This article was published on February 7, 2013

comScore: Retail e-commerce hit $186.2b in 2012 thanks to 15% growth, the strongest since before the recession


comScore: Retail e-commerce hit $186.2b in 2012 thanks to 15% growth, the strongest since before the recession

With record traffic numbers and spending increases in multiple corners of the world, it’s no big surprise that retail e-commerce is still growing. In fact, 2012 was a record year, with $186.2 billion in retail e-commerce sales.

The latest figures come from comScore, which says 2012 was actually a 15 percent increase over all of 2011. In fact, 2012 was the strongest annual growth rate since before the recession (late 2008).

comScore has quarterly data going back to 2007, when growth was in double-digits. Then the recession hit in 2008. Nevertheless, the last three years look good:

comscore_ecommerce

The growth was possible thanks to a massive fourth quarter. In Q4 2012, sales grew 14 percent year-over-year to $56.8 billion, marking the first ever $50 billion quarter.

That’s not all. As you can see in the table above, comScore says Q4 represented the thirteenth consecutive quarter of positive year-over-year growth and ninth consecutive quarter of double-digit growth.

Other highlights from Q4 2012 include:

  • The top-performing online product categories were: Digital Content & Subscriptions, Consumer Electronics, Toys & Hobbies, Apparel & Accessories, and Books & Magazines. comScore says each category grew at least 15 percent compared to 2011.
  • US retail e-commerce spending reached 10 percent of total US retail spending for comparable categories (excluding Food, Gas & Auto). comScore says this is the first time it has reached double-digits.
  • The 14-percent year-over-year growth of retail e-commerce spending in Q4 was driven by a 6-percent increase in the number of buyers and an 8-percent increase in spending per buyer.

“2012 was a year in which – for the most part – e-commerce continued to grow strongly, despite an uneven macroeconomic environment showing signs of recovery but also cause for continued concern,” comScore chairman Gian Fulgoni said in a statement. “With e-commerce growth rates consistently in the mid-teens throughout the year, it is clear that the online channel has won over the American consumer and will increasingly be relied upon to deliver on the dimensions of lower price, convenience and selection.”

In short, retail e-commerce will keep growing just fine, until the next recession, of course.

See also – eBay beats expectations with Q4 revenue of $3.99 billion, EPS of $0.70 on back of strong PayPal performance and The state of US e-commerce: California has the highest traffic, but Wyoming converts the most

Image credit: Klaus Post

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