Houston Chronicle

Holiday shopping season storms online

In face of pandemic, retailers alter strategy as customers flock toweb to browse, shop

- By Michael Corkery and Sapna Maheshwari

The holidays will look different at Macy’s this year. The Thanksgivi­ng Day parade in New York City will proceed without spectators, and Santa Claus will not be reviewing Christmas wish lists from his usual perch on 34th Street.

But while many of those traditions are likely to return once the threat of the coronaviru­s passes, other changes at Macy’s this holiday shopping season — which traditiona­lly begins with Thanksgivi­ng — signal how the company’s business, and that of the entire retail industry, may be altered forever by the pandemic.

Early last month, two Macy’s stores, in Delaware andColorad­o, went “dark,” meaning employees are primarily using the spaces as fulfillmen­t centers where they process online orders and returns rather than a place for customers to browse and shop.

Jeff Gennette, Macy’s chief executive, said the dark stores are part of an experiment as the company responds to customers buying more online and demanding ever-faster shipping for free. But the conversion of a department store into a fulfillmen­t center, even temporaril­y, reflects howretaile­rs are succumbing to the dominance of e-commerce and scrambling to salvage increasing­ly irrelevant physical shopping space.

The forces propelling online shopping were set in motion long before the pandemic. But charting the decline of many brickand-mortar stores and the simultaneo­us growth of e-commerce in the past seven months is like watching the industry’s evolution, and its impact on the broader economy, on fast forward. In the future, 2020 will be seen as a major inflection point for retail.

“COVID has pulled forward five years of fallout into an 18-month period,” said Vince Tibone, a senior analyst covering retail for Green Street Advisors.

Last week, Walmart, the nation’s largest retailer, reported that e-commerce sales increased 79 percent in the third quarter, while its rival Target said its ecommerce business was up 155 percent. Amazon’s sales increased 37 percent and its profit was up nearly 200 percent in the most recent quarter.

Retail executives said that staggering growth was not a fluke of the pandemic lock downs, but the result of a permanent shift in how people shop.

“We think these new customer behaviors will largely persist,” Walmart’s chief executive, Doug McMillon, said in a statement last week as the company released its most recent sales and profit numbers.

Across the industry, online sales are expected to increase at their fastest rate in 12 years, accounting for 20 percent of all retail purchases this year. That’s up from16 percent in 2019, according to Forrester Research.

While a portion of those sales are store pickups, many are not and the impact on brick-and-mortar is undeniable. Earlier this month, the number of stores announced for closure in 2020 climbed to a high of 10,991, according to the CoStar Group, a data provider for the real estate industry. Many malls are teetering as tenants reduce the number of stores, fail to pay rent or exit through bankruptci­es. Retailers that filed for bankruptcy this year include J.C. Penney, J.Crew, Brooks Brothers and Neiman Marcus.

“Retail has changed; it just has,” said Daniel Horrigan, the mayor of Akron, Ohio, where Amazon opened a fulfillmen­t center this month, creating 1,500 jobs. “You can’t stand in front of that wave.”

The new Amazon center replaces a once-beloved shopping mall from a bygone era that featured a Sears, RadioShack and York steakhouse.

But the 54-acre site sat vacant for a decade, a glaring reminder of the Rust Belt city’s broader struggles: The body of a murder victim was discovered at the mall

site and another manwas electrocut­ed trying to steal copper from the empty building. “It looked like a giant haunted house inside,” Horrigan said.

A few years ago, Horrigan attended the South By Southwest festival in Austin and pitched Amazon on the idea of redevelopi­ng the mall property.

City and state officials agreed to upgrade the roadways and interchang­es to make it easier for Amazon trucks to reach the building, which is near a major highway. Amazon also scored tax incentives in the deal.

“The mall used to be teeming with so much life, with kids and popcorn and concerts,” said Horrigan, who has spent most of his life in Akron. “Every Christmas it would be full of people. But we have to be realistic.”

That realism is settling over other cities, too. Even before the pandemic, some of New York’s most famous retail corridors were emptying. Long stretches of storefront along Madison Avenue and in Soho have struggled with

vacant storefront­s, taking some of the shine off those luxury neighborho­ods. Macy’s, which has posted sales declines ofmore than 20 percent in the past three quarters, has been hit especially hard at its iconic flagship store and at Bloomingda­le’s with the temporary loss of tourists and office workers.

Workers say that since the retailer reopened in June, there have been more employees than customers in the stores on some days. At Bloomingda­les, some workers are filling the time by packing online orders to ship from the store.

“There are people in the stores, but they don’t have the numbers,” in terms of sales, said BrendaMose­s, who startedwor­king at Bloomingda­le’s during the Christmas season more than 30 years ago.

AcrossManh­attan, the number of retail leases signed or renewed dropped 31 percent in the third quarter froma year ago and rents fell 13 percent in the major shopping corridors, according to

CBRE, a real estate services company. It was the 12th consecutiv­e quarter of rent declines. At Hudson Yards, the long-touted developmen­t on the west side of Manhattan, Neiman Marcus said it would exit its 188,000-squarefoot space a little more than a year after opening.

“Some retailers will return when the prices come down,” said Santiago Gallino, a professor at the University of Pennsylvan­ia’s Wharton School, who has studied retail. “But their stores are not going to come back in the same format. They will have to be more integrated with their online business.”

Inevitably, though, retailers will need less physical space. And it’s not clear what type of business will fill the increasing void, raising the prospect that Manhattan storefront­s could stay vacant for the foreseeabl­e future.

“For the economy and for the retail industry, this transition is exciting and good,” Gallino said. “But it is also true, it is not going to come without pain.”

 ?? Hiroko Masuike / New York Times ?? Retail chains are mimicking Amazon. Empty stores are turning into fulfillmen­t centers, and the market for warehouse space is boomin, as the pandemic causes some permanent changes.
Hiroko Masuike / New York Times Retail chains are mimicking Amazon. Empty stores are turning into fulfillmen­t centers, and the market for warehouse space is boomin, as the pandemic causes some permanent changes.

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