Toronto Star

Nordstrom’s new flagship, NYC, a bet on company’s future

Retailer aiming at a smaller variant of ‘hub-and-spoke’ concept with Nordstrom Local

- PAUL ROBERTS

In just over two months, Nordstrom executives and other luminaries will descend on midtown Manhattan to christen one of the largest, most ambitious projects in the company’s 118-year history: a seven-storey women’s store on West 57th St., in the heart of one of the most important markets for highend shopping in the U.S. The Nordstrom NYC Flagship, as it’s officially known, will boast 320,000 square feet of floor space with “curated” designer collection­s of women’s apparel, accessorie­s, shoes, children’s wear and beauty and home products.

Years in the making, the new store comes with a large price tag — more than $500 million (U.S.), according to some reports — but even larger expectatio­ns. Both inside and outside the company, the Manhattan flagship is seen as the crowning piece in a seven-year campaign to remake one of the oldest names in high-end retail.

But with Nordstrom’s recent struggles, those expectatio­ns will be even greater. The Seattle-base retailer has been hit hard by falling sales and disappoint­ing earnings —and some analysts expect more downbeat news when the company issues its second-quarter financial results on Aug. 21.

Since November, the company’s share price has fallen by more than half, to $25.32 on Friday. That’s its lowest in 10 years — a decade during which the S&P index for the retail sector has more than doubled. Management tensions have risen. Reports last month suggested that some board members want to replace the Nordstrom brothers, Erik and Pete, who have led the retailer since the death of their elder brother Blake in January, even as the Nordstrom family has revived efforts to regain a majority share of the company.

Meanwhile, the closing of underperfo­rming stores — most recently, at Seattle’s own Northgate Mall — though cheered by analysts as necessary strategica­lly, has added to an outward image of a oncegreat retail empire in retreat.

Against such a tumultuous backdrop, the New York flagship opening has taken on outsized significan­ce. A successful debut will be counted as welcome evidence that Nordstrom has not only stanched the bleeding, but has finally cracked the code for high-end retailing in a digital era; a lacklustre opening will add to doubts about the retailer’s turnaround strategy.

“A lot rests on their flagship store,” said Camilla Yanushevsk­y, a retail analyst at CFRA Research.

Nordstrom officials declined to be interviewe­d for this story, but the company responded to some queries via email.

Some of what ails Nordstrom is relatively simple. The retailer has acknowledg­ed a series of “executiona­l misses” this year, among them, a botched upgrade of its customer loyalty program and mistakes in stores’ merchandis­ing mix. Industry analysts say such errors are readily correctabl­e — and Nordstrom itself says fixes are already underway.

Other problems will take longer to set right, in part because solving them has required a complete rethink of much of the Nordstrom strategy.

Nordstrom became a national brand by perfectly melding impeccable customer service and quality merchandis­e for a middle-class consumer who aspired to dress like an upperclass one. But that model was upended by online disrupters, but also by a consumer who has been increasing­ly happy to trade the “experience” of the full-line department store for the discounts and convenienc­e of online shopping. Nordstrom was among the first of the major department stores to see this digital wave as a threat, but also an opportunit­y. The company launched Nordstrom.com in 1998, just three years after Amazon began selling online, and has laboured ever since to adapt to the whims of these more fluid digital shoppers with everything from mobile shopping to online-only brands to social media influencer­s. Most important, the company has invested heavily to embed its vast physical fleet — currently, 118 full-line stores and 248 off-price Rack stores —into a digital “ecosystem” that, if successful, will not merely survive in the online marketplac­e, but carve out a large, profitable piece of it.

Rolled out last year in Los Angeles, Nordstrom’s largest market, this new model will offer a retail variation on the hub-andspoke concept: “destinatio­n” flagship stores in high-traffic, upscale shopping locations and a network of smaller, serviceonl­y stores, dubbed Nordstrom Local. Located in outlying neighbourh­oods, the Local stores serve as intermedia­ries between Nordstrom’s brickand-mortar presence and its large online market: At Local stores, shoppers can pick up, try on and return items ordered online (and delivered the same day, thanks to a hyper-efficient supply chain), and get tailoring and other services in VIP “styling suites.”

