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TheDailyJournal
||| HOLIDAY SHOPPING
SPREE. Is it the worst in a long time?
Wary of
Black Friday
Rachel Metz | AP
Technology Writer
SYRACUSE,
N.Y. – Consumer electronics have long been among the
most popular holiday gifts, with fierce competition
among shoppers for day-after-Thanksgiving deals on flat-screen
TVs and laptop computers.
This year, everyone expects the economic crisis to
dampen the appetite for gadgets. But how much? Compared
to buying a car or a house, electronics are cheap, and
those who scrimp on big purchases may still treat
themselves or their children to an iPod.
At a Circuit City store here on Friday morning, Felicia
Perry, 38, said she is definitely spending less this
season, because her job is offering fewer overtime hours.
But she got an Xbox 360 bundle for her 16-year-old
daughter that included the Microsoft gaming console,
some games and accessories for $299.
Perry, a manager for Verizon's FiOS TV service who lives
in Liverpool, N.Y., said she is staying home more lately,
and the Xbox purchase was in part so her daughter can
stay home and play on it.
Store manager Steve Fairbrother said home theater and
video game items were selling well, in part because
people are not going out as much. But overall,
Fairbrother said that this Black Friday didn't stack up
well against others he's experienced.
"I think this is the worst one we've seen in 11 years,"
he said, which is the length of time he's worked for the
company.
Circuit City filed for bankruptcy protection earlier in
the month, which may have steered some prospective
buyers to rivals.
At the Best Buy store in the same mall, the crowd was
about the same size as usual, said Rob Schoeneck, the
mall's manager. He estimated there were roughly 1,000
people waiting for the store to open.
Earlier in the week, ABI Research analyst Michael Wolf
said he expected the usual lines of shoppers outside
stores proffering special Black Friday deals, as
consumers are more price-conscious than they have been
in the past and the deals are the best to be had all
year. But he thinks the day could end with consumers
spending less than usual.
"I think you're going to see consumers being very choosy.
The good deals are going to go, but other than that
they're going to be very selective," he said. The
decline in gas prices may be raising consumers'
willingness to spend up from the absolute bottom.
Michaela Kipp, 42, was at Best Buy to pick up a new HP
desktop computer packages for $600 and $380 Toshiba
laptop.
She estimated she will spending less this year than she
usually does on holiday gifts. Still, "the fact that the
gas prices have gone down, I feel confident that I can
pay off this without any problems," she said. |||
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