
Forthcoming JRER Paper
Retail
Concentration and Shopping Center Rents - A Comparison of Two Cities
Abstract:
This study aims primarily at testing whether, and to
what extent, retail concentration within regional and super-regional
shopping centers affects rent levels as well as the differential impact it
may exert for various goods categories and sub-categories and in different
urban contexts. In this paper, 1,499 leases distributed among eleven
regional and super-regional shopping centers in Montreal and Quebec City,
Canada, and negotiated over the 2000-2003 period are being considered. Unit
base rents (base rent per sq. ft.) are regressed on a series of descriptors
that include percentage rent rate, retail unit size (GLA), lease duration,
shopping center age as well as 31 retail categories while the Herfindahl
index is used as a measure of intra-category retail concentration. Findings
suggest that while, overall, intra-category retail concentration affects
base rent negatively, the magnitude and, eventually, direction of the impact
varies depending on the nature of the activity and the market dynamics that
prevail for the category considered.

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