Ghost Malls: Coming to Your Town
By James Quinn,
a certified public accountant
and a certified cash manager
Advertisements:
The illustration of Old West ghost towns is
something that every American can relate to. During the great gold
rush of the mid 1800’s in California, Nevada, and Wyoming towns
sprung up out of nowhere to support the gold mining efforts of those
looking to strike it rich. General stores, bars, hotels, and jails
appeared out of nowhere based on demand from delusional prospectors
hoping to hit the jackpot. Thousands of malls emerged throughout
suburban America in the last twenty years as delusional shoppers
thought they could spend their way to prosperity and achievement.
Both delusions will end in the same manner.
When the gold rush ended as quickly as it started,
the artificial demand collapsed and the towns were abandoned. These
ghost towns sat vacant for decades, slowly decaying and rotting
away. As you drive around today, you notice more and more For
Lease signs on vacant retail buildings. Strip malls, inhabited
by mom and pop stores, karate studios, pizza joints, and video stores
have felt the initial onslaught of consumer deleveraging. As the
pace of retailer collapse accelerates in 2009, larger malls will
begin to go dark. Once bustling centers of conspicuous consumption
and material decadence, built upon a foundation of consumer debt,
will become ghost malls. Decaying, rotting malls inhabited by rats,
wild dogs, and homeless former retail employees, will be a blight
on the suburban landscape for decades.
For the last twenty years, the American consumers
have carried the burden of the world on their broad shoulders. This
has been a heavy yoke, but when you take steroids it doesn’t seem
so heavy. The steroid of choice for American consumers was debt.
They have utilized home equity loans, cash out refinancing, credit
card debt, and auto loans to live far above their means. It has
been a wild ride, but the journey is over. They can’t score steroids
from their dealers (banks) anymore. The pseudo-wealth created in
the last twenty years has begun to unwind, and will increase in
speed in 2009.
Average Americans, who saw their faux paper wealth
growing rapidly as their home values increased, took advantage of
this by refinancing their mortgages and extracting the equity from
their homes and spending it. They mined $3 trillion of equity out
of their houses. This spending of seed corn led to the vast majority
of GDP growth between 2000 and 2007.
Source: John Mauldin
Major banks offered credit cards using your home
equity as a way to pay everyday expenses like groceries, cigarettes,
beer, gas and clothes. Eating your house was never so easy. The
enormous amount of excess home sales and equity extraction led to
titanic demand for home furnishings, remodeling services, appliances,
electronic gadgets, BMWs, and exotic vacations. This led to immense
expansion plans by retail and restaurant chains based on extrapolation
of this false demand.
A permanent psychological change has occurred in
American consumers. They have lost $30 trillion in value from their
homes and investments in the last few years. No amount of fiscal
stimulation will reverse this psychological trauma. The savings
rate will increase from 0% to at least 8%. Mike Shedlock recently
described the state of affairs.
Peak credit has been reached. That final wave
of consumer recklessness created the exact conditions required
for its own destruction. The housing bubble orgy was the last
hurrah. It is not coming back and there will be no bigger bubble
to replace it. Consumers and banks have both been burnt, and attitudes
have changed.
Now the impact of a retrenching consumer will be
felt far and wide, from Des Moines to Shanghai. Consumer spending
has accounted for 72% of GDP. It will revert to at least the long
term mean of 65%. David Rosenberg, the brilliant economist from
Merrill Lynch, describes
what will happen:
This is an epic event; we're talking about
the end of a 20-year secular credit expansion that went absolutely
parabolic from 2001-2007. Before the US economy can truly begin
to expand again, the savings rate must rise to pre-bubble levels
of 8%, that the US housing stocks must fall to below eight months'
supply, and that the household interest coverage ratio must fall
from 14% to 10.5%. It's important to note what sort of surgery
that is going to require. We will probably have to eliminate $2
trillion of household debt to get there, this will happen either
through debt being written off, as major financial institutions
continue to do, or for consumers themselves to shrink their own
balance sheets.
Source: John Mauldin
Every major retailer in the United States has built
its expansion plans on an assumption that American consumers would
continue to spend at an unsustainable rate. One basic truth that
never changes is that an unsustainable trend will not be sustained.
That crucial assumption error will lead to the bankruptcy of any
retailer that financed its expansion with excessive debt. Warren
Buffett’s wisdom will be borne out:
Only when the tide goes out do you discover
who’s been swimming naked.
There are at least 1.1 million retail stores in
the United States according to the Census Bureau. There are approximately
1,100 malls in the United States, not counting thousands of strip
centers. These numbers will be considerably lower by 2011. ICSC
chief economist Michael Niemira explained, "In the midst of
all this doom and gloom, it's hard to imagine it getting better...
But keep in mind, what happens in strong downturns is there's a
hefty pent-up demand. It's wrong to extrapolate these conditions
for the next year or two." Mr. Niemira will be wrong this time.
There is no pent-up demand. If the phrase unpent-up
demand existed, it would apply today. Americans have bought everything
they’ve desired for the last twenty years. There is no pent-up demand
if you own 20 pairs of jeans and 60 pairs of shoes. The over-spending
and over-leverage will take a decade to unwind.
