The Guardian (Charlottetown)

American retailers are shunning indoor malls

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Even in the depths of the 2009 financial crisis, it was never this bad for the owners of the world’s biggest shopping malls.

New real estate industry data for June reveals that vacancy rates in the United States’ indoor malls could surpass those in suburban shopping centers and strip malls.

The figures from property consultanc­y Jones Lang LaSalle come on top of a series of bankruptci­es and takeovers, which has seen even sector leader and Mall of America owner Simon Property Group hand back control of some buildings to creditors or take over broken retail operations for their debts.

The JLL data predicts that U.S. indoor mall vacancy rates will peak at just under 9 per cent this year compared to 7.8 percent for outdoor shopping centers and 7 per cent for “power centers”, industry code for open-air centers anchored by big box retailers like Best Buy or Target.

Experts say that a deeper change is underway, with property owners focusing investment on open air locations and smaller stores in cheaper locations where shoppers can feel more at ease in the post-COVID-19 world.

“The demand for space right now is higher than I’ve seen it in 15 years,” said David Lukes, chief executive officer of SITE Centers, who runs over a hundred power and shopping centers.

Deals done or underway with retailers include Macy’s, Lululemon Athletica, Bed Bath and Beyond, Warby Parker and Walmart’s Bonobos.

In Chicago, for example, Macy’s has shut its sprawling store in the Water Tower Place building on Michigan Avenue’s “Magnificen­t Mile”, a magnet for thousands of shoppers and tourists every weekend for the past half century.

The company is turning to modest buildings like its new “Market by Macy’s”, set on a canal-side lot in Fort Worth, Texas and flanked by a steakhouse and a branch of Wells Fargo.

In 2009, vacancy rates for the more downmarket properties peaked at 11 per cent while malls still showed rates of just 5 per cent.

But for Macy’s and others, the cost reward has become compelling: average annual rent for shopping centers in the first quarter of the year was $20.36 per square foot, as little as a third of the cost of big city center malls.

At Magnificen­t Mile, vacancy more than doubled to over 8 per cent currently from 4 per cent in late 2019. Rents fell by 2.5 per cent over the past year to a still very high $62.30, according to industry data provider CoStar.

Alexander Levy, senior consultant at CoStar, said shopping centers in suburban areas have fared better than malls in urban areas since U.S. pandemic-related restrictio­ns began to ease in the first quarter.

Signet, Ethan Allen Interiors and Express are among those to have opened stores in suburban areas, ranging from the suburbs of San Mateo, California and Southlake to smaller towns like Westport, Connecticu­t and Towson, Maryland.

“We are experienci­ng the migration to the suburbs right now,” said Conor Flynn, chief executive of U.S. investment trust Kimco Realty, which owns nearly 400 open-air shopping centres and complexes based around grocery stores.

“I’m cautiously optimistic that the lion’s share of what we’ve experience­d is sticky.”

City center landlords have responded by turning some city malls into mixed use retail and residentia­l buildings.

In Britain, Intu, owner of Manchester’s Trafford Centre shopping that called in the administra­tors last year, said they had applied for permission to use its outdoor space for events, food stalls and an urban beach.

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