Posted on 06/11/2014 6:47:47 AM PDT by dennisw
[Americas supposed recovery from The Great Recession is a hoax so obvious that only the mainstream news media, too lazy, cowardly and stupid to stray even an inch from the officially approved narrative, could fail to see it. And yet, here we are, so glutted with brick-and-mortar retail space that even if it were to be reduced by half there would still be an economically fatal overhang. Sales are plummeting and malls are dying a matter of no small consequence, considering that retail business supposedly makes up two-thirds of Americas GDP. In the trenchant commentary below, the intrepid Jim Quinn updates and amplifies an article he wrote four months ago on this subject. With his kind permission, I am reprinting it here because it deserves as wide an audience as possible. The original is copiously illustrated with charts and can be accessed at the link above. Other powerful essays by Jim can be found at numerous high-traffic web sites, including those shining beacons of truth, LewRockwell.com and ZeroHedge. Also, you can find David Stockmans approving comments on Jims essay here. RA]
The definition of death rattle is a sound often produced by someone who is near death when fluids such as saliva and bronchial secretions accumulate in the throat and upper chest. The person cant swallow and emits a deepening wheezing sound as they gasp for breath. This can go on for two or three days before death relieves them of their misery. The American retail industry is emitting an unmistakable wheezing sound as a long slow painful death approaches.
It was exactly four months ago when I wrote The Retail Death Rattle. Here are some excerpts from that article:
A Warning Siren
The absolute collapse in retail visitor counts is the warning siren that this country is about to collide with the reality Americans have run out of time, money, jobs, and illusions. The exponential growth model, built upon a never ending flow of consumer credit and an endless supply of cheap fuel, has reached its limit of growth. The titans of Wall Street and their puppets in Washington D.C. have wrung every drop of faux wealth from the dying middle class. There are nothing left but withering carcasses and bleached bones.
Once the Wall Street created fraud collapsed and the waves of delusion subsided, retailers have been revealed to be swimming naked. Their relentless expansion, based on exponential growth, cannibalized itself, new store construction ground to a halt, sales and profits have declined, and the inevitable closing of thousands of stores has begun.
The implications of this long and winding road to ruin are far reaching. Store closings so far have only been a ripple compared to the tsunami coming to right size the industry for a future of declining spending. Over the next five to ten years, tens of thousands of stores will be shuttered. Companies like JC Penney, Sears and Radio Shack will go bankrupt and become historical footnotes. Considering retail employment is lower today than it was in 2002 before the massive retail expansion, the future will see in excess of 1 million retail workers lose their jobs. Bernanke and the Feds have allowed real estate mall owners to roll over non-performing loans and pretend they are generating enough rental income to cover their loan obligations. As more stores go dark, this little game of extend and pretend will come to an end.
