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The Toy Market Stages a Turnaround Heightened Sales and Steady Toy Space Bode Well for Remaining Quarters
Firstly, sell-through numbers from my retailer panel, which includes a Target, a Toys “R” Us, a Wal-Mart, a CVS, an Albertsons and five specialty stores, suggest that toy sales overall, in dollar terms between January 1 and March 15, are something like 7 percent below the same period last year. ![]() *up to March 15, 2009 However, the good news is that March 1 saw the first positive sell-through numbers in my retailer panel since August. I also talked to buyers at the three mega retailers, Target, Wal-Mart and Toys “R” Us. Their reaction was that, indeed, they had seen an upturn in sales numbers — not a big upturn but an upturn nevertheless. INVENTORY AND ALLOCATION LOOK UP The other positive sign that things are getting better is the fact that clearances have returned to customary levels. At the beginning of the year, up to 21 percent of toy space was devoted to clearances. This is now down to a much more normal 4 percent. Another plus sign is that inventory levels, considered high at the end of December, have, according to the buyers I spoke with, pretty much come down. This basically means that the PO generation, pretty much at a standstill during January and February, should now resume, albeit on a very cautious basis. Toy space allocation also tells a positive story. Unlike the fourth quarter, in which toys are inordinately important to attract consumers to stores and hence to other, more profitable product categories, no such incentive exists during the first quarter, during which time space is allocated strictly on what management perceives as having the best short-term profit potential. Interestingly, Wal-Mart and Target have not reduced their toy space in the first quarter, in comparison to the same period in 2008, even though one would expect them to do so, given dismal toy sales during the first two months. The graph below tells the story: ![]() The graph showing endcap and aisle cap allocations presents a similar picture: ![]() Note that aisle caps carry four times the weight of an endcap. I also noticed that private label is getting a larger share of the toy space in Wal-Mart, Target and Toys “R” Us than it did a year ago. ![]() Even the vendors whose products are beginning to do well are not out of the woods yet. The buyers went on to a virtual PO freeze during January and most of February. I would expect this to affect first-quarter shipments but correct itself further out. VENDORS “SAFE” OR UNDER SCRUTINY ![]() As for others, some buyers go to the extreme of measuring the space a given vendor has with any large retailer they consider vulnerable, e.g. Kmart. If this vendor is estimated to have more than 5 percent of its business with any such retailer, the Wal-Mart or Target buyer will put this company on a watch list, which means that no PO generation takes place without very specific scrutiny by the divisional. This, of course, also applies to vendors who are suspected to be financially vulnerable … and there is any number of these around. ![]() |
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