Is it the end for Black Friday? Target joins Walmart in closing its stores on Thanksgiving Day, which usually kicks off annual sales, because 'this isn't a year for crowds'
Target is joining Walmart in closing its stores on Thanksgiving Day, ending a decade long tradition of jump starting Black Friday door buster sales.
The move, announced Monday, come as stores are rethinking the Black Friday in-store bargain shopping as they try to curb the spread of the coronavirus, which has seen a resurgence in a slew of states.
Walmart, the nation's largest retailer, announced the move on Tuesday, and at the time, analysts expected more would follow.
'Historically, deal hunting and holiday shopping can mean crowded events, and this isn't a year for crowds,' said Target in a statement.
Target is joining Walmart in closing its stores on Thanksgiving Day, ending a decade long tradition of jump starting Black Friday door buster sales. Customers shop in the electronics section of a Target Corp in New York last Thanksgiving
Target is joining Walmart in closing its stores on Thanksgiving Day, ending a decade-long tradition of jump starting Black Friday sales. Stock image
Macy's CEO Jeff Gennette said earlier this month that the department store will be pivoting its Black Friday business more toward online and will likely be going 'full force' with holiday marketing right after Halloween.
It also will be staggering events to reduce customer traffic in the store.
Target opened for the first time on Thanksgiving in 2011, joining other stores in jump-starting Black Friday sales and creating a new tradition of shoppers heading out to the stores after gobbling down their turkey and pumpkin pie.
Shoppers enter the Macy's Inc. flagship store in New York on Thanksgiving last year
Walmart, the nation's largest retailer, announced the move on Tuesday, and at the time, analysts expected more would follow. Walmart in Bentonville, Ark last Thanksgiving
It came as physical stores were looking to be more competitive as shoppers were shifting more online.
Still, while some people enjoy shopping on Thanksgiving, the events have drawn criticism particularly from labor-backed groups who have lambasted stores for taking advantage of workers.
Thanksgiving sales, which are not even on the top 10 busiest days of a retailers' calendar, have also eaten into Black Friday sales, though Black Friday is still the year's biggest or second-biggest shopping day.
Customers shop during Black Friday sales at a Target store in Chicago, Illinois on Black Friday
Is it the end for Black Friday? Target joins Walmart in closing its stores on Thanksgiving Day, which usually kicks off annual sales, because 'this isn't a year for crowds'
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July 28, 2020
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