TOM 12 2023

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T TOPS M OF THE MONTH TOMO RETAIL REAL ESTATE TOPS OF THE MONTH Essential News About The Players In In The Retail Real Property Estate Market In in Germany THE HOTTEST DEALS +++ INTERVIEWS +++ STATEMENTS +++ PARTICULARS +++ ANALYSES +++ PROJECTS presented by HI-HEUTE.DE December 2023 The consumer climate appears to be on the right track at the end of the year. Consumer sentiment brightens at the end of the year after all GfK: However, lasting recovery remains to be seen Consumer sentiment in Germany brightened somewhat towards the end of the year: Both income expectations and the propensity to buy recorded noticeable increases. The economic outlook also improved slightly. The consumer climate rose to -25.1 points in the forecast for January 2024 - an improvement of 2.5 points compared to the previous month (revised -27.6 points). These are the results of the GfK Consumer Climate powered by NIM for December 2023, which has been published jointly by GfK and the Nuremberg Institute for Market Decisions (NIM), founder of GfK, since October 2023. With these results, the consumer climate is on the rise again after a rather stagnant development recently. The last time the consumer climate was slightly higher was in August of this year at -24.6 points. „It remains to be seen whether the current rise is the start of a sustained recovery in consumer sentiment,“ explains Rolf Bürkl, consumer expert at NIM. „Consumers are still very worried. Geopolitical crises and wars, sharply rising food prices and discussions about the national budget for 2024 continue to cause uncertainty. As a result, the level of consumer confidence is currently still extremely low.“ For a sustainable upturn in consumer confidence, GfK and NIM believe it is necessary to tackle the causes of the uncertainty and find a solution. In concrete terms, this means that further steps must be taken towards price stability and solutions must be found for the various trouble spots. The main pillar supporting the positive development of the consumer climate this month is income expectations. In December, it increased by 9.8 points compared to the previous month, climbing to -6.9 points. A better value was last measured in July 2023 with -5.1 points. One of the main reasons for the increased income optimism is certainly the expected significant growth in the most important source of income for private households: wages and salaries or pensions. This is confirmed by an in-depth analysis recently carried out by the NIM: German consumers were asked why they expect their financial situation to improve. In the open survey, around a third of respondents answered that past or future wage/salary increases and pension increases would lead them to make this positive assessment. This is by Symbolic image: Depositphotos / Vitalik Radko far the most important reason given. A number of other reasons were also given, such as job security or career changes/ improvements, for example the end of training. However, saving money by reducing expenditure was also mentioned spontaneously by around one in ten respondents. I the wake of improved income prospects, the propensity to buy has also increased noticeably: after a period of stagnation lasting around one and a half years, the indicator has gained 6.2 points and now stands at -8.8 points. The last time consumer sentiment was higher was in March 2022 at -2.1 points. Despite the significant increases, the level of propensity to buy is currently still below the level of the two lockdowns during the coronavirus pandemic in 2020/2021.

T<br />

TOPS<br />

M<br />

OF THE MONTH<br />

<strong>TOM</strong>O<br />

RETAIL REAL ESTATE<br />

TOPS<br />

OF THE<br />

MONTH<br />

Essential News About The Players In In<br />

The Retail Real Property Estate Market In in Germany<br />

THE HOTTEST DEALS +++<br />

INTERVIEWS +++ STATEMENTS<br />

+++ PARTICULARS +++<br />

ANALYSES +++ PROJECTS<br />

presented by HI-HEUTE.DE<br />

December <strong>2023</strong><br />

The consumer climate appears to be on the right track at the end of the year. <br />

Consumer sentiment brightens<br />

at the end of the year after all<br />

GfK: However, lasting recovery remains to be seen<br />

Consumer sentiment in Germany<br />

brightened somewhat<br />

towards the end of the year:<br />

Both income expectations and<br />

the propensity to buy recorded<br />

noticeable increases. The<br />

economic outlook also improved<br />

slightly.<br />

The consumer climate rose to<br />

-25.1 points in the forecast for<br />

January 2024 - an improvement<br />

of 2.5 points compared to the<br />

previous month (revised -27.6<br />

points). These are the results of<br />

the GfK Consumer Climate powered<br />

by NIM for December<br />

<strong>2023</strong>, which has been published<br />

jointly by GfK and the Nuremberg<br />

Institute for Market Decisions<br />

(NIM), founder of GfK,<br />

since October <strong>2023</strong>.<br />

With these results, the consumer<br />

climate is on the rise again<br />

after a rather stagnant development<br />

recently. The last time the<br />

consumer climate was slightly<br />

higher was in August of this<br />

year at -24.6 points. „It remains<br />

to be seen whether the current<br />

rise is the start of a sustained recovery<br />

in consumer sentiment,“<br />

explains Rolf Bürkl, consumer<br />

expert at NIM. „Consumers are<br />

still very worried. Geopolitical<br />

crises and wars, sharply rising<br />

food prices and discussions about<br />

the national budget for 2024<br />

continue to cause uncertainty.<br />

As a result, the level of consumer<br />

confidence is currently still<br />

extremely low.“ For a sustainable<br />

upturn in consumer confidence,<br />

GfK and NIM believe it<br />

is necessary to tackle the causes<br />

of the uncertainty and find a solution.<br />

In concrete terms, this<br />

means that further steps must be<br />

taken towards price stability and<br />

solutions must be found for the<br />

various trouble spots.<br />

The main pillar supporting the<br />

positive development of the<br />

consumer climate this month is<br />

income expectations. In December,<br />

it increased by 9.8 points<br />

compared to the previous month,<br />

climbing to -6.9 points. A better<br />

value was last measured in July<br />

<strong>2023</strong> with -5.1 points. One of<br />

the main reasons for the increased<br />

income optimism is certainly<br />

the expected significant growth<br />

in the most important source of<br />

income for private households:<br />

wages and salaries or pensions.<br />

This is confirmed by an in-depth<br />

analysis recently carried out by<br />

the NIM: German consumers<br />

were asked why they expect<br />

their financial situation to improve.<br />

In the open survey, around a<br />

third of respondents answered<br />

that past or future wage/salary<br />

increases and pension increases<br />

would lead them to make this<br />

positive assessment. This is by<br />

Symbolic image: Depositphotos / Vitalik Radko<br />

far the most important reason<br />

given. A number of other reasons<br />

were also given, such as<br />

job security or career changes/<br />

improvements, for example the<br />

end of training. However, saving<br />

money by reducing expenditure<br />

was also mentioned spontaneously<br />

by around one in ten<br />

respondents.<br />

I the wake of improved income<br />

prospects, the propensity to buy<br />

has also increased noticeably: after<br />

a period of stagnation lasting<br />

around one and a half years, the<br />

indicator has gained 6.2 points<br />

and now stands at -8.8 points.<br />

The last time consumer sentiment<br />

was higher was in March<br />

2022 at -2.1 points. Despite the<br />

significant increases, the level<br />

of propensity to buy is currently<br />

still below the level of the two<br />

lockdowns during the coronavirus<br />

pandemic in 2020/2021.