Source: Mike Shedlock
According to the ICSC, about 150,000 stores are
anticipated to shut down in 2009, which adds to the 150,000 that
closed in 2008 and 135,000 in 2007. Normally, 110,000 to 125,000
new stores open per year. At least 700,000 retail jobs will be lost.
The opening of new stores will grind to a halt in 2009. Some major
retailers that have closed or will close include: Circuit City -728
stores; Linens N Things - 500 stores; Bombay Company- 384 stores;
Sharper Image-184 stores; Foot Locker (FL) -140; Pacific Sunwear
- 153. Other large retailers are closing underperforming stores
and scaling back expansion plans. By 2011, at least 15% of the existing
retail base will have gone to retail heaven. With the amount of
vacant stores likely to reach in excess of 200,000 and vacancy rates
of new malls already at 28%, there will be no need for the construction
of new stores for many years.
Most of the retailers that are closing, lease their locations from mall developers like General Growth Properties (GGP), Simon Properties (SPG), Mills Corp. (MLS), Pennsylvania REIT (PEI), Vornado Realty Trust (VNO). These developers have a quadruple whammy hitting them in 2009. Many borrowed heavily to finance massive mall expansion. The terms of these loans were generally five to seven years. The Wall Street whiz kids and their CDO machine generated the vast preponderance of financing in the last five years. According to commercial real estate expert Andy Miller, the collapse will come more rapidly than the residential collapse.
By contrast, in the commercial world, the
properties are fewer and much bigger. For example, you may have
ten properties in a commercial pool that ultimately works its
way into CDOs. Those loans are huge. You may have a shopping center
loan in there for $25 million and an office building loan for
$30 million dollars. As a result, if you have a default on just
one of those loans, you can effectually wipe out all of the subordinate
tranches. And that is why when you see the problems begin to appear
on the commercial front, it's going to be a much quicker sort
of devolution than we saw on the residential side. In the commercial
world, most of the financing that happened outside of the apartment
business was done by conduits, and there are no more conduits
left, and conduits were doing the stupidest loans you could find.
They were doing an advertised 80% loan-to-value, which was usually
more closely aligned to a 100% loan-to-value. They were dealing
with no coverage. They were all non-recourse loans. Many of them
were interest-only loans. Those loans are now gone. You can't
refinance them, and if you could, the terms would be onerous.
Source: Mike Shedlock
Billions of debt needs to be refinanced in the next
two years and there is no one willing to make those loans. The major
mall developers are so terrified they have made an all out press
to get their fair share of the TARP. As retailers go bankrupt, vacancy
rates have reached 9.4% for shopping centers, according to CoStar
Group. With virtually no demand, rental income is plunging. With
cap rates eroding and operating expenses going up, a perfect storm
will hit mall developers in 2009.
The negative feedback loop will accelerate as the
year progresses and will spiral out of control by late 2009 and
early 2010. The negative feedback loop will lead to major developer
bankruptcies and ultimately to Ghost Malls, particularly in the
outer suburbs. The positive feedback loop that got us here, made
people feel wealthy, smart, and overconfident. It was awesome! The
negative feedback loop is going to suck. The collapse of developers
will result in more major write-offs by regional banks that financed
their expansion. This go around, many smaller regional banks will
feel the major pain. The U.S. taxpayer will be required to step
up to the plate again and assume financial responsibility for their
own lack of spending. Talk about screwed if you do, screwed if you
don’t.
Mall owners and commercial developers are on the
brink of bankruptcy. Commercial developer CB Richard Ellis (CBG)
didn’t sound too optimistic in a recent 10Q filing:
We are highly leveraged and have significant
debt service obligations. Although our management believes that
the incurrence of long-term indebtedness has been important in
the development of our business, including facilitating our acquisitions
of Insignia and Trammell Crow Company, the cash flow necessary
to service this debt is not available for other general corporate
purposes, which may limit our flexibility in planning for, or
reacting to, changes in our business and in the commercial real
estate services industry. Notwithstanding the actions described
above, however, our level of indebtedness and the operating and
financial restrictions in our debt agreements both place constraints
on the operation of our business.
As Americans realize that they don’t “need” a $5 Starbucks latte, IKEA knickknacks, Jimmy Choo shoes, Rolex watches, granite counters, and stainless steel appliances, our mall centric world will end. Major mall anchor retailers Macy's (M), JC Penney (JCP), and Sears (SHLD) are in for a heap of trouble in the next few years. As low prices become the only factor that drives retail sales, retailers will have minimal profits in the future, further restricting expansion and renovations.
Mall developer General Growth Properties, which
owns or operates 200 malls, added $4 billion of debt in the last
three years and is teetering on the brink of bankruptcy. Simon Properties,
which owns or operates 320 malls, added $3 billion of debt in the
last three years and will be greatly affected by the coming downturn.
Many smaller developers will be in even more dire straits. With
shrinking cash flow, looming debt refinancing, and dim prospects
for a resumption of conspicuous consumption, Mall developers are
destined for a bleak future. Picture Clint Eastwood from his spaghetti
western days riding a horse through the middle of your local mall
with tumbleweeds blowing past the vacant KB Toys and Victoria's
Secret.
Source: seekingalpha.com/article/115466-ghost-malls-coming-to-your-town?source=wildcard
Published - January 2009
|