FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
MEDIA CONTACT:
Bill Kirk, CEO Weather Trends Intl. (O) 610-807-3585 (C) 484-903-6887 e-mail bkirk@wxtrends.com
MARKETING / SALES CONTACT:
Billy Martin, VP Marketing Weather Trends Intl. (O) 609-678-0633 email cooltools@wxtrends.com
The Northeast and the North Central
The two major May U.S. holidays didn’t help as the week-prior to Mother’s Day was the 2nd coldest in 16+ years and the week prior to Memorial Day was the #1 coldest in 16+ years – big negatives for many seasonal apparel items with reports from retailers of 10% to 30% YOY declines in many apparel and seasonal categories.
Rainfall and severe weather were secondary big negatives with national rainfall up 20% over last year. Tornadoes were particularly widespread and disruptive in the Central States with 547 reported, up 218% over last year. Home Centers can benefit from damaging weather so Home Depot, Lowes, Menards will benefit in the region.
The
“Our retail industry same-store sales research of the past 24 years show about a 1.8% decline in overall industry SSS from a favorable warm/dry May (SSS average +4.7%) compared to a cold/wet May (SSS average +2.9%) like we had this year. This combined with gasoline prices trending 26% higher than last year in not surprising that retail sales were on the lower end of the scale but apparel retailers and Department Stores faired much worse in the -5% to -7% range. Companies that ignore the significance of weather in their business and it’s statistically proven influence on consumer behavior to buy close to need and it’s influence on the overall economy will always be surprised by weak sales as they were again this May”, said Bill Kirk, CEO Weather Trends International. “Department Stores and apparel retailers shouldn’t panic just yet, as they’ll be surprised on the positive side in June with a couple scorching heat waves early and around the July 4th holiday when some areas of the U.S. will have the hottest conditions in 14 years driving exceptional demand for Summer items, including apparel and overall SSS.” Added Kirk.
The retail story for Spring 2008 is so goes the weather – so goes retail sales. Cold/Snowy March and coldest Easter in 16 years = 2nd worst retail sales in 24+ years, Warmer April = sales soar twice Wall Street expectations, cold/wet May – bad news for the purely apparel folks, better for those who had more to offer.
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