Macy’s and J.C. Penney have two very different real estate strategies

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In an era when the department store model is under siege, two major examples of it in the U.S. — Macy’s and J.C. Penney — are pursuing very different brick-and-mortar strategies.

They do have much in common, with plans to improve stores and streamline their supply chains, indicating an abiding faith in the department store as a still-relevant retail destination. J.C. Penney last year announced a $1 billion investment in store refreshes and tech upgrades; this year, the company said it would revamp 200 stores by the end of the year and touted improvements in the speed and cost efficiency of its supply chain. And at Macy’s, newly arrived CEO Tony Spring said he would use lessons from his time leading the company’s Bloomingdale’s banner to inform the flagship chain’s transformation.

Their differences are real, however, particularly when it comes to plans for the size, number and location of their stores. Analysts peg the reasons for those differences on their current — and potential — ownership.

Dropping anchors

These two retailers have long anchored shopping centers, a setup from the mid-20th century meant to drive consumer traffic to the mall. Today, Macy’s has increasingly broken this mold, while J.C. Penney remains firmly ensconced in it.

For both its Bloomingdale’s and Macy’s banners, Macy’s Inc. has been experimenting with stores about one-fifth the size of its sprawling downtown and mall-anchor locations, placed at strip centers. Last year, Macy’s announced it would accelerate this small-format strategy by opening as many as 30 smaller stores through the fall of 2025, which would triple their number and sometimes also entail shuttering a full-line store in a given market.

Speaking at the Shoptalk conference in March, Spring said that Macy’s runs “too many locations that were built for a different era” and that it has “no choice” but to close stores if it is to prosper.

By contrast, J.C. Penney, which nearly four years ago was acquired out of bankruptcy by shopping center REITs Simon Property Group and Brookfield Properties, is maintaining its relationship to the mall. Its turnaround plan makes no mention of experimenting with small formats or entering strip malls as Macy’s has done.

“I think their plans make a lot of sense. They’ve got a great leadership team that’s leading them into the next generation of what a department store should be,” Kevin McCrain, CEO of Brookfield Properties U.S., told Retail Dive about J.C. Penney. “They are very focused and know exactly who their consumer is, and they’re looking to cater to that consumer, which is exactly what every department store should be doing.”

Open and shut

Another stark difference between Macy’s and J.C. Penney’s real estate strategies lies in how each contemplates adjustments to the sizes of their fleets. As of its most recent quarter, the Macy’s banner runs 481 full-line stores, 12 small-format stores and nine Backstage off-price stores. According to a financial report released last week, J.C. Penney runs 663 stores.

A little over a year ago, Macy’s previous CEO, Jeff Gennette, said that the closure of four full-line stores meant that the retailer was largely finished with its plan to shutter about 125 underperforming stores, part of a turnaround announced in 2020. But this year, Spring said the company would shutter another 150 stores over the next three years. Stores won’t be spared just because they turn a profit, he also said, a hard line that analysts say may be necessary in the long run.

Normally, profitability is the main driver of whether or not to run a store, unless a different location might generate even more sales or consolidation might drive efficiencies, according to GlobalData Managing Director Neil Saunders. But neither Macy’s nor Penney are in normal situations, he said by email.

“It is no secret that Macy’s has been in decline for a very long time, and it is probably the case that some locations are seeing an ongoing deterioration in sales, so in five or 10 years they may not be profitable,” Saunders said. “If Macy’s acts now it can get in front of the problem and focus its efforts on investing in the stores it thinks can carry the business forward. In some ways this is like amputating gangrenous parts of the business: it’s not very pleasant and it has arisen because of a lack of care in the past, but it is necessary for survival.”

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