Shoppers are set to spend £2.5million every MINUTE from today
The END of the West End? Punishing Tier 3 lockdown hammers central London as shops suffer nearly 70% plunge in footfall compared to last year on first day of what retailers hoped would be £5.2bn spending weekend
- Total spending today – dubbed Frenzied Friday – is predicted to hit £1.55billion and peak tomorrow
- But footfall is down in central London by 25% in a week – and 68.5% in a year – after Tier 3 decision by the PM
- Pictures taken in London’s West End shoppers rushing to make Christmas purchases in run up to big day
- Hundreds of shoppers in Liverpool lined up outside Size? trainer store ahead of its opening to buy shoes
- Crowds far sparser than normal for the festive season, as many people stayed away due to the pandemic
Boris Johnson’s decision to place London in Tier 3 has further decimated trade in the West End with footfall down 25% in a week and 68.5% in a year on one of the busiest shopping days of 2020, MailOnline can reveal today.
Christmas shoppers hit the high streets with experts predicting the UK’s tills will ring with a staggering £2.5million-a-minute spent on gifts over the next four days – but it appears much more of this spending will have been online.
Total spending today – dubbed Frenzied Friday – is predicted to hit £1.55billion, up by 19 per cent on the equivalent day last year, despite the dreaded coronavirus crisis trashing the festive season for millions.
But while many still braved pouring rain to hit the shops in London, Liverpool, Newcastle, Portsmouth, Reading, Windsor and Swansea, the number of people shopping compared to a week ago – and the same day in 2019 – is down massively as a total of 38 million people begin life in Tier Three from Saturday.
In central London, put into Tier 3 early this week, the number of people on Oxford Street, Bond Street and other shopping streets has plummeted, exclusive figures show.
Diane Wehrle, Insights Director at Springboard said: ‘In Central London footfall declined sharply from the week before by 24.3% following the imposition of Tier 3 regulations. In regional cities outside London footfall declined by 2.3% due to this reason’.
This was the scene in central London today (left) as the capital sits in Tier 3. It was a different picture last year (right) when the city was busy in the run up to Christmas
Crowds of shoppers were seen outside the Nike store in London’s Oxford Circus today (right)
Crowds were far larger in Liverpool city centre’s busy shopping district in 2019 (left) on the last Friday before Christmas compared to today (right)
Shoppers in Liverpool were seen loaded down with bags of shopping this time last year (left) while fewer people were seen walking past the city’s neon Christmas tree today (right)
Oxford Street in London was far less busy today (left) than the same date in 2019 (right)
The rain in Liverpool further reduced the numbers of people today (left) compared to last year when the streets were rammed with people buying last minute gifts (right)
Only visits to shopping centres were up today, when compared to a week ago, but still down compared to December 18 2019.
Ms Wehrle said: ‘In shopping centres footfall rose from the previous Friday by 2.5%, which is a trend we expect with shoppers gravitating to shopping centres in the run up to Christmas as there is the widest choice of products for gifting’.
She added: ‘The peak Christmas shopping day in each year is December 23, however this year – due to the five day quarantine holiday that starts on 23rd – we forecast that the peak day will be December 22’.
It came as a scarcity of online delivery slots risks sending scores of Christmas dinner plans up in smoke.
Shoppers are desperately scrolling through slot times but finding they are fully booked or will not arrive until after December 25.
The festive rush has also left people who are self-isolating wondering how they are going to source food, while others choosing to avoid public places before meeting vulnerable relatives are now having to weigh up going to shops.
The last-minute dash appears to have resulted in shortages – which left one Tesco customer furious when her delivery arrived with no turkey.
Posting a photo of her order, she fumed on Twitter: ‘Just received my online delivery (last slot available before Christmas) and one product was not available with “no appropriate substitution available”.
‘Only the turkey!!! Really?! On 17 December no alternative turkey you could send? Beyond disappointed.’
A total of £5.3billion is set to be spent in high streets and online as families rush to complete festive purchases. Up to 42million shop visits are expected as some stores open around the clock from 8am today while others extend trading hours.
