David Bodamer

Editor in Chief

David Bodamer has been Editor-in-Chief of Retail Traffic since May 2006. Prior to that, he served as Managing Editor. Bodamer has covered the commercial real estate industry for 10 years. His articles have appeared in Registered Rep and Civil Engineering magazines, as well as the RealEstateJournal.com, The Wall Street Journal's online real estate news site.

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The 10 Most Iconic Apple Stores

The stunning passing of Steve Jobs has led to a massive outpouring of emotion across the globe.

It’s also giving people a chance to reflect on how Apple’s innovations during Jobs’ reign have affected their industries and what visionary leadership means.

We’ll have a post up shortly recapping just how great an impact Apple has had on the retail real estate sector. It’s come in two ways–the way that Apple Stores have pointed the way forward for other retailers and how the proliferation of smartphones and tablets is altering the way people shop.

Concerning the former, it’s an opportune time to revisit what Apple has done in the 10+ years it has operated retail stores. With that in mind, here is a gallery of, in our opinion, the 10 most iconic Apple stores around the globe.

Click on the images below to reveal larger views.

The Winners of the 2011 SADI Awards

I’m pleased to announce here the winners of Retail Traffic’s 22nd Annual Superior Achievement in Design & Imaging Awards.

The judging took place recently in New York. Overall, the jury tabbed 17 projects–seven as winners and 10 others as honorable mention recipients.

The big winner this year was FRCH Design Worldwide, which took home the Grand SADI for its design of the renovation of the Liverpool Polanco Department Store, which was the winner of the New or Renovated Department Store category. The judges felt the project was a top-notch example of an upscale department store design. The redesign freshened the concept and even though the scheme is dominated by white and black, the jurors felt it avoided feeling cold. Moreover, the theme works through the many departments with different kinds of merchandise. There’s a uniformity and flexibility to it that works throughout the complex.

FRCH also took home a second award–an honorable mention–for its concept for outdoor gear retailer Merrell. Other firms that took home multiple awards include GHA Design Studios, which was the winner for its International Currency Exchange scheme in the New Store — Less Than 5,000 square feet category and the winner for its design of Pusateri’s in the New or Renovated Supermarket category. Giorgio Borruso design, a past Grand SADI winner, won two honorable mentions in the New Store — Less Than 5,000 square feet category. And RTKL Associates, last year’s Grand SADI winner, swept the New Enclosed Center category. Its design for Mirdif City Centre in Dubai was the winner and its 360 Mall in Kuwait took home an honorable mention.

The award winners can be viewed below and a full write-up of the awards with project details will appear in the September/October issue of Retail Traffic. Full slideshows of the projects will be posted on our home page soon.

New or Renovated Department Store
Winner
Grand SADI Winner

Liverpool Polanco Department Store
Mexico City, Mexico
FRCH Design Worldwide

Liverpool Polanco (Before)

Liverpool Polanco (Before)

Liverpool Polanco (After)

Liverpool Polanco (After)

Liverpool Polanco (Before)

Liverpool Polanco (Before)

Liverpool Polanco (After)

Liverpool Polanco (After)

New Store – Less Than 5,000 sq. ft.
Winner

ICE – International Currency Exchange
Calgary, Canada
GHA Design Studios

International Currency Exchange

International Currency Exchange

New Store – Less Than 5,000 sq. ft.
Honorable Mention

Carlo Pazolini
Milan, Italy
Giorgio Borruso Design

Carlo Pazolini

Carlo Pazolini

New Store – Less Than 5,000 sq. ft.
Honorable Mention

Snaidero USA Showroom
New York
Giorgio Borruso Design

snaidero

Renovated Store – More than 5,000 sq. ft.
Honorable Mention

Cleveland Cavaliers Team Shop
Cleveland, Ohio
Herschman Architects

Cleveland Cavaliers Team Shop (Before)

Cleveland Cavaliers Team Shop (Before)

Cleveland Cavaliers Team Shop (After)

Cleveland Cavaliers Team Shop (After)

Renovated Store – More than 5,000 sq. ft.
Honorable Mention

Underground
Calgary, Alberta
Ruscio Studio, Inc.

