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Dive Brief:

Dive Insight:

Consumers are adjusting to inflation and other economic concerns by shopping earlier and mining for discounts, per Adobe.

Like years past, several retailers — including Amazon, Walmart and Target — have already announced holiday sales events beginning in October.

“The holiday shopping season has been reshaped in recent years, where consumers are making purchases earlier, driven by a stream of discounts that has allowed shoppers to manage their budgets in different ways,” Vivek Pandya, lead analyst for Adobe Digital Insights, said in a statement. “These discounting patterns are driving material changes in shopping behavior, with certain consumers now trading up to goods that were previously higher-priced and propelling growth for U.S. retailers.”

Buy now, pay later is increasing again this year, according to Adobe. The report projects that BNPL will be up 11.4% year over year during the holidays to a record $18.5 billion in online spending. According to Adobe, 22% of consumers said that BNPL allowed them to free up cash and 19% said it allowed them to purchase something they couldn’t otherwise afford.

And Cyber Week — the five-day period from Thanksgiving through Cyber Monday — is projected to drive $40.6 billion in online sales, up 7% from last year. Cyber Monday is expected to be the biggest shopping day of the year, with $13.2 billion in online sales, according to Adobe.