The Oklahoman

Buyer's remorse: Mall deal implodes as virus shakes retail

- By Joseph Pisani

NEW YORK—The nation' s biggest mall owner is backing out of a $3.6 billion deal to buy a major rival as the coronaviru­s pandemic shakes the retail industry.

It is the second major retail deal signed before the virus hit the U.S. to crumble. The sale of Victoria' s Secret to a private equity group fell apart last month.

Simon Property Group announced it would buy Taubman in early February, just weeks before the Centers f or Disease Control and Prevention announced that a California man was being treated for coronaviru­s, the first known case in the U.S. In March, clothing stores and malls were ordered to close.

The plunge in sales for retailers since then has been unpreceden­ted, particular­ly for those with a heavy presence in malls. J. C. Penney, Neiman Marcus and J.Crew, have all filed for bankruptcy protection this year.

Victoria's Secret moved aggressive­ly into malls at the direction of its parent company's founder Les Wexner, who wanted to push lingerie into the mainstream.

Malls have struggled for years as shopping moved online and consumers grew tired of them. Their plight even inspired a haunting YouTube channel called the Dead Mall Series.

The coronaviru­s has delivered a devastatin­g blow to those that remain and also stores with a big mall footprint.

In malls that have reopened, drinking fountains are disabled or taped off, play areas for kids are closed, and sitting in a food court is done at a distance from other humans.

Retail consultant Jan Rogers Kniffen believes that half of the 1,000 mall sin the U.S. will either close or be unrecogniz­able in two years. Before the pandemic, he expected only 300 to close, and that decline would take place over a decade.

The pandemic has accelerate­d that timeline. CBL, a Chattanoog­a, Tennessee, mall operator with 108 properties, warned this month that it may fail.

On Wednesday, shares of any retail chain with stores in malls plummeted.

Kohl's, Macy's, The Gap and Abercrombi­e & Fitch all slumped sharply.

In its legal complaint Wednesday, Simon said that Taubman is uniquely vulnerable because most of its properties are indoor malls “that many consumers will avoid.” Simon also said in the filing that Taubman had failed to cut costs during the pandemic and instead took on more debt to pay those costs.

Taubm an Centers Inc ., headquarte­red in Bloom field Hills, Michigan, did not respond to a request for comment Wednesday.

Simon, based in Indianapol­is, owns or has a stake in more than 200 properties in the U.S. as of last year. Taubman Centers owns, manages or leases 26 shopping centers in the U.S. and Asia, including The Mall at Short Hills in New Jersey, and Waterside Shops in Naples, Florida.

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