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Retail Traffic Plunges By "Staggering" 21% In Week Before Christmas
(Editor's Note: The misinformation which spews continually from the sources of government's statistical revision, has attempted to lead us to believe that some kind of recovery was in progress. Pure tripe. The recent news of a modest taper, by the Federal Reserve, was also more pure tripe, piled higher and deeper. 2014 will be the year that the petro dollar system is finally rejected by the rest of the world, which will result in the repatriation of trillions of dollars arriving on our shores. This will certainly cause a massive dissolution in the purchasing power of American Federal Reserve Notes in the U.S. which will, in turn, cause the price of everything to rise and the standard of most American's lives to fall precipitously. This year's retail season's train wreck will, by then, have become a fond memory of those assessing the state of the economy at that point. - JSB) That it has been one of the most lackluster shopping seasons in recent years has already been repeatedly covered, with average holiday spending expected to decline for the first time since the Great Financial Crisis of 2008, all this despite record promotions and an ever earlier start to Black Friday. Another chart showing the same trend from Bloomberg, with the comment that the "eroding middle class can no longer drive activity as it has in the past" - that's odd: we said the same thing in late 2009 for which we got yet another label of tinfoil conspiracy theorists... However, while the early start to shopping season has missed expectations, driven primarily by an unprecedented weakness in traditional bricks and mortar outlets, there was some hope that the last stretch into Christmas and the New Year would provide a much needed, last minute bump. Those hopes were dashed last night when Shopptertrack reported that retail traffic plummeted by an unprecedented 21% last week, and in-store sales decreased 3.1% from the year before, dashing retailers' hopes that the final stretch before Christmas would offset soft sales numbers earlier in the holiday shopping season.
Wait, November promotions were successful? For whom: retailers whose bottom lines got crushed in the margin collapse, or buyers who decided to wait and keep waiting for even better deals, until in the end they decided not to buy at all. Blaming the weather we understand, as do the trend to convert purchases to "window shopping" - in a world in which everything is turning virtual, it only makes sense that Americans pretend to shop asl well. What's worse, however, is that the deus ex of online sales is not appearing and will not save the day:
Finally, it appears that the strategy of pulling forward demand to the present through record discounts, and crushing margins in hopes of "making it up in volume" only works for those perpeptual non-cash flow generating juggernauts like Amazon, which on a long enough timeline will do everything (badly), and supposedly put everyone out of business. Just not yet.
We can't wait. In the meantime, we expect seasonally adjusted government retail sales data to indicate once again, that all is well, and that it is not the ARIMA X 12 seasonal fudge-factor goalseeker that is wrong, but that it is reality which is at fault.
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