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Snowstorm disrupts holday shopping rush

NEW YORK (AP) - The snowstorm that blanketed the East Coast, closing malls and snowing in shoppers, spelled trouble for retailers, but elsewhere in the country stores saw a strong turnout on the last weekend before Christmas.

Eager to win business from snowed-in easterners, retail websites including Macy's and JC Penney offered free express shipping yesterday. Traffic to retail websites spiked all weekend. Elsewhere in the country, crowds looking for discounts found some, but far less than the 60 to 70 percent off sales they wanted.

Retailers head into the home stretch hoping the storm leaves pent-up demand that will give them one last gift.

A snowstorm the Saturday before Christmas, often the busiest shopping day of the year, is about as bad as it gets for retailers, said Marshal Cohen, chief retail industry analyst at market researcher NPD Group. But there's still time and consumers are ready when they dig out of the storm.

"They'll hit the stores with a little more of a method to their madness, so all is not lost," Cohen said.

"Super Saturday" usually accounts for $15 billion worth of sales nationwide, according to Scott Bernhardt of weather research firm Planalytics. Stores missed that number this year, but Bernhardt still wasn't sure by how much.

Retailers were still totaling the impact of the snowstorm yesterday. The first figures for the weekend are due from ShopperTrak tomorrow.

Bernhardt said it's not yet clear how many stores closed, though many did around the Washington, DC, region, which got more than 25 inches of snow, and in New Jersey. Chains with a large share of their stores in areas affected by bad weather include Bon-Ton Stores, Dick's Sporting Goods and Christopher & Banks, he said.

Mall operator Taubman Centers closed four of its 24 centres early Saturday, including Fair Oaks in Fairfax, Virginia, and The Mall at Short Hills in Short Hills, New Jersey. Both stores reported an uptick in traffic yesterday and by the afternon, the Fairfax mall was as busy as a normal Sunday before Christmas, the company said.

The storm that stretched from the Carolinas to New England caused about one-third of Toys R Us stores to cut hours, but sales were relatively strong because people got out to shop before the storm hit, CEO Jerry Storch said. Online sales also rose.

He said retailers had been expecting a big shopping burst this week but with the storm, it will be even more frenzied, so the toy store chain is increasing staffing.

"There's always that feeling 'Oh I could just do it tomorrow' when Christmas is at the end of the week," he said of shoppers. "Now you add in this storm."

Traffic was heavy and the parking lots close to full at Green Acres Mall in Valley Stream, New York, Saturday afternoon as blowing snow started to snarl roads. The weather prompted shoppers to get out to stores before the storm hit.

"We went out early, and we're going home early," said Mike Kimball of Queens.

Shoppers who stayed home shopped online. Retail web traffic peaked at 2.9 million visitors per minute on Saturday night, according to the Akamai Retail Net Usage Index. That was up from 1.9 million on the Saturday before Christmas in 2008, though that day — December 20 — was closer to Christmas than this year.

Laura Gurski, a partner in the retail practice of management consultant AT Kearney, said more retailers will offer shipping deals to spur sales.

"I think they're going to have to, particularly those that were not able to drive the volume they needed to because of the weather," she said.