Urban Outfitters’ CEO says the US retail bubble is bursting, just like housing in 2008                                     Marc Bain             8 hours ago                                                               Comments                                                                                                                                 Sign in to like                                                                                                            Reblog on Tumblr                                                                                                                  Email                                                                                                                                                                                                      It’s not a good sign for retail when a top executive in the industry compares things to the 2008 housing-market collapse that  plunged the US economy into a deep recession.
                                On a call with investors yesterday (March 8) to discuss Urban Outfitters’ lackluster results for the quarter—sales grew  less than 2%—CEO  Richard Hayne offered a dim assessment of the retail landscape,  likening its overabundance of stores to the housing market in the  mid-2000s. The threat to the broader economy may not be as dire as the  one posed by housing bubble, but for the retail industry, the  consequences are proving harsh. According to Hayne, ecommerce owns a  good part of the blame.
                                                                                                                           Online sales, he said, are cannibalizing store sales,  reducing foot traffic and eroding margins. The giant physical  footprints retailers such as Urban Outfitters and department stores  built up over years have become a massive financial burden.
                                 Hayne went on:
                                              The US market is oversaturated with retail space, and far too much of that space is occupied by stores selling apparel.
     Retail square feet per capita in the United States is more than six  times that of Europe or Japan. And this doesn’t count digital commerce.  Our industry, not unlike the housing industry, saw too much square  footage capacity added in the 1990s and early 2000s.
     Thousands of new doors opened and rents soared. This created a  bubble, and like housing, that bubble has now burst. We are seeing the  results, doors shuttering and rents retreating. This trend will continue  for the foreseeable future, and may even accelerate.
                                                                                              The glut of stores has also pushed retailers into their  endless cycle of discounts, he said. That reliance on promotions to get customers to shop has been a drag on both retailers’  and brands’ bottom lines.
                                                Chains such as  Macy’s and  J.C. Penney  have been working to correct these problems by shuttering hundreds of  stores. And that may just be the start. A report last year by Green  Street Advisors, a real estate research firm, concluded department  stores would collectively need to shut down  about 800 locations, roughly 20% of the anchor space in malls around the US, to get back to sales productivity levels of 10 years ago.
                                                Retailers such as Gap, J.Crew, and Urban  Outfitters have also struggled to keep stores profitable as shoppers  move online and spend less on apparel.
                                                Stores, of course, aren’t disappearing entirely. But their purpose is in the midst of a shift toward  offering customers experiences, rather than just a place to buy stuff. Shoppers, after all, can just do that online.
                                                                                                
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