $20,000 last year
      -52 percent of American workers made less than $30,000 last year…”

      Ok, the whole problem with this article starts right here, with the lying and either misunderstanding of what the Census Bureau really said, the date the data was taken, and the ‘unspoken’ details of how the information was compiled.

      Let’s look at what the Census Bureau knows, that this article didn’t say:

      Individual income is DRASTICALLY impacted by age of the worker. For those over 18, the ‘individual income’ was a mere $24k a year. Ok, but what does this mean? It means your 18 year old college student working 10-hours a week at the bookstore is aggregated in with the 20-year old part-time mom working at McD’s, along with the 19 year old hacker working a company’s computer networks for $60k a year. It’s all mixed, BY AGE, and the point (median) where 50-percent of the people are divided by volume, that income is taken as the ‘median income’. Hence, where it is divided is keyed SOLELY on two factors – age span of the population reviewed, and how many are in the population.

      Why does all this matter? Because the greatest number of ‘working individuals’ are in the 25-44 population, which were NOT the population this article’s author was describing. He was referencing the 18-100 total number, where retirees on fixed incomes and kids working BK for 10 hours a week bulk the numbers to a lower income, as a result of low hours and fixed retirements that don’t take into account owned-assets (who cares if you make $10k a year, when you reside in a paid-off $300k home?)

      So, lets look at the numbers for the ‘working stiffs’. If you are over 25, the ‘median individual income’ suddenly raised to $32k a year. WOW, what a change just by getting rid of the kiddies! Now, pare this down further by not considering those older than 62 which are most-likely on a fixed pension, retirement or Social Security, and you raise the number yet-again.

      BUT, all this is about THE INDIVIDUAL. What we REALLY focus on, for most retail sales at holidays are HOUSEHOLD INCOMES (no household, then very little Yule Tide purchasing, right?) Ok, so this is yet ANOTHER set of numbers called ‘Household Income’.

      In America, the Median Household was $43,300 for the same timeframe (2005). The twist is that as of 2012,
      The MEDIAN HOUSEHOLD income is $51,370 while the The MEDIAN FAMILY income is $62,527 (interestingly, the American Census differentiates between ‘HOUSEHOLD’ and ‘FAMILY’).

      Per their website, they describe the difference as:
      “A family consists of two or more people (one of whom is the householder) related by birth, marriage, or adoption residing in the same housing unit. A household consists of all people who occupy a housing unit regardless of relationship. A household may consist of a person living alone or multiple unrelated individuals or families living together.”

      While the median household income is $51,371 in the US, this varies by age. Households with heads under 25 years old have a median income of $24,476 compared to $55,821 for those with heads aged 25 to 44 years old. Households headed by those aged 45 to 64 have the highest median incomes of $62,049, but those 65 and over have a median income of $36,743.

      So, you see, you can ‘Lie With Statistics’ all you want to, to sell the point you are trying to make – but in reality, the 50th percentile American HOUSEHOLD is making somewhere in the mid-$50k range (generally), while the 50th percentile actively-working American is making somewhere in the $45k range (generally).

      We aren’t as poor as we let on, we lie on every government document we have to fill out, we don’t claim all income, and we don’t disclose how many avenues of income we have. It is feasible to actually adjust the income numbers of all Americans by up to 40-percent, due to ‘hidden income streams’ that they do not report.

      This said, the truth of ‘retail apocalypse’ isn’t income or minimum wage issues. It has to do with overpriced goods, rampant abuse of credit lines, and perpetual living beyond our means because the TV shows us we need to, to be cool.

      It’s not government’s fault. It’s not retail’s fault. It’s your own fault, if you can’t control your spending or debt. That said, it’s EVERYONE’s fault that your god is the ‘god of economy’, and you can’t stop worshipping it at the bank-of-BIG, on their ‘altar-of-paycheck’.

      Mark of the Beast? False religion? You better look in your wallet, the ID number on your Driver’s License looks a whole lot like 666, and the Temple of Citibank sure doesn’t look like any church I’d expect.

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