eddie-soehnel-portable-iden.../data/insights-hub/hrecords/5716.json

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2026-06-16 19:20:04 +00:00
{
"HubID": "5716",
"Date": "01/18/2026",
"HubTags": [
"Future Map",
"External Platform Posts"
],
"Contacts": [
"contact1",
"contact2"
],
"Companies": "",
"File": "",
"Image": "",
"Summary": "The US shopping mall is increasingly a business in which there are a few big winners, many losers, and nothing in between, according to a report in the FT. The top 100 of Americas roughly 900 shopping malls represent about half of the sectors asset value; the bottom 350 account for just 10%. High-end malls (those classified as an A mall) can attract new tenants, luxury brands, and large-scale entertainment; C and D malls have seen their occupancy rates fall by more than 26 percentage points between 2016 to 2019. The pressure on weak malls is being “compounded” by the strain on lower-income American consumers who are facing mounting bills.\n Some good news: apparently younger people Gen Z in particular are tired of doing everything via screens and are more likely to want to visit malls; the trick will be in knowing what combination of attractions will inspire shoppers and having the investment to see the vision through.",
"Notes": ""
}