Toronto Star

Yorkville helps landlord weather retail apocalypse

First Capital Realty’s tight focus leads to record occupancy

- NATALIE WONG

What retail apocalypse? The head of First Capital Realty Inc. said rents have never been so high or vacancies so low in the shops it owns and operates.

It helps to be the biggest retail landlord in Yorkville, one of Canada’s ritziest shopping districts, and to have much of your real estate in downtown cores, anchored by grocery stores, fitness centres and pharmacies. It’s a profile often overlooked by investors obsessed with the narrative that online shopping is crushing retail, chief executive officer Adam Paul said.

“We’re definitely not representa­tive of the broader retail environmen­t because

our focus is very specialize­d within retail,” Paul, 44, said in an interview at Bloomberg’s Toronto office. “It’s urban focused and it’s necessity-based focus.”

First Capital will benefit from this “super-urban” strategy as Canadian cities densify amid rapid immigratio­n and rising incomes, Paul said. The Toronto-based firm could nearly double its footprint of about 24 million square feet just by redevelopi­ng its existing space, adding residentia­l units or offices, he said.

The company, which is in the process of converting to a real estate investment trust, had record occupancy of 96.8 per cent in the first quarter, while average net rents jumped 2.7 per cent from last year to a record $20.38 per square foot. It has 166 properties, which are valued at $10.1 billion.

In February, the company had an average of 250,000 people living within 5 kilometres of its buildings, with plans to boost that to 300,000.

That includes an investment totalling more than $750 million in Yorkville, a hippie hangout in the 1960s and now a neighbourh­ood of cafes, art galleries and boutiques, including Chanel and Brunello Cucinelli. First Capital plans to boost its investment­s to more than $1 billion on redevelopi­ng its properties there, Paul said.

Yorkville, with more than 700,000 people within five kilometres and thousands more residentia­l units on the way, scores high on the two primary demographi­c metrics the company looks at: population density and household income, Paul said.

“Yorkville is a rare neighbourh­ood where you get both,” he said.

Paul declined to say how much retail rents grew across its Yorkville properties, but noted that rates nearly doubled in the past few years on Yorkville Ave., as more and more luxury retailers became drawn to the area after Chanel moved there.

Malls in the U.S. have seen stores shuttering and chains going into bankruptcy as sales shift online.

The situation has been less dire in Canada, where the retail market isn’t as saturated and higher shipping costs have slowed the rise of e-commerce somewhat.

Still, many traditiona­l outlets in less-dense suburbs are struggling, leading many retail developers to add residentia­l and office components to their sites to drive profits.

Historical­ly, First Capital has sold air rights to other developers to build above its properties.

Now it plans to retain more ownership, making it easy for occupants to shop in its stores.

“There is a number of crossbenef­its that you can enjoy,” Paul said.

First Capital is planning to redevelop sites in Liberty Village, Griffintow­n in Montreal and Mount Royal Village in Calgary. Over the next two years it also expects to sell up to a15 per cent chunk of its portfolio, worth about $1.5 billion, that doesn’t fit its strategy.

Part of the sales will be used to help fund a $742-million share buyback in April, with proceeds going to founding shareholde­r Gazit-Globe Ltd., a Tel Avivbased company whose ownership went to 9.9 per cent from 31.3 per cent.

 ?? RANDY RISLING TORONTO STAR FILE PHOTO ?? Yorkville scores high on the two primary demographi­c metrics that First Capital Realty Inc. considers important: population density and household income.
RANDY RISLING TORONTO STAR FILE PHOTO Yorkville scores high on the two primary demographi­c metrics that First Capital Realty Inc. considers important: population density and household income.

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