Retail store results for the 1st quarter of 2014 have been rolling in over the last week. It seems the hideous government reported retail sales results over the last six months are being confirmed by the dying bricks and mortar mega-chains. In case you missed the corporate mainstream media not reporting the facts and doing their usual positive spin, here are the absolutely dreadful headlines:
- Wal-Mart Profit Plunges By $220 Million as US Store Traffic Declines by 1.4%
- Target Profit Plunges by $80 Million as Store Traffic Declines by 2.3%
- Sears Loses $358 Million in Q1 as Comparable Store Sales Plunge by 7.8%
- Sales at Kmart Plunge by 5.1%
- JC Penney Thrilled With Loss of Only $358 Million For the Quarter
- Kohls Operating Income Plunges by 17% as Comparable Sales Decline by 3.4%
- Costco Profit Declines by $84 Million as Comp Store Sales Only Increase by 2%
- Staples Profit Plunges by 44% as Sales Collapse and Closing Hundreds of Stores
- Gap Income Drops 22% as Same Store Sales Fall
- American Eagle Profits Tumble 86%, Will Close 150 Stores
- Aeropostale Losses $77 Million as Sales Collapse by 12%
- Best Buy Sales Decline by $300 Million as Margins Decline and Comparable Store Sales Decline by 1.3%
- Macys Profit Flat as Comparable Store Sales decline by 1.4%
- Dollar General Profit Plummets by 40% as Comp Store Sales Decline by 3.8%
- Urban Outfitters Earnings Collapse by 20% as Sales Stagnate
- McDonalds Earnings Fall by $66 Million as US Comp Sales Fall by 1.7%
- Darden Profit Collapses by 30% as Same Restaurant Sales Plunge by 5.6% and Company Selling Red Lobster
- TJX Misses Earnings Expectations as Sales & Earnings Flat
- Dicks Misses Earnings Expectations as Golf Store Sales Plummet
- Home Depot Misses Earnings Expectations as Customer Traffic Only Rises by 2.2%
- Lowes Misses Earnings Expectations as Customer Traffic was Flat
Never Reported
Of course, those headlines were never reported. I went to each earnings report and gathered the info that should have been reported by the CNBC bimbos and hacks. Anything you heard surely had a Wall Street spin attached, like the standard BETTER THAN EXPECTED. I love that one. At the start of the quarter the Wall Street shysters post earnings expectations. As the quarter progresses, the company whispers the bad news to Wall Street and the earnings expectations are lowered. Then the company beats the lowered earnings expectation by a penny and the Wall Street scum hail it as a great achievement. The muppets must be sacrificed to sustain the Wall Street bonus pool. Wall Street investment bank geniuses rated JC Penney a buy from $85 per share in 2007 all the way down to $5 a share in 2013. No more needs to be said about Wall Street analysis.
It seems even the lowered expectation scam hasnt worked this time. U.S. retailer profits have missed lowered expectations by the most in 13 years. They generally beat expectations by 3% when the game is being played properly. Theyve missed expectations in the 1st quarter by 3.2%, the worst miss since the fourth quarter of 2000. If my memory serves me right, I believe the economy entered recession shortly thereafter. The brilliant Ivy League trained Wall Street MBAs, earning high six digit salaries on Wall Street, predicted a 13% increase in retailer profits for the first quarter. A monkey with a magic 8 ball could do a better job than these Wall Street big swinging dicks.
Corporate Flunkies
The highly compensated flunkies who sit in the corner CEO office of the mega-retail chains trotted out the usual drivel about cold and snowy winter weather and looking forward to tremendous success over the remainder of the year. How do these excuse machine CEOs explain the success of many high end retailers during the first quarter? Doesnt weather impact stores that cater to the .01%? The continued unrelenting decline in profits of retailers, dependent upon the working class, couldnt have anything to do with this chart? It seems only the oligarchs have made much progress over the last four decades.
Retail CEO gurus all think they have a master plan to revive sales. Ill let you in on a secret. They dont really have a plan. They have no idea why they experienced tremendous success from 2000 through 2007, and why their businesses have not revived since the 2008 financial collapse. Retail CEOs are not the sharpest tools in the shed. They were born on third base and thought they hit a triple. Now they are stranded there, with no hope of getting home. They should be figuring out how to position themselves for the multi-year contraction in sales, but their egos and hubris will keep them from taking the actions necessary to keep their companies afloat in the next decade. Bankruptcy awaits. The front line workers will be shit canned and the CEO will get a golden parachute. Its the American way.
The Old Retail Formula
The secret to retail success before 2007 was: create or copy a successful concept; get Wall Street financing and go public ASAP; source all your inventory from Far East slave labor factories; hire thousands of minimum wage level workers to process transactions; build hundreds of new stores every year to cover up the fact the existing stores had deteriorating performance; convince millions of gullible dupes to buy cheap Chinese shit they didnt need with money they didnt have; and pretend this didnt solely rely upon cheap easy debt pumped into the veins of American consumers by the Federal Reserve and their Wall Street bank owners. The financial crisis in 2008 revealed everyone was swimming naked, when the tide of easy credit subsided.
