City
Epaper

Black Friday sale logs $9bn in US, smartphones bring in $3.6bn

By IANS | Updated: November 29, 2020 11:05 IST

San Francisco, Nov 29 US consumers spent $9 billion online during the Black Friday sale, up by 21.6 ...

Open in App

San Francisco, Nov 29 US consumers spent $9 billion online during the Black Friday sale, up by 21.6 per cent on a year ago. Smartphones alone accounted for $3.6 billion in sales up by 25.3 per cent over the last year as people stayed indoors during the pandemic.

For Black Friday, Adobe had originally forecast sales between $8.9 billion and $9.6 billion, TechCrunch reported late on Saturday.

The $9 billion Black Friday sale figure makes the event the second-largest online spending day in the US history (after 2019's Cyber Monday).

According to Adobe analysts, "Cyber Monday is likely to continue to be the biggest of them all, expected to bring in between $11.2 billion and $13 billion in e-commerce transactions".

Earlier, American consumers' online spending hit a record high of $5.1 billion on Thanksgiving Day with a year-on-year growth of 21.5 per cent, according to data by Adobe Analytics.

Heavy discounts and aggressive promotions since early November succeeded in making consumers loosen their wallet strings earlier, said Taylor Schreiner, director with Adobe Digital Insights.

Statistics provided by Adobe Analytics showed that nearly 50 per cent of the online spending was on the purchase of smartphones, and retailers with curbside pickup service had a much higher conversion rate of traffic to their websites.

"This year's Black Friday won't have as much 'door-busting' as usual. Retailers are pushing deals up and promising Black Friday deals to last for 'all of November and December'," said Adobe Analytics.

The National Retail Federation (NRF) said that the US holiday sales in the last two months of 2020 would grow 3.6 per cent to 5.2 per cent yearn year, reaching $755.3 billion to $766.7 billion.

Meanwhile, the NFR added that the US online sales and other non-store sales would increase 20 to 30 per cent year-on-year in the range of $202.5 billion to $218.4 billion in November and December, which is higher than $189.1 billion projected by Adobe Analytics.

Black Friday, one of the most anticipated days by consumers, shifted its consumption patterns due to the Covid-19 pandemic this year.

More shoppers have opted for online sales, and in-store shoppers tend to buy things much faster than before.

( With inputs from IANS )

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalWill decide on Awami League ban after receiving official gazette: B'desh Election Commission

NationalNCW condemns online abuse targeting Foreign Secretary Misri and daughter

BusinessSmall private airport capex to rise 50-60% in next three fiscals: Crisil

ThaneThane: Water Supply Disrupted in Kalwa, Diva and Mumbra Due to MIDC Pipeline Burst

Other SportsTaliban Bans Chess in Afghanistan, Calling It a Form of Gambling Under Sharia Law

International Realted Stories

InternationalEarthquake in Pakistan: Quake of magnitude 4.6 on Richter Scale Hits

InternationalUS, China sign deal to roll back tariffs for 90 days

InternationalTrump's Kashmir proposal: Dangerous diplomacy in a sensitive South Asian dynamic

InternationalSouth Korea: Prosecution to question ex-first lady Keon Hee over influence-peddling scandal

International"Right but small step on the road which is long and bumpy": Former diplomat KP Fabian on India-Pakistan understanding