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- <text id=90TT3230>
- <link 91TT0397>
- <link 90TT3379>
- <link 89TT3235>
- <title>
- Dec. 03, 1990: Scrooge Goes To The Mall
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990 Highlights
- The American Economy
- </history>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Dec. 03, 1990 The Lady Bows Out
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BUSINESS, Page 80
- Scrooge Goes To the Mall
- </hdr><body>
- <p>As consumers balk, anxious retailers confront a potentially
- disastrous Christmas sales season
- </p>
- <p>By JANICE CASTRO -- Reported by Mary Cronin/New York and
- William McWhirter/Chicago
- </p>
- <p> Santa Claus kicked off the Christmas shopping season in
- grand style last week in St. Louis, where he was escorted by
- 3,000 children to his castle at the sprawling 200-store
- Northwest Plaza. In New York City, Macy's staged its lavish
- Thanksgiving Day parade, towing Bart Simpson and 12 other giant
- balloons to Herald Square, where a 36-ft.-tall Paddington Bear
- now hovers invitingly above the entrance of the flagship store.
- In San Francisco holiday shoppers were making a beeline for the
- free merry-go-round and other rides on the roof of the
- Emporium. Across America, retailers are trying all sorts of
- stunts to get folks inside their stores between now and the
- holidays. But once there, will they buy?
- </p>
- <p> Fearing the answer, shopkeepers are bracing for what may be
- the toughest Christmas selling season in a decade. Says Bernard
- Brennan, chief executive of Montgomery Ward: "There are more
- negative dynamics working than at any other time I've seen in my
- entire marketing career." After a year in which retail sales
- barely kept up with a 4.8% inflation rate, merchants have
- watched even that shopping pace flag just before the onset of
- the most important selling season of the year, one that
- typically accounts for as much as 60% of annual retail profits.
- Overall, sales (excluding gasoline) fell 0.1% in October.
- </p>
- <p> Anxious consumers may be strolling the aisles, but they are
- holding on to their wallets more and more tightly. Fears about
- possible war in the Persian Gulf are piling upon recession
- worries and news of spreading corporate cutbacks. One consumer
- sounding after another is recording the development of a
- batten-down-the-hatches mentality. Since Iraq invaded Kuwait,
- consumer confidence has fallen to its lowest level in 44 years.
- In a national survey of 500 consumers conducted last week by the
- Leo Burnett advertising agency, 82% said the economy was in
- worse shape now than it was a year ago, while 40% said they were
- feeling the pinch themselves.
- </p>
- <p> A chill in consumer spending this Christmas would come at
- the worst possible time for a retailing industry that is
- desperately overbuilt and heavily indebted. While the U.S.
- population grew only 10% during the 1980s, a building boom
- expanded retail square footage 75%. As a result, nearly half of
- all retail space is superfluous, according to Management
- Horizons, the market-research division of Price Waterhouse.
- Making matters worse, a frenzy of mergers and acquisitions
- during the past few years has saddled the 30 largest retail
- companies with a staggering debt burden of $60 billion.
- Struggling to meet interest and debt payments, those companies
- must capture customers in order to survive. Says Gap chairman
- Donald Fisher: "It's going to be brutal."
- </p>
- <p> Christmas sales started especially early this year, as
- nervous retailers tried to get a head start on the competition.
- Labor Day had barely passed when some retailers started decking
- their shelves with tinsel and flashing lights, startling more
- than a few suntanned customers. By Halloween, major stores were
- slashing prices on everything from furs and evening clothes to
- CD players and toys.
- </p>
- <p> Early indications are that consumers this season are
- shopping carefully for value. Says Kenneth Macke, chairman of
- Dayton Hudson (1989 sales: $13.6 billion): "The customers are
- going to make sure they get their money's worth. We think that
- things like purses, gloves, shaker sweaters, turtlenecks and
- espresso machines are going to be very good. I don't think this
- is the year when we want to be in space-age TV sets that float
- on the ceiling."
- </p>
- <p> To help stir warm Christmas sentiments and loosen those
- purse strings, stores are emphasizing family ties this year.
- Montgomery Ward has donated $2 million worth of VCRs and
- videocams to the U.S.O. for American troops stationed in the
- Persian Gulf. Families of servicemen and -women are invited to
- go into the chain's stores and videotape holiday messages for
- them. The J.C. Penney's in East Brunswick, N.J., is kindling the
- holiday spirit with a giveaway. Customers can get a $10 discount
- on new coats by turning in any old coat; the used garments are
- then donated to the needy.
