Menu Click here
website logo
Sign In| Sign Up
back back
Diamond trading
Search for Diamonds Manage Listings IDEX Onsite
diamond prices
Real Time Prices Diamond Index Price Report
news & research
Newsroom IDEX Research Memo Search News & Archives RSS Feeds
back back
Diamond trading
Search for Diamonds Manage Listings IDEX Onsite
diamond prices
Real Time Prices Diamond Index Price Report
news & research
Newsroom IDEX Research Memo Search News & Archives RSS Feeds
back back
MY IDEX
My Bids & Asks My Purchases My Sales Manage Listings IDEX Onsite Company Information Branches Information Personal Information
Logout
Newsroom Full Article

IDEX Online Research: U.S. Jewelry Sales Strong in June

August 15, 06 by Ken Gassman

There’s an old adage among retailers: “When the going gets hot, consumers go shopping.” That was the case in June, when jewelry sales rose by a solid 8.7 percent over June a year ago. The extreme heat over much of the U.S. drove shoppers into air-conditioned malls where they went on a shopping spree that surprised most analysts. Normally, shoppers take a holiday break in the summer, before returning to the malls in late August for Back-To-School goods. This year, however, consumers have continued to buy goods all summer long.

 

Despite the lack of a major sales event in June – aside from the usual graduation gifts of watches – U.S. jewelers posted another month of solid sales gains, as the graph below illustrates.

 

 

Continuing strong consumer demand in June helped pushed year-to-date U.S. jewelry sales up 8.2 percent for the first six months of the calendar year versus the same period last year.

 

In addition to solid jewelry sales gains, U.S. shoppers continued their shopping spree for all consumer goods in June. For the month, total retail sales (ex-auto) in the U.S. were up 9.2 percent; year-to-date total retail sales were up 9.6 percent. The Fed may see a recession on the horizon, but consumers don’t seem to be worried.

 

Jewelry Demand Is Broad-Based for Second Quarter

U.S. jewelers reported brisk sales for the second calendar quarter ended June 2006. For the three-month period, jewelry sales advanced by a very strong 7.5 percent, based on preliminary results.

 

Among the major mass market retailers, Sterling Jewelers (Kay, Jared, and regional brands) reported the strongest sales gain – +16.6 percent – for the three-month period ended July 2006. Sterling’s same-store sales advanced by a robust 10.3 percent. Sterling took market share from other jewelers.

 

Zale’s quarterly sales gain of 3.7 percent – with a 3.5 percent same-store sales gain – was encouraging. This was the largest same-store sales gain since early 2005. However, the company announced that it would post a large loss in the July quarter due to one-time write-offs.

 

Finlay’s sales were also disappointing, with a total sales decline of 3.4 percent. However, its same-store sales advanced by +3.4 percent in going-forward units.

 

DGSE reported that its retail jewelry sales were up 27.1 percent in the June quarter. Total corporate revenues increased by 85.5 percent in the quarter, driven primarily by a 262 percent increase in bullion sales to $4.1million. Besides the 27.1 percent increase in retail jewelry sales, the company posted a 17.4 percent increase in wholesale jewelry sales and a 92.8 percent increase in the sale of rare coins.

 

Internet jewelry retailers also reported very strong sales in the second quarter. Blue Nile’s sales of $57 million – a 30 percent gain over last year’s June quarter – were driven primarily by greater diamond engagement sales, including seven customer sales above $100,000 and one sale above $200,000. Blue Nile cut the retail prices of its diamonds in an effort to drive sales gains; this strategy obviously worked, since the 30 percent sales gain in the quarter was the largest increase of the past six quarters. Abazias’ sales were up 46 percent to about $1.1 million. Odimo, which was just delisted from the NASDAQ stock exchange, has failed to report its quarterly results in a timely manner; thus, it has violated SEC reporting requirements and could be subject to additional sanctions. Bidz.com’s initial public offering failed, so it likely will not report June quarter results.

 

The following jewelers have reported sales results for the second quarter of 2006:

 

 

Mass market retailers such as J.C. Penney continued to report solid jewelry sales gains. For Penney’s second quarter ended July, company management cited fine jewelry as a particularly strong sales category for the company.

 

Luxury Goods Demand Remains Strong

In addition to strong demand for jewelry, American shoppers have continued to spend heavily on luxury goods, including leather goods (shoes, for example), and other high-end merchandise at up-scale retailers.

 

The graph below summarizes U.S. consumer spending on luxury goods versus jewelry sales in America.

 

 

Outlook: Economists See Clouds, But Consumers See Only The Rainbow

While retail analysts see stormy economic clouds on the horizon, consumers clearly have not gotten the message.

 

There are some positive factors driving consumer spending, including the following:

 

  • Solid wage gains
  • Relatively low interest rates
  • Low unemployment
  • Relatively low inflation

On the other hand, there are factors that are set to dampen consumer spending, including the following:

 

  • Sharply higher energy prices
  • High gasoline prices
  • High consumer debt burden
  • Weakening housing market
  • Slowing job gains
  • Geopolitical tensions remain 

The good news is this: most analysts are calling for a slowing of the pace of retail consumption, not a collapse.

 

IDEX Online's Research’s Proprietary Jewelry Sales Forecast Still Positive

IDEX Online's Research’s proprietary jewelry sales forecast model for the U.S. market continues to predict solid gains in jewelry sales for 2006. This mathematically driven model uses a mix of historical performance, economic data, and other projections to produce a sales forecast for U.S. jewelry demand.

 

After weighing the negative factors – energy prices, gasoline prices, inflation threats, higher interest rates, and others – with the positive factors – wage and salary levels, low unemployment, and moderate inflation – our latest forecast suggests that U.S. jewelry sales will rise by about 6 percent in 2006.

 

Intuitively, this seems somewhat aggressive based on the current economic outlook. Jewelers generate nearly 40 percent of their annual sales in October, November, and December. With storm clouds building on the horizon, the 2006 holiday selling season is highly uncertain. We’d be more comfortable with a jewelry sales forecast of about 4 percent for the year. Either way, a sales gain in the 4-6 percent for 2006 would be a solid gain that most jewelers would welcome.

 

 

 

 

Diamond Index
Related Articles

Newsletter

The Newsletter offers a quick summary of the past week's industry news and full articles.
Our Services About IDEX Privacy & Security Terms & Conditions Sign-Up Advertise on IDEX Industry Links Contact Us
IDEX on Facebook IDEX on LinkedIn IDEX on Twitter