Deep Dive 14 minutes PremiumAmerica’s Changing Shopping Centers: Part 2—Coronavirus Crisis Could Trigger Long-Delayed Mall Consolidation Coresight Research June 30, 2020 What's InsideAs US states relax stay-at-home restrictions, several property owners are reopening malls in a phased manner. This report is the second in our America’s Changing Shopping Centers series. We discuss the challenges that the coronavirus crisis has created for shopping malls: In the short to medium term—including reduced foot traffic, falling rental rates and the role of experiential retail In the medium to long term—including the impact of department-store chain bankruptcies and store closures on mall occupancy and property cash flows, and the curbside-pickup trend We also consider how mall operators will fill vacant space left by anchor tenants in the wake of the coronavirus crisis—such as by repurposing space to dark stores and onboarding grocers and health-care centers. Click here to read the first report in our America’s Changing Shopping Centers series, which explores long-term trends that are driving shifts in the US mall landscape. This report is for paying subscribers only. Already a paying subscriber? Please log in to see the entire report.If you wish to learn more about our subscription plans and become a paying subscriber, click here. This document was generated for Other research you may be interested in: Manhattan Momentum 2023 Conference: Manhattan Associates Adds RFID, Touts Cloud-Native Architecture, Generative AI Potential and Google Shopping IntegrationFewer Consumers Report Inflation-Induced Shopping Changes: US Consumer Survey InsightsGroceryshop 2023 Day Two: Technology and Partnerships in the Grocery SpaceResearch Preview: Retail-Tech Landscape—Generative AI Infrastructure