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MNeagle
16th May 2010, 11:47 AM
NEW YORK (AP) -- Retailers are priming for a consumer comeback.

Shoppers have started to show they're willing and able to spend more, and stores are tweaking their merchandise to accommodate them. Cashmere is making a comeback and sellers of everything from wine to toys are seeing shoppers move away from the very lowest price ranges.

The moves signal optimism that the recovery from the Great Recession is picking up steam, but there's a downside for shoppers: the return of higher prices.

The changes, which have started to crop up this spring, range from bringing back lavish cookware sets that were dumped during the Great Recession to once again stocking big wedges of gourmet cheese instead of cutting them into smaller chunks that cost less.

Toys R Us, which carved out a section in the store to sell toys under $3 during the downturn, is now throwing in $5 toys. Home-improvement chain Lowe's Cos. has tweaked its spring advertising to focus less on low prices and more on the experience of its salespeople.

Meanwhile, HSN Inc. is back to showcasing $250 Wolfgang Puck cookware sets and pushing more gold jewelry instead of silver.

On the high end, luxury stores are prominently displaying $1,500 python skin shoes instead of the $700 patent leather highlighted during the recession, said Robert Burke, a New York-based luxury consultant.

The steps are moderate because retail decision-makers emphasize they still think consumers will keep many frugal habits amid high unemployment. But stores don't want to get caught flat-footed in the recovery, either.

Last week's batch of first-quarter earnings reports from Macy's Inc., Nordstrom Inc., J.C. Penney and Kohl's Corp. all showed consumers' willingness to spend more on a variety of items, but spending is still well below what it was before the Great Recession and shoppers remain pragmatic.

"Retailers are testing the waters with more aspirational items and prices to gauge consumer appetites --and there is some early evidence that consumers are responding well," said John Long, retail strategist at Kurt Salmon Associates. But he pointed out that stores, including luxury merchants, are sprinkling in higher-priced items while continuing to expand store-label offerings, which are less expensive.

For 18 months, stores cut prices and slashed inventory as nervous shoppers focused on bare necessities. But since January, consumers have been more willing to spend on nonessentials such as denim leggings, and more people are willing to pay full price.

Coach Inc., whose handbag prices are now 12 percent lower than a year ago, told investors last month it might raise prices this year as sales of purses priced above $300 recover. However, Coach CEO Lew Frankfort told The Associated Press that its typical shopper is still "not spending at levels she did in 2007, at least not yet."

Stew Leonard Jr., president and CEO of New York and Connecticut grocery chain Stew Leonard, said that he could "feel things pop around Easter." Customers are tentatively spending more, gravitating toward $30 wine bottles instead of $10 to $15 wines, but not the $50 versions yet, Leonard said.

That's why he's making small adjustments. Among them: Stocking and packaging big wedges of Reggiano Parmesan cheese, which sells for $13.95 per pound. Leonard noted that in late 2008, customers had sticker shock and no longer wanted to pay more than $10 for a block, so the store started to cut wedges smaller to shrink the price to about $9.

In recent weeks, Mohan's Custom Tailors began restocking its shelves with the most luxurious fabrics like cashmere as well as the highest-grade materials from designers Ermenegildo Zegna and Loro Piana, which also create their own fabric as well.

The New York shop turned to ordering fabrics mostly from generic mills when clients, who include investment bankers and hedge-fund managers, were no longer willing to shell out $1,200 or more for a suit, and were sticking to $700 price tags, according to K.J. Singh, sales manager.

But since late February, Singh has seen an increase in customers willing to splurge after Wall Street bonuses made a comeback.

"We're feeling OK," said Singh. "But it's still too early."

http://finance.yahoo.com/news/Retailers-prepare-for-apf-2068477294.html?x=0

Ponce
16th May 2010, 11:59 AM
Hahahahaahahahah I just love this, dancing the night away while The Titanic has hit an iceberg and is sinking..........in a little while they will realise what is happening but by then it will be to late but to pray and die.

sunshine05
16th May 2010, 12:12 PM
I'm not seeing it. I continue to see stores going out of business and overall less shopping, less eating out, etc.

Ponce
16th May 2010, 12:20 PM
Yes Sunshine........in my Micky Mouse of a town just about two out of five houses are in the market and all the cars and trucks that were on the properties for sale are still there after three months.

We have almost no turists coming in.......is dead, dead, dead.

Gaillo
16th May 2010, 12:23 PM
I was in a sporting goods/shoe shop yesterday picking up a pair of leather work boots. I asked them how business has been, they told me LOUSY - but if they could only hold on and keep the doors open for a few more months they were expecting it to get GREAT! I kind of shut up, rolled my eyes when they weren't looking, and left the place shaking my head at their "hope". People are so clueless and in so much denial at this point that I don't think they'll EVER get back to reality! ::)

I am me, I am free
16th May 2010, 12:34 PM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tsTAUs_h_uY

Horn
16th May 2010, 12:37 PM
Related;

Too Many Homes? Just Build More...



Home prices in Las Vegas are down by 60 percent from 2006 in one of the steepest descents in modern times. There are 9,517 spanking new houses sitting empty. An additional 5,600 homes were repossessed by lenders in the first three months of this year and could soon be for sale.

Yet builders here are putting up 1,100 homes, and they are frantically buying lots for even more.

Las Vegas is trying to recover by building what it does not need

http://www.businessinsider.com/too-many-homes-just-build-more-2010-5

Book
16th May 2010, 12:43 PM
http://blog.case.edu/linda.zhang/2005/09/06/happyguy.gif

Gotta sell optimism before they can sell their crap on credit...lol.

:D

cigarlover
16th May 2010, 12:50 PM
Depends where you are. Cities still seem to be doing ok and the burbs not so much.

zap
16th May 2010, 01:01 PM
I was in a sporting goods/shoe shop yesterday picking up a pair of leather work boots. I asked them how business has been, they told me LOUSY - but if they could only hold on and keep the doors open for a few more months they were expecting it to get GREAT! I kind of shut up, rolled my eyes when they weren't looking, and left the place shaking my head at their "hope". People are so clueless and in so much denial at this point that I don't think they'll EVER get back to reality! ::)


Same here, nobody has any work, But there are still the optimist's ( yes clueless) out there, if we can just hold on its got to get better. People get mad at me we I tell them no its going to get worse, so I just shutup.

Mouse
16th May 2010, 10:30 PM
This just in:

INHABITANTS OF HELL PREPARE FOR FREE ICEWATER

ximmy
16th May 2010, 10:54 PM
This just in:

INHABITANTS OF HELL PREPARE FOR FREE ICEWATER


Satan and his banksters almost ready to distribute newly printed coupons to hells residents for free icewater at participating retailers across the land. "This should help stimulate the consumers lust for new and improved retail offerings for this quarter," Satan's bankster spokesman said.

Horn
17th May 2010, 01:12 PM
Think the I.R.S. stimulus earned income credit has run out & the psycho stimulus is beginning?