Thousands More Stores Are Now On The 2018 Retail Apocalypse Death List

in retail •  7 years ago 

Content adapted from this Zerohedge.com article : Source


In this article posted on the Organic Prepper by Daisy Luther, we see that more retail establishments are slated for closure in the near future. This is a trend which came into the consciousness of people a few years ago but really started more than a decade back. Amazon is often blamed as the primary culprit and rightly so.

Store closing of this magnitude affects a couple major areas. The first is commercial real estate, specifically shopping malls. The other is employmet. Retail often is the path to providing entry level jobs for people before moving onto other things. It is also a fall back in times of recession when high paying jobs are lost.

This all is taking place with an expanding economy. It is scary to think of what might happen when we drift into recession.

Authored by Daisy Luther via The Organic Prepper blog,

Every year, it seems like more and more retail outlets are going out of business, resulting in the loss of jobs and local supplies. Last year, hundreds of stores closed, and this year, even more shops are scheduled to shut their doors for good.

The 2018 Death List

This year, in an effort to save their businesses, the following retailers will close hundreds of their stores, according to Fox Business.

  • Abercrombie & Fitch: 60 more stores are charted to close
  • Aerosoles: Only 4 of their 88 stores are definitely remaining open
  • American Apparel: They've filed for bankruptcy and all their stores have closed (or will soon)
  • BCBG: 118 stores have closed * Bebe: Bebe is history and all 168 stores have closed
  • Bon-Ton: They've filed for Chapter 11 and will be closing 48 stores.
  • The Children's Place: They plan to close hundreds of stores by 2020 and are going digital.
  • CVS: They closed 70 stores but thousands still remain viable.
  • Foot Locker: They're closing 110 underperforming stores shortly.
  • Guess: 60 stores will bite the dust this year.
  • Gymboree: A whopping 350 stores will close their doors for good this year
  • **HHGregg: **All 220 stores will be closed this year after the company filed for bankruptcy.
  • J. Crew: They'll be closing 50 stores instead of the original 20 they had announced.
  • J.C. Penney: They've closed 138 stores and plan to turn all the remaining ones into toy stores.
  • The Limited: All 250 retail locations have been closed and they've gone digital in an effort to remain in business. * Macy's: 7 more stores will soon close and more than 5000 employees will be laid off.
  • Michael Kors: They'll close 125 stores this year.
  • Payless: They'll be closing a whopping 800 stores this year after recently filing for bankruptcy.
  • Radio Shack: More than 1000 stores have been shut down this year, leaving them with only 70 stores nationwide.
  • Rue 21: They'll be closing 400 stores this year.
  • Sears/Kmart: They've closed over 300 locations.
  • ToysRUs: They've filed for bankruptcy but at this point, have not announced store closures, and have in fact, stated their stores will remain open.
  • Wet Seal: This place is history – all 171 stores will soon be closed.

And these are just the people who have announced store closures so far. In an environment hostile to brick and mortar businesses, more are sure to come.

Tens of thousands of jobs will be lost.

Even if you don't like to shop, _this is a sign of economic trouble. _The malls that sit empty are a sign of massive unemployment.

Jobs in the retail sector are the most prolific in America, employing 4.3 million workers as salespeople and 3.3 million workers as cashiers. (source) The current store closures mean the end of employment for tens of thousands of workers.

All in all, the collapse of the retail industry could, at some point, put the livelihoods of more than 7 million people in jeopardy. Perhaps the doomsaying economists like Peter Schiff and Dave Kunstler are right when they warn that a Great Depression the likes of the one in the early 1900s is upon us. That means not only massive unemployment but also massive hyperinflation, making it nearly impossible to stay fed.

Let's add to rising retail unemployment the move to more self-checkout, more AI, and more computerized systems instead of human staff. It's not too hard to understand why people could soon be dependent on a Universal Basic Income and a return to an almost feudal society.


A Great Depression now would be far worse than the historic one we all look back on.

And if that's the case, it's bound to be even worse. Back in 2006, our urban population exceeded our rural population for the first time ever. This means that people will be unlikely to have the space to grow food for self-reliance.

As well, we've gotten so far away from the skills of self-reliance that it's practically a lost art. Our society is one of consumers, not producers, and this means that in a depressed economy, many more people will be at the mercy of government handouts. And let's face it, in a depression, those handouts, if they happen at all, will be very sparse.

These days, most folks don't know how to grow food, preserve food, sew, or build. For a list of self-reliant skills and links to places that will help you learn them, go here to my Self-Reliance Manifesto. No matter where you live, some of these skills will be applicable you, and it's more urgent now than ever to put them into practice. To learn more about living through a societal and economic collapse, check out articles by Jose, who is currently trying to get his family out of Venezuela due to their own crisis. (Here's one that is really enlightening.)


Is the retail apocalypse a sign of impending financial doom or merely a move toward a more digital society? Will unemployment begin to rise even further?

Non-adapted content found at zerohedge.com: Source


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This is a very long list.. Tens of thousands of jobs!!! where will these employees get the money to finance their standards of living. I do believe these retail outlets closing business is a result of competition set by Amazon; an online outlet which offers lower prices, a variety of options to pick from, a convenience of purchasing an item while cross legged in your chair at home. This has been too much for the retail outlets that have been trying to maximise profits amidst the huge costs they incur like employees' salaries.
Am seeing big names on this list which shows almost every retail outlet is getting affected.
The government needs to come in at this time to prevent all these people from going back to the streets. The level of unemployment that will come up is bad for America. The government has been doing it's level best to keep the American people secure.. but with this popping up, we might start seeing increase in the crime rate. Good time keeping employees will turn into burglars for the sake of surviving.
The government needs to come up with a plan to prevent these retail outlets from going down. I strongly believe giant outlets like Amazon are the culprits here. And policies creating a good working environment between these giant firms and the retail outlets need to be set up and regulated to keep the retail outlets from falling out of business.

