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National  + Retail  | 

Experience Economy Drives 2018 Lease Deals

The retail sector has experienced more than its share of challenges and shifts over the past few years. As we round out the year, Connect Media sat down with Coreland Companies’ Matt Hammond to find out what drove leasing trends in 2018, and what he sees ahead in 2019. Check out his responses in our latest 3 CRE Q&A.

Q: What did 2018 look like in terms of Southern California lease transactions?
A:
While the past few years saw an explosion of restaurant concepts, 2018 was much more about service models and service providers. From the acceleration of click-and-collect concepts, to local businesses expanding their platform of services, tenants of all types have spent the year re-shaping their business.

Southern California retail leasing efforts were driven by anything you can’t do on the internet, from salons and spas to pet grooming and supplies. Based on our initial review of 2018 lease deals, nearly 50 percent of our Southern California transactions were with service providers. The balance was an even split between restaurants and health & fitness.

Q: Where does that leave traditional retail deals?
A:
Traditional retail, such as clothing and home goods, made up just 7% of our transactions. However, the lines have blurred between retail and service because no retailer can afford to just be in the business of selling products.

Look around this holiday season and you see custom experiences being offered everywhere. The skate shop that is also a skate park, the surf shop that sells little in store and focuses on custom orders; or the home store selling interior design services in addition to goods.

Q: Have we seen the peak of Health and Fitness deals in the market?
A:
I don’t think we’ve seen the peak because specialization is fueling growth. Similar to grocery store specialization, fitness concepts have found great opportunities focusing on niche audiences. Today, you can choose from traditional (LA and 24-Hour Fitness), discount (Planet, Chuze and Crunch Fitness) or specialty (UFC, Orangetheory, F45, Fit Body Bootcamp, SoulCycle, etc.), all offering a different product at different price points.

Owners and tenants today are more welcoming of fitness co-tenants. They have seen the value and better understand the use. Just based on our experience on recent deals, owners have reasonably been able to obtain approvals from anchor co-tenants, something that would not have happened a decade ago. This allows fitness tenants to target better real estate deals and encourages new concepts.

*Pictured Foothill Marketplace

For comments, questions or concerns, please contact Dennis Kaiser

Connect

Inside The Story

Connect With Coreland Companies’ Hammond

About Dennis Kaiser

Dennis Kaiser is Vice President of Public Relations and Communications for Connect Creative. Dennis is a communications leader with more than 40 years of experience including as a journalist and in corporate and agency marketing communications roles. He is responsible for Connect Creative’s agency client services and is involved in a range of initiatives ranging from public relations and content strategy, communications and message development, copywriting, media relations, social media and content marketing services. Prior to joining Connect Media in 2015, his most recent corporate communications roles involved leading a regional public relations effort across Southern California for CBRE, playing a key marketing role on JLL’s national retail team, and directing the global public relations effort at ValleyCrest (BrightView), the nation’s largest commercial landscape services company. He has worked on marketing communications assignments for such CRE companies as Blackstone/Equity Office, Carlyle, Caruso, Disney Resorts, GE Capital, Irvine Company, Hines, Howard Hughes Corp., Jeffries, Lennar, MGM, Marcus & Millichap, Prologis, Raleigh Studios, Simon, Starwood, Trammell Crow Company, Transamerica, UBS and Wynn Resorts. Dennis has also worked on communications and launch strategies for a number of consumer electronic, media and tech brands including SlingMedia, Channel Master, Deluxe Media Entertainment, BeIn Sports, EchoStar and Sprint. Dennis’s agency background included firms such as Off Madison Ave., Idea Hall and Macy + Associates. He has earned an outstanding reputation with organization leaders as a trusted advisor, strategic program implementer, consensus builder and exceptional collaborator. Dennis has developed and managed national communications programs for Fortune 500 companies to start-ups, both public and private. He’s successfully worked with journalists across the globe representing clients involved in major-breaking news stories, product launches, media tours, and company news announcements. Dennis has been involved in a host of charitable and community organizations including the American Cancer Society, Easter Seals, Boy Scouts, Chrysalis Foundation, Freedom For Life, HOLA, L.A.’s BEST, Reach Out and Read, Super Bowl Host Committee, and the Thunderbirds Charities.

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