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Some stores get a jump on Black Friday

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THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

NEW YORK • After pushing steep discounts throughout November that are usually reserved for the day after Thanksgiving, retailers from Kohl's to Toys "R" Us are offering even bigger cuts and promotions for Black Friday in a frantic bid to pull in shoppers.


But the bargain hunters showing up for the early morning specials on toys and TVs are not expected to buy with the same gusto as a year ago, as they fret about tightening credit, layoffs and shrinking retirement funds.


Not to mention consumers are jaded by those "60 percent off" signs plastered on storefronts.


Analysts say shoppers may stick to smaller gifts such as cosmetics rather than $1,000 flat-panel TVs in a holiday season expected to be the weakest in decades.


Another concern? There aren't any must-have items, even in toys - though some items have been popular, such as Spin Master Ltd.'s Bakugan.


"I will be careful," said Joanna Rizzo, 20, an executive secretary from Medford, N.Y. who plans to stick to her budget of $200 for the day after Thanksgiving. Rizzo just finished paying off her credit cards, and will use cash to pay for her presents. Overall, she plans to spend about $600, less than the $1,000 she spent on presents last year.


In recent years, merchants including Wal-Mart Stores Inc. and Toys "R" Us Inc. have been pushing earlier the sales and expanded hours that were typically reserved for Black Friday - named because it historically was when stores turned a profit - to jump-start the season.


But in this year's deteriorating economy, stores from luxury retailers to consumer electronics chains, pressed the panic button - slashing prices up to 60 percent on even new merchandise.


After reporting the worst October sales in at least 39 years, stores are seeing more weak sales in November, according to the International Council of Shopping Centers-Goldman Sachs Index, which measures sales at stores open at least a year.
Kmart, a division of Sears Holdings Corp., started offering products at what it calls "Black Friday prices" earlier in the month - the first time it had done so. Drugstore chain CVS Caremark Corp. will launch a weeklong "Black Friday" promotion Sunday, offering early morning deals on items ranging from GPS devices to digital photo frames.


"Black Friday is going to have some very impressive deals, but overall the deals won't be any better than what you saw before," despite all the hype, said Dan de Grandpre, editor-in-chief of dealnews.com.


The day after Thanksgiving - the biggest sales generator of the season last year - isn't a predictor of the holiday season, but serves as a barometer of people's willingness to spend, said Burt Flickinger III, managing director of Strategic Resource Group.
A survey of 100 chief merchandising officers at leading retailers found they expect Black Friday sales to rise 1.2 percent this year, below the 8.3 percent growth seen a year ago. Online sales, whose growth has dramatically slowed since September, will also experience slowing growth.


According to the survey by BDO Seidman LLP, executives expect online sales to rise 2.4 percent on Dec. 1, the Monday after Thanksgiving. That's down from a 21 percent growth last year.


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