Getting mauled?

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Howard Davidowitz believes that for retailers, the worst is yet to come.

 

Big-box retailers are in liquidation. Big chains are closing locations. Earlier this month, Fortunoff filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy.

 

“The two worst categories in retail are home and jewelry,” said Davidowitz, chairman of Manhattan-based Davidowitz & Associates Inc., a national retail consulting and investment banking firm. “Fortunoff happened to be in the two worst categories in retailing, so it was a double-header,” Davidowitz said. With Pier One on life support, Levitz Furniture Corp. in liquidation and Linens ”™n Things closing down, the home furnishings industry is “a complete train wreck.”

 

There are survivors and those who will benefit, including Bed Bath & Beyond, which will ultimately benefit from the liquidation of Linens ”™n Things, Davidowitz said. “Retailers with strong balance sheets with staying power ultimately will benefit.”

 

The home furnishings and décor industry is being hit hard because “home is the consumer”™s biggest asset and it”™s getting crushed,” Davidowitz said.

 

As for apparel, the news is all terrible, according to Davidowitz.

 

“Anything discretionary is terrible because of the wreck the consumer is in,” Davidowitz said. “I think we”™re going nowhere but downhill, and there is no improvement in sight.”

 

In the past, a bankruptcy filing ”“ with its ability to hold creditors at bay ”“ didn”™t necessarily mean closing for good. That is no longer the case.

 


“More and more, these bankruptcies mean store closings rather than re-organization,” said Matthew Harding, president and chief operating officer of North Plainfield, N.J.-based retail real estate services firm Levin Management. “Banks really aren”™t lending, so it”™s difficult for a bankrupt retailer to get the financing it needs to go on. Many of these retailers who have filed bankruptcy are doing liquidations.”

 

The combination of the amount of space being put back on to the market and the low demand for new space has left big-box footprints around the country.

 

“These days so many retailers have pulled back on the reins and are not expanding, so it”™s going to be difficult to fill those spaces,” Harding said.

 

Harding said consumers are migrating toward value retailers. The renovation of the 280,000-square-foot Post Road Plaza shopping center in Pelham Manor will reflect this trend with the addition of discount grocer Fairway Market among existing tenants Mandee, A.J. Wright and Modell”™s.

 

The 75,000-square-foot market will open in a reconfigured K-Mart space.

 

“These are interesting times, but strong, well-located properties should still do pretty well as long as the properties are kept up-to-date,” Harding said.

 

The Palisades Center in West Nyack has seen several retailers recently close locations at the mall, including Dave & Barry and Legal Seafood. Legal Seafood in White Plains remains open for business.

 

“A lot of stores are actually closing down,” said Isik Beravy, who owns two Customize It kiosk locations at the mall. “There”™s a lot less people, a lot less traffic lately.”

 

Beravy has worked at the mall in various stores since it opened 10 years ago. He said anchor stores like Macy”™s have helped draw shoppers in, but the winter months are generally slow for retailers.  

Mall management, however, remained mum about the status of retail establishments within the mall. 

 

“We”™re not going to comment at this time,” said LeeMarie Dell”™Accio, director of marketing for the Palisades Center.