Call it the pregame show for Santa and his elves.
Monday was expected to be the busiest day in FedEx history, with nearly 16 million packages moving on its conveyer belts, trucks and planes. That's up 13 percent from 14.2 million on the busiest day last year, and double what the company handles on a normal day. That jump in shipments bodes well for the nation's retailers, online stores and larger rival UPS, which has its single busiest day next week.
About half of the increase is from the company's SmartPost partnership with the U.S. Postal Service. SmartPost moves lighter, cheaper packages through FedEx that are then delivered by a postal worker. A growing number of online and catalog purchases is driving growth in that unit and across the company.
Online holiday spending since Nov. 1 is up 12 percent over last year to nearly $22 billion, according to research company comScore. Last Monday and Wednesday ranked in the top five days for online spending ever, comScore said.
Consumers are using smartphones and other mobile devices, as well as computers, to buy and ship. Online auction and shopping website eBay said Monday that Sunday was its busiest mobile shopping day so far this year. In the United States shoppers bought $5 million worth of items on eBay, more than double on the same Sunday last year. EBay expects mobile users to buy $1.5 billion worth of goods this year compared with $600 million last year.
Online orders overall are likely to spike again this Friday, which many merchants are promoting as "Free Shipping Day."
Online spending increases come with modestly brighter prospects for holiday spending in general. Retail experts predict total spending will increase 2 percent to 4 percent over last year.
Severe weather, including a weekend blizzard in the Midwest, is not hindering deliveries significantly on FedEx's busiest day, spokeswoman Deborah Willig said. There are scattered road closures and dangerous driving conditions in parts of the Midwest. Snow is still falling across the Great Lakes region.
Although this week is the busiest for both UPS and FedEx, you still have time to send packages to be under the tree by Christmas. The last day for guaranteed FedEx ground service delivery is Friday. Procrastinators can choose more expensive options such as FedEx two-day shipping until Dec. 21, or overnight service through Dec. 23.
UPS expects its busiest day on Dec. 22, when it will move about 24 million packages. That's 60 percent more than a normal day. The Atlanta-based company will accept packages for Christmas delivery through Dec. 23.
FedEx's busiest day is the high water mark of a holiday season in which it expects to move 223.3 million shipments worldwide. That's 86 packages delivered every second from Thanksgiving Day to Christmas Eve. UPS will deliver almost double that.
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