Page 2<br />

The pan-European real estate<br />

investment and development<br />

company Eurofund Group<br />

and the London-based private<br />

equity firm Signal Capital<br />

Partners confirm that CBRE<br />

Retail Consulting will take<br />

over the marketing and management<br />

of the Rhein-Ruhr-<br />

Zentrum (RRZ) in Mülheim<br />

at the beginning of 2024.<br />

CBRE Retail Consulting, based<br />

in Düsseldorf, specializes<br />

in leasing, consulting and management<br />

of shopping centers<br />

and retail parks and has more<br />

than 30 years of experience in<br />

this field. In September, the global<br />

real estate services provider<br />

CBRE acquired Prime Consulting<br />

from CEO and owner Alastair<br />

Green, who in turn is expanding<br />

its consulting services<br />

for the retail sector in Germany<br />

with the takeover.<br />

The Eurofund Group and<br />

CBRE have already worked together<br />

successfully on the Puerto<br />

Venecia project in Spain and<br />

the UBBO project in Portugal.<br />

The 206,000 square meter Puerto<br />

Venecia project opened in<br />

20<strong>12</strong>, marked the birth of the<br />

shopping resort concept and<br />

now attracts over 20 million<br />

visitors annually. The Eurofund<br />

Group has also pursued<br />

the same concept in the transformation<br />

of UBBO Lisbon,<br />

which has established itself as<br />

one of the city‘s leading centers<br />

and recently broke through the<br />

20 million visitor barrier. With<br />

the Rhein-Ruhr-Zentrum, Eurofund<br />

Group, Signal and CBRE<br />

will bring the shopping resort<br />

concept to Germany, combining<br />

the best of retail with a<br />

comfortable public space and<br />

leisure activities for the whole<br />

family.<br />

NEWS<br />

CBRE takes over management<br />

of the Rhein-Ruhr-Zentrum<br />

The partners are implementing a shopping resort concept in Mülheim<br />

CBRE will manage the Mülheim Rhein-Ruhr-Zentrum in the future.<br />

<br />

Visualization: Eurofund<br />

Ian Sandford, President of Eurofund<br />

Group: „We are delighted<br />

to have selected CBRE as a<br />

strong strategic partner for this<br />

project, who will support us in<br />

realizing our vision of transforming<br />

the Rhein-Ruhr-Zentrum<br />

in Mülheim back into a regionally<br />

significant and innovative<br />

district center. We will be working<br />

with one of the most experienced<br />

retail specialists in the<br />

whole of Germany, led by Alastair<br />

Green with over 20 years<br />

of retail experience and a team<br />

of 50 retail experts. As well as<br />

building on our strong relationships<br />

with existing tenants, our<br />

joint aim is to attract new partners<br />

to the building and offer an<br />

attractive and innovative mix of<br />

retail, food and leisure.“<br />

December <strong>2023</strong><br />

Ifo does not yet see a<br />

decline in inflation<br />

According to the economic research<br />

institute Ifo, the easing of<br />

consumer prices is likely to stall<br />

for the time being. The proportion<br />

of companies in Germany<br />

that want to raise their prices in<br />

the coming months is increasing<br />

again, the Munich-based researchers<br />

announced this morning.<br />

Ifo price expectations rose to 19.7<br />

points in December from 18.1<br />

points in November. Expectations<br />

had reached a temporary low<br />

in August with a balance of 14.5<br />

points.<br />

The experts expect more price<br />

increases in consumer-related<br />

service sectors. „Restaurateurs in<br />

particular want to increase prices<br />

noticeably“, the institute reported.<br />

In this area, the balance rose<br />

from 45.9 to 87.6 points.<br />

Deutsche Konsum:<br />

FFO significantly below<br />

the previous year<br />

Deutsche Konsum REIT-AG recently<br />

published its final and audited<br />

figures for the past financial<br />

year 2022/<strong>2023</strong>: Rental income<br />

increased by 7% to 79.7 million<br />

euros, while rental income rose<br />

slightly by 1.8% to 48.3 million.<br />

Further facts: FFO decreased to<br />

EUR 33.1 million due to interest /<br />

FFO per share is EUR 0.66 (fully<br />

diluted). The real estate portfolio<br />

has a balance sheet value of EUR<br />

1.0 billion.<br />

URW opts for green electricity at Ruhr Park<br />

Germany‘s largest photovoltaic system on the roof of a shopping center<br />

Together with Stadtwerke Bochum,<br />

Ruhr Park is taking a<br />

major step towards sustainability:<br />

by spring next year, the<br />

Bochum-based energy supplier<br />

will install a photovoltaic<br />

system on the roof of Ruhr<br />

Park. With over 3,600 modules<br />

and an annual electricity<br />

yield of over 1.4 million kilowatt<br />

hours, this will be Germany‘s<br />

largest photovoltaic<br />

system on the roof of a shopping<br />

center.<br />

The project underlines the fact<br />

that the retail and leisure destination<br />

takes its corporate responsibility<br />

in the city and region<br />

seriously and is expanding<br />

and strengthening strategic partnerships<br />

with local companies<br />

Ruhr Park Bochum is getting a large photovoltaic system.<br />

<br />

Photo: URW<br />

and organizations. The state-ofthe-art<br />

system is an important<br />

milestone on the way to achieving<br />

the medium and long-term<br />

goals of Ruhr Park‘s operator<br />

and owner, Unibail-Rodamco-Westfield:<br />

to reduce CO2<br />

emissions along the entire value<br />

chain by 50 percent by 2030 and<br />

by 90 percent by 2050 compared<br />

to 2015. The first work on<br />

the plant has lready begun and it<br />

is scheduled to go into operation<br />

in April 2024. The photovoltaic<br />

system, which consists of a total<br />

of 3626 modules, will then<br />

generate around 1,434,000 kilowatt<br />

hours of green electricity<br />

per year. This is roughly equivalent<br />

to the electricity consumption<br />

of 410 single-family homes.<br />

T643,000 kilowatt hours from<br />

the plant will cover 44.8 percent<br />

of the total electricity consumption<br />

of the public areas of Ruhr<br />

Park. Lars Horn, Center Manager<br />

at Ruhr Park, says: „Making<br />

renewable energy usable for our<br />

shopping center is an important<br />

step in our sustainability concept.<br />

The plant is not only a sign<br />

of the ecological responsibility<br />

that we are assuming locally,<br />

but also offers direct economic<br />

benefits because it has a positive<br />

impact on energy purchasing.“


Page 3<br />

TOP STATEMENT OF THE MONTH December <strong>2023</strong><br />

TOP STATEMENT<br />

December<br />

„Energy subsidies help<br />

to remedy urban development<br />

problems.<br />

It doesn‘t get any<br />

better than that.“<br />

Architect Michael Maas (Mass<br />

& Partner) in an interview with<br />

Immobilien Zeitung, Germany


Integrated approach<br />

to real estate<br />

We find solid platforms from which we can create sound investments, all around the<br />

