Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Mall owners will pay to reinvent properties

- SARAH MULHOLLAND BLOOMBERG NEWS Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Lauren ColemanLoc­hner of Bloomberg News.

The owner of Newgate Mall plans to pour $500,000 into overhaulin­g the outdated food court in a bid to lure restaurate­urs and hungry shoppers. Rent payments from eateries are never going to recoup the renovation costs, but for landlord Time Equities Inc., that’s not the point. The point is survival.

The work is part of an effort to breathe new life into the entire 718,000-squarefoot center and increase foot traffic, according to Ami Ziff, director of national retail at New York-based Time Equities. The company, which bought Newgate in Ogden, Utah, from GGP Inc. for $69.5 million last year, is one of many landlords wagering that elaborate makeovers will keep them competitiv­e as they reinvent their properties in the age of Amazon.

Costs are escalating as mall owners work to keep their real estate up to date and fill the void left by failing stores. The companies are turning to everything from restaurant­s and bars to mini-golf courses and rock-climbing gyms to draw in customers who appear more interested in being entertaine­d during a trip to the mall than they are in buying clothes and electronic­s. The new tenants will pay higher rents than struggling chains such as Macy’s and Sears, in the hope they will attract more traffic for retailers at the property, according to Haendel St. Juste, an analyst at Mizuho Securities USA LLC.

“The math is pretty obvious, pretty compelling, but there are risks,” St. Juste said in an interview. “This hasn’t been done before on a broad scale.”

It’s more costly to build and maintain large, customized spaces that require extensive updates such as commercial kitchens, according to St. Juste. Landlords’ capital expenditur­es — including repairs, remodeling and leasing costs — are rising relative to the income being generated by retail properties.

As the retail business evolves, such capital expenditur­es will become more crucial in assessing property values, according to Green Street Advisors LLC, a real estate research firm. Many investors aren’t adequately accounting for the rising costs of maintainin­g a mall, Green Street said in its annual outlook in January. The real question is whether this is a temporary blip, or a new normal, according to Cedrik Lechance, an analyst at the Newport Beach, Calif.-based firm.

More than a dozen retailers have gone bankrupt this year as the shift toward online shopping accelerate­s. Even healthy companies are shuttering hundreds of locations. As many as 13,000 stores are forecast to close next year, compared with 4,000 in 2016, according to brokerage Cushman & Wakefield Inc.

Many landlords have been proactive in reclaiming space from weaker tenants to fill with more profitable ones. Chicago-based GGP, the No. 2 U.S. mall owner, has bought back 115 department stores over the past six years and redevelope­d them, Chief Executive Officer Sandeep Mathrani said last month during the National Associatio­n of Real Estate Investment Trust’s annual conference in New York. The new tenant roster at those malls includes Best Buy and Nordstrom stores, restaurant-arcade chain Dave & Buster’s and health club Life Time Fitness, he said.

“We’ve actually made a very, very big statement by saying that over the next five years, we hope to recapture another 100 department stores,” Mathrani said.

Department stores, the heart of suburban malls for decades, have been particular­ly hard hit by changing consumer tastes, leaving gaping holes in their wake. The departure of a center’s anchor tenant can easily spur an overhaul of the entire property.

“If Sears shuts down, you need to reinvent that part of the mall,” said Green Street’s Lechance. “Typically, when you reinvent one part of the mall, you redevelop the whole mall.

Whether the damage was caused by physical drift, inversion or misapplica­tion by the farmer is still being determined, he said.

Sen. Jonathan Dismang, RBeebe, an accountant who is Senate president pro tempore, questioned how the Plant Board could recommend a ban without knowing how many acres have been damaged or how much yield loss farmers could face.

Walker said it takes two to three weeks before symptoms of dicamba damage become apparent, and that yield losses will be determined by damage that remains on plants once they bloom, or reach their reproducti­ve stages. Most Arkansas soybeans haven’t reached that stage, he said.

Some farmers planted soybeans later than others and some, especially in northeast Arkansas, had to replant their beans because of floods and heavy rains in late April and early May, Walker said.

The meeting Friday of the House and Senate agricultur­e committees will be in Room A of the Multi-Agency Complex, just west of the Capitol building’s northern entrance. The executive subcommitt­ee will meet in room 205 of the Capitol.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States