Culture

Black Friday: Bay Area shoppers still worried about prices, but appear ready to spend this holiday season


Sofia Arroyo, 21, talks about holiday shopping during an interview at Santana Row in San Jose, Calif., on Tuesday, Nov. 26, 2024. (Dai Sugano/Bay Area News Group)

Inflation? Tariffs? Trade wars? After a contentious election, Bay Area shoppers may still feel nervous about the economy’s direction, but many appear ready to spend this holiday season — albeit with a keen eye on prices.

Heading into the Thanksgiving weekend, gift-hunters were already flocking to shopping malls and retail stores across the region in search of early Black Friday deals on everything from athleisure to kitchen accessories.

“I feel like shopping around this season is what makes home, home,” said Sofia Arroyo, 21, perusing stores at San Jose’s Santana Row while back from college for Thanksgiving. “I was looking forward to coming home and being in a mall and seeing the Christmas trees and stuff. It makes you feel like the holiday spirit.”

Sofia Arroyo, 21, talks about holiday shopping during an interview at Santana Row in San Jose, Calif., on Tuesday, Nov. 26, 2024. (Dai Sugano/Bay Area News Group) 

Nationwide, holiday shoppers are expected to spend almost a trillion dollars — between $979.5 billion and $989 billion — a 3% increase from last year, according to the National Retail Federation. That would be a new record, yet a smaller bump in sales compared to recent years.

The optimistic estimate comes despite widespread anxiety over higher prices — even as inflation has returned to historical averages — and a drumbeat of headlines about how President-elect Donald Trump’s promise to impose tariffs on a range of imports could rattle global markets.

“Household finances are in good shape and an impetus for strong spending heading into the holiday season,” said Jack Kleinhenz, chief economist with the retail federation, in a statement.

The retail federation expects per-person spending on holiday gifts, food, decorations and other seasonal items this year to come to $902, up from $875 in 2023.

But with overall prices 20% higher than before the coronavirus pandemic, consumers remain cost-sensitive. According to a survey by business consultant Deloitte, almost two-thirds of holiday shoppers plan to seek out lower-priced brands, while nearly half intend to trade down to more affordable retailers.

Sarah Chester, who lost her El Cerrito home in a fire in 2022, said she’s still reeling from the financial and emotional toll of the blaze, explaining how every nail was more expensive to replace compared to pre-COVID prices.

“My soul hurts from how much we’ve had to buy from Amazon,” she said. “Prices have just gone through the roof.”

Still feeling the fog of the election two days before Thanksgiving, the only must-buy items on her holiday shopping list were for basic prep for the week: a cheese grater, bottle stoppers, a candy cane cosmo mix and colorful pack of “Teenie NeeDoh Cool Cats” stress balls for her kids, which she and her husband will undoubtedly borrow.

“We just needed tools to help us get through,” Chester said. “I think for consumers in general, it doesn’t feel safe to spend when you don’t know what the chaos machine is doing.”

Miro Copic, a marketing lecturer at San Diego State University, said retailers are being especially responsive to cost and spending …read more

Source:: The Mercury News – Entertainment

      

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