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Japan’s oldest department stores face bankruptcy amid virus crisis

- Reuters

After more than three centuries in business, the Onuma department store in northern Japanese city of Yamagata began bankruptcy proceeding­s this year — one of many distinguis­hed department stores across the country in dire straits. Known for fancy food halls, luxury items, impeccable service and, in their heyday, rooftop attraction­s to entertain families, Japan’s department stores have been in a long slow decline as shopping habits change. Now the coronaviru­s pandemic, just as it has forced US retailers such as Lord & Taylor and Neiman Marcus into bankruptcy, is hammering nails into coffins for some — particular­ly those in regional areas.

Last month, 146-year-old Nakago closed the doors of its last remaining store in Fukushima city, also in the north, while Izutsuya Co. Ltd, a chain in the southern city of Kita Kyushu, shuttered one of its two main stores. “Everyone agrees it’s very disappoint­ing, but the truth is that people haven’t been shopping at these stores lately,” said Shuhei Yamashita, a retail consultant who hopes to buy the Onuma department store from creditors and turn it around. This year, with consumers wary of shopping and tourism decimated amid the pandemic, sales have plunged. Industry sales

dropped by a fifth in July from a year earlier and policymake­rs fear more store closures and bankruptci­es are inevitable.

Even before this year’s woes, Japanese department stores have struggled to stay relevant, selling items such as $10,000 kimonos and posh tableware to maintain their cachet even as consumer tastes have turned toward more informal items. At the same time, consumers have taken much of their shopping online. Both industry-wide sales and store numbers have tumbled 30 percent since 1999. Some of the country’s 203 department stores have also drasticall­y shrunk floor space by bringing in other tenants.

Big national chains and stores in major cities haven’t been immune. Isetan Mitsukoshi Holdings Ltd., for example, has closed several stores over the past decade and said in March it would close a Mitsukoshi store in downtown Tokyo next year. However, it is the prospects for regional stores and the implicatio­ns for their local economies — already wracked by decades of deflation, anemic growth and an exodus of young people searching for better jobs — which are causing the most concern. Policymake­rs fret store failures may sow seeds of crisis, exacerbati­ng pain felt throughout a local economy to the point that beleaguere­d regional lenders will not be able to cope with increases in nonperform­ing loans.

“Closures will weigh on property prices, jobs and many other aspects of an already weakening regional economy,” said a government official with expertise in regional finance, speaking on condition of anonymity. Japan’s Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga, the frontrunne­r to become the country’s new prime minister this month, has made revitalizi­ng regional economies a key policy priority. But whether any of the government’s pledge of $2.2 trillion in stimulus for pandemic-hit companies finds its way to department stores remains an open question with some government officials and politician­s privately.

 ??  ?? An entrance of Ebisu Mitsukoshi department store in Tokyo. Reuters
An entrance of Ebisu Mitsukoshi department store in Tokyo. Reuters

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