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Retailers plan to stop paying rent due to business dropoff and closings

[ Edited ]
Newsmax
Retailers Plan to Stop Paying Rent to Offset Virus Closures
 

By: Lauren Coleman-Lochner, Natalie Wong and Ed Ludlow

 

Major U.S. retail and restaurant chains, including Mattress Firm and Subway, are telling landlords they will withhold or slash rent in the coming months after closing stores to slow the coronavirus, according to people familiar with the situation.

In a brewing fight, chains are calling for rent reductions through lease amendments and other measures starting in April, said the people, who asked not to be named because the discussions are private.

 

These moves mark the next phase in virus fallout: What happens to billions in rent owed for businesses that have been closed? The stakes are high. Retail has a slew of big chains in turnaround mode. And if they do withhold payments, there would be a ripple effect. Landlords can’t afford to stop collecting rent for long, with many property owners sitting on loads of debt.

 

The situation is likely to get messier. The U.S. relief packages being considered don’t directly address rents. But the Federal Reserve’s actions may give banks the leeway to defer mortgage payments, allowing property owners to delay rent. It’s also unclear if retailers can declare a so-called “force majeure,” a contract clause that covers highly unusual events, and if landlords could then make the same case to insurers.

“The court system is just going to get flooded with a million of these disputes between tenants and landlords,” said Vince Tibone, an analyst at Green Street Advisors. “If the government doesn’t step in in any form or fashion, it could get ugly. They need to respond quickly.”

 

‘More Drastic’

Mattress Firm, with about 2,400 stores, sent landlords a letter last week saying it would cut rent in exchange for longer leases and offering two options to do so. This week, it sent a more urgent note revoking its earlier offer.

 

“The decline in revenue and forced store closures across the nation are more drastic, compressed and immediate than we originally anticipated,” the company wrote in a letter reviewed by Bloomberg. “Our need is now more severe,” the firm said, invoking the virus as a force majeure event that “will prevent or prohibit us” from paying rent.

After being contacted by Bloomberg, Mattress Firm confirmed that it has requested a temporary suspension of rent.

 

“We appreciate our landlord partners, and the responses have been encouraging so far,” Randy Carlin, chief real estate officer for Mattress Firm, said in a statement. “We will continue to do everything we can to maintain business continuity and to ensure there are jobs available for our people to return to when this crisis ends.”

 

Subway Restaurants, which has more than 20,000 U.S. locations, sent out a letter to landlords last week saying that it might cut or postpone rental payments due to the virus, according a person with knowledge of the situation. The Real Deal, a real estate trade publication, reported on the communication earlier.

 

Some Help

In a statement, Subway said it was looking at ways to help franchises mitigate the virus fallout.

 

Some landlords have recognized they need to help smaller tenants. Irvine Company Retail Properties, based in Irvine, California, is allowing rent to be deferred for 90 days and then paid back with no interest over a year starting in January, according to a document reviewed by Bloomberg. The firm confirmed the practice without further comment.

 

Bedrock, a Detroit developer, said it will waive rent and other fees for three months for its smaller retail and restaurant tenants.

 

Retail real estate investment trusts may need to provide leeway on rent, Bank of America said this week after downgrading several REITs. The bank sees store closings lasting through May and the possibility of some locations going away as more fragile retailers are forced into bankruptcy.

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Re: Retailers plan to stop paying rent due to business dropoff and closings

They can't do that. You can't just not pay your rent or mortgage if your income goes down. Do they not have any emergency reserves? I would understand this more if it were a mom and pop restaurant that was just getting by, but these are national chains.

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Re: Retailers plan to stop paying rent due to business dropoff and closings

Did they vacate the store? Is the lease up?

 

If not the rent is due.

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Re: Retailers plan to stop paying rent due to business dropoff and closings

[ Edited ]

A a former real estate broker, I have to grin at the leverage that retailers have over  commercial landlords

 

This country has been "over-stored" for years.  Mall  and shopping center owners have loads of empty space to rent in many areas of the country.  (Part of the problem is the growth of online selling and declining consumer foot traffic.)

 

Pretend you own retail properties, and your tenants are giving you a choice---accept less rent or face business shutdowns and vacant spaces altogether.

 

The "force majeure" clause in lease agreements might well come into play.  Lawsuits and court fights might well ensue, but each tenant needs to decide how worthwhile it is to remain in the space and continuing to pay rent against declining profits.

 

Then landlords have to make hard decisions.  Negotiate with the retailer and reach a compromise, or take a hard-line position and live with the consequences.

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Re: Retailers plan to stop paying rent due to business dropoff and closings

@novamc1  If the commercial lease has provisions for government-mandated closures, etc. I think the tenants can request rent abatement. Would depend on each circumstance, and their lease, how airtight it is.  I would think that the larger tenants (like the ones in the article, Starbucks etc.) they have very good attorneys on their side.  The smaller ones and the mom & pop stores probably do not, and will probably be out of luck.  In those cases, if the government helps any business, IMO it should be the small ones first.  It'll definitely have a big ripple effect.

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Re: Retailers plan to stop paying rent due to business dropoff and closings


@Porcelain wrote:

They can't do that. You can't just not pay your rent or mortgage if your income goes down. Do they not have any emergency reserves? I would understand this more if it were a mom and pop restaurant that was just getting by, but these are national chains.


I believe that certain rents for retail establishments are figured upon estimated "sales per square foot".   

 

They have signed a contract that was based upon those figures.  Yes, they could be evicted, but that would mean no rent at all for the landlord.  In the case of a chain, that would be even more devastating.  

 

This is uncharted territory, but a landlord might agree to this, hoping it is a temporary situation and they will not have to look for another tenet to fill the space.  And who would be opening a new business right now?

 

Rents have been massively high for several years now, and just keep going up.  Maybe it is time to hit the reset button?

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Re: Retailers plan to stop paying rent due to business dropoff and closings


@CelticCrafter wrote:

Did they vacate the store? Is the lease up?

 

If not the rent is due.


@CelticCrafter Have you ever run your own business out of a rented or owned space?

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Re: Retailers plan to stop paying rent due to business dropoff and closings

So if I can't afford to pay my apartment rent, I just tell my landlord I am not paying it. That will work. I am sure the locks would be changed as soon as I went to work.
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Re: Retailers plan to stop paying rent due to business dropoff and closings

[ Edited ]

@lovesrecess 

 

I wouldn't threaten my landlord if I'm residing in the property.  In some parts of the country, a housing shortage exists.

 

Unless you live in a rent-controlled area, your landlord can probably turn around and rent your space for  more money than you are paying now.

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Re: Retailers plan to stop paying rent due to business dropoff and closings


@GrailSeeker wrote:

@Porcelain wrote:

They can't do that. You can't just not pay your rent or mortgage if your income goes down. Do they not have any emergency reserves? I would understand this more if it were a mom and pop restaurant that was just getting by, but these are national chains.


I believe that certain rents for retail establishments are figured upon estimated "sales per square foot".   

 

They have signed a contract that was based upon those figures.  Yes, they could be evicted, but that would mean no rent at all for the landlord.  In the case of a chain, that would be even more devastating.  

 

This is uncharted territory, but a landlord might agree to this, hoping it is a temporary situation and they will not have to look for another tenet to fill the space.  And who would be opening a new business right now?

 

Rents have been massively high for several years now, and just keep going up.  Maybe it is time to hit the reset button?

 

 

 

 

 

 


Good points. There is so much empty retail real estate out there.

When you’re accustomed to privilege, equality feels like oppression.
"Power without love is reckless and abusive, and love without power is sentimental and anemic." - Dr. Martin Luther King Jr