This death list is pretty scary, but it’s reality and it gets lot worse before it gets better. I think in reality the retail sector is in worse shape today than it was in 2008 during the financial crisis. A soaring budget and trade deficits, rising interest rates, higher inflation, a falling U.S. Dollar a trade war and a slowing economy all causing lower earnings. It’s all related to Fed policy. Let's see how much longer Powell along with others can pretend all is well. Another reason people are shopping on the Internet is that the average American shopper is broke. They can barely afford to buy the stuff that they’re buying. In fact, most people are buying stuff that they can’t afford. They’re just buying anyway and they’re using a credit card…Retailing is a shrinking market because Americans’ pocketbooks are shrinking, their paychecks are shrinking.
Great post about retail APOCALYPSE!
8DAA987B-5041-4A0A-BB48-8FE04C748AC2.gif

I thought radio shack went out of business years ago, either go online and sell shit cheaper than amazon or go out of business, that's what is up. I went to Walmart on "black Friday" and to the mall a week before Christmas, retail is dead. Self driving cars and trucks will eliminate 15% of jobs, but who cares, everyone can just become steemit millionaires. I imagined that in the future someday after robots and automation took everyone's jobs that we would be paid for posting online, and lo and behold...

What do you think?
Is the retail apocalypse a sign of impending financial doom or merely a move toward a more digital society? Will unemployment begin to rise even further?

The death of the Malls has begun.. Higher insurance, higher deductibles. high and higher property taxes and state taxes, less of company benefits and those affected are supposed to keep shopping in malls.

A mall near me actually lost Saks Fifth Avenue last year. And the mall only had two anchors, But the mall owners are doing the right thing: They have added many more restaurants and is now completing an upscale multiplex where Saks used to be. Its the right answer for malls to survive. People want experiences. Amazon can do a lot but it can't replicate the dining out or movie theater experience. Malls need to be destinations now and not a place to buy things.

Every time I turn around, the shop radio is blasting a sale advertisement for JCPenny or Macy's. Every weekend is some excuse for a 'sale' as they desperately try to get warm bodies to visit their retail necropoli. No brick and mortar retail is going to survive the internet age unless they become a primarily online retailer and forget the huge storefront and expensive square footage of 'the mall.'

Not necessarily (monopolistic fuckbag owned and operated) Amazon; but online.

O'Reiley's, Napa, and Autozone are going to die too -their prices are consistently almost double what RockAuto and other online distributors can sell for, so why would any rational person shop there except for the occasional emergency part or odds-n-ends?

It is a 'brave new world' out there and we wonder why Soma sales are through the roof (with the concumbant overdoses, death and misery it brings.)

Shopping is no longer fun. You get badgered to donate to charity, get a rewards card, open a credit card and give your email. I don't not shop because I lack money, I don't shop retail because I'm tired of being badgered. Being a good customer with cash in hand is no longer good enough for stores, they want much more from you.It doesn't help that customer service is non existent when visiting the actual stores now. These millennial employees usually act like I am bothering them at their house when I need to purchase something. They also never know anything about the merchandise and can not answer any questions you might have. Only high end boutiques seem to still take pride in helping customers.

We are really shocked on that time.No-one complained when the current crop of mega-stores killed the Mom and Pop shops, General Stores, haberdasheries, Candy, and Hay Grain and Feed stores.
But this is the time to change us and walk with a harmonic step to stop this.

This death list is pretty scary, but it’s reality and it gets lot worse before it gets better. I think in reality the retail sector is in worse shape today than it was in 2008 during the financial crisis. A soaring budget and trade deficits, rising interest rates, higher inflation, a falling U.S. Dollar a trade war and a slowing economy all causing lower earnings.Another reason people are shopping on the Internet is that the average American shopper is broke

Amazon has taken Walmart's spot as the new Bully. As much as I love Amazon, I'm scared of them as well. Amazon is about 5% of all US sales, but almost 40% of US online sales. Amazon is a huge reason for the Retail Apocalypse and continues to squeeze retails like pythons....to death. Every city is bidding on Amazon HQ2, not realizing the consequences will be housing price increases and more traffic.

Some interesting charts on the stores closing historically and this year here:

https://www.providr.com/store-closures/

This death list is pretty scary, but it’s reality and it gets lot worse before it gets better. I think in reality the retail sector is in worse shape today than it was in 2008 during the financial crisis. A soaring budget and trade deficits, rising interest rates, higher inflation, a falling U.S. Dollar a trade war and a slowing economy all causing lower earnings. It’s all related to Fed policy. Let's see how much longer Powell along with others can pretend all is well. Another reason people are shopping on the Internet is that the average American shopper is broke. They can barely afford to buy the stuff that they’re buying. In fact, most people are buying stuff that they can’t afford. They’re just buying anyway and they’re using a credit card…Retailing is a shrinking market because Americans’ pocketbooks are shrinking, their paychecks are shrinking.

"If the American people ever allow private banks to control the issue of their money, first by inflation and then by deflation, the banks and corporations that will grow up around them (around the banks), will deprive the people of their property until their children will wake up homeless on the continent their fathers conquered." -- Thomas Jefferson

And... we didn't listen!

The 2018 Death List exists because the consumer is changing its preferences and tendencies. Right now we see e-commerce winning more and more fans, which mean that either you adapt and try to survive this new era, or you are going to close doors.
Of course Amazon is the obvious company to blame, but evolution is always happening and a lot of this "shops" are only trying to sell physically to the consumer.

The big problem associated to this, is that tens of thousands of jobs will be lost and it will have a negative impact in the unemployed rate.