Underground (Before)

Underground (Before)

Underground (After)

Underground (After)

New Prototype or Reinterpretation of a Prototype
Honorable Mention

Merrell
Rockford, Mich.
FRCH Design Worldwide

Merrill (Click for full image)

Merrill (Click for full image)

New or Reinterpretation of a Prototype
Honorable Mention

Nautica Outlet
Cypress, Texas
Little

Nautica Outlet

Nautica Outlet

New or Renovated Supermarket
Winner

Peqout Lakes Supervalu
Pequot Lakes, Minn.
Supervalu Store Design Services

Pequot Lakes Supervalu

Pequot Lakes Supervalu

New or Renovated Supermarket
Winner

Pusateri’s
Bayview Village, Toronto
GHA Design Studios

Pusateri's

Pusateri's

New or Renovated Supermarket
Honorable Mention

Whole Foods Market
Darien, Conn.
BL Companies Inc.

Whole Foods Market

Whole Foods Market

New Enclosed Center
Winner

Mirdif City Centre
Dubai, UAD
RTKL Associates Inc.

Mirdif City Centre

Mirdif City Centre

New Enclosed Center
Honorable Mention

360 Mall
Kuwait City, Kuwait
RTKL Associates Inc.

360 Mall

360 Mall

New Open-Air Center
Winner

Santa Monica Place
Santa Monica, Calif.
The Jerde Partnership
Omniplan

Santa Monica Place

Santa Monica Place

New Open-Air Center
Honorable Mention

The Shops of Grand River
Leeds, Ala.
CMH Architects Inc.

The Shops at Grand River

The Shops at Grand River

Renovated or Expanded Community or Power Center
Honorable Mention

South Coast Collection
Costa Mesa, Calif.
Ware Malcomb

South Coast Collection (Before)

South Coast Collection (Before)

South Coast Collection (After)

South Coast Collection (After)

Renovated or Expanded Enclosed Center
Winner

Westfield Valencia Town Center
Santa Clarita, Calif.
Westfield Inc.
Field Paoli

Westfield Valencie Town Center (Before)

Westfield Valencie Town Center (Before)

Westfield Valencia Town Center (After)

Westfield Valencia Town Center (After)

A Look at the Sunshine State’s Retail Real Estate

Florida’s retail real estate scene is expected to slowly improve throughout 2011, according to Marcus & Millichap Real Estate Investment Services. It’s a much brighter scene than when we checked in two years ago.

A walk through some recent Marcus & Millichap market reports gives us some results to chew on. Here are stats from five Florida markets–Tampa, Orlando, Miami-Dade County, Palm Beach County and Broward County–showing vacancy and rental trends by submarket.

A look through various submarkets reveals a mixed picture. Vacancy rates have improved in the last 12 months in some markets and worsened in others, although the magnitudes of the year-over-year changes are not dramatic in either direction. Rents have shown greater stability and in most markets are within 1.0 percent of where they were a year ago. Miami-Dade County boasts some of the submarkets with the lowest vacancy rates in the state while Broward County has several submarkets where the vacancy rate exceeds 10 percent. Miami-Dade also has the most expensive rents while Tampa is the most affordable.
In terms of outlook, here are some commentary excerpts from the four reports along with charts.

Broward County

Property operations continue to improve notably in Broward County, but the deliberate pace of the recovery will minimize gains in occupancy and rents this year and defer a more robust turnaround until 2012. While resumed job creation generated a healthy 6 percent year-over-year increase in retail spending through the first quarter, space demand has strengthened modestly in response as retailers remain hesitant. A slack pace of household growth and a still-recovering housing market continue to limit the number of new store openings and will support a steady, albeit slow, increase in occupied space over the rest of 2011.

Investors’ demand for decent yields and capital preservation continues to support a fluid single-tenant, net-leased investment market in the county. Nationally branded drugstores remain favored, with deal flow limited only by a lack of recent construction. Cap rates for these assets typically start at 7 percent for newer buildings with the long lease terms. Small investors have stayed active in deals listing for $3 million or less, targeting ground leases on bank branches, which often trade at cap rates in the mid-6 percent range. Multi-tenant deal volume also picked up recently, with healthy institutional and large investor interest in well-occupied properties with strong anchors.