world. From shopping to public or living spaces, from management to turnkey projects,<br />

we are the most far-sighted partner when developing innovative concepts.<br />

www.sonaesierra.com


Page 5 ANALYSES December <strong>2023</strong><br />

A look into the future based on inflation<br />

Gfk experts provide consumer forecasts for 2024<br />

Multiple crises and a high<br />

inflation rate have characterized<br />

the year <strong>2023</strong>. Many<br />

consumers are unsettled, the<br />

consumer climate is stagnating.<br />

How has this year<br />

changed consumers and their<br />

values? And what will be important<br />

in 2024? Experts from<br />

GfK and NIQ look back and<br />

provide data-based forecasts<br />

for the new year.<br />

The current crises are leading<br />

to a growing need for security.<br />

Women, people on low incomes<br />

and young people in particular<br />

show an above-average<br />

orientation towards security.<br />

„Generation Z and millennials<br />

are unsettled by a variety of<br />

issues, such as terrorism, environmental<br />

pollution, the quality<br />

of education, the impact of disruptive<br />

technologies on society,<br />

recession and unemployment.<br />

As a result, they are probably<br />

looking for stability more than<br />

older people,“ explains Petra<br />

Süptitz, consumer trends expert<br />

at GfK. „This is also reflected<br />

in their purchasing behavior.<br />

Young consumers trust established<br />

brands more often than older<br />

people because they rely on<br />

their proven quality. They will<br />

continue to do so in the coming<br />

year.“<br />

Trend towards<br />

retreating into the<br />

home<br />

Consumption and inflation in the coming year - GfK and NIQ provide<br />

forecasts. Symbolic image: Depositphotos / Igor Vetushko<br />

Older and financially less crisis-proof<br />

people in particular<br />

are retreating into their homes.<br />

This is accompanied by a trend<br />

towards domestic activities such<br />

as cooking and repair work. Social<br />

activities are also shifting to<br />

the home: while 30% of 20 to<br />

29-year-olds had guests at home<br />

at least once a week in 2019,<br />

this figure had risen to 37% by<br />

<strong>2023</strong>. This is presumably also<br />

due to price increases in the catering<br />

industry and may increase<br />

further with the return of VAT<br />

from January 2024. Already,<br />

43% of Germans are eating out<br />

less often to save money. Climate<br />

change remains the third biggest<br />

concern for Germans. This<br />

means that sustainability will<br />

remain a relevant topic in 2024,<br />

although the latest GfK Sustainability<br />

Index showed that the<br />

willingness to pay for sustainable<br />

purchases has decreased<br />

slightly.<br />

The situation is different for<br />

technical consumer goods,<br />

especially larger household appliances:<br />

Consumers are willing<br />

to pay more for sustainable refrigerators,<br />

washing machines<br />

or dishwashers, as it is not only<br />

the environment that benefits,<br />

but also the consumer. Buyers<br />

pay eleven percent more than<br />

the average for washing machines<br />

with an A energy efficiency<br />

label. At the same time, their<br />

market share is increasing: while<br />

37% of all washing machines<br />

were in energy efficiency class<br />

A in 2022, for example, this figure<br />

had risen to 60% in the first<br />

ten months of <strong>2023</strong>. These appliances<br />

are attractive because<br />

they consume less energy and<br />

allow consumers to save money<br />

during operation. Consumers<br />

are also increasingly opting for<br />

durable appliances - as this also<br />

reduces the life cycle costs of<br />

the product. „Consumers want<br />

to make their everyday lives<br />

easier with technical aids. In<br />

a time of many simultaneous<br />

crises, at least the home should<br />

be an uncomplicated, stressfree<br />

retreat,“ says Alexander<br />

Dehmel, expert for technical<br />

consumer goods at GfK. „And<br />

they are willing to pay for it:<br />

52% of Germans say they are<br />

prepared to spend more money<br />

on products that make their lives<br />

easier. This is where growth<br />

opportunities lie for 2024.“ In<br />

the FMCG sector - i.e. food and<br />

drugstore products - consumers<br />

are becoming more price-sensitive.<br />

In <strong>2023</strong>, private labels<br />

were on the rise: on the one<br />

hand due to lower prices, on the<br />

other hand the image of private<br />

labels has also changed. According<br />

to NIQ data, many consumers<br />

see private labels as a good<br />

alternative to branded products<br />

(51%) and often consider them<br />

to be of equal or even better<br />

quality (41%). In competition<br />

with stronger private labels,<br />

it is important for traditional<br />

brands to sharpen their unique<br />

selling points and rethink their<br />

value proposition. For example,<br />

a stronger focus on certain<br />

product characteristics such as<br />

effectiveness or sustainability<br />

can help them remain competitive.<br />

„The industry is aware of<br />

the challenge of finding a balance<br />

between price and image.<br />

Our recent NIQ Insider Survey<br />

of industry executives revealed<br />

that in 2024, they believe products<br />

must offer good value for<br />

money and be affordable in order<br />

to be successful,“ explains<br />

Enrico Krien, consumer expert<br />

at NIQ.<br />

Price and promotion management<br />

will play a decisive role<br />

in the coming year, not only for<br />

manufacturers but also for retailers.<br />

In view of limited consumer<br />

budgets, retailers will<br />

have to find the right balance<br />

between attractive prices and<br />

promotions with relevant margins<br />

in order to attract consumers<br />

on the one hand and secure<br />

important margins on the other.<br />

Category management will also<br />

be even more relevant in 2024<br />

in order to identify growth areas<br />

and better exploit them with<br />

products and services relevant<br />

to the respective target group<br />

segments. New product ranges,<br />

products or brands can also secure<br />

important sales. To do this,<br />

retailers must have a precise<br />

understanding of customer preferences<br />

and market conditions.<br />

Relying on gut instinct is no<br />

longer enough in such volatile<br />

times - not least because consumer<br />

segments are becoming<br />

increasingly fragmented. Additional<br />

margins are offered by<br />

the monetization of data and<br />

specific retail media offerings,<br />

which also enable the industry<br />

to address relevant buyer segments<br />

in a targeted and efficient<br />

manner.<br />

Customer<br />

centricity and<br />

customization<br />

„In a digitalized world where<br />

change is the new normal, unconditional<br />

customer centricity<br />

and adaptability are important<br />

keys to success. Retailers who<br />

set up their strategy based on<br />

data and constantly adapt it will<br />

be better positioned to meet the<br />

ever-changing demands of consumers.<br />

This is how retailers ensure<br />

long-term success,“ summarizes<br />

Oliver Schmitz, retail<br />

trends expert at NIQ and GfK.<br />

T<br />

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RETAIL REAL ESTATE<br />

Essential News About The Players In In<br />

The Retail Real Property Estate Market In in Germany<br />

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Page 7 NEWS December <strong>2023</strong><br />