The last weekend before Christmas will be the busiest so far this year on high streets with experts expecting a shoppers’ crush despite coronavirus restrictions.
Retailers have been told they must limit the number of people allowed into shops at any one time to prevent a super-spreader event. They are extending trading hours and introducing shop-by-appointment systems. The Centre for Retail Research estimates spending across stores and websites will peak tomorrow on ‘Super Saturday’.
Windsor: Shoppers in Windsor, Berkshire, ahead of the county moving into Tier 3 of coronavirus restrictions from Saturday.
Portsmouth: People make their way along Commercial Road in Portsmouth. Portsmouth, as well as neighbouring Havant and Gosport, will go into tier 3 of coronavirus restrictions
Up to 42million shop visits are expected as some stores open around the clock from 8am today while others extend trading hours on Frenzied Friday
Swansea: A masked woman with her hood up braves the driving rain in South Wales this afternoon
Two men in Reading (left) and Swansea (right) got in the Christmas spirit by donning festive jumpers for shopping before lockdowns
Liverpool: Shoppers headed out in the rain to buy last minute gifts but more than usual appeared to stay at home
London: Shoppers rush along Oxford Street in the rain today as it was revealed Tier 3 rules slashed footfall by a quarter in a week and two thirds when compared to the same Friday a year ago
Reading: Shoppers in Berkshire queue for entry to John Lewis ahead of the county moving into Tier 3 of coronavirus restrictions
Commuter continue to flood on to the Jubilee Line at Canada Water in south-east London this morning on the last day of work for many people
Shoppers on oxford Street London is in Tier Three in Covid 19 restrictions meaning pubs and restaurants must close or only serve takeaways
Queues were around the block outside the central London Ted Baker and Karen Millen stores this morning as consumers prepared to spend £2.5m per minute
Shoppers got into the festive spirit in London, Liverpool, Newcastle and other UK towns and cities with every Briton expected to spend £480 on presents this year
Masked shoppers braved the rain and Covid-19 warnings on the first of four big Christmas shopping days in the UK
Its Christmas spending study, commissioned by VoucherCodes.co.uk, said: ‘Super Saturday is set to be the peak trading day in December for stores in the lead-up to Christmas with 11.5million shoppers.
‘It is predicted footfall will be up 12 per cent in comparison to 2019. Despite this, forecasts predict that £1.65billion will be spent – £1.4billion offline and £250million online – which is 3 per cent less than in 2019.’ Spending is predicted to hit £800million on Sunday before rising to £1.3billion on Monday, giving a total four-day figure of £5.3billion. Retailers, both on the high street and online, have been running sales for weeks – with savings of more than 50 per cent – in a bid to grab a share of crucial festive spending.
Diane Wehrle, of market research firm Springboard, said: ‘The extension of opening hours is certainly a good idea as it enables shoppers to visit stores when it is quieter.
‘However, footfall between 9am and 6pm accounts for 88 per cent of the total.’
Eleven Primark stores will open through the night, while JD Sports and Footasylum are doing the same with some shops.
John Lewis, Next, Debenhams and House of Fraser will be trading for record numbers of hours, with many shops remaining open until 9pm. Boots and toy chain The Entertainer will have some outlets open until 10pm. Top shopping centres, such as the two Westfield complexes in London, Manchester’s Trafford Centre and Meadowhall in Sheffield, will have late opening.
From Monday, Marks & Spencer will open 400 stores until midnight up to December 23.
Police were today called to break up crowds outside a trainer store in Liverpool as hundreds queued to buy newly released shoes ahead of an anticipated £5.2billion four-day spending frenzy starting tomorrow.
Around 400 eager shoppers gathered outside Size? on Bold Street in anticipation of the release of the Nike Air Max 95 OG Neon trainers, with some even camping through the night to secure the £130 shoes.
The size of the crowd led to Merseyside Police being called to disperse gathering Britons ahead of the retailer’s scheduled opening on Thursday, and the shop was later closed to customers.
