Toys R Us makes bets on holiday toys

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The nation's biggest toy-store chain is placing its holiday bets — and because the stakes are high, the prices are lower.

The nation's biggest toy-store chain is placing its holiday bets — and because the stakes are high, the prices are lower.

If Toys R Us' testing is any indication, a $10 toy hamster might be a runaway hit.

Chief Merchandising Officer Karen Dodge said her staff of buyers spends the better part of the year mulling what will be the top toys for gift-giving. Some they test in small markets and gauge consumers reaction.

"We get the read on that, extrapolate, and go from there," she said. This year, for example, they tested Zhu Zhu Hamsters — the interactive squeaking toy rodents — in Arizona. They sold out, Dodge said.

Toys R Us' holiday hot list of toys it plans to heavily promote and stock this year, released Thursday, features just a handful of toys over $100.

The bets Toys R Us makes matter a lot in the business' make-or-break time of year. Parents remain cautious spenders and unemployment continues to rise. Gone from the list are last year's $300 animatronic stuffed animals.

Wayne, N.J.-based Toys R Us made 40 percent of its annual sales during the holiday season last year; toy makers can make up to half.

Toy makers and retailers alike are trying to avoid last year's dismal season, when retailers were forced to slash prices to move expensive toys amid the consumer spending downturn. Overall toy sales fell 5 percent during the holiday quarter, according to market research firm NPD Group Inc.

This year might be even worse. Needham & Co. analyst Sean McGowan predicts toy sales will be flat to down 2 percent during the season.

And while parents will still buy toys, those between $20 and $25 likely will be the best sellers, McGowan said.

But there are plenty of more expensive toys on offer.

Toys R Us' list includes Mattel's Mindflex, about $90, which measures brain activity through a helmet and uses it to move a ball through an obstacle course. Hasbro's Construction Devastator Transformer, about $100, combines six different vehicles to form a speaking and glowing robot. There's also a $35 Nerf dart thrower on the list.

And those hamsters? They cost less than real ones — those run about $14 to $20 — and you don't have to clean the cage.

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