Friday 20 November 2009

Agglomeration Of The Decade

From The Evening Standard:

Five years ago it was the West End's “cashmere alley,” a tired collection of Scottish knitware shops, airline offices, high street chains and faux “England-land” heritage stores.

The arrival of the Apple Store - the first outside America - exactly half a decade ago today - has transformed Regent Street into one of Europe's leading retail shopping destinations with an enviable and growing collection of global brands. Retail experts say the arrival of Apple - where takings are a remarkable £60 million a year - acted as a catalyst that allowed Regent Street to throw off its spinsterish image as Oxford Street's tartan clad maiden aunt...

Even in the depths of the recession Regent Street has no empty space “from Circus to Circus” and only 2000 sq ft on its northern stretch, Mr Shaw said. That gives it an overall vacancy rate of 0.03 per cent compared with 4.5 per cent across the West End as whole and 11 per cent nationally.

The “Apple effect” has also had a dramatic impact on rents, which have risen around 25 per cent since then compared with 0 to 10 per cent in the West End as a whole. While rents, which range from around £275 to £450 per square foot are still at a discount to Oxford Street, the gap is closing...


OK. Breathe in, relax, breathe out, think ...

Apple operates in a free-ish market, it looked at the cost/benefit of various locations for its new shop and went for Regent Street, invested a shedload of money in refurbishment, fancy glass staircase etc. This attracts more shoppers, so at first, tenants of surrounding shops benefit as well. So more stores want to open up there, so the landlord can put up the rents, by 25% (if the article is to be believed).

The less profitable shops can't keep up with the new rents and go out of business, and other, more profitable shops (who generate sufficient profits to be able to afford the new, higher rents) move in. Which attracts more shoppers, so rents get nudged up a bit more etc.

As a result of all this, by the time Apple's lease comes up for renewal, they'll find that their rent has gone up by fifty per cent, in other words, they'll have the privilege of paying over the odds to be near people who are themselves paying over the odds to be near Apple, and so on ad infinitum.

Seriously, which party has benefitted most from Apple's decision to move there while putting in least effort? It's a simple question with a simple answer, you just have to be honest.

9 comments:

Anonymous said...

Your economic logic is slightly faulty here. If you think about it, the rents can't rise by more than the increase in profits experienced by the shops - otherwise the net profitability of local shops would fall, and other shops/tenants would be driven away and not attracted.

It is fair to say that the landlords benefit from the general economic improvement without contributing to it, just as for example the oil states benefit from economic growth in the West.

Mark Wadsworth said...

Adam: "the rents can't rise by more than the increase in profits experienced by the shops"

Correct. That is exactly what I was trying to say.

The rents will rise to the level that the most profitable shops can afford. Some of the existing shops become more profitable and pay more rent. Some can't afford to pay the new rent and go out of business, to be replaced by a shop which can pay the rent.

(unless the landlord plays silly buggers and leaves shops deliberately empty, a practice which scrapping vacant premises exemption for Business Rates discourages).

In the long run, the increase in rents is exactly equal to the overall increase in gross profits earned by the shops trading from that location (whether those are the same businesses or new, more profitable businesses who can better capitalise on Apple being there than those who couldn't and went out of business), no more and no less.

Bill Quango MP said...

When Landlords accept no rent deals to fill the empty shops caused by by their own high rents - these zero rents are never included in the rent reviews. Keeps the rates high.

TheFatBigot said...

I might be missing something but I don't see a problem with commercial landlords making a profit from their premises being desirable.

Maybe it's nothing to do with them, maybe it's just chance; but you can say that about any business that depends ultimately on the whims of personal taste.

Mark Wadsworth said...

TFB, I never said there was 'a problem', I am just describing the world as it is. But what you are missing is that the landlord in question is The Crown Estates, i.e. The State.

Would you say that they are charging "ground rent" (at which the right-winger shouts 'Hooray') or charging "land value tax" (at which the right-winger shouts 'Boo')? Is there any difference between the two?

And yes, the success of any business ultimately depends on 'the whims of personal taste', but there is a lot of hard work and financial risk involved and a lot of businesses fail and a lot of employees lose their jobs.

The landlord, his heirs and successors in title are the only ones who have a one-way bet; if others work hard and their gambles pay off, they can put up the rents, if not, they just sit tight and wait until some other mug comes along.

bayard said...

If Apple had any savvy, they should have foreseen the process you describe and guarded against it in some way, such as taking out a 99 year lease at a rate which allowed for the improvement to the area (which they may well have done, in which case they are the joint beneficiaries with the landlord).

Mark Wadsworth said...

B, perhaps Apple did that, but that just makes them a landlord as well as a business.

bayard said...

But at least Apple are then benefiting from their own efforts, which is how it should be, should it not?

Mark Wadsworth said...

Bayard, superficially yes, but you have to split up their total income into proper business income and income from the location.

At the moment the location income (=rent) is going to Crown Estates. If Apple bought the land it would be retained by Apple. In the grander scheme of things, it doesn't actually matter, or whether it is collected as rent by CE or Apple or collected as Land Value Tax or Business Rates by 'the state'.

Seeing as price rationing is the best form of rationing, and shop space in central London is a scarce resource, we actually end up with a better outcome if everybody is a tenant - otherwise unprofitable owner-occupying businesses will use the location income to subsidise their business losses.