By Robert Lemos, 31 December 2004 10:10
NEWS
Sales of goods on the internet during the holiday season jumped to $8.8bn in the US, a 24 per cent increase over last year, according to internet service provider VeriSign.
The data, culled from VeriSign's online payment services, which the company said handles 35 per cent of North American e-commerce, showed a similar increase to earlier surveys that found online sales up 23 per cent in November alone. VeriSign's data measured the total volume of sales between Thanksgiving (25 November) and 27 December.
Trevor Healy, vice president of payment services for VeriSign, said: "Through the online data we collected, we have seen clear changes in consumer behavior such as accelerated weekday shopping activity, more confidence in buying digital goods from e-commerce sites, an increase in gift-certificate purchases as well as the direct impact of shipping lead times on sales."
The data gave internet stores more to cheer about than their offline brick-and-mortar competitors. Analyst estimates for real-world retailers predicted a two per cent to five per cent increase in sales over last year, according to reports. In fact, the demand for shopping online may have caused some stores to become inaccessible during some periods.
Electronics seemed to be the most lucrative category, averaging $291 per purchase. Housewares garnered the second highest average ticket price, at $148. The average sale amount overall was $145 per transaction.
Robert Lemos writes for CNET News.com.

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