The pundits, politicians and delusional retail CEOs continue to await the revival of retail sales as if reality doesnt exist. The 1 million retail stores, 109,000 shopping centers, and nearly 15 billion square feet of retail space for an aging, increasingly impoverished, and savings poor populace might be a tad too much and will require a slight downsizing say 3 or 4 billion square feet. Considering the debt fueled frenzy from 2000 through 2008 added 2.7 billion square feet to our suburban sprawl concrete landscape, a divestiture of that foolish investment will be the floor. If you think there are a lot of SPACE AVAILABLE signs dotting the countryside, you aint seen nothing yet. The mega-chains have already halted all expansion. That was the first step. The weaker players like Radio Shack, Sears, Family Dollar, Coldwater Creek, Staples, Barnes & Noble, Blockbuster and dozens of others are already closing stores by the hundreds. Thousands more will follow.
Not Mere Opinion
This isnt some doom and gloom prediction based on nothing but my opinion. This is the inevitable result of demographic certainties, unequivocal data, and the consequences of a retailer herd mentality and lemming like behavior of consumers. The open and shut case for further shuttering of 3 to 4 billion square feet of retail is as follows:
- There is 47 square feet of retail space per person in America. This is 8 times as much as any other country on earth. This is up from 38 square feet in 2005; 30 square feet in 2000; 19 square feet in 1990; and 4 square feet in 1960. If we just revert to 2005 levels, 3 billion square feet would need to go dark. Does that sound outrageous?
- Annual consumer expenditures by those over 65 years old drop by 40% from their highest spending years from 45 to 54 years old. The number of Americans turning 65 will increase by 10,000 per day for the next 16 years. There were 35 million Americans over 65 in 2000, accounting for 12% of the total population. By 2030 there will be 70 million Americans over 65, accounting for 20% of the total population. Do you think that bodes well for retailers?
- Half of Americans between the ages of 50 and 64 have no retirement savings. The other half has accumulated $52,000 or less. It seems the debt financed consumer product orgy of the last two decades has left most people nearly penniless. More than 50% of workers aged 25 to 44 report they have less than $10,000 of total savings.
- The lack of retirement and general savings is reflected in the historically low personal savings rate of a miniscule 3.8%. Before the materialistic frenzy of the last couple decades, rational Americans used to save 10% or more of their personal income. With virtually no savings as they approach their retirement years and an already extremely low savings rate, do retail CEOs really see a spending revival on the horizon?
- If you thought the savings rate was so low because consumers are flush with cash and so optimistic about their job prospects they are unconcerned about the need to save for a rainy day, you would be wrong. It has been raining for the last 14 years. Real median household income is 7.5% lower today than it was in 2001. Retailers added 2.7 billion square feet of retail space as real household income fell. Sounds rational.
- This decline in household income may have something to do with the labor participation rate plummeting to the lowest level since 1978. There are 247.4 million working age Americans and only 145.7 million of them employed (19 million part-time; 9 million self-employed; 20 million employed by the government). There are 92 million Americans, who according to the government have willingly left the workforce, up by 13.3 million since 2007 when over 146 million Americans were employed. Youd have to be a brainless twit to believe the unemployment rate is really 6.3% today. Retail sales would be booming if the unemployment rate was really that low.
- With a 16.5% increase in working age Americans since 2000 and only a 6.5% increase in employed Americans, along with declining real household income, an inquisitive person might wonder how retail sales were able to grow from $3.3 trillion in 2000 to $5.1 trillion in 2013 a 55% increase. You need to look no further than your friendly Too Big To Trust Wall Street banks for the answer. In the olden days of the 1970s and early 1980s Americans put 10% to 20% down to buy a house and then systematically built up equity by making their monthly payments. The Ivy League financial engineers created exotic (toxic) mortgage products requiring no money down, no principal payments, and no proof you could make a payment, in their control fraud scheme to fleece the American sheeple. Their propaganda machine convinced millions more to use their homes as an ATM, because home prices never drop. Just ask Ben Bernanke. Even after the Bernanke/Blackrock fake housing recovery (actual mortgage originations now at 1978 levels) household real estate percent equity is barely above 50%, well below the 70% levels before the Wall Street induced debt debacle. With the housing market about to head south again, the home equity ATM will have an Out of Order sign on it.
