Tag Archives: Gurgaon

Similarities between Indian and Middle Eastern malls

Cord has worked across the Middle East for the last 6 years and recently conducted an in-depth visual brand audit for one of India’s leading property companies. It is interesting to compare the expansion of property businesses from the Middle East in relation to India, as there are certain marked similarities between both markets. Here are a number of observations:

The proliferation of shopping centres with no apparent planning.

More and more centres are located in close proximity, which results in increased competition between the schemes with no apparent distinction between brand positioning, offer and service except ‘bigger and better’.

Where there has been a distinction i.e. high end and mid market the question is twofold:

  • to the target retailer, especially within the international luxury market how does this reflect on their brand status/values and does it perceptionaly down value it?
  • to the consumer there is the question of “voyeurism” versus exclusivity

Mall proliferation in India is best experienced in Gurgaon, Delhi.

The role of retail leisure.

With the changing aspirations and needs for leisure time and the temperatures outside, retail environments have become the prime leisure destination and as such have to be adaptable to offer more than just retail in order to increase dwell time and spending power.

Both in India and the Middle East there is a marked increase in weekend and evening visits, people hanging out and meeting up with friends and relatives etc. However, the net result is that there will be people wandering around not necessarily purchasing. Cord’s work on Mall of the Emirates created a fusion of retail and leisure by introducing Dubai’s first snow dome.

The disparity within the population.

Whilst in the Middle East the lower end of the market are transient workers from the Indian continent they similarly take up a large proportion of the total market whilst having minimal spending power.

The mid-market is increasing in size but the lower end is still fairly naïve in their shopping patterns and the smaller hi-end market have higher than average expectations in offer and service.

The propensity to travel.

Wealthier locals have a greater awareness of not only the major International brands but also what is expected of flagship stores through the total offer. It is all about those “added extras” – service delivery, design and branding.

This means that if retailers are not careful there can be over promise and under delivery.

In addition there is also the added kudos of the wealthier consumer to say they have purchased the item in New York, London, Paris etc. At this moment in time can the same apply to say “Gurgaon”?

Mall mania leaves India overstocked

The following article appeared in AsiaProperty magazine. Having carried out an in-depth visual brand audit of the Indian mall sector, Cord were asked to contribute thoughts about the Indian market and the challenges that it faces.

Developers are struggling to find tenants to fill the plethora of shopping schemes that have sprung up across the country in the past three years, while retailers are holding out against high rents

On MG Road, the leading shopping street in Gurgaon, India’s burgeoning new business centre outside Delhi, there are 15 mall developments, all of which were originally planned as purely retail schemes. Today, only four have stuck to the original plans. The rest have gone mixed-use, switching their third, fourth and fifth floors to office space and even apartments. 

It’s a story repeated across India, as the higher potential rents that malls offer developers are offset by the difficulty of finding retailers to take the space.

At the end of July, Akruti City, one of Mumbai’s leading developers, said it had converted seven of its mall developments into office space over the past year. Delhi- based DLF now plans to develop 40% of its planned malls as mixed-use developments.

“They were hoping that retail would catch on, but there just aren’t enough operators in the country,” says Shubhranshu Pani, head of retail at Jones Lang LaSalle. “Every major retailer in India probably already has two outlets on MG Road.”

Pani says vacancy rates in some malls are above 50%. Cushman & Wakefield reports an average vacancy of 18% across the 3.75m m2 of retail developments in India’s eight leading cities. The vacancy rate could have been even higher, but only 185,800m2 of a planned 557,400m2 of new mall supply expected to come onto the market this summer has actually been completed.

Vacancy rates to worsen

Rajneesh Mahajan, director of retail services at C&W, says he expects the situation to get worse. “The vacancy level reported is a result of inappropriate supply, poor mall management and consolidation of retailers,” he says. “We expect vacancy rates to go even higher in the short term.”

Mahajan expects to see more retail developments converted into commercial space: “The modern retail spaces developed in recent times will find other commercial uses and get occupied.”

Retail was India’s next business growth story two to three years ago, with most of India’s big business groups – Reliance Industries, Tata Group, Aditya Birla Group among them – launching chains. Foreign companies, from niche fashion players to supermarket chains such as Tesco, Wal-Mart and Metro, were also queuing up to launch stores in the country.

The lure was a retail industry worth $350bn and set to grow even faster than India’s 9% GDP growth, 95% of which was still in the hands of small ‘ma and pa’ retailers.

But even Reliance – famed for its ability to carry out its plans – has failed to fulfill the ambitious roll-out strategy for its retail operation. While Tesco and Wal-Mart have announced joint ventures, neither has yet opened a store.

Indians starved of clean public spaces in which to hang out have flocked to its new malls in the past decade, but they have spent far less than projected. As a result, retailers are now refusing to pay the high rents – in excess of 100 rupees/sq ft ($2.11/sq ft) – they were willing to pay a year ago.

“They were anticipating that business would be better,” says Pani. “In the absence of organised retailers, they were predicting sales from population figures. A reality check came when they opened the stores. Now they know what their affordability is, they’re not jumping at rents.”

As a result, many retailers are delaying openings in anticipation of a correction in retail rents over the next few quarters. “We are experiencing a cut in the demand for store space, or clients not taking up the spaces they booked earlier,” says Mahajan. Retailers continue to pay high rents for space in good-quality, well-designed developments that pull in customers.

However, they are deserting the many Indian malls that fall short of the mark in terms of location and quality. “Certain kind of catchment areas have also not lived up to retailers’ expectations, hence they do not want to repeat mistakes,” says Mahajan.

This means that it is crucial for developers to ensure that their malls stand out from the others that are springing up across India’s cities.

Standing out from the crowd

“Developers are going to have to invest in establishing strong mall brands to differentiate themselves and stand out from the crowd,” says Sara O’Rorke, a partner at Cord, a London-based agency that advises on mall developments.

On the face of it, looming oversupply could mean that even well-thought-out malls suffer. Some 10.4m m2 of retail space is expected to be completed in the next three to four years, with 250 new malls expected in India in the next two years.

JLL projects that in cities such as Gurgaon, Bangalore and Ludhiana, the amount of retail space will balloon from 1 sq ft per person to as much as 5 sq ft per person – far beyond what is justified by the projected growth in Indian spending habits.

However, Pani predicts that only around 50% of the announced developments will actually be built. One model that is becoming more common is rental deals where the retailer receives a lower rent, but agrees to share revenue beyond a certain level with the mall- owner, thus giving the landlord a bigger stake in the store’s success – a similar practice to the turnover rents common in European retail. Big Bazaar, India’s low-cost retail success story has pioneered this approach.

But the fundamental demographic and growth statistics that created such fevered interest in India’s retail remain. Pani believes that, as India’s corporate retailers gain the sort of market understanding a company such as Tesco has in the UK, the mall rental market will become more stable.