Where can we learn more about effective natural home folk remedies to save money and stay healthier? Is now the best time to start post holiday shopping?

Sunday December 27  2009

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Click here to link directly to EarthClinic.com

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Now that the holiday shopping frenzy has ended, if we need to buy something, now through the next few months is the best time to shop for drastically reduced bargain prices. Our thanks to Chris Burritt, Cotten Timberlake, and Bloomberg.com for the following informative article:

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Dec. 25 (Bloomberg) — U.S. retailers are extending discounts on computers, toys and clothes beyond Christmas to lure consumers who held out for lower prices.

Best Buy Co. trimmed the price of a Lenovo netbook computer by a third to $197 online today and in stores tomorrow. Toys R Us Inc.  shoppers who buy video games including Sony Corp.’s PlayStation 3 can buy a second game for half price.

Walmart Stores Inc. which started cutting holiday toy prices Sept. 30, is trying to keep consumers coming back by offering a $50 gift card on purchases of Microsoft Corp.’s Xbox 360 players through Jan. 1. Promotions intensified after last weekend’s East Coast snowstorm hurt sales going into Christmas.

“It’s certainly more aggressive than in past years,” Toys “R” Us Chief Executive Officer Jerry Storch said by telephone Dec. 23 from Wayne, New Jersey, where the largest U.S. toy chain is based. The company is closely held.

Best Buy, based in Richfield, Minnesota, fell 6 cents to $40.70 yesterday in New York Stock Exchange composite trading. Bentonville, Arkansas-based Walmart climbed 28 cents to $53.60.

The Washington-based National Retail Federation was holding to its forecast for a 1 percent drop in holiday sales, Ellen Davis, a spokeswoman, said Dec. 20. The International Council of Shopping Centers reiterated on Dec. 22 its forecast for a 2 percent increase in sales at stores open at least a year in December, after reporting that the storm slowed growth to 0.4 percent year over year in the week ended Dec. 19.

Out With a Bang?

“We expect a strong Dec. 26 shopping day since it falls on Saturday this year, which should close out December with a bang,” Lisa Walters and Sapna Shah, principals of Retail Eye Partners, a New York-based research firm, wrote in a Dec. 24 report. “We expect early-morning specials and compelling offers by retailers to boost selling levels to make up for the slower start to December.”

Saks Inc., the New York-based luxury retailer, said it was offering up to 70 percent off from 8 a.m. to noon tomorrow, after which the discounts will revert to 40 percent.

New York-based Brooks Brothers, the privately held apparel chain, said it would start offering 50 percent off tomorrow. J.C. Penney said it would open stores at 5 a.m., its earliest opening ever for the day after Christmas, and have more than 100 so-called doorbusters.

Over the next week, Joseph A. Banks, a men’s clothing chain, will continue emphasizing price reductions of regular merchandise, more than marking down clearance goods, CEO Neal Black said.

Waiting Game

“You’ll see a lot of retailers, including us, with very strong offers the week after Christmas,” Black, 54, said Dec. 22 by telephone from the company’s headquarters in Hampstead, Maryland. “We’re looking for people who waited until after Christmas to see if there’s even lower prices. People get enticed to spend gift cards when you’ve got good offers.”

Black declined to disclose Jos. A. Bank’s post-Christmas promotional plans. The week before Christmas, it deepened discounts to at least 50 percent on all clothing after the snowstorm hurt sales.

The retailer’s shares fell 17 cents to $42.82 yesterday on the Nasdaq Stock Market. Saks lost 12 cents to $6.78 in New York Stock Exchange trading. Plano, Texas-based J.C. Penney dropped 29 cents to $27.02.

The Dec. 19 storm dumped 24 inches of snow on Bethesda, Maryland, and 23.2 inches at Philadelphia International Airport, according to the National Weather Service.

Sales fell 13 percent to $6.9 billion on the last Saturday before Christmas from the previous year, according to Chicago- based researcher ShopperTrak RCT Corp. A year ago, that was the second-biggest shopping day after Black Friday, the day after U.S. Thanksgiving.

Some impulse buying and so-called self-purchases were irretrievably lost during the storm, Richard Jaffe, an analyst with Stifel Nicolaus & Co. in New York, said in a Bloomberg Radio interview on Dec. 22.

“It’s not a delay, it’s lost sales,” Jaffe said. “You just don’t recover that.”

This entry was posted on Saturday, December 26th, 2009 at 9:04 pm and is filed under Answers, Credit Cards, Debt, Loans. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

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