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Which Retail Tenants Are Still Struggling to Pay Rent?

February brought some welcome relief for the country’s retail landlords, as multiple tenants managed to pay all of their rent for the month and the number of those able to pay less than half of what they owed dropped, according to the most recent report from data firm Datex.

According to Datex, between the end of 2020 and February, total rent collections rose 514 basis points, to 90.81 percent. The increase affected both national and non-national retail tenants, with the non-nationals showing a somewhat stronger improvement and paying up to 87.70 percent of the rent they owed in February in contrast to just 81.64 percent in December of 2020.

As of February, here are the retail tenants that paid the most and the least of their rent.

 

 

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Wary Of Another Shutdown, Retail Landlords Sweeten Pot For Tenants

Some retail landlords are offering additional concessions to tenants in case the government mandates another Covid-related shutdown.

Landlords are including language in new leases that allows retail tenants to defer part of their rent if the government requires store closures, according to the Wall Street Journal. Many insurance policies did not cover pandemic-related losses, leading landlords to find new ways to keep struggling tenants in place.

In one case, EastBanc, which owns and operates 25 retail properties in Washington, D.C.’s Georgetown neighborhood, has offered to cut tenants’ base rent to 50 percent if the city forces a shutdown, the Journal reported.

In Detroit, development company Bedrock — created by billionaire Dan Gilbert — is allowing tenants to forgo their base rents if they provide the company with 7 percent of gross sales.

Throughout the pandemic, retail landlords have largely offered deferrals to tenants whose businesses have been decimated who were unable to pay rent. But other landlords have sued and sought to evict some chain retailers over millions of dollars in unpaid rent. Meanwhile, landlords are seeking to exclude pandemics as being labeled force majeure events — act of God — which they argue would make it more difficult to get financing if that language is included.

 

Source:  The Real Deal

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