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Late surge pushes holiday web sales up 12.7%

Confident they could order online just days before Christmas and still get their orders in time for the holiday, U.S. consumers purchased heavily from retail websites late in the holiday season, boosting overall sales for the festive period up 12.7% over last year to $83 billion, Adobe Inc. reported today.

While e-retail growth for most of the season averaged under the 11% Adobe had projected, there was a surge of web orders in the last week. That was especially notable on Dec. 23, when sales spiked 56% over the same day in 2014, the largest growth rate for any day during the November-December holiday season, according to Adobe data.

Adobe attributes the increase to more retailers offering the option to pick up online orders in stores and growing consumer confidence that online retailers will deliver on promises for expedited delivery in the last week before the holiday.

“During the last couple of years, there was a lot of talk about retailers trying to spread out the holiday season,” Tyler White, an analyst for Adobe Digital Index, a research arm of marketing technology provider Adobe. “This year, they really weren’t able to get the buying started that much earlier, but they were able to keep it going longer into the Christmas week.”

Adobe says its estimates are based on visibility into 75% of the online transactions by the 500 leading online retailers. Adobe’s estimate is in line with the 13% year-over-year growth estimate of comScore Inc., which bases its projections on the activity of a consumer panel.

Also notable in the Adobe data is how much more consumers shopped on smartphones over the holiday season. 17% of online sales came from mobile phones during the 2015 holiday period, versus 9% a year earlier, and those phones accounted for 39% of visits to retailers’ websites, up from 30% a year earlier.

That growing smartphone traffic, which experts attribute to improve retailer mobile websites and apps and larger phones, cut into traffic and sales from desktops and tablets. Desktops accounted for 73% of online purchases during the 2015 holiday season versus 78% a year earlier, and tablets 11% in 2015 versus 12% in 2014. In terms of traffic, desktop’s share fell to 50% from 56% and tablets’ from 14% to 11%.

Other highlights from Adobe’s holiday report include:

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