Battle for market share<br />

with non-food discounters<br />

Atradius expects a wave of consolidation<br />

Stinginess is cool - this consumer<br />

leitmotif seems more<br />

relevant than ever in view of<br />

the inflation rate, high energy<br />

prices and declining propensity<br />

to consume. But not everyone<br />

benefits from this motto.<br />

While it‘s all sunshine and roses<br />

at the food discounters, the competitive<br />

pressure is increasing at<br />

non-food discounters - i.e. suppliers<br />

of inexpensive textiles,<br />

shoes, drugstore products and<br />

household goods. „We expect<br />

a wave of consolidation among<br />

non-food discounters in the medium<br />

term,“ says Frank Liebold,<br />

Country Manager Germany at<br />

international credit insurer Atradius.<br />

Tedi, Kodi, Thomas Philipps,<br />

Woolworth, Pfennigpfeifer and<br />

Co. are facing numerous challenges.<br />

In particular, the increases<br />

caused by inflation, minimum<br />

wage increases and higher personnel<br />

costs are weighing on the<br />

companies. Energy costs and rent<br />

increases are also leading to considerable<br />

additional expenditure.<br />

This is because companies pay<br />

index-linked rents linked to the<br />

consumer price index, and these<br />

have developed well to well<br />

in recent years. „However, as<br />

<br />

companies cannot pass on cost<br />

increases to their customers on a<br />

one-to-one basis, this is at the expense<br />

of profitability,“ explains<br />

Frank Liebold. The margins of<br />

non-food discounters have already<br />

fallen from six to ten percent<br />

to just two to four percent. They<br />

are also suffering from declining<br />

footfall in city centers, where<br />

most of their stores are located.<br />

„Discounters that don‘t sell food<br />

are coming under increasing<br />

pressure. And only the large market<br />

players with the corresponding<br />

purchasing power will be<br />

able to survive on the market,“<br />

emphasizes Frank Liebold.<br />

According to Atradius, additional<br />

pressure is being exerted on the<br />

domestic top dogs by internatio-<br />

Photo: Tedi<br />

nal competitors who are forcing<br />

their way onto the German market<br />

- above all the Dutch company<br />

Action and the Polish provider<br />

Pepco. According to market research<br />

institute GfK, Action grew<br />

by 39% in the first six months of<br />

<strong>2023</strong>, while Tedi, previously the<br />

market leader, only grew by 19%.<br />

Pepco is also pursuing ambitious<br />

goals. The Polish chain for clothing<br />

and household goods wants<br />

to open 2,000 stores in Germany.<br />

Pepco already has around 3000<br />

stores across Europe. As a result,<br />

the battle for customers is intensifying.<br />

„The cake isn‘t getting<br />

any bigger, but has to be spread<br />

across more providers - and that<br />

intensifies the battle for market<br />

share,“ says the head of Atradius<br />

Positive trend at the Schwarzwald-Baar-Center<br />

New anchor tenant and refurbishment in Villingen-Schwenningen<br />

Action Deutschland GmbH<br />

(Action) has opened its doors<br />

in the Schwarzwald-Baar-<br />

Center in Villingen-Schwenningen.<br />

The non-food discounter<br />

has leased and refurbished<br />

an area of almost 1,391 square<br />

meters in the existing property<br />

of Berlinovo Immobilien<br />

Gesellschaft mbH (berlinovo)<br />

on a long-term basis, of which<br />

around 920 square meters is<br />

retail space.<br />

By letting this part of the space,<br />

berlinovo is continuing the positive<br />

trend in the development<br />

of this important commercial<br />

location. VÖLKEL Real Estate<br />

GmbH, which is responsible for<br />

center management, brokered<br />

the lease agreement between<br />

Non-food discounters are currently facing a number of challenges.<br />

New anchor tenants Action and Kaufland have moved into the<br />

Schwarzwald-Baar-Center. Photo: Schwarzwald-Baar-Center<br />

berlinovo and the international<br />

company Action.<br />

Carsten Pohnke, Head of Commercial<br />

Real Estate Management<br />

at berlinovo: „The opening<br />

of the Action store shows<br />

Eurozone trade<br />

balance with higher<br />

surplus<br />

The foreign trade surplus in<br />

the eurozone increased in October.<br />

The trade surplus as the<br />

difference between exports<br />

and imports rose from 8.7<br />

billion euros in the previous<br />

month to 10.9 billion euros<br />

after adjustment, according to<br />

the statistics office Eurostat in<br />

Luxembourg. Analysts had on<br />

average only expected an increase<br />

to ten billion euros.<br />

This development is due to increased<br />

exports and lower imports.<br />

Exports climbed by 0.7<br />

percent, while imports fell by<br />

0.3 percent. Foreign trade in<br />

the 27 countries of the European<br />

Union (EU) developed<br />

similarly to the 20 countries of<br />

the European currency area.<br />

Almost one in four<br />

Germans would pay<br />

for gift tips with data<br />

24% of Germans are willing<br />

to disclose their personal data<br />

in return for help in finding<br />

the perfect Christmas present.<br />

This makes Germans the most<br />

willing to provide information<br />

in Europe, while the Dutch<br />

(18 percent), French (16 percent)<br />

and British (11 percent)<br />

responded more cautiously in<br />

a survey conducted by Zendesk,<br />

according to a press<br />

release. When it comes to<br />

the use of AI, Europeans are<br />

that our concept of establishing<br />

a varied mix of well-known national<br />

and international brands<br />

and integrating local players<br />

is working. The Schwarzwald-<br />

Baar-Center is one of the bestknown<br />

and most popular shopping<br />

centers in the region. This<br />

makes it all the more important<br />

to ensure that it remains an attraction<br />

for local people.“<br />

The opening of the Kaufland<br />

store in September of this year<br />

was already a noticeable stimulating<br />

element. The retailer has<br />

leased a section of around 7100<br />

square meters in the Schwarzwald-Baar-Center<br />

on a longterm<br />

basis and acts as the anchor<br />

tenant of the property. Kaufland<br />

closed the gap in the food supply<br />

that had arisen following the<br />

withdrawal of the hypermarket<br />

chain real in 2021. With the arrival<br />

of Action, another vacant<br />

space has now been put to longterm<br />

use in line with customer<br />

requirements.


