In what is usually the shining star of the retailers' entire year, this holiday shopping season has many retailers predicting coal in their stockings. The credit crunch and soaring energy prices might yet catch up with consumers.
While initial Black Friday numbers out of the retail sector seemed promising, official November sales left much to be desired. Fifty-one percent of retailers missed projected November sales numbers. And we all know how the Street feels about missed numbers. Target got severely punished after missing its analyst-predicted mark. Shares gapped down more than 6 per cent while getting slapped with a nasty downgrade from Bank of America Securities.
2008 isn't looking to be a banner retail year, either. Following several years of full-scale expansion, many top retailers expect to hit the brakes on growth for next year. Wal-Mart announced earlier this year that it plans to pare square footage growth down to about 5 per cent, from an aggressive historical pace of 9 per cent. McDonalds also plans to build fewer Golden Arches in the US in 2008.
Meanwhile, in the midst of this "glass is half empty" retail mentality, one retailer is posting impressive sales and forecasting impressive growth for next year. While others are scaling back on new stores, this company expects to add more than 40 new stores this year -- and break into China. And while more than half of retailers are down in sales and the National Retail Federation is predicting a mere 4 per cent revenue gain in November and December (the worst since 2002), one retailer is betting on 31 per cent growth this quarter alone.
How? Quite simply: "They now produce some of the most-wanted