After a rocky start to the holiday shopping season, U.S. retailers benefited from cheaper gas prices and an improving job market in the weeks leading up to Christmas, raising optimism that sales reached a three-year high.
Customer Growth Partners President Craig Johnson, who tracks the retail industry, now expects holiday sales to grow about 3.9 percent, a faster clip than he had previously projected as his "base case."
The biggest payroll gains since 1999 and the lowest gasoline prices in five years are prompting consumers to spend more liberally. The decline in gas prices, which are down 22 percent this month, could free up $3 billion in holiday consumption, Johnson said. The money has largely gone toward hard lines, such as televisions, headphones and toys, he said.
"This has been very much a hard lines Christmas," he said.
Retail sales between Thanksgiving and Christmas rose 5.5 percent, according to MasterCard Advisors, with jewelry and women's clothing ranking among the strongest categories. Johnson's research showed that this season was the best in years for both consumer electronics and toys, helped by products like Apple Inc.'s iPhone 6 and dolls from the Disney movie "Frozen."
The National Retail Federation has predicted that sales in November and December will gain 4.1 percent, the biggest increase since 2011. Holiday sales had climbed 3.1 percent last year, when severe winter storms kept shoppers home at the end of the season.
The Standard & Poor's 500 retailing index rose 0.5 percent Friday to 1,026.96. Shares of Wal-Mart Stores Inc., the world's largest retailer, rose 0.6 percent to $86.91. Best Buy Co. Inc., the biggest chain focused on electronics, also gained 0.6 percent, to $39.14.
Slower sales and foot traffic during the post-Thanksgiving weekend had stoked fears that this holiday season would be a disappointment as well. Spending tumbled an estimated 11 percent over the Black Friday weekend from a year earlier, the Washington-based NRF said. And more than 6 million shoppers who had been expected to hit stores never showed up.