Page 9 INTERVIEW December <strong>2023</strong><br />

„Experience, empathy and creativity are<br />

back in demand among center managers“<br />

Skills shortage in the retail real estate sector too - interview with HR expert Jutta Heusel<br />

Everyone is talking about the<br />

shortage of skilled workers<br />

and it affects all sectors; the<br />

question is rather how badly<br />

the respective sector is affected.<br />

„It has certainly affected<br />

the retail sector,“ says Jutta<br />

Heusel, who has been working<br />

as an independent personnel<br />

consultant at Kollmannsperger<br />

Executive Search in the<br />

real estate sector for over 20<br />

years, in an interview with<br />

<strong>TOM</strong>. Due to the rise in e-<br />

commerce, bricks-and-mortar<br />

retail has been in a difficult<br />

market situation for years. It<br />

has been hit correspondingly<br />

hard, which is why it is very<br />

difficult to recruit good employees.<br />

Other asset classes<br />

have been booming for a long<br />

time and have therefore been<br />

able to attract the top people.<br />

<strong>TOM</strong>: Ms. Heusel, how is the<br />

personnel issue currently affecting<br />

the retail real estate<br />

segment?<br />

Jutta Heusel: Shopping centers<br />

in particular have gone through<br />

various developments, changes,<br />

expansions, repositioning,<br />

etc. and with these have always<br />

come the corresponding personnel.<br />

Originally, one center manager<br />

and his or her team were<br />

responsible for each shopping<br />

center (and thus the corresponding<br />

center advertising association).<br />

For cost reasons, the team<br />

was first reduced and then, for<br />

reasons of efficiency, the communal<br />

area to be managed was<br />

reduced until today‘s development,<br />

where one center manager<br />

is responsible for several<br />

centers at the same time.<br />

In a fundamentally good market<br />

situation, there are large,<br />

successful centers in busy locations<br />

and smaller centers that<br />

are more tailored to local conditions<br />

and their players. The difficulty<br />

of this task of managing<br />

several centers at the same time<br />

is evident in the current market<br />

situation.<br />

<strong>TOM</strong>: What are the personnel-related<br />

challenges?<br />

Jutta Heusel: Smaller centers<br />

Jutta Heusel, Managing Partner Kollmannsperger Executive Search<br />

GmbH Photo: Kollmannsperger<br />

in particular currently require<br />

a lot of attention and a high<br />

degree of time and creativity in<br />

order to process contracts, implement<br />

insolvencies and redesign<br />

spaces and find new tenants<br />

accordingly. This is the technical<br />

side. The personnel side is<br />

finding suitable staff for the role<br />

of center manager. The focus is<br />

on people with experience, but<br />

they are hardly available on the<br />

market. The shortage of skilled<br />

workers is having a major impact<br />

here. In the past, few new<br />

positions were advertised, so<br />

there are too few and the experienced<br />

ones are usually valued<br />

and satisfied. The smaller<br />

centers are at a disadvantage<br />

because, on the one hand, they<br />

have fewer attractive and larger<br />

tenants and, on the other, they<br />

are in less frequented locations.<br />

Nobody wants to manage difficult<br />

centers either, as it is not a<br />

very promising task to bring about<br />

change here.<br />

<strong>TOM</strong>: What does that mean<br />

in concrete terms?<br />

Jutta Heusel: If in the past a<br />

center manager was primarily<br />

defined by the size, level of<br />

awareness and therefore also<br />

the location of his center (and<br />

his experience could also be<br />

read from this), we currently<br />

have new challenges. As there<br />

have been more young, inexperienced<br />

center managers in<br />

recent times, they have not yet<br />

been able to experience a crisis<br />

and are not used to breaking<br />

new ground. At the moment,<br />

locations are very different and<br />

are drifting further apart than<br />

was the case in the past. Large,<br />

well-functioning centers, which<br />

are controlled by the center manager<br />

from the tenant side via<br />

the head office, contrast with<br />

small, very regional centers that<br />

function via local players and<br />

also have their difficulties here.<br />

Individual action must be taken<br />

here. It helps to have a good and<br />

trusting relationship with the<br />

tenants in order to rethink solution<br />

concepts and changes in the<br />

use of space together with them.<br />

In this way, attractive and functioning<br />

centers can be managed<br />

again.<br />

<strong>TOM</strong>: How have the tasks in<br />

center management changed?<br />

Jutta Heusel: If efficiency<br />

and maximum space utilization<br />

were the focus in the past, individual<br />

solutions are currently in<br />

demand. Center managers are<br />

being taken back into their actual<br />

management role because<br />

they are no longer simply the<br />

administrators of the locations<br />

and organizers of the advertising<br />

communities of centers,<br />

but must approach tenants with<br />

creativity and empathy and get<br />

them on board in order to develop<br />

a successful concept in<br />

centers and also in the district.<br />

The shortage of skilled workers<br />

and the lack of crisis experience<br />

are leading to a renewed focus<br />

on seniority, which has been<br />

dispensed with in many centers<br />

in recent years for reasons of efficiency.<br />

Experience was often<br />

not and could not be afforded.<br />

<strong>TOM</strong>: But why is all this so<br />

difficult in practice?<br />

Jutta Heusel: The main difficulty<br />

is that many center managers<br />

are not at all familiar with<br />

a crisis situation. Even though<br />

online retail has been booming<br />

for a long time and is pushing<br />

back bricks-and-mortar retail,<br />

insolvencies on a large scale<br />

have fortunately only been seen<br />

recently. Working together with<br />

the existing tenant to implement<br />

the insolvency and being<br />

open to pragmatic and new approaches<br />

is uncharted territory<br />

for many CM staff and tends<br />

to be frustrating. Seniority is<br />

once again in greater demand<br />

here, because experience also<br />

brings strength of nerve and the<br />

awareness that solutions can<br />

be found with pragmatism and<br />

empathy even in difficult times.<br />

Perhaps the shortage of skilled<br />

workers is also forcing centers<br />

not only to tackle new concepts<br />

in leasing and space management,<br />

but also to respond to<br />

pragmatic solutions and flexibility<br />

in center management staffing.<br />

If managers were shown<br />

more appreciation and were<br />

once again the caretakers and<br />

doers of the center, their position<br />

would be strengthened and<br />

seen as more attractive in the<br />

market.<br />

Of course, the shortage of skilled<br />

workers cannot be denied,<br />

but creativity and flexibility in<br />

every respect can provide a remedy<br />

so that new concepts can<br />

be implemented in a different<br />

way and difficult locations can<br />

become more attractive.


