Tuesday, June 16, 2015

Gap Store Closures Mean Dark Times Ahead For America's Worst Malls

As America’s biggest mall clothing store dramatically scales back its business, struggling malls across the country will take a hit.

Justin Sullivan / Getty Images

Gap, the quintessential mall clothing store, plans to close 25% of its full-price stores in North America in the next few years, and the move spells trouble for the country's worst malls.

The company, which said yesterday that it will close 140 Gap brand stores this year and 175 in coming years, told investors today that it's paying about $40 million to buy out a number of leases instead of waiting for them to expire. It also noted that competitors will snatch up much of the $300 million in annual sales that it's giving up with the closures.

But — and here's the very bad news for America's least productive malls — the company would rather take those hits than stick around in stores that CEO Art Peck says "hadn't been touched in years" and "did not handle the product in the appropriate way."

"It positions the remaining fleet to be in the right real estate where Gap brands should be," Peck said.

Joe Raedle / Getty Images

While Gap hasn't specified where it will close stores, the announcement underscores the fact that America's malls have become increasingly bifurcated in the past decade.

At the highest end, retailers fight for space in what analysts refer to as "A" malls, home to brands like Apple and Tiffany & Co. that lure educated, wealthy shoppers. Lower down the list, C and D malls (where D means "dead") are suffering from declining foot traffic, sputtering sales and the exit of national retailers.

More than 200 U.S. malls are considered C or below and face the greatest risk of closing during the next several years, according to a January report from research firm Green Street Advisors. The company counted about 700 A and B malls in the same report.

Jeff Kiwan, global president of the Gap brand, said in a separate presentation that eliminating unattractive full-price stores will make it easier for his team to rehabilitate the Gap brand.

Gap, the namesake brand for a company that also owns Old Navy, Banana Republic, Intermix and Athleta, posted its 16th straight month of comparable sales declines last month. Gap has disappointed customers in the past two years with drab colors and and styles and received few accolades for its somewhat baffling "Dress Normal" marketing campaign last fall.

While the company is shrinking its base of full-price Gap stores, it's keeping all its outlet stores open. Once the closures are complete, Gap will operate 500 regular locations and 300 outlets.


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