Singapore malls take lead in bumping up food space to counter online hit


SINGAPORE: Singapore’s shopping centres, intent on keeping units filled and luring back patrons, are renting space to eateries far beyond industry norms in what observers say is a glimpse of how malls are coping with the online onslaught on brick-and-mortar stores.

The often-billed shopping paradise, with Asia’s highest retail space per capita, has seen vacancy rates and rents near their weakest in at least six years - metrics which place its malls among the worst-performing of the region’s bigger economies.

Malls globally have long been countering Internet shopping by adding features not easily replicated online, such as cinemas and schools, but the impact of changing consumer trends is more pronounced in Singapore due to an oversupply of retail space.

To make up for lost revenue, Singapore mall operators have doubled the space for food and beverage (F&B) tenants compared with a decade ago to as much as 40%, analysts said, even though it is costly to refit units to accommodate kitchens, while rents can be lower than for fashion stores, for instance.

“They are no longer ‘shopping’ malls,” said Desmond Sim, research head at real estate services firm CBRE in Singapore. "They are adding more activity-based tenants and facilities that “provide a little bit more sustainability away from e-commerce”.

Real estate services firm JLL put F&B space in Singapore malls at over 30%, compared with 23% in rival shopping destination Hong Kong and 10%-15% in Europe.

In September, M&G Real Estate reopened its Compass One mall in the island’s north-east with 33% of space allocated to F&B outlets, from 20% before a year-long refurbishment.

“F&B, in Singapore, I will consider that as rather non-discretionary,” said Ng Chiang Ling, M&G Real Estate’s Asia chief executive. ”So that was one of the key things - offer more F&B (and) to offer more choices.” 

AsiaMalls also added eateries after refurbishing its Tiong Bahru Plaza and White Sands shopping centres, while Sim Lian Group gave F&B about 30% when it opened Hillion Mall in February.

“Regionally, other countries will definitely look at us in terms of our offerings, and we can be used as a reference as well,” said Singapore-based Diane Aw, head of retail services at property consultancy Colliers International.

GIANT FOOD COURT 

Singapore has about 11.6 sq ft of retail space per capita, showed data from JLL. That compared with Hong Kong’s 11.5 sq ft, Bangkok’s 8.6 and Shanghai’s 4.8.

But its retail vacancy rate hit 8.4% in July-September, the highest since at least January-February 2011, government data showed, increasing the pressure to fill units.

“Malls have been providing more room for negotiation compared with a few years back,” said Vincent Tan, managing director at Select Group, which runs Peach Garden and Texas Chicken restaurants. ”We have been able to strike better deals with regard to rent.” 

To be sure, F&B is just one means of countering a downturn, with others including loyalty programmes and technology to track shopping behaviour.

“Malls will never go 100% F&B - nobody wants to go to a giant food court,” said Christopher Tang, chief executive officer, Singapore, at developer Frasers Centrepoint Ltd . "It can be 35%-40%. I’m not sure where the magic line is at the moment.” - Reuters

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