National Retail Federation
NEWS RELEASE
THE VOICE OF RETAIL WORLDWIDE
Liberty Place, 325 7th Street, NW, Suite 1100, Washington, DC 20004
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact: Kathy Grannis (202) 821-7513 or
grannisk@nrf.com
www.nrf.com/holidays
Average Person Has Completed Far Less Holiday Shopping
Than in Previous Years, According to NRF
--41 Million People Have Not Started Holiday Shopping--
Washington, December 16, 2008 – With five fewer days between Thanksgiving and
Christmas this year, the holidays are sneaking up on shoppers more than usual.
According to NRF’s 2008 Holiday Consumer Intentions and Actions Survey,
conducted by BIGresearch, the average person had completed 47.1 percent of their
holiday shopping by the second week of December, about ten percent less than the
52.6 percent average completed by this time last year.
The survey also found that over 41 million people have not started holiday
shopping, with the biggest procrastinators being men (20.7% haven’t started) and
35-44 year-olds (20.9%). Only eight percent of shoppers say they have completely
finished their shopping.
“Procrastinators are in good company this year because a shorter window between
Thanksgiving and Christmas this year means that the holidays have snuck up on
many of us,” said NRF President and CEO Tracy Mullin. “Retailers will try to
manage the rush of last-minute shoppers with expanded hours, extra employees to
stock shelves, and a lot of sales and promotions.”
While shoppers will be visiting a variety of retailers over the next 10 days,
some categories will be busier than others. According to the survey, discount
stores (43.0%) and department stores (42.5%) will be the top spots for shopping,
with about one-third (31.8%) planning to visit specialty stores. Additionally, a
large majority of last-minute shoppers are planning to skip the crowds and visit
the web, with 40.2 percent of people planning to shop online for the remainder
of their holiday shopping, up substantially from 34.9 percent a year ago.
In order to stick to a budget this holiday season, consumers continue to set
aside plastic. According to the survey, two-thirds of shoppers (66.2%) have
primarily used cash, debit cards, or checks to pay for holiday purchases, up
from 64.5 percent last year.
“Most Americans have put themselves on a budget this holiday season and are
sticking to it,” said Phil Rist, Executive Vice President, Strategic
Initiatives, BIGresearch. “Retailers are finding that consumers who pay with
cash or a debit card may be less likely to make impulse purchases, but recognize
that these shoppers are also trying to put themselves in a better financial
situation to spend in the future.”
Practical gifts continue to reign this holiday season, with clothing being the
most popular gift purchased (44.8%). Additionally, shoppers have been buying
books, CDs, DVDs, videos or video games (40.8%); toys (33.1%); and electronics
(24.5%).
As expected, fewer people have purchased gift cards this year compared to a year
ago. Though gift cards are the most requested gift for the holidays, 24.3
percent of shoppers have purchased gift cards this holiday season, compared with
30.2 percent who had done so by this time last year.
About the Survey
The NRF 2008 Holiday Consumer Intentions and Actions Survey was designed to
gauge consumer behavior and shopping trends related to the winter holidays. The
survey polled 8,860 consumers and was conducted for NRF by BIGresearch, December
2-9, 2008. The consumer poll has a margin of error of plus or minus 1.0 percent.
BIGresearch
is a consumer market intelligence firm that provides unique consumer insights
that are gathered online utilizing very large sample sizes. BIGresearch’s
syndicated Consumer Intentions and Actions survey monitors the pulse of more
than 8,000 consumers each month to empower its clients with unique insights for
identifying opportunities in a fragmented and changing marketplace.
The National Retail Federation is the world's largest retail trade association,
with membership that comprises all retail formats and channels of distribution
including department, specialty, discount, catalog, Internet, independent
stores, chain restaurants, drug stores and grocery stores as well as the
industry's key trading partners of retail goods and services. NRF represents an
industry with more than 1.6 million U.S. retail establishments, more than 24
million employees - about one in five American workers - and 2007 sales of $4.5
trillion. As the industry umbrella group, NRF also represents more than 100
state, national and international retail associations.
www.nrf.com
###