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November 28, 2009 11:09 PM

Shoppers Seek out Black Friday Bargains

Shoppers look for deals during a black Friday sale at Nebraska Furniture Mart Friday, Nov. 27, 2009 in Kansas City, Kan. (AP Photo/Charlie Riedel

Shoppers look for deals during a black Friday sale at Nebraska Furniture Mart Friday, Nov. 27, 2009 in Kansas City, Kan. (AP Photo/Charlie Riedel (AP Photo/Charlie Riedel)

(CBS/AP)  As shoppers around the nation crowded stores and malls in the wee hours Friday to grab discounts and hard-to-find items, early reports pointed to some renewed spending vigor.

The nation's retailers ushered in the traditional start of the holiday shopping season with expanded hours and deep discounts on everything from toys to TVs in hopes of getting consumers, many of whom have slashed spending to focus on basics amid high unemployment and tight credit, to open their wallets.

Online sellers including Walmart.com and Amazon.com also pushed to grab a piece of the action, pushing deals on Thursday and even earlier in the week.

Several large retailers, including Walmart and many Old Navy locations, opened on Thanksgiving, hoping to make the most of the extra hours.

Retailers are banking on this crucial period to bolster their bottom line in a tough economy.

"This is game time. If you're in retail, there are some butterflies. There is some caution. It's been a very difficult year," Brian Cornell of Sam's Club told CBS News correspondent Don Teague.

The National Retail Federation estimates the average consumer will spend $682 this year - slightly less than last year's $704 average, Teague reports.

Early reports from Best Buy and mall operator Taubman Centers offered some encouraging signs that consumers were buying more for themselves and that crowds were larger compared with last year. Toys R Us CEO Gerald Storch said that on average about 1,000 were in line for the midnight opening for each store.

"So far, we are seeing that consumer are willing to spend a little more than what was on their intended list," said Marshal Cohen, chief retail industry analyst at NPD Group Inc. "This is a big gift for retailers. It was missing from the equation last year."

Still, worries about jobs clearly were on shoppers' minds as they lined up for big bargains on TVs and practical gifts.

At a Best Buy in suburban Cincinnati, store officials said some people starting camping out with tents at 5:30 p.m. Wednesday. The store started handing out tickets for big items, like laptop computers and televisions, around 4 a.m. Friday.

Robin Fryman, 47, of Mount Orab, Ohio, said she and her daughter, a friend and her husband got out at 6:30 a.m. for deals at Best Buy. Her hours as a food worker were recently cut from 40 to 25 per week.

"I've definitely cut down. You have to cut down, because you have to eat," Fryman said.

She said she usually shops on Black Friday, but got out earlier this year to find a camera for her daughter. They bought a $300 Nikon camera for $172. Other than that, she's focusing mostly on practical items like clothing.

Dondrae May, a manager at Best Buy's Framingham, Mass., store, said shoppers started lining up at 4 p.m. Thursday for the 5 a.m. opening for such specials as the $299 32-inch Dynex flat-panel TV.

Crowds were larger than last year, he said, and shoppers were filling their baskets with more items than a year ago, when they were shellshocked after the financial meltdown. The biggest draws were laptops, TVs and GPS systems, he said.

"A year ago, they were focused on what they needed," he said.

At a Walmart in suburban Marietta, Ga., early morning specials on flat-panel TVs, cameras and other electronics were sold out before 7 a.m., two hours after the store started selling the early morning specials. Aside from electronics, store clerks said $2 bath towels, kitchen items and children's toys also were selling well.

Most of the Walmart stores were open on Thanksgiving to prevent the mad dash for the 5 a.m. opening in the aftermath of the death of a Walmart worker on Black Friday in a Long Island store.

After suffering the worst sales decline in several decades last holiday season, the good news is that the retail industry is heading into the Christmas selling period armed with lean inventories and more practical goods on their shelves that reflect shoppers' new psyche.

Still, with unemployment at 10.2 percent, many analysts expect that total holiday sales will be at best about even from a year ago.

Optimism rose in early fall as shoppers spent a little more, but stores say they've seen a sales slowdown since Halloween, putting merchants more on edge.

The holiday weekend has high stakes for retailers who've suffered through a year of sales declines. It's also important for the broader economy, which could use a kickstart from consumer spending.

Black Friday gets its name because it traditionally was the day when huge crowds would push stores into "the black," or profitability. But the weekend doesn't necessarily predict spending for the rest of the season, which accounts for as much as 40 percent of annual sales and profits for many stores.

Still, retailers closely study buying patterns for the Thanksgiving weekend to gauge shoppers' mindset - what kinds of items they're buying and what deals are luring them.

© 2009 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Add a Comment See all 21 Comments
by myopinionpal November 28, 2009 5:39 PM EST
America is a country full of materialistic people. I mean people willing to go to a store and wait in the freezing cold seventeen hours before the store opens for what? I'll tell you for something that they will have to sell in a month or so to buy food or make a house payment.
Reply to this comment
by myopinionpal November 28, 2009 5:38 PM EST
America is a country full of materialistic people. I mean people willing to go to a store and wait in the freezing cold seventeen hours before the store opens for what? I'll tell you for something that they will have to sell in a month or so to buy food or make a house payment.
Reply to this comment
by enwr77 November 28, 2009 9:13 AM EST
It is called supply and demand. The struggle is in full force. Stores are full of shoppers, the demand. Shoppers are mainly in the discounted and sale areas. There are fewer and fewer sales on the supplier/vendor side. Prices remain original for a longer time period before they go on sale. Prices are even higher in some cases as if there was no recession and high unemployment. The vendors are trying to gain back losses from the recession and make the pre-recession income. Income loss from sales cannot be made up by way of credit cards interest as before the recession with high extortionary interest rate practices. Basically, retailers are selling at the slow dime pricing and not the quick nickel. Those of us that are the cash only and no credit card shoppers are definitely not buying at regular or higher prices. Looming overhead is the anger that the rich still are getting richer while the poor and especially the middle class were robbed. Who will win the struggle?
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by IrishWench01 November 27, 2009 11:04 PM EST
Maybe next year it will be even better and I'll even be able to shop a little.
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by barbaram99 November 27, 2009 7:33 PM EST
I am using my used notebook to blog. I am appalled at persons who know nothing of the poor. I may be poorly schooled. I am smart to not mess with the black friday shoopping. I only have one person to get for. I can't save as the money goes to live. I don't need to keep up with the jones' as the saying goes. Yet the poor can't save. Only rich who need to learn the ways of the poor. I grew up poor. We learnt to take care of what we have, I am 55 and legally blind from birth.
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by retm-w November 27, 2009 7:13 PM EST
Most of the shopping carts I saw today were not overflowing, most people only had a few items. The biggest problems in the checkout lines were credit cards that were limited out, checks and debit cards with non sufficient funds. Cashier's at Target and Best Buy told me that was what was holing lines up all day.
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by bann65 November 27, 2009 3:03 PM EST
I could NOT get in the parking lot at my Super Walmart, at 5 a.m.! It was like Times Square at New Years! Then when I parked a long ways away and got inside, you could not move in the aisles!! I managed to get a HP Printer/scanner/copier, for $25. Then I waited in line for an hour at Target for more items. This all is before 6 a.m.!
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by soggyb13 November 27, 2009 2:01 PM EST
Man Shot at the Myrtle Beach Walmart 501 store
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by soggyb13 November 27, 2009 2:00 PM EST
Man Shot at the Myrtle Beach Walmart 501 store
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by timping1 November 27, 2009 12:55 PM EST
What a joke. No markdown is worth that hassle. Just a bunch of sheep.
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