Page 11 NEWS December <strong>2023</strong><br />

On the way to an urban commercial district<br />

Interview with Steffen Uttich and Fabian Spahn (INBRIGHT Investment)<br />

Shopping centers remain attractive<br />

for investors if they<br />

move away from the retail<br />

monoculture. This is what<br />

Steffen Uttich (Managing Director)<br />

and Fabian Spohn (Senior<br />

Portfolio Manager) from<br />

INBRIGHT Investment say<br />

in a <strong>TOM</strong> double interview.<br />

Their Berlin-based company<br />

focuses on light industrial real<br />

estate in economically strong<br />

regions throughout Germany.<br />

<strong>TOM</strong>: How has the world of<br />

institutional real estate investors<br />

developed? Things looked<br />

very different 20 years ago,<br />

didn‘t they?<br />

Steffen Uttich/Fabian Spohn:<br />

Indeed. Back then, the world<br />

of German institutional real<br />

estate investors was a world of<br />

drawers: Drawer open, type of<br />

use in, drawer closed. The portfolio<br />

cabinet was then sorted<br />

according to residential, office,<br />

retail and hotel. Sometimes it<br />

even contained something as<br />

exotic as logistics. In any case,<br />

a mixture was not intended at<br />

property level. Preferably one<br />

tenant with one use in one building<br />

- that made the investment<br />

clear. The weighting of the individual<br />

types of use at portfolio<br />

level was a strategic decision<br />

that investors wanted to make<br />

themselves.<br />

This approach was no longer<br />

up to date, at the latest with the<br />

upheavals that the 2008 financial<br />

crisis brought to the real<br />

estate market. The miracle of<br />

risk diversification slowly but<br />

steadily found its way from securities<br />

investments to real estate<br />

investments. After all, it is the<br />

individual property that ultimately<br />

determines the success of an<br />

investment. And that is why risk<br />

diversification should start right<br />

there. Risk diversification in<br />

real estate investment therefore<br />

means bringing many tenants<br />

with different types of use under<br />

one roof. Multi-tenant/multi-use<br />

is the recipe for success that requires<br />

two essential ingredients:<br />

space that can be used by third<br />

parties and a property manager<br />

who can deal with many tenants<br />

and different types of use. As<br />

a result, the investor gets what<br />

he expects: stable rental income<br />

and thus a stable return on his<br />

invested capital.<br />

Steffen Uttich und Fabian Spohn Fotos: INBRIGHT<br />

<strong>TOM</strong>: What will the medium-term<br />

future hold for investors?<br />

Steffen Uttich/Fabian Spohn:<br />

It is precisely this miracle of<br />

risk diversification that can save<br />

many inner-city shopping centers<br />

their status as an established<br />

investment property for institutional<br />

investors in the coming<br />

years. Of course, there will also<br />

be shopping centers in the future<br />

that will continue to function<br />

due to their location and<br />

reputation with a high customer<br />

frequency. But these will be few<br />

and far between. The majority<br />

will no longer be able to cope<br />

with the challenges posed by<br />

online retail and changing consumer<br />

habits. For their current<br />

owners, they need to reinvent<br />

their shopping centers.<br />

That sounds more difficult than<br />

it is. Because there are actually<br />

only two adjustments that need<br />

to be made. The first is to open<br />

up the shopping center space -<br />

including the sometimes oversized<br />

parking areas - for other<br />

types of use. Instead of the monoculture<br />

of retail with a fig leaf<br />

of gastronomy, a colorful quarter<br />

can be created in which the<br />

original tenant target audience<br />

occupies at most half or less of<br />

the current space. The rest can<br />

be filled by city logistics companies,<br />

craftsmen with their workshops,<br />

educational institutions,<br />

medical professionals with laboratories<br />

and, last but not least,<br />

creative companies.<br />

Such a property strategy can<br />

open up undreamt-of potential.<br />

For example, it can be assumed<br />

that the neighboring districts<br />

will be revitalized by combining<br />

workplaces and residential<br />

areas. Horizontal integration<br />

makes it possible to implement<br />

flexible working time and family<br />

concepts without long commuting<br />

times. At the same time,<br />

the other types of use can generate<br />

new public traffic, which<br />

revitalizes the retail and restaurant<br />

areas and generates the necessary<br />

turnover. This approach<br />

can already be seen in Bochum,<br />

where a virtue is being made of<br />

necessity with the establishment<br />

of urban production. Today‘s<br />

shopping centers can play a central<br />

role in such a concept if they<br />

combine the production and sale<br />

of locally manufactured goods<br />

under one roof.<br />

<strong>TOM</strong>: What is the major challenge<br />

in the repurposing process?<br />

Steffen Uttich/Fabian Spohn:<br />

The trick is to make this transformation<br />

into a multi-tenant/<br />

multi-use property economically<br />

viable. However, in view of<br />

the ongoing price correction in<br />

the shopping center segment,<br />

business plans are likely to provide<br />

more and more scope for<br />

this. A leased multi-use center<br />

can continue to generate attractive<br />

returns for investors, even if<br />

the rental income is at a lower<br />

level than in the original use. For<br />

example, the resulting ancillary<br />

costs, which would otherwise<br />

have to be borne by the landlord,<br />

fall with the vacancy. If<br />

the downward spiral of vacancy<br />

and inadequate footfall is interrupted<br />

by a new mix of uses, the<br />

benefits increase. If, for example,<br />

rents of EUR 15 per square<br />

meter are consistently generated<br />

for a year in a center with<br />

a variety of uses, this is more<br />

profitable than a vacancy of six<br />

months in a space rented for an<br />

average of EUR 30 per square<br />

meter. If high-quality services<br />

such as doctors and laboratories<br />

can be located, an even higher<br />

rent level can be expected. If the<br />

fit-out of the multi-use space is<br />

also geared towards the highest<br />

possible third-party usability,<br />

the costs for future meter extensions<br />

can be set lower - leaving<br />

more scope for the retail space<br />

that is desired to remain in the<br />

center. There are also positive<br />

effects for sustainability, financing,<br />

valuation and exit price.<br />

<strong>TOM</strong>: And what else is important<br />

in this context?<br />

Steffen Uttich/Fabian Spohn:<br />

Above all, property management.<br />

Successful asset and property<br />

management of shopping<br />

centers has always been an art<br />

in its own right. Striking the<br />

right balance between the right<br />

mix of stores and the maximum<br />

achievable rents with the lowest<br />

possible vacancy rate is a smart<br />

business. But it is a business of<br />

yesterday. Developing an understanding<br />

that new skills are<br />

needed here can prove to be a<br />

major hurdle. In place of the<br />

previous retail letting artist, the<br />

skills of a community manager<br />

are required who can adapt to<br />

the particularities of very different<br />

users.<br />

As in a traditional business<br />

park, it is important to keep an<br />

eye on the needs of the tenants<br />

at all times, provide ideal space<br />

for the respective purposes and<br />

respond to changes in operations<br />

during the rental period.<br />

When it comes to re-letting, it is<br />

important to deal appropriately<br />

with prospective tenants beyond<br />

the highly professionalized expansion<br />

departments from the<br />

retail sector. A number of lessons<br />

can be learned here from<br />

the operation of co-working<br />

spaces, especially from the light<br />

industrial market segment. It<br />

would therefore come as no great<br />

surprise if light industrial specialists,<br />

with their experience in<br />

managing different types of use,<br />

were soon to find themselves<br />

in the shopping center market.


