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‘Experiential’ Tesla and iPhone Stores Aren’t Really Helping Battered Malls

The buzz around ‘experiential’ stores may have been a bit overblown.

‘Experiential’ Tesla and iPhone Stores Aren’t Really Helping Battered Malls
Pedestrians walk past a closed Tesla Inc. store in Palm Desert, California, U.S. (Photographer: Patrick T. Fallon/Bloomberg)  

(Bloomberg) -- Mall owners have sung the praises of “experiential retail,” touting it as the savior of a sector battered by store closures and the shift to online shopping. It turns out the buzz may be a bit overblown.

A study by location-data firm Thasos Group shows that malls with a Tesla showroom, Apple store, Eataly or Starbucks Roastery -- retailers that offer shoppers a more hands-on experience -- don’t have much of an edge over centers without those shops. In fact, these properties trailed their more-traditional peers in foot traffic up until the end of last year.

‘Experiential’ Tesla and iPhone Stores Aren’t Really Helping Battered Malls

Thasos used mobile-phone location data to assess foot traffic at 144 “experiential” malls. In October 2017, visitation at these centers was down 11 percent from the prior year, compared with an 8.1 percent decline at other malls. The trend started to reverse this past September, handing the advantage to landlords who’ve invested in experiences, though the edge isn’t substantial.

Landlords are spending billions to make over their properties in hopes of drawing shoppers at a time when everything can be bought online. They’ve added grocery stores, climbing walls and even offices for technology giants like Google. The biggest U.S. mall owner, Simon Property Group Inc., last year announced plans to spend $4 billion to create “new lifestyle experiences” at its shopping centers.

Mall owners are spending a lot to win over the specific tenants identified in the study because they believe those retailers will drive more traffic, said John Collins, chief product officer at Thasos.

To contact the reporter on this story: Lily Katz in New York at lkatz31@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Debarati Roy at droy5@bloomberg.net, Christine Maurus, Rob Urban

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