Consumers seemed to be merry despite a S&P 500 Index that has tumbled, a government shutdown that's entering its fifth day and ongoing trade tensions with China.
Amazon wasn't the only one benefiting from an insatiable consumer appetite. Mastercard and Visa rebounded after four days of declines. Mastercard said holiday sales increased 5.1 per cent to more than US$850 billion ($1.2 trillion) this year, the strongest growth in the last six years. Online shopping saw gains of 19 per cent compared with 2017, according to Mastercard SpendingPulse. Brick-and-mortar retailers also gained. Nike, Macy's, Kohl's and PVH were all higher mid-morning in New York.
People bought "millions more" of Amazon's own devices compared with last year, including the new Echo Dot speaker and the Fire TV Stick, the Seattle-based company said. At the same time, Amazon said more than 50 per cent of items sold in its stores came from small and medium-sized businesses.
Among the most popular items under the Christmas tree were the L.O.L. Surprise! Glam Glitter Series doll, Bose Corp. wireless headphones and clothes from Carhartt Inc. Other popular brands bought through Amazon's Prime Wardrobe service, which allows consumers to fill a box with selected items and return anything that they don't want, included PVH Corp.'s Calvin Klein, and Hanesbrands Inc.'s Champion.
Amazon started the shopping frenzy out strong, with November's Cyber Monday already pegged as the company's biggest shopping day in history. Along with the Christmas sales report, the picture seems much brighter than Amazon had initially projected in its latest earnings results. In October, Amazon's revenue and profit forecast for the holiday quarter fell short of analysts' estimates, as investors worried about Amazon's increased pace of spending.
While Amazon has expanded into almost every area of retail, from pharmaceuticals to groceries, its more profitable units are cloud computing and advertising.
Still, Amazon, which dominates e-commerce in the US, has relied on the growth of its Prime members, who pay US$119 a year for the service. Recent estimates put subscribers at just under 100 million in the US Amazon didn't give any new numbers for Prime subscribers in its statement Wednesday, but said millions of unique items in the US shipped with Prime.
That kind of volume presents a challenge for logistics services like FedEx Corp. and United Parcel Service Inc. In 2013, a larger than expected surge in last-minute online shopping caught UPS off guard and forced it and Amazon and other retailers to offer refunds to customers who didn't receive their orders on time for Christmas.
This year, UPS said it expects to deliver an average of more than 31 million parcels a day during the holidays and anticipates a peak-season total of about 800 million packages to rise 5 per cent compared with last year's tally. To deal with the rush of deliveries, the company invested in automation and new facilities to add sorting capacity of 350,000 packages an hour to its US system.
"We're so far pleased with the operational aspect of it," said Glenn Zaccara, a spokesman for UPS. "The investments that UPS made in the network, technology, people and planning across the season with our customers obviously paid off."
The couriers are bracing for a second wave of business as people begin returning gifts in January. UPS expects return packages to hit 1.3 million on January 3. The company said it had 1.5 million returns, its highest for the season, on December 19.
With the S&P teetering on a bear market after a volatile fourth quarter and the worst December in more than a decade, Baird analyst Colin Sebastian lists Amazon as one of the three best picks for investors in the event of a market rebound. Amazon shares have gained about 17 per cent this year, compared with an 12 per cent decline on the S&P 500.
If Amazon's Echo speaker was one of its best sellers, it appears to also have been a victim of its own success. Powered by Alexa, the voice-activated software, the smart devices appeared overwhelmed by an onslaught of new users on Christmas, according to reports from the UK. Owners asking Alexa to play music, turn on the tree lights or recite turkey recipes were often met with the highly unsatisfactory response of: "Sorry, I'm having trouble understanding you right now," The Guardian reported.
A week before Christmas, several of Amazon's online stores in North America and Europe sold out of various models of Alexa-powered devices, hinting at the surge in demand.