By Suzanne Kapner
Retailers' preferred solution for empty stores may only be
adding to their problems, according to new research and industry
executives.
Retail chains have announced thousands of closures this year
after closing a record number of stores last year, as the pandemic
crimps demand for nonessential items and shopping continues to
migrate online.
The hope is that by cutting expenses associated with physical
locations, the chains can become more profitable and start growing
sales again as customer purchases shift to their remaining
locations and websites. But that rarely happens, according to new
research and interviews with industry executives.
"Closing stores isn't going to solve a retailer's underlying
problems," said Stephen Sadove, the former chief executive of Saks
Inc. "You have to look at why the stores aren't performing. What is
their competitive advantage and their reason for being?"
Even before the pandemic, retailers were closing stores at a
record pace. U.S. chains announced the closure of 9,275 outlets
last year, the most since Coresight Research Inc. began tracking
the figures in 2012. The tally exceeds 8,000 stores so far this
year, according to Coresight.
The health of the industry will be on display this week as
chains from Walmart Inc. to Macy's Inc. report quarterly earnings,
with the holiday shopping season already under way. Chains began
offering Black-Friday-type discounts in October, instead of waiting
until the traditional day after Thanksgiving.
Retailers that closed stores in recent years often continued to
shrink, sometimes to the point of disappearing altogether,
according to research from Citigroup Inc. and BMO Capital Markets.
The firms looked at roughly a dozen retailers that announced major
store closings in recent years, including Macy's, J.C. Penney Co.,
Abercrombie & Fitch Co. and L Brands Inc.
An Abercrombie spokeswoman said the company still believes in
stores, but they need to be the right size and in the right
location. As its digital business has grown, the retailer remains
committed to reducing its square footage, but continues to open
smaller stores, she said.
Macy's, Penney and L Brands declined to comment.
"No retailer ever announces one round of store cuts -- it's
always the precursor to a store bleed," said Simeon Siegel, a BMO
senior analyst. "Most companies we looked at had lower revenue and
profit than before they started closing stores."
Two exceptions were Nike Inc. and American Eagle Outfitters Inc.
Mr. Siegel said the two companies closed stores more as part of a
normal pruning of undesirable locations, rather than the mass
closures of other chains.
Nike didn't respond to a request for comment. An American Eagle
spokeswoman said the chain's fleet is largely profitable, but it
continues to evaluate and reposition stores as part of its ongoing
strategy.
Mr. Siegel said the problem is often not that chains have too
many stores, but that they have diluted their brand with too many
discounts. A healthier approach would be to sell fewer items and
charge more for them, he said. The result would be a smaller, but
more profitable company.
That didn't work for Penney, which scaled back discounts under
previous management only to watch shoppers flee. Other brands,
including Coach and Ralph Lauren, are having more success weaning
customers off promotions. But it isn't easy to do in a world where
retailers are rewarded by investors for growing sales, Mr. Siegel
said.
In his view, Wall Street's focus on sales growth contributed to
the overstoring of America over the past half-century. "All a
retailer had to do was open a new store," Mr. Siegel said. "It
became more important to be bigger, not better."
The rise of e-commerce put an end to the store-opening
juggernaut. As consumers bought more online, they visited physical
stores less, making them less productive and more costly to
operate. That led chains to close hundreds of locations with the
hopes of stabilizing profits. For some, the strategy hastened their
decline.
"When you look at all the retailers that are closing stores now,
it's easy to forget that so many have tried this in the past and
they aren't around anymore," Citigroup analyst Paul Lejuez
said.
Retailers cast store closings as a necessary fix, and sometimes
their businesses are under so much pressure they don't have a
choice.
"We believe this is an important step, a good step for the
long-term health and profitability of the business," L Brands
finance chief Stuart Burgdoerfer told analysts in August about
plans to close 250 Victoria's Secret stores this year.
Mr. Burgdoerfer said Victoria's Secret expects to recapture
roughly 30% to 40% of sales from shuttered locations, as shoppers
transfer their purchases to a nearby outlet or the internet. The
lion's share will go to other stores in the chain, he said, with
only 5% expected to be reclaimed online.
In many cases, though, a purchase is lost for good.
Tommia Hayes said she is shopping less at Forever 21, Gap and
Foot Locker since they closed stores near her Washington, D. C.,
home in recent years.
"When I walk by a store and see a cute display in the window,
that makes me want to go inside," said Ms. Hayes, who works for a
health-care nonprofit. "If the store isn't there, I'll just go
someplace else."
Real-estate executives said shoppers typically won't travel more
than three to five miles to a store, although that can vary
depending whether they live in a rural or urban area and on the
type of retailer.
"I call it the 20-minute rule," said Jim Bieri, a principal of
Stokas Bieri Real Estate, a Detroit-based broker. "Once it's
farther than 20 minutes, people won't come."
William McComb, who closed stores as CEO of Fifth & Pacific
Cos. -- which at the time owned Kate Spade, Juicy Couture and Lucky
Brand Jeans -- said when a store closes shoppers don't always move
online. In fact, e-commerce sales can suffer unless retailers have
spent to build a web presence, he said.
"Stores are a demand-generation machine," Mr. McComb said.
"Consumers don't automatically go to your website. It's very
expensive to get the eyeballs."
The risk of shrinking-to-grow -- which is how some retailers
describe their store-closing strategies -- is that chains aren't
always able to cut enough costs to offset the lost sales and shore
up profit margins, analysts and executives said.
"The money saved from closing stores ends up being deployed on
marketing, " BMO's Mr. Siegel said.
As a result, he said, marketing costs, which historically
averaged around 3% of sales, have inched up to about 4.5% of sales
for the bricks-and-mortar chains that he follows. For online brands
that have few if any stores, marketing can average upward of 15% of
sales, he said.
"The argument of the past 15 years has been that e-commerce has
diminished the need for stores," Mr. Siegel continued. "But every
company that has embarked on massive store closings has simply
gotten smaller."
Write to Suzanne Kapner at Suzanne.Kapner@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
November 15, 2020 05:44 ET (10:44 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2020 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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