Santa says economic woes evident among holiday shoppers in the most troubled housing markets

Robert
Ecker was bored with retirement, so he went back to work as a housing
appraiser in Stockton, Calif. He trained four other appraisers during
the real estate boom -- all of them are now out of the business.
"Since the real estate
market closed down, I grew a beard and now I'm doing this," said Ecker, dressed in the trademark red suit with white trim.
"The older kids are asking for clothes now, rather than gifts," he said. "Most of them are asking for one gift."
From
Stockton to Miami, from ritzy Las Vegas to gritty Detroit, cities with
the worst real estate markets led the U.S. economy into recession.
Skidding home prices and soaring foreclosures have magnified the
broader woes of unemployment, stock market turmoil and hard-to-get
loans. Holiday shoppers are making a list, checking it twice, and then
scratching off the nonessentials.
"I used to buy what I need and
what I like: a lot of shoes, clothes in general -- I love clothes,"
said Stephanie Guzman, who works at the Wireless Image kiosk at the
Weberstown mall near Stockton. "I only buy what I need now -- I don't
have money."
Last Friday, the Commerce Department said retail sales
fell by almost 2 percent in November. It was the fifth month in a row
-- a period of weakness never before seen on the government's retail
sales records.
Stockton resident Debbie Rooker is shopping, but for more practical gifts this year.
"Less
electronics and more clothing," said Rooker, whose family lives on her
husband's pension and savings from his career as a firefighter. "We got
a rocking chair for one daughter and a frying pan -- a nice one -- for
a son."
At the Westland Mall in Hialeah, Fla., northwest of Miami,
Katherine Cuevas and her husband run two kiosks, one selling perfume
and cologne, the other hawking child's gifts like toy laser guns and
fire engines.
Business is off 40 percent from last year, and the
Cuevases have had to let go one of their employees and put in longer
hours themselves.
"If you can't pay your mortgage on time, how are
you going to spend your money on perfume? They'll make one perfume
bottle last a year," said Katherine, 36.
Consumer cutbacks are
affecting stores of all sizes this year. Among the early casualties:
Sharper Image, Linens 'N Things and Circuit City, which are all in some
stage of bankruptcy.
At the Dolphin Mall in the Miami area, general
manager Pete Marrero says sales at the outlet stores have been buoyed
by international visitors, but home goods may fall short of
expectations.
One reason is that housewares retailer Linens 'N Things is closing its store there.
"This
is sad to watch," says George Schafer, a retiree who sits in front of
Linens 'N Things as he waits for his wife to plumb the store's massive
discounts.
A few miles east in Coral Gables, Fla., the sidewalks of
swanky Miracle Mile look like bowling lanes -- wide and empty. Lined
with restaurants and shops that sell expensive jewelry and apparel,
Miracle Mile has at least six store vacancies, including a Qdoba
Mexican Grill and what once was an upscale furniture store.
Yaime
Diaz, manager of a store that sells multi-pocketed Cuban-style shirts
known as "guayaberas," says she's noticed that foot traffic is down on
Miracle Mile.
"It's just not the same as last year," she says,
surrounded by shirts colored blue, yellow and red -- hues that contrast
with the drab wooden plywood covering the windows of the shuttered
furniture store just steps away.
One of the few cities with more
foreclosures than Miami is Las Vegas. In the suburb of Henderson, a
La-Z-Boy Furniture Galleries store near the edge of a large shopping
mall was empty on a Sunday afternoon, though the mall itself was fairly
busy.
La-Z-Boy announced last month it would close some 15 to 20
stores and cut about 850 jobs. Store manager Kevin Durney said his
financing department was turning down some customers looking to borrow
money to pay for furniture who would have qualified with the same
credit score last year.
"The spendable income isn't there," Durney said. "It's a little harder for (shoppers) to make decisions."
Economic worries
certainly have engulfed Detroit and its suburbs, as the Big Three
automakers seek to stave off the Grinch by asking for a government
bailout of their industry.
In Harper Woods, Mich., the watches and
belt buckles at Buckles Unlimited sparkle like ornaments on a Christmas
tree. Owner Adam Naseh says he used to sell 100 belt buckles a day, but
now is selling 20 or 30.
"People are basically afraid of investing, of spending money," he said.
The housing market, the
economy,
the auto industry -- the list is enough to stress out any merchant. And
the shoppers are even more harried. Just ask the Santa Claus who has
worked a Detroit-area mall for the past five years.
"The kids are fine," he said, sipping coffee in full Santa gear. "The parents are nuts."
Associated
Press Writers Donald Thompson in Stockton, Calif., Oskar Garcia in Las
Vegas and Ben Leubsdorf in Michigan contributed to this report.
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