A force spokesperson told the Mirror: ‘We can confirm officers attended a shop in Liverpool city centre this morning (Thursday 17 December) to a report of a large gathering outside.
‘We were called just after 7.05am to a report a crowd had gathered outside Size on Bold Street ahead of its scheduled opening. After opening, staff at the store secured the doors to prevent further customers entering.
‘Officers attended and gave advice to staff, and asked those gathered outside to leave.’The shop subsequently closed and those gathered outside moved on.’
Swathes of shoppers also lined up around the block in London‘s West End today, with pictures taken on Bond Street showing crowds rushing to make their Christmas purchases – including dozens waiting patiently outside luxury designer Hermes.
The retail bonanza all got a bit too much for some, who let off steam with a takeaway pint – newly returned to the capital since sitting inside pubs was banned under Tier 3 rules.
Non-essential shops remain open even under the tougher rules, meaning the high street should be able to capitalise on some of the spending splurge even if much will go online.
However, the West End crowds were far sparser than normal for the festive season, as many people stayed away due to the pandemic.
Shoppers in the pouring rain on Bond Street this morning on the most important shopping day of the year
Retailers are offering big reductions to entice in shoppers as sales have been hit by repeated lockdowns
‘Frenzied Friday’ will be followed by ‘Super Saturday’ as people rush to get their Christmas shopping done in time
The weather looks poor for the next few days meaning many may choose to complete their purchases online instead
Crowds of shoppers were dispersed yesterday after hundreds of people queued up outside Size? on Bold Street, Liverpool
Pictures taken on Bond Street today showed thousands of shoppers rushing to make their final Christmas purchases – including dozens waiting patiently outside luxury designer Hermes (pictured)
The latest footfall figures from Springboard found shopping centres had seen a 2.8 per cent increase in visitors on last week – but a 33 per cent drop on the same time last year.
Retail parks had also seen a relative boost, surging by 1.3 per cent on last week despite declining by 11.8 per cent on 2019.
But the beleaguered British High Street continues to struggle despite the Christmas rush, with footfall falling by 1.6 per cent on last week and 40 per cent on last year.
All areas in the country have seen visitors fall on last week and last year, with London’s dropping by 4.4 per cent and 64.8 per cent respectively.
People in market towns have plummeted by 10 per cent on last week and 31.8 per cent on 2019.
Meanwhile coastal towns have also seen tourists decline by 3.5 per cent on last week and 24.8 per cent based on last year’s figures.
But in a boost for businesses, research by VoucherCodes.co.uk and the Centre for Retail Research found £2.5million will be spent in store every minute.
On what has been dubbed ‘frenzied Friday’ Britons are estimated to spend £1.55billion – £1.1billion in store and £450million online – a 19 per cent surge on 2019.
Trading is expected to peak for December on ‘super Saturday’ as 11.5million descend on the beleaguered High Street.
Non-essential shops remain open even under the tougher rules, meaning the high street should be able to capitalise on some of the spending splurge even if much will go online
Shoppers queuing around the block to get into the Hermes store on Bond Street. In the background is the Coach and Horses, a Greene King pub
Footfall is predicted to leap by 12 per cent compared to last year but the total spent is expected to be 3 per cent less than in 2019.
London is expected to lead the charge for money spent, racking up a total of £504million on Friday and Saturday, closely followed by the South East spending £485million.
Sunday is also expected to see a huge amount of money exchange hands – £850million by 8.5million shoppers – but it is down eight per cent on last year.
On Monday, with just four days until December 25, the High Street is expected to welcome 11million customers spending a total of £1.3billion, which represents a 0.8 per cent rise on 2019.
Retail stores and supermarkets are expected to be especially busy this year due to most online retailers no longer being able to guarantee delivery in time for Christmas.
Lifestyle Editor at VoucherCodes.co.uk Anita Naik said: ‘The last full week before Christmas is always a busy period for retailers both offline and online.
‘After a difficult year for the high street, it’s encouraging to see spend is predicted to hit £2.5m in-store every minute.’