“Sell” may be the chorus on Wall Street, but optimistic shoppers looking to fill the empty space under the country’s Christmas trees were out in full force during the season’s final shopping weekend.

Americans streamed into brick-and-mortar stores on Saturday and Sunday looking for deals. The International Council of Shopping Centers predicted heading into the weekend that 48 percent of U.S. adults would spend over the weekend, and analysts say early signs point to a blowout.

“Best ever Saturday and Sunday we’ve ever seen,” said Craig Johnson, president of retailer research firm Customer Growth Partners. “Wall Street may be panicking but consumers are not.”

Even as the S&P 500 Index continued to tumble as fear of a possible slowdown in the new year grips the market, many U.S. consumers are still feeling merry. Higher employment and wages translate into higher household cash flow, Johnson said, meaning that credit cards didn’t do all of the heavy lifting this year. The weather cooperated in most parts of the country and gas prices are lower than last year, so consumers had no excuses not to make those final preholiday shopping treks.

With the window on free, two-day shipping firmly closed for holiday deliveries, gift givers hustled to value-focused retailers like Walmart, Costco and Target. Apparel did especially well, analysts said.

“Stores were busy,” said Jennifer Bartashus, a Bloomberg Intelligence analyst, adding that retailers were making a big dent selling into the inventory they’d built up. Retailers used private label brands to increase their unique appeal, she added. “It makes it harder for direct price comparison,” Bartashus said.

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On a day when the S&P 500 was down as much as 2 percent, retailers like Target and Kohl’s saw gains of as much as 2.6 percent.

The only place where wider market concerns may have hit retailers is on the luxury side. Burt Flickinger, managing director of Strategic Resource Group, said observations suggest receipts at stores like Tiffany & Co. slowed on Sunday after a decent Saturday. Traditionally, luxury outperforms in the weekend before Christmas.

A Tiffany spokesman declined to comment, noting that the company will release holiday results on Jan. 18.

“A combination of getting the weekly business wrap-ups on Saturday and then getting the news on government shutdowns” were behind the “noticeable slowdown” at the high-end shops, he said.

People are still buying entry level and midprice luxury goods, but the most expensive items are moving slowest, he said.

“By this time last year,” Flickinger said, “luxury stores were sold out.”


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