U.S. Web Sales Hit 2.8 Billion Dollars for January
LOS ANGELES (March 1) XINHUA - U.S. consumers spent 2.8 billion dollars shopping online in January, according to a report released Wednesday.
In the said month, during which retail sales typically slacken, consumers spent about half as much online as they did for the entire holiday season, said a new monthly report compiled by the National Retail Federation (NRF), a trade group, and Forrester Research, a technology research firm.
"We're very excited about the data," said Scott Silverman, NRF vice president for Internet retailing.
The numbers are also consistent with Forrester studies that show online spending has exploded from 2.4 billion dollars for all of 1997 to 8 billion dollars in 1998 and 20.2 billion dollars last year.
"Once consumers get engaged in online shopping it tends to stick," said Seema Williams, a senior retailing analyst for Forrester Research. "They're shifting more of their spending to online."
Market analysts said the numbers reflect the growing presence of e-commerce and the increasing comfort level of consumers as they get used to the idea of shopping on the Internet.
NRF and Forrester hope the new report, believed to be the first that tracks only Internet sales, will help identify what consumers are buying and how much they are spending online.
The report, based on the results of 5,000 responses to an online panel surveyed by Greenfield Online during the first 10 business days of February, showed that consumers spent the most on airline tickets, nearly 318 million dollars.
Next, consumers spent the same amount for computer hardware and books, more than 224 million dollars each. Third on the list was computer software, for which shoppers forked over 187 million dollars, closely followed by 182 million dollars spent on apparel.
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