Yorkshire Post

More gloom for UK’s high street

Struggling shops ‘will shed 175,000 jobs’

- GRACE HAMMOND NEWS CORRESPOND­ENT ■ Email: yp.newsdesk@ypn.co.uk ■ Twitter: @yorkshirep­ost

ECONOMY: Another 175,000 jobs are set to be lost from Britain’s high street this year, while the value of retail property will tumble amid challenges facing the sector, new research shows.

More than 23,000 shops are expected to close in 2019, according to research by real estate adviser Altus Group.

ANOTHER 175,000 jobs are set to be lost from the high street this year, while the value of retail property will tumble amid challenges facing the sector, new research shows.

More than 23,000 shops are expected to close in 2019, according to research by real estate adviser Altus Group.

The numbers mark a significan­t increase on 2018, when a series of company failures and store closure programmes claimed nearly 20,000 stores and 150,000 jobs.

Meanwhile, the woes of the industry are set to hit the value of retail property, which is expected to decline by 15.9 per cent as shoppers are tempted away from the high street by online alternativ­es.

Altus Group’s annual Commercial Real Estate (CRE) Innovation Report found that 62 per cent of major UK property owners and investors say Amazon and other online players have disrupted the retail property market.

A further 78 per cent said the trend towards “experienti­al” retailing was now impacting their investment decisions, as customers seek out experience-led shopping.

Altus Group managing director Guillaume Fiastre said retail property value had dropped significan­tly due to headwinds facing the sector, but that “survivors”

would emerge from the current transforma­tion.

“Retail of the future will use bricks-and-mortar spaces in a very different way mixed in with leisure and lifestyle residentia­l spaces, for example.

“The most successful retailers – the survivors – are learning to draw in their customers with the promise of a personalis­ed experience.

“Technology makes that all possible, but it still needs a strong human element.”

Last year saw major retailers including Maplin, Toys R Us and House of Fraser go into administra­tion.

Many other shopping chains slashed their store estates in response to reduced footfall on the high street.

Retailers planning to close stores this year include Marks & Spencer, Debenhams and House of Fraser.

Last week The Yorkshire Post reported retail giant Marks & Spencer had earmarked another three stores in Yorkshire for closure as part of a move that puts 17 outlets and more than 1,000 jobs at risk across the country.

Hull Council leader Steve Brady said the local authority would “put in a very strong case” to M&S bosses to keep a store in the city.

Last week’s announceme­nt formed part of the high street chain’s wider closure programme which impacts on more than 100 stores as it tries to transform the business.

In Yorkshire, M&S shops in Hull, Huddersfie­ld and Rotherham are at risk of being mothballed.

If closed, they will join stores in Bridlingto­n and Keighley, which were closed last year.

Technology makes that possible but it needs a human element. Guillaume Fiastre, Altus Group managing director.

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