How Black Friday Really Did

Sales should hit $9.4B by Cyber Monday
By Newser Editors and Wire Services
Posted Nov 30, 2019 12:50 PM CST
How Black Friday Really Did
People shop at Macy's department store during Black Friday shopping, Friday Nov. 29, 2019, in New York.   (AP Photo/Bebeto Matthews)

This year’s Black Friday was the biggest ever for online sales, as fewer people hit the stores and shoppers rang up $7.4 billion in transactions from their phones, computers, and tablets, the AP reports. That's just behind the $7.9 billion haul of last year's Cyber Monday, which holds the one-day record for online sales, according to Adobe Analytics. Adobe measures sales at 80 of the top 100 US online retailers. Adobe expects online sales to jump to another record this Cyber Monday with an estimated total of $9.4 billion. Much of the shopping is happening on people's phones, which accounted for 39% of all online sales Friday and 61% of online traffic.

Shoppers have been looking for Frozen 2 toys in particular. Other top purchases included sports video games and Apple laptops. All the online shopping may have helped thin the crowd at malls on Black Friday. Traffic at stores fell 2.1% on Black Friday from a year ago, according to preliminary figures from RetailNext. It tracks in-store activity at tens of thousands of locations, including specialty apparel retailers, big-box stores, and mall-based stores. The drop in traffic helped lead to a 1.6% dip in sales. Online and in-store shopping aren’t always completely separate, though. Many people buy things online, only to head to the store to pick them up. Such sales surged 43.2% on Black Friday from a year ago, according to Adobe.

(More online sales stories.)

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