By blending upscale service with the convenienc­e of a neighbourh­ood setting, the Local concept gives consumers “the best of both worlds,” says Oliver Chen, a retail analyst with Cowen Research.

This hybrid model is showing promise in keeping bricks-andmortar relevant: One in three Los Angeles customers who buy online use a physical store to learn about the product they’re buying.

Yet, even as Nordstrom prepares to crown this best-ofboth-worlds strategy with its Manhattan flagship, there is no shortage of questions about the new model’s broader direction.

For example, Nordstrom is betting heavily on female shoppers with upscale tastes, with an emphasis on glossy women’s stores and “high-low” assortment­s that might run from a $100 pair of Nikes to a $2,500 Gucci handbag. But some analysts worry that the today’s apparel market is actually moving in the opposite direction.

Some of retail’s strongest recent growth has come in men’s apparel, says Yanushevsk­y, the CFRA analyst. Nordstrom itself has acknowledg­ed that women’s apparel has “continued to have the toughest results” in its full-price division.

Analysts also worry about the emphasis on higher-end purchases. So far in 2019, Nordstrom’s hoped-for “price point assortment” of $50 to $200 is “not resonating with customers,” notes Matthew R. Boss, a retail analyst with J.P. Morgan. Advertisin­g One problem is that Nordstrom’s traditiona­l market has splintered, says Neil Saunders, an analyst with GlobalData. Many midmarket customers have gravitated toward discounter­s: That’s one reason why Nordstrom’s Rack is now generating a third of the company’s total sales, and why offprice competitor­s like Ross and TJ Maxx are booming. Meanwhile, customers looking for Gucci and other higher-margin “strategic” brands are just as likely to buy directly from the brands themselves, Saunders adds.

While there is still a Nordstrom customer who wants “super-premium” products, Saunders says, there simply may not be enough of these shoppers to fill Nordstrom’s large physical stores. “You can’t operate a massive department store off really super premium” purchases, Saunders says. “It’s very niche.”

Such concerns go to the heart of the Nordstrom’s flagship model: Can these stores generate enough revenue to justify their large costs?

That question seems especially relevant for the soon-to-beopen women’s store in ultraprice­y Manhattan. (A men’s store opened, across 57th street, in 2018.) Although Nordstrom officials have touted the store as “a growth driver,” Yanushevsk­y says, “we question the return on investment given the current softness in women’s apparel.” Nordstrom contends that such landmark stores in locations like New York, Los Angeles and even Seattle deliver returns that go well beyond instore sales, because these cities act as “destinatio­ns” for out-ofarea shoppers and tourists.

And New York City is unquestion­ably a shopper’s paradise: Even without a flagship, it is already Nordstrom’s biggest online market. Adding a flagship store and two Local stores — in the West Village and the Upper Eastside — will give the retailer “tons of exposure to a vast shopper base,” says Thomas Dobrowski, an expert on retail real estate with Newmark Knight Frank.

Yet, even the Big Apple is no guarantee of retail success, in part because stores must generate huge sales simply to cover the high real estate costs. As Yanushevsk­y notes, recent retail departures from New York City have included a number of high-end players, among them, Lord & Taylor, Calvin Klein, Ralph Lauren and Henri Bendel.

Some analysts worry that the today’s apparel market is actually moving in the opposite direction

 ?? BETTINA HANSEN TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE ?? Nordstrom’s flagship is seen as the crowning piece in a seven-year campaign to remake one of the oldest names in high-end retail.
BETTINA HANSEN TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE Nordstrom’s flagship is seen as the crowning piece in a seven-year campaign to remake one of the oldest names in high-end retail.

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