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Reports on consumer confidence, GDP tug at stocks
Facebook creates dual-class stock structure
Consumer group warns about toy hazards
Americans gloomy on economy heading into holidays
Banks earn $2.8 billion in third quarter; insurance fund in the red
Akron, Summit County jobless rates increase
Home prices rise for fourth month in a row
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2 men shot during party in Fairlawn
Cancellation of Christmas not an option
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Akron Children's Hospital CEO, wife announce $1 million gift to support research
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Akron Circle K store robbed for second time this month
KSU suspends basketball player
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A Dog Named Christmas – Pet for the Holidays
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No. 1 Akron to play Stanford next
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Seven players added to Tribe’s 40-man roster
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Audio: Mangini disputes Poteat call, accuses Lions of faking injuries
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Flashes travel to Florida Atlantic
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Gameblog: Cavs vs. Philadelphia 76ers
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Buckeye Football – Present and Future
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Gulley to visit Central Michigan in December
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The Onion, By Any Other Name…
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Don't Try to Have Fun if you are Depressed
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Faye Dunaway to be Evicted?
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Steely Dan Plays "The Royal Scam" at E.J. Thomas Hall
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Personal Rant – Why I am Glad I live in NEO
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Nintendo's Mario endures even as games come and go
Store closings usher in wave of bankruptcies
By Anne D'Innocenzio
Associated Press
Published on Friday, Mar 14, 2008
The signs that smaller retailers are struggling are unavoidable at malls across America: ''Going out of business'' sales at many Wilsons Leather stores. ''Up to 70 percent off'' at KB Toys.
At the once-sizzling Paradise Valley Mall in Phoenix, Ariz., the space once occupied by Bombay Co., the furniture chain that went bankrupt last year, is empty. Wilsons just finished liquidating its inventory. KB Toys, Ann Taylor and American Eagle feature bold posters advertising steep discounts.
''I don't think it brings much business when all these stores are closed,'' said Michelle Green, a sales clerk at Fred Meyer Jewelers.
Around the country, mall centers are starting to feel the recoil from a rapid expansion in recent years that allowed retailers to aim stores at almost every niche, from shoppers who wanted Talbots clothes for their children to those who craved Bombay's little wood tables.
Now, consumers who are closing their wallets amid rising gasoline prices and a housing slump are forcing specialty retailers to pare back their brands. Mall centers in areas hardest hit by the housing downturn — like Paradise Valley — are suffering the most store shutdowns.
Retailers including Ann Taylor Stores Corp., Talbots Inc. and Pacific Sunwear of California Inc. have closed hundreds of stores so far this year. Gadget seller Sharper Image Corp. filed for bankruptcy protection last month and plans to shutter nearly half of its 184 stores.
That retrenchment, along with the Chapter 11 bankruptcy of catalog retailer Lillian Vernon Corp., marks the beginning of a wave of retail bankruptcies that's expected to go well beyond the home furnishings stores hurt by the housing malaise.
''This is economic Darwinism,'' said Dan Ansell, a partner
at Greenberg Traurig LLP and chairman of its real estate operations division. ''Those retailers and businesses that have a product that is desired by consumers will survive, and those who do not will not.''
Unless the economy dramatically improves, Ansell believes retail bankruptcies this year could reach the highest level since the 1991 recession. More closings could leave gaping holes in the nation's retail centers, which have already seen average vacancy rates creep up to between 7 percent and 8 percent from 5 percent over the last six months, according to data from NAI Global, a commercial real estate services firm.
David Solomon, president and CEO of ReStore, NAI Global's retail division, expects the vacancy rate could hit 10 percent by the end of the year. Suzanne Mulvee, senior economist at Property & Portfolio Research, figures that vacancies could rise as high as 12.5 percent this year. Her figure includes retail spaces where tenants have defaulted on their rents.
Part of the problem, according to Mulvee, is that more retail space is coming to the market just as consumer demand is falling. Another 130 million square feet of retail space will become available this year, she predicts, on top of last year's 143 million. That is well above the average 100 million square feet added per year earlier in the decade.
Still, Solomon doesn't think the situation will be as dire as in 1991, when the savings and loan crisis hurt the entire country. Experts also say merchants are weathering downturns better because of new systems to control inventory and costs.
The power of national discounters like Wal-Mart Stores Inc. helped seal the eventual demise of regional discount chains last time around. Now, the discounters' clout is hurting consumer electronics stores like CompUSA, which is closing most of its stores, and Circuit City Stores Inc., which posted dismal holiday sales.
The industry pullback follows several years of rapid expansion and experimentation with a range of new store formats as retailers enjoyed robust consumer spending fueled by rising home values. But the sharp spending drop has made stores rethink how to expand their businesses.
Jewelry retailer Zale Corp. announced more closings last month, meaning it now plans to shutter almost 5 percent of its stores by the end of July.
The signs that smaller retailers are struggling are unavoidable at malls across America: ''Going out of business'' sales at many Wilsons Leather stores. ''Up to 70 percent off'' at KB Toys.
Get the full article here.
