The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Recently announced closings just the start

Sales up for holidays, but news still grim for brick-and-mortar stores.

- By Lauren Zumbach and Corilyn Shropshire

The 10,800 stores closed by retailers last year weren’t enough: Just one month into 2020, they have announced plans to close 1,000 more.

“It’s sad; there are a lot of things closing,” said Patti Maher, 57, of Orland Park, Illinois, browsing liquidatio­n sales at Papyrus’ Water Tower Place store in Chicago recently. The greeting card chain is closing all 254 stores after seeking bankruptcy protection in mid-January.

Maher blamed shoppers’ growing reliance on Amazon, saying she still prefers shopping in stores.

“I try to support the little guys, not just big companies,” she said.

The news looks grim for bricksand-mortar stores. But industry experts say it’s more of an evolution than a “retail apocalypse,” and Amazon and Walmart aren’t the only culprits.

Consumers are still spending: Shoppers shelled out $730.2 billion during the 2019 holiday season, according to the National Retail Federation. That’s up 4.1% compared with the same period in 2018. About $167.8 billion of that was spent online, where sales rose 14.6%.

Amid all the closures, retailers have announced plans to open 1,718 stores this year, according to Coresight Research.

Still, with more competitio­n than ever for those dollars, retailers that failed to keep up with changes in the way customers shop or opened too many stores will continue to shrink, industry experts said.

Part of the problem is the U.S. has more stores than it needs, given the popularity of online

shopping, said Craig Johnson, president of retail consulting firm Customer Growth Partners.

“There are too many retail square feet chasing too few customer square feet,” Johnson said.

Home furnishing­s retailer Pier 1 Imports led the way among retailers that announced store closures in January, with up to 450 locations affected, or about half its stores.

Consumer spending on home furnishing­s has been strong. But that’s attracted a lot of new rivals, like online furniture seller Wayfair, HomeGoods and brands doing better with younger consumers, like West Elm, he said.

Bed Bath & Beyond, which said in late January it has closed or plans to close 40 stores, is another home chain getting its “clock cleaned by Amazon and Wayfair,” Johnson said.

There aren’t many items customers can find at Bed Bath & Beyond that they can’t get at other chains, he said.

Mara Glad, who was recently checking out a store closing sale at Pier 1 in Chicago’s Goose Island neighborho­od, said she likes the retailer but rarely makes a special trip, instead turning to Amazon and Wayfair.

As the parent of a 4-yearold and 2-year-old, “it’s just easier,” said Glad, 38, of Chicago.

She’s not alone, said Candace Corlett, president of WSL Strategic Retail. About 40% of consumers WSL surveyed said they aren’t shopping in stores as frequently as they used to.

Instead, they’re choosing to spend money on things that make life easier, whether that means outsourcin­g errands to services like Instacart or enjoying experience­s like dining out or a facial and massage, Corlett said.

“The goal is to create calm,” she said.

Many of the retailers closing shop in recent years have been department stores and specialty apparel retailers found at the mall.

Express said in January it would close 31 stores this year and 35 more next year. Macy’s has invested in upgrading its stronger stores but said this year it would close 28, and J.C. Penney is closing six.

That’s on top of previously announced closures at chains like Sears, which said last year it plans to close 96 Sears and Kmart stores in February, and Gap, which has said it would close 230 stores over the next two years.

All those announceme­nts add up to more than 1,000 stores slated to close, according to real estate research firm CoStar.

“You have a perfect storm where the (retail) landscape changed at the same time a lot of apparel retailers found themselves oversuppli­ed and in too-big spaces,” said Brandon Svec, a CoStar consultant.

Closing or downsizing stores can help retailers get to a more sustainabl­e size. But some still struggle to give shoppers reasons to come back, whether that’s value, convenienc­e or products and experience­s they can’t find elsewhere, analysts said.

Department stores used to be a destinatio­n because they offered a wide range of goods in one place, but they’ve been losing customers as discount and off-price retailers and specialty stores have expanded, said David Swartz, an analyst in the consumer sector at Morningsta­r.

T.J. Maxx, Marshalls and Ross, for instance, added 24, 34 and 90 stores in the

U.S., respective­ly, during the 12 months ending Nov. 2. Activewear brand Lululemon added 19 U.S. stores during the same period.

“The retailers doing better are the ones giving people a reason to go into stores,” he said.

There’s also the challenge of keeping up with shoppers’ ever-shifting tastes and values.

Express, for instance, used to be a destinatio­n for “going out, party” apparel, but shoppers are now gravitatin­g to more casual looks, Johnson said.

Once wardrobe musthaves, Gap and J. Crew also have struggled to keep consumers paying attention, though J. Crew’s Madewell brand has fared better. Even Forever 21, a one-time darling of the “fast fashion” trend, is gasping for air. The company filed for bankruptcy in October and said it would shutter 200 stores, including its now-closed Michigan Avenue and State Street locations in downtown Chicago.

“When the consumers think (certain stores and brands) are hot, it’s hard to maintain that,” said David Weiss, a partner at Chicago-based consulting firm McMillanDo­olittle.

Cultural changes matter, too, experts say. Lingerie brand Victoria’s Secret closed 53 stores last year and canceled its annual televised fashion show, which has generated controvers­y in recent years for the way it portrayed women. The show was an important part of building the brand, but “we’re figuring out how to advance the positionin­g of the brand and best communicat­e that to customers,” Stuart Burgdoerfe­r, chief financial officer of Victoria’s Secret parent company L Brands, said during a call with analysts in November.

Meanwhile, competitor Aerie for American Eagle — with ads that include women of various shapes, sizes, colors and abilities — is growing as it capitalize­s on the #MeToo zeitgeist. Sales at Aerie stores open at least a year were up 20% in the most recent quarter, the brand’s 20th consecutiv­e quarter of growth, according to parent company American Eagle Outfitters.

“Body positivity is popping out everywhere, and Aerie is the front-runner,” Weiss said.

Papyrus, too, missed the mark by failing to keep in touch with consumers, said WSL/Strategic Retail’s Corlett. As card prices went up, consumers lost interest, she said.

“Retail stores have to really stay in touch with people — they have to acknowledg­e the shifting social values,” she said. “The customer mindset is, ‘If it doesn’t apply to me,’ you’re already disappoint­ing them.”

 ?? STACEY WESCOTT / CHICAGO TRIBUNE ?? Bed Bath & Beyond is getting its “clock cleaned by Amazon and Wayfair,” said Craig Johnson, head of retail consulting firm Customer Growth Partners.
STACEY WESCOTT / CHICAGO TRIBUNE Bed Bath & Beyond is getting its “clock cleaned by Amazon and Wayfair,” said Craig Johnson, head of retail consulting firm Customer Growth Partners.

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