To: LLCF  who wrote (398 ) 6/22/2012 9:10:01 AM From: Smiling Bob     Read Replies (1)  | Respond to    of 442  I mostly follow from a retailing and macro perspective, so I'd be the wrong person to ask as far as financing It's all locality based. As a whole, doesn't looking promising and I would avoid like the plaque. ------ Get used to your crummy shopping center 		Commentary: Retailers don’t want to be anywhere near the have-nots 	 	                                                      By Al Lewis                                                                        DENVER (MarketWatch) — If there’s a crummy shopping center in your neighborhood, it will probably only get crummier.                                                                         That’s Don Wood’s take, anyway. He is the chief executive officer of Federal Realty Investment Trust                  				    (NYSE:FRT) 			      , a 50-year-old real estate investment trust with nearly 20 million  square feet of un-crummy retail space in affluent cities on both coasts  and some hoity-toity places in between.                                                                         “How many times have you passed something in your own neighborhood and  asked ‘why don’t they do something about that eyesore?’” Wood said at  the National Association of Real Estate Editors’ conference in Denver on  Wednesday. “Why do things stay crummy year in and year out, and why  will they stay crummy year in and year out?”                                                                                       Al Lewis                           Don Wood says retailers are fleeing any place that isn’t doing fine already.                                           The nation is increasingly dotted with unsightly boxes that used to be  Circuit City, Borders and Best Buy stores. Nobody has written a book  called “101 Uses For A Used Blockbuster.” And there are only so many  churches, tanning salons and “We Buy Gold” stores to fill these  deteriorating spaces.                                                                         “I’m 51 years old,” said Wood. “I have never seen a period of time where  the split between the haves and the have-nots is as wide as it is  today.”                                                                         How this gap plays out in retail real estate should be obvious: It  hardly makes economic sense to pour millions of dollars into a mall for  the have-nots.                                                                         “Redevelopment is more likely to happen in places that don’t really need it,” said Wood. “In places that are great already.”                                                                         Nevertheless, almost every city official in the nation wants to turn  their local retail blights into lovely mixed-use monoliths with fancy  stores and restaurants on ground floors and pricey lofts and condos  upstairs. This simply isn’t going to work without a high density of  upper-income households, Wood said, and in places where it will work,  the development process takes years.                                                                         Redeveloping old shopping centers is complicated enough already.  Sometimes a shopping center owner leases the land beneath the buildings  and would have to give up a big chunk of the revenues any redevelopment  would bring. And sometimes local governing authorities are too difficult  to work with. But the biggest hurdle is often just dealing with  tenants.                                        				 	 					                                                              Click to Play                                                         						 					 																 					Advertising sector counts cost of world slowdown 					 						Ad spending is slowing in parts of Europe, advertising executives  and analysts say, a sign of weaker consumer spending and caution on the  part of businesses as the euro-zone crisis bites. WSJ's Sam Schechner  discusses. Photo: Reuters 					  				                                        Tenants call the shots at almost any struggling retail center. A  developer has to appease them or risk losing what little revenue is  left. And tenants are often more concerned about rising rents than any  benefits improvements might bring.                                                                         So what we see in retail development is just another chapter in the tale  of two economies. Those living in places such as Boston, New York,  Washington and Silicon Valley don’t really see the decay that most other  American shoppers will have to live with for decades to come.                                                                         “You talk to people like that,” said Wood, “and those people are saying ‘what recession?’...There is a giant chasm.”                                                                         The nation’s most successful retailers are scrambling to open stores in  the areas that are doing well, and running away from places that are  not. This is another trend Wood said he has not seen in his long career,  and it will add to the downward spiral of any struggling city.  Meantime, his company, staying focused on the high end, has delivered 44  years of consecutive dividend increases for its shareholders.                                                                         I often wonder why we don’t see more headlines about a retail real  estate crisis after four years of stubbornly high unemployment and a  foreclosure crisis that shows few signs of abating.                                                                         “It should have been worse,” Wood told me after his presentation. “The  reality is that much of the economy in this country is very concentrated  in a few places. The power and the resiliency of those economies  buffers us.”                                                                         Meantime, investment dollars keep flooding into the U.S., seeking safety  as every place else in the world gets worse, Wood said. The affluent  U.S. cities that have access to this capital will keep seeing  ever-grander shopping paradises. The rest should just get comfortable  with their local eyesore.                                                                         “It’s more likely that it will just stay there,” said Wood, “and get  worse and worse and worse over the next 20 years.”                                                                                               				        	  	 	            			Copyright © 2012 MarketWatch, Inc.  All rights reserved.  			By using this site, you agree to the  Terms of Service   			and  Privacy Policy - UPDATED 10/18/2011 . 		  	  		       Intraday Data provided by SIX Telekurs and subject to  terms of use .  Historical and current end-of-day data provided by SIX Telekurs.  Intraday data delayed per exchange requirements. Dow Jones Indexes (SM)  from Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All quotes are in local exchange  time. Real time last sale data provided by NASDAQ. More information on  NASDAQ traded symbols   and their current financial status. 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