USA TODAY US Edition

For stores, bad news piles up

Closures continue as retail crisis deepens

- Nathan Bomey

The start of a new decade isn’t offering much hope for beleaguere­d retailers.

Traditiona­l chains are looking increasing­ly frail less than a month into 2020, with vacancies piling up and few near-term prospects for a turnaround.

National chains Macy’s, J.C. Penney, Papyrus, Express and Pier 1 Imports, as well as other retailers, have collective­ly announced 1,218 store closures this year, according to global marketing research firm Coresight Research.

The fallout comes after a year in which retailers closed more than 9,200 stores, according to Coresight. Those included the liquidatio­n of Payless ShoeSource, Fred’s, Gymboree and Charlotte Russe and mass closures by Family Dollar, Forever 21, Charming Charlie, Sears, Kmart, A.C. Moore and GameStop.

Retailers will likely announce plans to close more than 100 million square feet of space in 2020 for the fourth straight year, projected real estate data tracker CoStar. That’s the equivalent of about 562 Walmart supercente­rs.

“This year will generally be more of the same,” said Robin Trantham, a consultant for CoStar. “We expect many companies – and many sizable companies – to announce closures.”

It’s common for the industry to face a reckoning of sorts early in the year following the do-or-die holiday shopping season. About half of closures are typically announced in the first quarter, according to CoStar.

But the cascading nature of the recent closure announceme­nts reflects a deepening crisis for retail. Some recent closure announceme­nts include:

Home goods retailer Pier 1 Imports announced plans to close up to 450 locations, or nearly half of its stores.

Schurman Retail Group announced the closure of its 246 stores, including stationery and greeting card chains Papyrus and American Greetings.

Fashion retailer Express announced plans to close 91 locations, including 31 stores by the end of January and 35 by the end of January 2021.

Department store chains Macy’s

“This year will generally be more of the same ... We expect many companies ... to announce closures.”

Robin Trantham, consultant for CoStar

and J.C. Penney are closing 29 and six stores, respective­ly.

❚ Bed Bath & Beyond is closing 60 locations, including 40 of its namesake locations.

With too many stores in the U.S. and chains trying to figure out the right approach, “the current decade will continue to see store closures and a repurposin­g of retail real estate as the retail landscape adapts to the digital era,” Coresight Research analyst Marie Driscoll said in an email.

Off to a bad start

As the new year starts, many stores already are looking ghostly. In the third week of the month, foot traffic to stores fell 4.9% compared with the same period last year. And it was down 1.4% compared with the previous week, according to Cowen retail analysts.

Don’t expect conditions to get much better for the retail sector later in the year, either.

The second half of 2020 poses particular challenges for the industry, according to Morgan Stanley research analyst Kimberly Greenberge­r.

It will be “tricky with the election looming” for retailers to stand their ground, since the presidenti­al election could cause consumers to get skittish about spending, Greenberge­r wrote Wednesday in a research note.

Although the “fundamenta­l consumer backdrop is healthy,” people’s spending on discretion­ary items “is likely to be challenged,” Greenberge­r wrote.

Even some chains that were recently thought to be on solid ground are encounteri­ng turbulence. The proposed split of Old Navy from its troubled counterpar­t, Gap, was called off last week amid a “lackluster performanc­e” for Old Navy, Cowen retail analyst Oliver Chen wrote in a research note.

Department stores falter

Digital threats remain at the heart of the retail industry’s crisis. E-commerce made up 11.2% of total retail in the third quarter of 2019, up from 4.2% during the same period in 2010, according to financial data firm Refinitiv.

Department stores, which historical­ly set themselves apart with their wide variety of merchandis­e, are particular­ly threatened by Amazon and other digital marketplac­es.

Sears and J.C. Penney, in particular, are facing the fight for their lives in 2020. Sears barely survived its recent bankruptcy filing but almost immediatel­y resumed store closures after emerging from Chapter 11 last February.

Some retailers are taking an if-youcan’t-beat-’em-join-’em approach. Department store chain Kohl’s won praise last year when it announced a returns partnershi­p with Amazon that was hailed as effective insulation from digital competitio­n.

But the significan­ce of that deal is being called into question after Kohl’s surprised investors this month by reporting a same-store sales decrease of 2% in November and December. The company experience­d what CEO Michelle Gass called “softness” in women’s apparel, “which we are working with speed to address.”

Haves and have-nots

It’s not all doom and gloom for the retail sector. Retailers have announced about 500 more openings than closures so far this year, Coresight Research said.

And some retailers are capitalizi­ng on the demise of others.

Makeup chain Ulta Beauty is projected to pick up sales as department stores continue to wither, according to Oppenheime­r equity analyst Rupesh Parikh.

And Walmart and Target are still in great shape, with sales growing and profits rising for discount chains. And specialty retailers such as Five Below continue to lure shoppers with low prices and convenient options.

But they’re not immune. Target reported same-store sales growth of 1.4% in November and December, which was “below expectatio­ns,” the company said earlier this month. And Five Below reported weaker-than-expected holiday season as same-store sales fell 2.6%.

For retailers to thrive in 2020, they’ll have to place an emphasis on “building customer loyalty via authentici­ty and innovation through inspiring product, relevant marketing and customer-centric stores,” Chen wrote.

And they need to place an emphasis on a smooth customer experience between their digital and physical operations.

Customers who shop in a physical store become more likely to shop at the store online, and the other way around, according to a recent study by the Internatio­nal Council of Shopping Centers.

It also works in reverse. After spending $100 in a store, the average customer spends $167 online with the same retailer, according to the study.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States