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US online shoppers record spend $4.2b on Thanksgiving

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US online shoppers spent 4.2 billion dollars on Thanksgiving, up by 14.5 per cent from last year and reaching a record high, according to the web analytics tool Adobe Analytics.

The top three online selling products on Thanksgiving were Frozen 2 toys, L.O.L Surprise dolls and Amazon's Fire TV, reports Xinhua.

Nintendo Switch game consoles, Beats headphones and Hot Wheels toys had been online shoppers' favourite choices last year.

Adobe Analytics tracks 80 per cent of online transactions at 100 of the largest retailers in the United States.

From Nov. 1 to Thanksgiving, online sales totalled 57.1 billion dollars. Smartphones made up 34.5 per cent of all e-commerce sales, while some 60 per cent of the revenue came from desktop computers, and 5.0 per cent from tablets.

It is predicted that online sales for Black Friday, the day after Thanksgiving, will hit $7.5 billion. As of 10 am EST (1500GMT), online sales already reached 767 million dollars, up by 19.2 per cent from last year.

Cyber Monday, which falls on the first Monday after Thanksgiving Day and Black Friday, is considered the biggest online shopping day of the year.

This year, Adobe Analytics expects online sales on Cyber Monday to reach $9.4 billion, up by 18.9 per cent from 2018.

Holiday season shopping started early this year, as retailers began offering discounts earlier than usual, in the hope of making up for a shorter holiday season which is six days less between Thanksgiving and Christmas than last year.

Some 56 percent of consumers interviewed during the first week of November had already begun their holiday shopping, according to an annual survey released last week by the National Retail Federation (NRF) and the Prosper Insights & Analytics.

"Consumers don't wait for Thanksgiving or Black Friday anymore and neither do retailers," said Phil Rist, Prosper's executive vice president of strategy. "Retailers responded this year by offering promotions earlier than ever, with some rolling out holiday deals even before Halloween."

During the full holiday season, which Adobe defines as the period between Nov. 1 and Dec. 31, shoppers are expected to spend $143.8 billion online, up by 14.1 per cent from last year.

Sales for the full holiday season will total between $727.9 billion and $730.7 billion, according to NRF forecasts.

Consumers are expected to spend an average 1,047.83 dollars, an increase of 4.0 per cent over last year, according to NRF's annual survey released last month.

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