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Welcome back to our Sunday edition, a roundup of some of our top stories. Business Insider’s Mia de Graaf recently got the chance to sit down with Sen. Bernie Sanders to discuss the incoming administration. He talked about the common ground he sees with Elon Musk regarding government spending, and why he’s in favor of Robert F. Kennedy Jr. shaking up the nutrition system.


On the agenda today:

But first: Let’s go shopping!


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Photo illustration of dollar sign balloon in shopping cart
LightFieldStudios/Getty Images; Jenny Chang-Rodriguez/BI

The holiday shopping season is in full swing, but judging by the numbers, you might have already bought all the gifts you need.

Black Friday and Cyber Monday were monster days for retailers. And while some took the old-school approach of braving the crowds, online shopping was the real star.

Adobe’s data showed $10.8 billion in Black Friday e-commerce sales, while Cyber Monday hit $13.3 billion, new records for both days.

TikTok Shop also did well, with over $100 million in single-day sales on Black Friday. Viewers had plenty to swipe through, as creators hosted more than 30,000 livestream sessions during the day.

It was a demonstration of the power influencers and affiliate marketers now hold in the retail industry, as they drove 20% of US e-commerce revenue on Monday.

The social platform’s success shows shoppers have overcome the stigma of buying things, especially big-ticket items, from their phones. More than half of Cyber Monday’s sales were done via mobile, according to Adobe.

Customers shelling out big during Cyber Week might come as a surprise to those seeing reports about consumers feeling the pinch of inflation.

But the economy’s one constant during a volatile few years has been a resilient US consumer that hasn’t slowed down spending. (And if you are hurting from inflation, what better time to shop than when the deals are the best?)

How some shoppers are paying for all those purchases could be an issue, though. Buy now, pay later options got plenty of play, which could spell trouble for users as those bills come due. That’s been particularly tough for Gen Z, which is acquiring debt at a faster rate than any other age group.

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