www.wisag.de<br />

Your shopping centre in the best hands<br />

Perfect cleanliness, uncompromising security and optimum service:<br />

all this keeps not only the customers satisfied, but also tenants and<br />

owners. With our tailored solutions and experience, you will benefit<br />

from optimum management costs. And at all times, we have value<br />

retention and the sustained development of your centre in mind.<br />

We go one step further for you.<br />

Joaquin Jimenez Zabala<br />

Tel. +49 162 7861-324 joaquin.jimenez.zabala@wisag.de


Page 13 GUEST CONTRIBUTION December <strong>2023</strong><br />

Trade is change, politics (too often) standstill<br />

Guest article by lawyer Niklas Langguth (law firm Langguth & Burbulla, Dusseldorf)<br />

The insolvency of Galeria<br />

Kaufhof was the final, momentous<br />

stage in a development<br />

that began with the Hertie insolvency<br />

several years ago and<br />

was announced much earlier.<br />

To date, there has been no<br />

comparable replacement for<br />

the loss of department stores,<br />

which were often the mainstay<br />

of city centers. In recent years,<br />

it has been possible to fill most<br />

of the Hertie vacancies with<br />

new concepts. This in itself<br />

has proven to be a challenge.<br />

This makes it all the more important<br />

to find promising and<br />

sustainable solutions within a<br />

reasonable period of time.<br />

The problem<br />

In the case of the Galeria insolvency,<br />

it is possible to draw<br />

on the experience gained from<br />

the revitalization of the Hertie<br />

stores. However, department<br />

stores are very individual locations<br />

and properties with commercial<br />

and real estate law problems<br />

that have often developed<br />

over decades. Accordingly, these<br />

properties can only rarely be<br />

restructured using a template.<br />

And where the commercial and<br />

legal aspects are usually difficult,<br />

there is a further problem:<br />

as a rule, these are locations that<br />

shape the district, and the municipal<br />

policy requirements for<br />

urban development are correspondingly<br />

high and varied.<br />

The developer‘s<br />

dilemma<br />

Niklas Langguth<br />

Project developers are often<br />

caught in a dilemma here: even<br />

an initial rough draft for the<br />

development of such properties<br />

involves considerable investment.<br />

If the developer then<br />

approaches the local authority<br />

with such a design, there is a<br />

high risk that the design will be<br />

disliked, torpedoed or discussed<br />

over several rounds.<br />

On the other hand, local authorities<br />

often do not feel compelled<br />

to embark on urban land-use<br />

planning on their own, despite<br />

the corresponding mandatory<br />

tasks. In these cases, it is possible<br />

to find out about the city‘s<br />

planning intentions. In this<br />

constellation, all too often something<br />

can only be initiated<br />

if an investor drafts a restructuring<br />

scenario at high risk, knowing<br />

full well that his design is<br />

unlikely to come to fruition and<br />

that a competitor may end up<br />

benefiting from the impetus if a<br />

planning process gets underway<br />

and is often only completed years<br />

later.<br />

The failure of many<br />

local authorities<br />

The problem with this constellation<br />

often lies in the inertia and<br />

inactivity of local authorities. A<br />

brownfield site the size of a department<br />

store in the best inner<br />

city area is an urban planning<br />

disaster that creates an urgent<br />

need for planning.<br />

The local authorities are not<br />

only entitled, they are legally<br />

obliged to comply with this<br />

planning requirement (Section<br />

1 (3) BauGB). The fact that this<br />

obligation is not enforceable because<br />

it is not legally enforceable<br />

against third parties often<br />

leads local authorities to ignore<br />

the legal obligation.<br />

The excuses are manifold, particularly<br />

popular and often heard:<br />

local authorities cannot afford<br />

it. One wonders: a local authority<br />

that does not see itself as capable<br />

of forward-looking planning<br />

even in the narrowest inner<br />

city area has obviously given<br />

up its urban planning will. Only<br />

when an investor appears on the<br />

scene do most local authorities<br />

begin to think seriously about<br />

their urban planning ideas.<br />

This usually leads to extensive<br />

discussions and arguments between<br />

the council factions until<br />

there is nothing left of the investor‘s<br />

design. Only then does<br />

the city start a planning process,<br />

but it often comes to a standstill<br />

again when the investor leaves<br />

in frustration. Then the game<br />

often starts all over again with a<br />

new investor.<br />

What the local authorities overlook<br />

is that times have changed.<br />

When the Hertie bankruptcy<br />

had to be overcome, online platform<br />

retail took its first steps. In<br />

the meantime, online retail has<br />

taken substantial market shares<br />

from bricks-and-mortar retailers.<br />

A city center location is no<br />

longer a guarantee that an investor<br />

will take the risks that such<br />

a location entails and wait patiently<br />

until the municipality has<br />

finished its discussions. At the<br />

same time, business taxes from<br />

city center retail are generally<br />

a significant proportion of municipal<br />

revenues. If a solution is<br />

not found quickly for the derelict<br />

site, the remaining inner-city<br />

retail trade could be damaged<br />

along with the department store<br />

and, in the worst case, become<br />

deserted.<br />

Unlike 15 years ago, the local<br />

authorities do not have time<br />

to wait until, after several attempts,<br />

an investor comes up<br />

with an idea that suits all political<br />

groups. If the local authorities<br />

want to design their city<br />

centers effectively in the current<br />

situation and preserve city center<br />

retail, they will have to become<br />

active in planning. And they<br />

will have to do this themselves,<br />

as they are legally obliged to do<br />

so anyway.<br />

You almost want to shout to the<br />

local authorities concerned: Do<br />

your job!


