Talking up the Regions

Of the nine regions in England, London region, the capital city, is dominant; next is South East that covers a much larger area but whose population exceeds London by only about 500,000; the other seven are what those in London and the South-East would regard, sometimes in derisory tone, as the provinces. For further reading, please visit LandlordZone.

A rare opportunity for landlords

Now the credit-crunch has settled, landlords have a rare, possibly unique, opportunity to determine the future of retailing, for good.

As I see it, a lot of hard-working decent honourable tenants, good at what they do, have found their property costs inflated as a result of the legacy of a bunch of irresponsible retailers who, operating in splendid isolation, behaved like drunken idiots by throwing their weight around when they could borrow lots and go on a spending spree, but are no longer full of confidence now the money-tap is turned off. Indeed, with balance-sheets hung up for all to see, it is interesting just how many retailers are heavily indebted. Which makes one wonder where all the money went.

Let’s face it, an awful lot of multiple retailers are not as good as they like to think, and many were struggling before recession arrived. It’s also fascinating how many multiple retailers think the world owes them a living. And how fond they are of blaming rent, rates, the economy, for their loss-making. The truth is a failure to address operational difficulties. It’s easy to manage without coming unstuck in times of change, so not getting the formula right is tantamount to gross negligence at the highest level. It is not as though there is no money about. You only have to look at turnover figures to see how much is spent.

Every retailer thinks it has a unique selling proposition, but, actually, there is hardly any originality, and copycat merchandise is in overdrive. The shopping public is doing its bit by not spending indiscriminately, and supermarkets are making life hell for those that think themselves so heavenly wonderful but are no earthly good, but landlords are in a position to accelerate change. One might think failing retailers are helping too, using pre-pack administration and CVA to prune branches, but pre-pack is about yesteryear directors out for whatever they can get.

You may think I’m off my rocker, or living on another planet, but this is no ordinary downturn. Things will never go back to how they were. It’s a shift, to a entirely different set of values and way of doing business. Which is why, in my view, landlords should seize the opportunity to rid us of all the retailers that have got us into this mess, and instead re-let the shops, even if it means lower rents, to those that understand the difference between running a business and managing for long-term consistent success.