- We hear the endless drivel from disingenuous Keynesian nitwits about government and consumer austerity being the cause of our stagnating economy. My definition of austerity would be an actual reduction in spending and debt accumulation. It seems during this time of austerity total credit market debt has RISEN from $53.5 trillion in 2009 to $59 trillion today. Not exactly austere, as the Federal government adds $2.2 billion PER DAY to the national debt, saddling future generations with the bill for our inability to confront reality. The American consumer has not retrenched, as the CNBC bimbos and bozos would have you believe. Consumer credit reached an all-time high of $3.14 trillion in March, up from $2.52 trillion in 2010. That doesnt sound too austere to me. Of course, this increase is solely due to Obamanomics and Bernankes $3 trillion gift to his Wall Street owners. The doling out of $645 billion to subprime college students and subprime auto buyers since 2010 accounts for more than 100% of the increase. The losses on these asinine loans will be epic. Credit card debt has actually fallen as people realize it is their last lifeline. They are using credit cards to pay income taxes, real estate taxes, higher energy costs, higher food costs, and the other necessities of life.
Recovery Is a Scam
The entire engineered recovery since 2009 has been nothing but a Federal Reserve/U.S. Treasury conceived, debt manufactured scam. These highly educated lackeys for the establishment have been tasked with keeping the U.S. Titanic afloat until the oligarchs can safely depart on the lifeboats with all the ships jewels safely stowed in their pockets. There has been no housing recovery. There has been no jobs recovery. There has been no auto sales recovery. Giving a vehicle to someone with a 580 credit score with a 0% seven year loan is not a sale. Its a repossession in waiting. The government supplied student loans are going to functional illiterates who are majoring in texting, facebooking and twittering. Do you think these indebted University of Phoenix dropouts living in their parents basements are going to spur a housing and retail sales recovery? This Keynesian solution was designed to produce the appearance of recovery, convince the masses to resume their debt based consumption, and add more treasure into the vaults of the Wall Street banks.
The master plan has failed miserably in reviving the economy. Savings, capital investment, and debt reduction are the necessary ingredients for a sustained healthy economic system. Debt based personal consumption of cheap foreign produced baubles & gadgets, $1 trillion government deficits to sustain the warfare/welfare state, along with a corrupt political and rigged financial system are the explosive concoction which will blow our economic system sky high. Facts can be ignored. Media propaganda can convince the willfully ignorant to remain so. The Federal Reserve can buy every Treasury bond issued to fund an out of control government. But eventually reality will shatter the delusions of millions as the debt based Ponzi scheme will run out of dupes and collapse in a flaming heap.
The inevitable shuttering of at least 3 billion square feet of retail space is a certainty. The aging demographics of the U.S. population, dire economic situation of both young and old, and sheer lunacy of the retail expansion since 2000, guarantee a future of ghost malls, decaying weed infested empty parking lots, retailer bankruptcies, real estate developer bankruptcies, massive loan losses for the banking industry, and the loss of millions of retail jobs. Since I always look for a silver lining in a black cloud, I predict a bright future for the SPACE AVAILABLE and GOING OUT OF BUSINESS sign making companies.
“Retail space is no measure of anything as floor space is real cheap right now and cheaper than in any other country due to land being available.”
Space is cheap because people overbuilt during the boom years (as always), and now nobody is renting. You can’t get a commercial tenant without offering them at least 3-6 months worth of concessions.
