Last, Last-Minute Shopping? We’re All Turning to Plastic

Starbucks expects to sell a record number of gift cards to last-minute shoppers on Christmas Eve. Last year on Dec. 24, it sold about 1,700 gift cards per minute, and Starbucks estimates that one in seven U.S. adults received one during the 2014 holiday season.

Steve Burns
WMAL.com

WASHINGTON — (WMAL) Gift cards remain a reliable option for last-minute shopping that’s convenient, easy to send, and just the right amount of personalization.

“We see the market this year hitting about $130 billion this year,” said Brian Riley with the CEB Group. “That’s about 6.3% over 2014,” and he expects sales to keep rising 6-10% over the next few years.

“As technologies around financial services have evolved, these have really latched onto that pretty well,” Riley said. An ever-increasing amount of gift cards are sold and distributed online, Riley said.

“They’re very convenient. I don’t really have to put a lot of effort into deciding what a gift can be for a particular party,” Riley said.

About .75% of a gift card’s balance is left unspent, Riley said, and that has gone down recently. “People have become a lot more conscious about that. As we’ve gone through the Recession, people have been more inclined to squeeze that value out.”

Copyright 2015 by WMAL.com. All Rights Reserved. (PHOTO: CNN)

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