- </p>
- <p> Retailers are also bolstering service, in the hope that
- they can hold on to the customers they've already got. At Saks
- on Michigan Avenue in Chicago, says store manager Joan Tillman,
- "we treat each and every sale as if it is a true gift to us."
- </p>
- <p> At the same time, though, merchants are protecting their
- perilously thin profit margins by cutting expenses, especially
- inventory costs. Macy's, which was swept up in the price-cutting
- panic among big stores last Christmas when it found itself more
- than 10% overstocked, is carrying about $640 million less
- inventory this year. Orders of U.S.-made apparel are down 8%
- industry-wide this season, while in Hong Kong clothing
- manufacturers report a flurry of canceled and curtailed orders
- from big U.S. stores.
- </p>
- <p> Usually, the onset of the holidays spurs an increase in
- retail hiring to handle the surge in business. But during the
- past three months, for the first time since the 1981 recession,
- the number of workers employed in the industry has been
- shrinking as the crucial shopping period approaches. In many
- stores customers who can find what they want may have trouble
- locating someone to ring it up. Even so, because of troubles
- elsewhere in the economy, stores have been able to attract some
- very impressive temps. In Manhattan, for example, where nearly
- 50,000 Wall Street traders and other workers have lost their
- jobs during the past three years, financial wizards are working
- some of the counters at Bloomingdale's this season, selling
- menswear, furniture and electronics.
- </p>
- <p> No matter how troubling the signs, no one expects consumers
- to skip Christmas and Hanukkah this year. But while they may buy
- nearly as many presents as last year, they may shop for them in
- different places. More than a fourth of the people surveyed by
- Leo Burnett last week said they plan to do much of their
- Christmas shopping this year in discount stores. Among the
- well-managed retailers surging ahead of the pack as a result:
- the Gap, Wal-Mart, Mervyn's, T.J. Maxx, Costco and Crate &
- Barrel in Chicago, which specializes in moderately priced
- housewares. Quality retailers expected to excel by offering
- affordable luxury range from Dillard department store to
- Crabtree & Evelyn (bath and toiletries), Williams-Sonoma
- (kitchenware) and one of the industry's strongest performers,
- Victoria's Secret (lingerie).
- </p>
- <p> If consumers sink into an especially stingy mood, though,
- some big retailers simply may not make it. Three of the most
- vulnerable: Federated, Carter Hawley Hale and Macy's. Already in
- Chapter 11, the Federated company, which owns Bloomingdale's,
- A&S and Rich's, owes more than $9 billion and is due to submit
- its reorganization plan to a federal bankruptcy judge in
- February. While the company is expected to sell off large chunks
- of itself to satisfy its creditors, moderately strong holiday
- sales could help preserve a core company more capable of
- emerging from bankruptcy protection.
- </p>
- <p> Carter Hawley Hale, which includes Weinstock's and the
- Emporium, lost $26 million in the year that ended in July. The
- company was forced to spin off its best properties -- Neiman
- Marcus and Bergdorf Goodman -- after it ran its debt up to $1.6
- billion fending off takeover attempts by the Limited in 1984 and
- 1987. For Macy's, which still carries $4.5 billion in debt, the
- next six weeks may be the most critical in its 132-year history.
- Having lost $215 million in the year that ended in July, Macy's
- must move enough merchandise to come up with $690 million in
- debt and interest payments due next July. A Macy's spokesman
- insists that "this Christmas will not be any more important than
- others." But Thomas Rauh, regional director of retail services
- for the accounting firm Ernst & Young, notes that, despite
- Macy's sound management, "bankruptcy is an option that the
- company is almost certainly going to have to consider in 1991."
- </p>
- <p> While consumers adjust to simpler things again, the stores
- that are deeply mired in debt cannot shift so smoothly. Says
- Brennan of Montgomery Ward: "I hate to be a Dr. Doom, but we're
- going to end up at the beginning of 1991 with fewer retailers
- than we had at the start of 1990." If consumers really throttle
- down this holiday season, some famous stores may be taking down
- those Christmas decorations only to hang up GOING OUT OF
- BUSINESS signs.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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