Malls see 35% decline
in footfalls: Malls magic seems to have disappeared this festive season!
Shopping malls which
are already suffering from large vacant space is expected to see a sharp
decline of 35-40 per cent in footfalls in the ongoing festive season as
economic slowdown, high interest and job uncertainties have dampened the
shopping spirit this year, reveals an ASSOCHAM recent survey.
A recent ASSOCHAM
Survey on "Shopping malls fail to draw footfalls this festive season”
indicated that economic slowdown, galloping inflation, interest rates have
upset the festival shopping plans of all the consumers this festive season.
ASSOCHAM team
interacted with about 650 leasing managers, representatives of malls’
management, strategist, marketers and supervisors in Delhi-NCR, Mumbai,
Ahemdabad, Chennai, Kolkata, Hyderabad, Chennai, Bangalore, Chandigarh and
Dehradun. The shopping spirit was found to be at the lowest ebb among Delhiites
(33%), followed by Ahemdabad (31%), Chennai (30%), Mumbai (28%) and Hyderabad
(27%).
Mr. D S Rawat, Secretary General ASSOCHAM said,
“the trend is on expected lines as the economic recovery is rather slow and
consumer confidence low."
As per the ASSOCHAM
estimates, roughly 250-300 malls came up in the country over the last two years
but 70-80% of the spaces in these malls lie vacant. The economic slowdown has
landed especially heavily on the shopping malls.
The survey further
reveals that the slowdown, job cuts and devaluation of the rupee against the
dollar is also making imported raw material and finished goods costlier. It
will also impact consumer spending in a significant way.
The numbers of malls
across the country, unable to justify the rents they charge tenants, are
shutting down. The currency fluctuation is a major challenge for the consumer
electronics industry because the imported consignment is coming at a higher
cost. The dinnerware and cookware companies have already started offering
attractive offers and discounts to boost sales, adds the ASSOCHAM recent
survey.
More than 47 percent
of the total mall space in nine cities is vacant, the survey found. Delhi-NCR tops the list with 55 percent of
malls being vacant, followed by Mumbai at 52 percent, Ahemdabad at 51 percent
and Chennai 50 percent. In order to lure retailers, many developers started
giving rent-free period for up to six months for big brands.
While some malls are
operating at 60 percent occupancy, others are struggling with less than 20
percent. “Vacancy levels are due to poor location, poor design and poor parking
facilities while some are operating at 60 percent occupancy,” it said. It said
the industry is also facing problems like multiple taxes, lack of clarity in
policies and shortage of experts in areas such as supply chain and store
management, adds the paper.
The sharpest decline
in mall rental values was recorded in Delhi-NCR followed by Mumbai, Ahmedabad,
Chennai, Hyderabad, Bangalore, Kolkata and Pune. Most of the shop owners, who
participated in the survey, said that increasing rents will not work because at
the end of the day it has to be affordable for retailers to do business.
Both retailers and
consultants seem convinced that the mall magic seems to have disappeared in a
puff of smoke on the back of the economic slowdown, poor revenue model, low
footfalls-to-sales conversion and lack of special purpose malls, adds the
survey.
(ASSOCHAM)
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