By Clare Saliba E-Commerce Times
12/26/01 12:09 PM PT
The sales spike helped propel Yahoo! into the number two spot in Nielsen//NetRatings
rankings of the top online retailers for the peak buying period.
Rackspace now offers green hosting solutions at the same cost without sacrificing performance. We make it easy for our customers to choose a green configuration or customize one that works for your business needs. Make the eco-friendly choice.
While many Internet sellers have seen their traffic slow this holiday season
due to deep retail discounts that drove consumers back into
brick-and-mortar stores, Internet heavyweight Yahoo! (Nasdaq: YHOO) said Wednesday that its sales volume surged more
than 86 percent during the post-Thanksgiving buying period over last year's
levels.
The Sunnyvale, California-based company said the figure for its shopping
channel outpaced Forrester Research's original
holiday growth estimates of 10 percent by more than eight-fold.
The sales spike helped propel Yahoo! into the number two spot in Nielsen//NetRatings
rankings of the top online retailers for the peak buying period between November 23rd
and December 24th.
'Critical Period'
In all, Yahoo! estimated that its users spent US$10.3 billion online in the
fourth quarter of 2001, with the most popular product categories ranging
from video game consoles and digital cameras to toys and apparel.
"The holiday season is a critical period for Yahoo! Shopping, and we are
proud to announce that our Yahoo! Shopping business has maintained extremely
strong growth momentum," said Yahoo! shopping vice president and general
manager Rob Solomon.
"Our commitment to enhancing our consumer and merchant
offerings is one of the driving factors behind our ability to successfully
capture increasingly more market share."
Slashing Prices
Seeking to build on this momentum, Yahoo! also announced that it is
launching a post-holiday sales center that will be promoted in its shopping
and auctions channels.
Some Internet marketers are taking a cue from real-world retailers, which are slashing
prices to bargain-basement levels in an effort to prop up sagging
earnings figures.
Yahoo! said that companies such as Eddie Bauer, Eluxury.com, Godiva, Old Navy, and
SonyStyle will be offering exclusive online specials, as well as winter clearance sales
of 50 to 70 percent off their merchandise.
Too Little, Too Late?
The dose of good news from Yahoo! helped stoke investor optimism in early
trading, which saw the company's shares climb $1.50 to $18.17.
Other gainers on Wednesday morning
included Amazon.com (Nasdaq: AMZN),
which has repeatedly promised investors that it will finally post a pro-forma
quarterly profit, and online auction
giant eBay (Nasdaq: EBAY).
Despite the uptick in retail stocks, some Internet analysts have hinted
that online holiday sales may not grow at all this year. Last week,
Forrester Research cut its estimate for
spending during the holiday season to $8 billion, which would represent a
significant drop from the $10 billion it said consumers spent during the
2000 season.
Forrester had originally forecast an $11 billion holiday season, which would have
represented a modest 10 percent increase.
However, industry analysts said a surge in late-season online traffic holds
the possibility that 2001 sales expectations may be exceeded.
Last week, Jupiter said the majority of online shopping activity seemed to be occurring closer to Christmas as
consumers held out to try to get better deals on their purchases. Jupiter is
still predicting sales of $11.9 billion for this holiday season.