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Posts Tagged ‘e-commerce sales data’

Any concerns that the e-commerce industry would suffer through a hangover of sorts after a robust holiday shopping season can be put to rest for the time being at least.

comScore data released today shows that e-tail sales increased 12 percent in the first quarter of 2011 compared tothe same time period a year ago.  The increase marks a sixth straight quarter of year-over-year growth and gives the industry back-to-back quarters of double digit sales increases.

Total U.S. e-commerce sales for the quarter were $38 billion, up from $33.98 billion in Q1 2010.

“Domestic retail e-commerce built on the success of a strong 2010 holiday season with another encouraging quarter here in the first three months of the year,” said Gian Fulgoni, comScore’s chairman.  “Faced with rapidly rising gas prices and stubbornly high unemployment, consumers continued to take advantage of the Internet’s lower prices by shifting their spending from offline retail stores.”

“In fact, in the first quarter, the growth in e-commerce spending was roughly double that observed at offline retail,” Fulgoni continued.  “While we would expect online buying to dampen slightly if gas prices continue to eat into discretionary spending, it’s clear that e-commerce has become a mainstay in consumer behavior, driven by the attraction of both lower prices and convenience.”

The data suggests that smaller and mid-sized merchants are starting to garner a larger piece of the e-commerce pie.  The top 25 online retailers’ share of all e-commerce sales remained at 67.7 percent for Q1, the same as during Q1 last year.  But that’s still down from a 2010 high of about 70 percent.

The total number of online buyers rose 7 percent during the first quarter and transactions per buyer also increased by 9 percent, though the average dollar amount per online order did decrease by 4 percent.

The best performing product categories – video games, consoles and accessories, magazines and books, consumer electronics, software and computers/peripherals/PDA – all saw sales increases of at least 13 percent year over year.

Coupled with last week’s promising retail sales data from MasterCard Advisors, e-tailers are off to a great start in 2011. Is it going to keep up?  Leave us your thoughts and comments below!

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Paying a ton of money to put gas in your car is no fun, make no mistake about it.  But there does seem to be one positive side-effect of rising fuel prices lately: they’re boosting online sales substantially.

Online spending increased 19.2 percent year over year in April according to the latest MasterCard Advisors SpendingPulse report, marking a sixth consecutive month of double-digit e-commerce growth.

The strong April showing follows up March’s 16.1 percent year over year increase in e-commerce spending, which was also widely believed to be high due to the increased costs of gas that are forcing many Americans to curtail trips to the mall and shop from home instead.  It’s a trend that MasterCard expects to continue in the near future.

“We can expect consumers to make fewer shopping trips, especially on weekends, and this may contribute to an ever stronger growth for e-commerce,” says Michael McNamara, vice president, research and analysis for SpendingPulse.

Quite a few individual sectors saw solid increases during the month of April:

–Online shoe sales were up 20 percent year over year;

–Online sales of women’s apparel increased by 15 percent, making it two straight months that saw jumps of at least 15 percent in that particular category.  Total apparel sales, including those in brick and mortar stores, was up 10.4 percent;

–Consumer electronics bought online also grew 9.1 percent, for an eighth consecutive month of growth.  Overall electronics and appliance sales, including brick and mortar purchases, actually declined 1.8 percent in April;

–Overall luxury sales had a seventh consecutive month of growth, up 9.6% year over year.

As always, MasterCard bases its SpendingPulse reports on retail sales using all payment forms, including credit and debit cards of all brands, cash and checks, in its network.

Leave us your thoughts and comments on another strong month for e-commerce sales!

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After a summer of completely underwhelming retail sales that left merchants nationwide feeling a bit concerned, the month of September saw a rebound in sales across several retail categories and a respectable jump in online spending as well as shoppers fulfilled their back-to-school needs.

The MasterCard Advisors’ SpendingPulse for September reveals that bad weather and some tepid economic news helped dampened overall sales across the entire retail industry for the month but also provides hope for a stronger holiday shopping season this year based on isolated pockets of growth between August 29 and October 2.

“The overall story here is there is some growth but not dynamic growth,” said Michael McNamara, vice president of research and analysis for Spending Pulse, adding that September mirrored the month of August with “mild growth in certain areas, but some (areas) continued somewhat struggling.”

Clothing and apparel sales rose 3.8 percent during the month, powered mostly by children’s and familyitems as shoppers snatched up discounted items for back-to-school.  Electronics goods also had a solid September, rising 4.7 percent, with the most robust growth coming on items between $500 and $1000.

Footwear and jewelry had modest gains of about 0.7 percent but luxury items overall fell 5.4 percent in September.

Meanwhile, while gains in the brick and mortar retail sector were modest, e-commerce sales had another strong month in September, posting gains of 7.8 percent after a 7.2 percent increase the month before, according to SpendingPulse.

Apparel was the strongest online category for the month, with sales up 13.4 percent, while footwear was up 9 percent.  Electronics were just as strong online as in physical storefronts, increasing by 7.6 percent.

Finally, the National Retail Federation said it expects holiday sales in 2010 to rise by 2.3 percent. That would be somewhere in the neighborhood of $447 billion and a 0.4 percent gain over last year.  It would also represent the largest year-to-year increase since 2006 when sales rose 3.1 percent.

Is the economy coming back for real?  Is a decent September enough to rest fears of continued consumer frugality leading up to the holiday shopping season?   We want to hear from you so leave us a comment!

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