Click for larger chart
broward_m&m_q2_2011

Miami-Dade County

With construction financing still limited and the local economy improving, the Miami-Dade County retail sector will record minimal completions this year and a decrease in store closures. Combined with a modest rate of expansion by retailers, these trends will support a solid decline in vacancy and a slight rent increase. Ongoing efforts to retain and attract tenants, though, continue to require liberal use of concessions, and leasing incentives will ease only gradually in the near term as tenants drive favorable lease terms. Concessions remain elevated even in prime areas such as Coral Gables, and rents here and in other submarkets will not rise appreciably until retailers expand more rapidly and lease additional space.

The investment market continues to make steady progress as highly rated single-tenant, net-leased properties attract interest from investors. National drugstore chains remain a primary target, with cap rates generally starting around 7 percent. Bank branches also garner attention, and the entrance of new banks seeking to backfill vacant outparcels may present opportunities for investors in the months ahead. In the multi-tenant segment, distressed or high-quality, institutional-grade assets continue to sell, with sales of properties comprising the middle of the quality spectrum coming back modestly.

Click for larger chart
miami_m&m_q2_2011

Orlando Metro Area

Despite the most significant job growth in any 12-month stretch in four years, retail operations have only slightly recovered thus far, lacking an appreciable rise in tenant demand. Store closures totaled about 2.7 million square feet over the past year, down from 4.7 million square feet in the preceding 12 months, but substantial numbers of new tenants have not yet emerged. Retailers such as the Aldi grocery chain have opened new stores and continue to scout locations, but many others remain cautious regarding expansion, a stance that will limit near-term vacancy improvement. As a result, extremely low completions, not a robust recovery in demand, will contribute most to the projected decline in Orlando vacancy this year.

Multi-tenant property investment has recovered, with more deals executed over the past 12 months than in any year-long period since the recession started. Access to financing, however, remains an impediment to restoring greater liquidity in the market. Lenders will finance acquisitions of newer, well-located shopping centers, where strong investor demand persists and properties anchored by top grocery chains can command cap rates in the mid-7 percent range. Other assets in lower-visibility locations or with weaker anchors and in-line tenants typically demand higher equity commitments from the limited number of lenders willing to underwrite deals.

Click for larger chart
orlando_m&m_q2_2011

Palm Beach County

Positive economic trends, including job growth and a jump in spending, have sparked a recovery in Palm Beach County retail property operations and will drive more vigorous performance in the second half of 2011. A revival in hiring over the past 12 months triggered a 6 percent increase in retail sales as residents bought items for new jobs and moved forward with purchases deferred during the recession. As more residents become employed through 2011, further improvements in retail sales and a rise in traffic to local stores will occur. Employment and spending gains, in turn, have encouraged leasing activity of retail space, contributing to positive net absorption during the first quarter and over the last 12 months.

Improving access to financing continues to create a stronger, more liquid investment climate, but investors remain discriminatory. Single-tenant properties net leased to top-rated tenants account for most of the activity in the county, signaling strong demand for low-risk assets providing steady returns.

Additional multi-tenant sales were recorded in the past few months, and sales of well-occupied assets in high-traffic locations will help establish price benchmarks. Cap rates for such properties are estimated to range from 7.5 percent to 8.0 percent.

Click for larger chart
palm_beach_m&m_q2_2011

Tampa Metro Area

A decline in the vacancy rate to less than 10 percent in the first quarter likely signals the start of a gradual recovery in the Tampa retail property sector. … While the marketwide vacancy rate will likely remain well above pre-recession levels for several more quarters, the recent decline has been sufficient to ease the fall in effective rents. Still, effective rents average 15 percent below rates prior to the downturn, leaving a considerable deficit to overcome as tenant demand ticks up slowly.

Investment activity in Tampa continues to rebound from recessionary lows, as expanded financing capacity and investors seeking to deploy capital have supported a surge in deals. Single-tenant, net-leased product accounts for the largest share of sales, with drugstores drawing keen interest. Scaled-down construction of new stores by CVS and Walgreens has compressed drugstore cap rates into the low-7 percent range.


In the multi-tenant segment, Publix-anchored properties are the primary target of institutions and large investors; cap rates for strong locations start in the low- to mid-6 percent range.

