Subscribe in NewsGator Online   Subscribe in Bloglines

Restaurants Battle for Customers

Nov 1, 2008 12:00 PM, By Hortense Leon

One rule of thumb in tracking the downturn in restaurant sales is to follow the trail of U.S. foreclosures, says Joel Bloomer, senior equity analyst at Morningstar in Chicago. He says California and Florida have been hit harder than the Midwest and Northeast. In August alone there were 303,879 foreclosure filings throughout the United States, reports Irvine, Calif.-based Realty Trac. Of those, 101,724 (33 percent) were in California and 44,000 (14 percent) were in Florida.

“I think that a lot of retailers in Central Florida, as well as restaurants, are holding on until the Christmas holiday, but may close after January 1, 2009,” says Jeff Sweeney, managing principal and president at the Orlando office of Grubb & Ellis Commercial Florida. He notes shoppers are still frequenting mall restaurants but check totals are falling.

Digesting the news

Despite the pain in the sector, there are still a handful of chains looking to expand, including Chick-fil-A and Red Robin, Althoff notes. However, landlords do need to weigh an important factor. Would they rather lose the tenant they have and replace it with one of the growing chains if that means downgrading the type of tenant moving in or would they rather offer concessions to keep who they have in place?

“We may turn down a restaurant as a replacement for another if it doesn't have the right price point, or is not financially capable,” says Phoenix-based Greg Cochran, senior vice president of national restaurant leasing for the Santa Monica, Calif.-based Macerich Co. Sweeney says, “If you are replacing a Bennigan's with Billie Bob's Barbecue, you are going from what you thought was an A-credit tenant to a C-credit one, and most shopping center owners are not willing to do that.”

At Miami Beach, Fla.-based brokerage firm Koniver Stern Group, managing director Michael Finkle says retail rents are declining, albeit on a case-by-case basis, and cites the dialogue between the landlord and their tenant.

“Some landlords [in South Florida] are saying to their tenants, ‘We'll reduce the rent now, but next January [during the tourist season] you can pay me the rest,’” he says. While owners of large regional malls are willing to let a space go dark rather than lease to a less lucrative tenant, landlords of smaller centers are more amenable to giving tenants rent relief.

Meanwhile, some landlords, while not officially lowering the rent, are postponing scheduled increases, says Ft. Lauderdale-based Lori Schneider, senior vice president and senior director, of the national retail group at Marcus & Millichap.

Owens noted that a lot of tenants are going back to their landlords to try to renegotiate, as their leases come up for renewal. And, sometimes they try to re-negotiate in the middle of a lease. “Restaurant occupancy costs should be coming down as tenants ask for cheaper rent,” says Owens. West Palm Beach, Fla.-based NAI/Merin Hunter Codman's director of retail sales and leasing Bruce Corn says, it's primarily the local mom-and-pops that are seeking rent relief. “An Applebee's or a P.F. Chang's usually has enough staying power without help from the landlord.”

At its 40,000- to 100,000-square-foot centers, Coral Gables, Fla.-based Investment Management Associates CEO Daniel Baumgard says he is seeing more vacancies today than he has in the past 15 years, which is why he is receptive to lowering rent. That said, in this climate he won't green light a prospective tenant that doesn't have good credit or is poorly capitalized. “No one tells me not to lease for less than $35 per square foot, because I own these centers,” says Baumgard.

Morningstar's Bloomer explains there is a significant distinction between independently owned and operated firms and a publicly traded REITs, which can't be as flexible in setting rents because they have to pay shareholders dividends.

In some cases, notes Merrie Frankel, vice president and senior credit officer at Moody's Investors Service, a privately-held retail chain can be required to show a landlord its financial statements. Scrubbing a tenant's financial statements will not always uncover a red flag that could prompt a tenant's departure or bankruptcy filing. When that happens, a chain is often liable for lease payments, says Frankel. Typically, bankrupt companies have assets to cover their liabilities and a lease is a liability. “There are cases when a bankrupt chain has an outlet in a mall and it's one of the company's best performing restaurants. In these cases, the owner may still ask the tenant to leave, because of the financial vagaries of bankruptcy, she says.




Most Recent Story

Traffic Court Blog

When the Landlord Can’t Pay the Mortgage

Podcast In the face of the biggest financial crisis and deepest recession since the Great Depression, retail landlords are increasingly falling behind on mortgage payments or defaulting entirely. Owners are facing great difficulties refinancing debt. One major source of financing—commercial mortgage-backed securities—is no longer available. And the lenders that are still in the market have dramatically tightened underwriting standards.

Resources

Blogs

Here's where we will have a new, frequent conversation with our readers alerting you to the interesting (and sometimes oddball) things we see every day as we scan the horizon of the retail real estate business

Blog Home

Retail Architecture Review 2009

Architecture Review 2008

Retail Architecture Review 2009: Welcome to the third edition of Retail Traffic’s Retail Architecture Review. This supplement includes our 20th Superior Achievement in Design and Imaging Awards and our annual Leaders in Retail Architecture supplement.
View the full listing

Browse Back Issues