This time of year is normally a retailers  dream, but according to Bloomberg.com people are spending much less than usual this  holiday season. With banks tightening their lending practices before  a new credit-card law is due to take effect, large retailers are expected  to lose out on nearly $9 billion in lost revenue. 
 
Sales in November and December may fall  1.2 percent to $436.7 billion from the same period in 2008, said Britt  Beemer, chairman of consumer polling firm America’s Research Group.  If lenders weren’t cutting customer spending limits and rejecting  more credit-card applicants, sales would gain about 0.8 percent to $445.5  billion, he said in a Dec. 21 interview.
Target Chief Financial Officer Douglas  Scovanner says the credit-card legislation is exacerbating a spending  slump just as consumers begin to consider more discretionary purchases  they would usually buy with credit. Items such as clothing, jewelry  and home goods suffered steeper declines during the recession and are  among the most profitable sales for retailers.
“It will mute the impact of the rebound  that would have otherwise occurred,” Scovanner said. “Diminished  availability of credit equals diminished spending.”