Click for larger chart
tampa_m&m_q2_2011

Sanity Being Restored?

After yesterday’s carnage in retail REIT stocks, things are looking much better this morning. The losses have only been partially restored, but at least every firm is regaining ground.

sanity_restored

Dramatic Buying Opportunity for REIT Stocks?

SNL Financial just posted a piece illustrating how dramatic the stock price fall was for REITs relative to the underlying property values of those firm’s assets.

It seems, in part, REITs get treated like financial stocks in moments such as this, which is why REIT shares have fallen even by an even greater magnitude than broader indices.

However, if SNL’s NAV estimates are accurate, there are now some huge opportunities here to buy REIT shares at a discount.

According to SNL, “All U.S. REITs fell to a discount to NAV of 22.62% as of Aug. 8 from a premium of 1.4% as of July 29.”

Check the chart:

11580897

Free Falling

As expected, markets are continuing to tank in the wake of Standard & Poor’s downgrade of the United States credit rating.

Retail REITs are not immune from this. In fact, at a quick glance they appear to be doing worse than some of the broader indices. Regional mall REITs are leading the way down with General Growth, PREIT, CBL having the worst days so far.

blood_bath

Update 4:54 PM

Things didn’t get any better in the last hour the market was opened. Here’s the final carnage:

bloodbath_update

Discounts Drive July Same-Store Sales Gains

July same-store sales rose by more than 4.0 percent year-over-year as retailers kicked off the back-to-school season. Most attributed the gains to discounts and the warmest July weather in many years.

Warehouse clubs Costco and BJ’s and luxury chain Saks posted some of the biggest gains, highlighting the bifurcation in the consumer-driven U.S. economy. Department store and other retailers that cater to the middle were among those that disappointed.

“The folks that are doing well economically are going to continue to spend at a pretty good clip, and the families that have less means are going to continue to pick and choose and only spend on what they need versus what they want,” said Alison Paul, leader of advisory firm Deloitte’s U.S. retail practice.

The July figures made some chains, such as Target Corp, optimistic about demand heading into the back-to-school season, the second-biggest selling period of the year after Christmas.

“Back-to-school sales are off to a solid start, contributing to our confidence in the strategies we have in place and our ability to execute them,” Target Chief Executive Officer Gregg Steinhafel said on Thursday.

Despite the numbers, as I’ve written in other monthly roundups, it’s important that we remember that the pool of retailers that still report same-store sales numbers is considerably smaller than it once was. Less than 30 retailers use the metric (down from more than 70 a few years ago). Wal-Mart stores, which singlehandedly accounts for roughly 5 percent to 6 percent of the overall retail pie, only reports quarterly figures today. And it has reported comparable store sales declines (excluding fuel sales) for eight straight quarters.

Were they still in the monthly matrix, the figures would look quite a bit different.

My look inside the monthly reports is after the jump. Read the rest of this entry »

High Gas Prices Help Boost June Same-Store Sales

June same-store sales outpaced Wall Street estimates and rose by 6.5 percent, according to the Thomson Reuters Same-Store Sales Index. Analysts had been expecting a gain of 4.9 percent.

June typically is a clearance month and consumers are still shopping for bargains.
One of the strongest performances came from Limited, which hosted a semi-annual sale at its Victoria’s Secret stores. Limited’s same-store sales rose 12 percent in June, blowing past the 3.8 percent average analyst estimate reported by Thomson Reuters.

Discounters Target, Costco and BJ’s Wholesale also topped estimates.

Target said same-store sales rose 4.5 percent in June, far above the 3.2 percent analyst estimate.
According to Target, the result was at the “high end” of its own internal expectations, and was helped by an increase in the size of the transactions shoppers made.

In a recorded message, Target said it expects July same-store sales results to rise in the low- to mid-single digits. Inventories were in “very good condition” at the end of June, according to the retailer.

Despite the numbers, as I’ve written in other monthly roundups, it’s important that we remember that the pool of retailers that still report same-store sales numbers is considerably smaller than it once was. Less than 30 retailers use the metric (down from more than 70 a few years ago). Wal-Mart stores, which singlehandedly accounts for roughly 5 percent to 6 percent of the overall retail pie, only reports quarterly figures today. And it has reported comparable store sales declines (excluding fuel sales) for eight straight quarters.

