Black Friday Sales Slump
29 November 2020
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BLACK Friday this year was a flop for South African retailers, early statistics show, with a huge decrease in in-store sales.

Retailers expected reduced sales compared to 2019, as shoppers avoided malls and stores for fear of coronavirus infection – and for lack of money in their pockets thanks to the economic impact of the virus and associated lockdown.

But the size of the drop is startling, and may signal more trouble than anticipated. In-store card purchases on November 27 numbered just under five million, said clearing house BankServAfrica on Saturday morning.

That is a decrease of 30 percent compared to 2019.

Online transactions, by contrast, spiked by more than 60 percent – but off a low base, reaching just under 870 000 sales in total.

That makes for around 300 000 extra online sales, compared to two million fewer sales in physical stores.

Though mall owners and shops went to considerable lengths to reassure customers they would be safe, malls were quiet on Friday, some more so than on a regular shopping day.

Traditionally physical retail chains sought to encourage online shopping, via channels newly revamped during lockdown.

But they seemed to fail in drumming up the kind of excitement they rely on in shops, where visitors attracted by a few headline deals could in previous years be convinced to buy other things too. Declines were also recorded in other countries, with numbers from Barclaycard, the biggest credit card company in Britain, showing an overall decline of some 10 percent in total transactions, with the value of payments down even more.

-businessinsider