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Chitchat US Shopping Malls Struggling Against Online Retail

Pinkieslut

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By ESTHER FUNG
Updated Jan. 24, 2017 10:11 p.m. ET
171 COMMENTS
Mall landlords are increasingly walking away from struggling properties, leaving creditors in the lurch and posing a threat to the values of nearby real estate.

As competition from online retailers batters store owners, some of the largest U.S. landlords are calculating it is more advantageous to hand over ownership to lenders than to attempt to restructure debts on properties with darkening outlooks.

That, in turn, leaves lenders with little choice but to unload the distressed properties at fire-sale prices.

In the period from January to November 2016, 314 loans secured by retail property—totaling about $3.5 billion—were liquidated, 11% more loans than in the same period a year earlier, according to data from Morningstar Credit Ratings. The liquidations resulted in a loss of $1.68 billion.

“We’re seeing a boatload of these kinds of properties coming to market,” said James Hull, managing principal of Augusta, Ga.-based Hull Property Group, which bought five malls from foreclosure sales in 2016. “There have been some draconian losses for the enclosed-mall business.”

The moves are an echo of the housing crash, when mortgage borrowers stopped making payments and walked away from homes that had lost value. In some cases they sent back the keys in envelopes, a practice derided by critics as “jingle mail.”

As mall property values sink below their loan balances, “some mall owners are more aggressively taking the step to walk away,” said Morningstar Credit Ratings Vice President Edward Dittmer.

Washington Prime Group in November said it was considering turning two malls in Grand Junction, Colo., and Lancaster, Ohio, back to its lenders, mostly bondholders who hold the mortgages that have been bundled into securities. The Columbus, Ohio-based landlord also noted in an earnings call that malls it owned in Chesapeake, Va., and Merritt Island, Fla., had been foreclosed on. The value of the mortgages for the four malls was $247.5 million. Washington Prime didn’t respond to requests for comment.

CBL & Associates Properties in 2014 announced plans to prune its portfolio and so far it has unloaded 14 malls, eight of which it sold and six it handed back to lenders. The six malls that CBL returned to lenders had a debt balance totaling $381 million.

The Wausau Center mall in Wausau, Wis., was a bustling regional shopping center when it opened in 1983 with three anchor stores. Today, J.C. Penney and Sears are gone, leaving department store Younkers as the only anchor tenant.

CBL last July returned to creditors the $18 million mortgage on the roughly 424,000-square-foot property. The mortgage, which had been bundled into securities and sold to bondholders, was initially underwritten by Wells Fargo & Co. A spokeswoman for Wells Fargo said the bank couldn’t comment on specific loans but that it would continue to provide financing for malls on a case-by-case basis.

A CBL spokesman said the firm spent time and resources over a two-year period working with the city on revitalizing the mall, but was stymied by red tape.

“Delays, including the city approval process, held up the project past the point of what would have allowed for us to successfully complete it,” he said. “As a result, we decided that the best course of action for all parties would be to return the property to the lender and allow the city to execute their plans with new owners at their own pace.”

Wausau Mayor Robert Mielke said CBL didn’t do enough marketing or maintenance, with the mall plagued by lapses in plumbing, holes in the roof and lightbulbs not getting changed. “CBL wasn’t a very good business partner,” Mr. Mielke said.

“If a mall closes or goes into decline, you’re going to see declining property values in the area,” said Arthur C. Nelson, professor of Urban Planning and Real Estate Development at the University of Arizona. “The mall is a marker.”

Despite a strengthening economy in 2016, the delinquency rate for loans backing retail property rose by 0.6 percentage point last year to 5.76%, according to Trepp LLC, a real-estate data service. Special servicers, which deal with troubled commercial mortgage securities, managed $3.1 billion worth of mall-backed loans last year, up from $2.9 billion in 2015, according to Trepp.

This year is off to a shaky start. Earlier this month, Sears Holdings Corp. said it would close 150 stores, and Macy’s Inc. gave more details of a plan to close 100 stores.

Limited Stores Co. said it plans to close all 250 stores and filed for chapter 11 bankruptcy protection last week.

“We don’t have a favorable outlook for secondary and tertiary malls with weaker sales. We look at them with a high degree of skepticism,” said Eric Thompson, senior managing director at Kroll Bond Rating Agency.

One reason mall owners struggle to restructure loans is that many were packaged into commercial mortgage-backed securities, and these bonds in turn are owned by numerous investors, making it difficult to negotiate new deals.

Landlords can negotiate with lenders a “deed-in-lieu” of foreclosure, in which they sign over ownership of the mall to the lender. If this can’t be arranged, a foreclosure process typically follows.

Borrowers typically take hits to their creditworthiness when forfeitures occur. But so far Washington Prime, CBL and Simon haven’t had downgrades to their credit ratings.

Big mall landlords such as publicly traded real-estate investment trusts say walking away is a justifiable response to shareholder pressures to shore up balance sheets and unload troubled assets. In the case of a default, creditors make claims only on the collateral that backs the loan, not on the borrower itself.

“It doesn’t negatively impact their corporate credit quality,” said Steven Marks, who heads Fitch Ratings’ U.S. REIT group. “If anything, we oftentimes view these transactions positively, as it indicates financial discipline to not commit corporate capital towards failing or uneconomic investments.”
 

gingerlyn

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This will not happen in Singapore because very soon PAP will implement COE system for online purchase. Consumers have to bid for COE before they are allowed to participate in online purchase.
 

virus

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It comes evidently clear farking fap r behaving like American sailor at pearl harbour never knew what hits them, who hits them n what to do, just stunt, hopeless pos pc of shit
 

congo9

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This will not happen in Singapore because very soon PAP will implement COE system for online purchase. Consumers have to bid for COE before they are allowed to participate in online purchase.


KNS la. The retail store struggle because of high rental. I would gladly shop in JB and not other online outlet for my clothing.
 

virus

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or angmoh can convert into plenty of massage parlour like peoples park sure got plenty of cloud.
 

parrardee

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In Singapore this situation will not be much of a problem. Any mall can be demolished and highrise condos built in its place yielding profits to the lenders.
 

johnny333

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Yes. Go to City Square, Komtar, etc. Let SG malls suck thumb


I've noticed that the malls in Spore are not as crowded as in the past. I think many have voted with their feet & gone to JB.
Used to go to JB regularly but with the large Spore crowds now going to JB, I'll wait until the festive season is over.
 

johnny333

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A pair of Bata shoes cost less than half the price in JB when compared to those in zikapore.


You can get drugs cheaper from JB because the prices in Malaysia have always been cheaper than in Spore. Now with the weak ringgit it is even cheaper. You also save $ because one does not need a doctors prescription.
 
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