Were they still in the monthly matrix, the figures would look quite a bit different.

My look inside the monthly reports is after the jump. Read the rest of this entry »

CoStar’s First Look at Q2 Numbers Shows Continued Recovery

With the second quarter in the books, early indications are that the retail sector continued its recovery.

CoStar’s first look report said that the retail real estate market has now experienced eight straight quarters of positive net absorption resulting in a cumulative 99 million square feet absorption.

The overall vacancy rate remained steady at 7.1 percent.

Click for larger image.
costar_q22011_total_vacancy

National Highlights

  • Second quarter net absorption increased to 11.1M square feet, 700,000 square feet more than the previous quarter’s net absorption of 10.4 square feet. This, however, remains well below the robust fourth quarter net absorption rate of more than 26.5M square feet. The two year average net absorption rate is 12.4M square feet.
  • The national retail vacancy rate remained steady at 7.1% in large part due to a 40-year record
    low amount of new retail square footage completed, 7.4M square feet
  • New retail deliveries will be minimal for the foreseeable future as retail space under construction
    in the second quarter totaled 26.8M square feet. This compares to more than 145M square feet
    of retail space under construction in the second quarter of 2008.
  • The national retail rental rate declined to $14.74 per square foot from $14.84 per square foot in
    the first quarter. While record low new supply has stabilized the retail vacancy rate rental rates
    won’t increase until retail demand increases which would require significant increases in hiring
    and wage growth.

Click for larger image.
costar_q22011_absorption

Property Type Highlights

  • Lifestyle centers continued to suffer the largest rental rate declines with second quarter rental
    rates declining $.94 from the first quarter rental rate.
  • Lifestyle centers also suffered the largest quarterly increase in vacancy rate increase from 8.6%
    in the first quarter to 8.9% in the second quarter.
  • Due to the continued weak performance of Lifestyle centers the spread in rental rates between
    Lifestyle centers and malls has declined from more than a 56% rental rate premium for Lifestyle
    centers in the first quarter of 2008 to less than a 30% premium today. This is due largely to two
    factors. First, aggressive building of lifestyle centers during the last decade continues to haunt
    Lifestyle centers as they are forced to trade occupancy for reduced retailer quality and reduced
    rents. Conversely, malls significantly reduced their rate of new construction in the last
    decade building less than 40% of the mall square footage built in the 1970’s.

SNL: REIT CEO Compensation Soared in 2010

SNL Financial published a look at REIT CEO compensation that shows that the highest paid REIT CEOs saw a very nice boost in their compensation in 2010.

According to their research:

SL Green Realty Corp.’s Marc Holliday landed the largest total compensation during the year at $24.8 million, up 117.6% from the prior year. Under his leadership, SL Green’s total return bested the SNL US REIT Equity Index total return by 6.4 percentage points, at 35.3%, and FFO per share grew 9.3% year over year.

And while Holliday’s 117.6% year-over-year pay bump may seem high, other CEOs saw total compensation growth far exceeding that figure. David Simon, chairman and CEO of Simon Property Group Inc., saw the largest pay increase among the top 20 highest-paid CEOs and posted the second-largest total compensation.

In 2010, the company recorded a total return of 28.4%, and FFO per share fell 6.0% from a year earlier, while Simon’s total compensation grew 430.0% to $24.6 million from $4.6 million. Simon’s bonus climbed to $4 million in 2010 from $3 million in 2009, and he received $19.5 million in stock and option awards, up from $578,677 in the prior year.

Aside from Simon, several other retail REIT head honchos made the list.

Retail REITs ranked fifth through ninth on the list. Federal Realty Investment Trust CEO Don Wood made $9.76 million. Tanger Factory Outlet Centers CEO Steve Tanger received compensation of $9.44 million. Equity One CEO Jeff Olson got $9.15 million. And Macerich CEO Art Coppola was paid $8.99 million.

It was a big boost for all of them with Wood’s compensation up 178.1 percent, Tanger’s up 170.9 percent, Olson’s up 301.5 percent and Coppola’s up 54.5 percent.

All the retail REITs on the list posted total return growth in 2010. In addition, REIT share prices appreciated quite a bit last year.