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Page 15 INTERVIEW December <strong>2023</strong><br />

„We have a tailor-made concept<br />

for every location challenge“<br />

Interview with Susanne Gehle (Kaufland Real Estate Germany)<br />

Supermarkets and hypermarkets<br />

have undergone a major<br />

process of change in real estate<br />

development in recent<br />

years and have also broken<br />

new ground in many cases.<br />

Kaufland is one of the pioneers<br />

here. HI <strong>TOM</strong> editor-inchief<br />

Thorsten Müller spoke<br />

to Susanne Gehle, who is also<br />

responsible for real estate development<br />

at Kaufland.<br />

we have been working intensively<br />

there to modernize the<br />

building, which was constructed<br />

in the early 1970s, with conversions<br />

and extensions.<br />

With the revitalization in Bad<br />

Tölz, we have shown that it<br />

does not always have to be demolition<br />

and new construction<br />

and how a sustainable future<br />

concept can still be created.<br />

<strong>TOM</strong>: The year <strong>2023</strong> is drawing<br />

to a close. What were the<br />

focal points for you in <strong>2023</strong>?<br />

Susanne Gehle: The main focal<br />

points in <strong>2023</strong>, as in the year<br />

before, were the growth of our<br />

store network and the revitalization<br />

of our existing properties.<br />

<strong>TOM</strong>: Kaufland has broken<br />

many new ground with its<br />

properties in recent years.<br />

Which ideas have been particularly<br />

successful?<br />

Susanne Gehle: In the space of<br />

less than two years, for example,<br />

we recently created attractive<br />

Kaufland stores from over<br />

90 former Real stores. One of<br />

our highlight projects in <strong>2023</strong><br />

was our revitalization of RemsPark<br />

in Waiblingen. We developed<br />

the new letting concept,<br />

including the Kaufland store,<br />

in-house on over 22,000 square<br />

meters. After twelve months of<br />

construction, we celebrated the<br />

reopening of the Kaufland store<br />

in the center and the reopening<br />

of the center on December 7,<br />

<strong>2023</strong>. We are proud of the result.<br />

In addition to our new Kaufland,<br />

customers will find specialist<br />

stores such as Decathlon, Smyth<br />

Toys and dm Drogeriemarkt.<br />

The specialist store concept is<br />

complemented by many other<br />

stores and services. The culinary<br />

highlight is the newly created<br />

FoodCourt, which invites customers<br />

to enjoy and linger.<br />

We now operate over 770 stores<br />

in Germany and will continue to<br />

focus on growth in the future.<br />

In doing so, we are focusing<br />

on the new development and<br />

revitalization of existing retail<br />

locations.<br />

Susanne Gehle <br />

<strong>TOM</strong>: What else will change<br />

or develop in the near future?<br />

Susanne Gehle: The focus will<br />

shift even more from new construction<br />

to the restructuring of<br />

existing retail properties, if only<br />

because of the large number<br />

of legal regulations that exist<br />

or are under discussion at both<br />

national and European level.<br />

Although many shopping centers<br />

or inner-city properties are<br />

in great need of revitalization,<br />

the locations themselves are established.<br />

There are enormous<br />

development opportunities here.<br />

<strong>TOM</strong>: ESG is playing an increasingly<br />

important role in<br />

new realizations as well as in<br />

the operation of existing properties,<br />

but it still feels like it<br />

is in its infancy. What is your<br />

current experience? What is<br />

Kaufland doing in this area?<br />

Photo: Kaufland<br />

Susanne Gehle: There is a<br />

great need for ESG measures<br />

in existing properties in particular.<br />

In our opinion, there is<br />

great awareness of the topic in<br />

the sector. However, committed<br />

action in the implementation of<br />

ESG-compliant measures must<br />

be or become the declared requirement,<br />

especially for property<br />

owners. As an owner and<br />

as a tenant, ESG plays a central<br />

role in the further expansion<br />

and management of our existing<br />

portfolio. As a local supplier of<br />

the future, we face economic,<br />

social and geopolitical challenges<br />

with innovative approaches,<br />

focusing on revitalization and<br />

a contemporary mix of uses.<br />

As a modern local supplier, we<br />

actively address sustainability,<br />

ESG and CSR issues across the<br />

company.<br />

The Kaufland store in Bad Tölz,<br />

for example, is currently a pioneering<br />

project. Since last year,<br />

<strong>TOM</strong>: Maintaining a vibrant<br />

city center is of existential importance<br />

for brick-and-mortar<br />

retail. What can a company<br />

like yours do to achieve<br />

this, or is it already doing so?<br />

Susanne Gehle: As a frequency<br />

generator, we occupy all retail<br />

locations, from stand-alone supermarkets,<br />

specialist stores and<br />

shopping centers to inner-city<br />

locations. Local service providers,<br />

retailers and restaurants<br />

also benefit from this. Kaufland<br />

acts as a strong local partner that<br />

finds an individual solution and<br />

a tailor-made concept for every<br />

challenge at the location. Innercity<br />

locations in particular offer<br />

us optimal revitalization opportunities,<br />

especially in shopping<br />

centers.<br />

<strong>TOM</strong>: Online and offline are<br />

no longer enemies. Would you<br />

agree with this and can you<br />

give an example from your<br />

company?<br />

Susanne Gehle: In our Düsseldorf<br />

store on Hilde-und-Joseph-<br />

Neyses-Platz, we have been<br />

testing an open showroom in<br />

the entrance area with exclusive<br />

products from our marketplace<br />

Kaufland.de since June, offering<br />

a piece of the online world you<br />

can touch. This gives the marketplace<br />

even more visibility<br />

on the sales floor and our customers<br />

can conveniently discover<br />

selected marketplace products<br />

directly on site during their<br />

weekly shop instead of only seeing<br />

them online. It is another<br />

example of how stores and the<br />

online platform are increasingly<br />

merging into one Kaufland<br />

world.


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Page 17 MAP OF THE MONTH December <strong>2023</strong><br />

GfK Purchasing Power for Toys & Hobbies, Germany <strong>2023</strong><br />

GfK’s Map of the Month for December shows the <strong>2023</strong><br />

regional distribution of purchasing power for toys<br />

and hobbies via online and brick-and-mortar retail<br />

in Germany. The holidays are just around the corner,<br />

and children in particular can hardly wait to unpack<br />

their presents. But where in Germany do people buy<br />

the most toys? GfK’s study on purchasing power for<br />

retail product lines shows that there are significant<br />

regional differences in terms of spending potential<br />

for toys and hobbies – both in online and brick-andmortar<br />

retail. The inhabitants of the rural district of<br />

Munich spend €86 per capita online, which is more<br />

than 29% above the German average, on toys and<br />

hobbies – putting them in first place among all 400<br />

urban and rural districts in the online retail channel.<br />

In contrast, the urban district of Gelsenkirchen is in<br />

last place with a per capita purchasing power of €48.<br />

Residents of the urban district of Wolfsburg have the<br />

highest spending potential in brick-and-mortar retail.<br />

At €81 per person, this is almost 35 percent above<br />

the national average. In the last-placed urban district<br />

of Hamm, on the other hand, residents only have<br />

€44 available for their toys and hobbies spending in<br />

brick-and-mortar retail.

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