LONDON: Retailers across Europe chased shoppers on “Black Friday” in a test of consumer confidence, particularly in Britain where the spending spree imported from the US has become most popular.
After suffering their biggest decline in sales volumes for four-and-a-half years in October, British retailers are pinning their hopes on discounts to get shoppers, who are being squeezed by inflation and low wage rises, spending again.
Meanwhile, Wednesday’s budget statement from finance minister Philip Hammond did little to address Britons’ falling living standards or purchasing power.
In the UK the annual promotional event, which has historically focused on electrical goods, has been mainly online since 2014 when it was marred by chaos and scuffles in stores.
“I think it will be our busiest trading day of the year,” John Rogers, chief executive of electricals to toys retailer Argos, which is owned by Britain’s second biggest retailer Sainsbury’s, told Reuters on Friday.
Research firm GlobalData forecasts UK spending during the Black Friday period — defined as Monday November 20 to Monday November 27 — will grow by 3.8 percent year on year to £10.1 billion (SR50.18 billion).
But whether retailers make money from the event, which was imported to Britain from the US by online retailer Amazon in 2010, is unclear.
Supporters argue carefully planned, targeted promotions with global suppliers allow them to achieve a sales boost, while still maintaining profit margins.
But critics say the discounts suck forward Christmas sales that retailers would otherwise have made at full price and can dampen business in subsequent weeks.
Rogers said the Argos Black Friday event kicked off at 2100 GMT on Thursday, with its website recording over 800,000 visits in the first hour. Some 85 percent of those visits were from mobile devices.
Rogers said he expected a record 12 million visits to the website for the entire day.
Like last year, retailers including Amazon, Dixons Carphone and market leader Tesco are stretching promotions over one to two weeks, hoping to smooth out demand and reduce pressure on supply and distribution networks.
Black Friday, the day after the US Thanksgiving holiday, was so named because spending would surge and retailers would traditionally begin to turn a profit for the year, moving from the red into the black.
In Germany sales promotions on Black Friday and Cyber Monday are expected to add around €1.7 billion to retailers’ revenues, about on par with 2016, a survey by trade body HDE found.
It said 16 percent of German consumers took advantage of Black Friday discounts last year, spending an average of just over €170 each.
About 8 million France-based consumers are expected to shop from Friday to Monday, translating into expected revenue of around €945 million, according to a study conducted by Kantar TNS for USe-commerce firm eBay.
Europe’s retailers chase sales boost with Black Friday offers
Updated 24 November 2017