Thank the Free Traitors for this. The retail sector in Red China, a country that produces the wealth that used to made here, is exploding.
Same experience in St. George, UT. While there are some empty storefronts, there's ALWAYS something being built in the area. Those Mormons are doing something right as that kind of activity has been going on for years.
I suspect, as you allude to, the problem is area-dependent. A decently-run state will moderate a poor economic situation.
I'm pretty sure Amazon does price comparisons then either matches or beats lowest price. I say that because everything I compare from in-store to Amazon amazingly has price slashed to beat it. I still usually buy in-store because Amazon hassle huge next to walking out the door with your purchase.
I wasn’t at Northpark.
The Amazon shipping warehouse near here is hiring over $12 an hour, no experience necessary, mandatory overtime and can’t get enough workers.
You may have hit on something here. Maybe there should be Section 8 retail stores, where people who can't afford a store of their own will get the government to give them one. It could open up a whole new area of retail--Crack R Us, Meth-Ed to Madness, Guns n Hos, Booty-full Designs (for the full figured gals), etc. etc. I like it.
That, too. There was far more building without any realistic expectation of need.
Something about a fool and his money.
None of this is happening by accident, very few think there is a New World Order, whose design and blueprint is working as planned, a plan that is now in fast track mode.
Obama is nothing but a very useful tool to the real powers that be, selected long before 2008, because of his extreme narcissism, psychopathy, and most important of all; the color of his skin, a perfectly timed Perfect Storm.
Same here. The closest one is 100 miles north. I was in it 2 years ago. I could use a tractor supply...I have lots of things growing
A lot of malls located in upscale areas that aren’t nearly as affected by the current economic. People might have just gone walking in the mall to get out. I do that fairly often without spending more than a few dollars on something like a soda. Doesn’t mean they are buying a lot just because they are in the mall..
In that list of stores showing losses they should include any of the ones that supported the obamas. They have all gone out of business after a personal endorsement by them.
Tractor Supply is great to shop at. I visited Minnesota where I am from originally and my sister who still lives there took me to one of these stores. They have everything. I believe I spent about $400 that day of fishing equipment : )
Tractor Supply
http://www.tractorsupply.com
they allow a bus stop in their parking area, allowing people, especially teens, from downscale areas to get there.
That happened to the Brookdale mall in Brooklyn Center, Minnesota. Some of the comments mention it at dumpystripmalls below. They have since torn down most the mall and are rebuilding it with lower rent stores. The area around there has high crime now and the home values are generally under $100k.
Flickr photos
https://www.flickr.com/photos/marje/sets/72157624490320816/
Dead malls
http://dumpystripmalls.com/2008/08/brookdale-mall-brooklyn-center-mn/
“I think it reflects that people have less money to spend and that there a larger percentage of the people are unemployed than the lies from the WH suggest.”
No doubt; I live a few miles south of the brand new Xanadu Mall in the NJ meadowlands. It was completed years ago, and never opened (it is next to the stadium where the Super Bowl was just played); now they don’t know what to do with the buildings (including an indoor ski slope - also never used). People here in the northeast have known for years how bad things really are; unfortunately there aren’t many Americans left to do anything about it.
“I think Amazon and other on-line outlets have a lot to do w/ retails troubles.”
More than you could imagine; people will walk into a store, get info on a very specific product (including size, if applicable), then simply leave and order it from Amazon (avoiding paying for all of the store’s overhead)...
“Prior to the fundamental transformation of America, I had never seen an empty storefront. Now theyre everywhere. Maybe 5-10%. And two major stores were replaced by a giant Salvation Army store, and another similar second-hand store.”
When nearby malls here in northern NJ started filling their vacancies with tattoo parlors and an ever-growing number of food places, it was obvious that malls were done; they are obsolete. The last time I visited one, it was filled with foreigners (the replacement Americans) and few of them were buying anything.
Haven’t been to an indoor mall in over five years, and I have no plans to go to one anytime soon.
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