So there was a delightful gathering at the Jervis shopping centre last week—a flock of bargain-hunters, or, more precisely, potential buyers for the mall. Apparently, 13 first-round offers were tossed onto the table like confetti at a wedding. The owners, the dynamic duo Paddy McKillen and Padraig Drayne, had quietly placed this beloved shopping shrine on the market like it was an old couch they just didn’t have space for anymore.
This is the first time the shopping centre has been officially for sale since its inception back in the ’90s—a real estate version of a long-lost treasure finally coming to light. Now, it’s one of the last dozen or so retail places in the last thirty years still under the care of its original creators, which is like finding out your childhood teddy bear is still hanging around, but slightly more commercial.
The Sunday Times has whispered that prospective bidders included the heavy-hitters: the Comer Group, the esteemed US property investor Hines (who clearly thinks shopping malls are the new gold), Peter Horgan’s Lugus Capital, and Patron Capital. Why, even David Goddard’s Lanthorn got in on the action, taking a shot on behalf of some elite clients. If shopping centre bidding were an Olympic sport, we’d certainly be racking up the medals.
Interestingly enough, this ferocious bidding war was fueled by a recent frenzy over Marlet’s trio of retail parks, which received an astonishing ten bids amid the rubble of our economically uncertain times. Retail has evolved into the hot favorite in the property investment market post-Covid, as it turns out, while offices are merely gathering dust—sounds like the old cat lady’s house minus the cats.
Estate agents recently reported that in the first quarter of the year, retail accounted for a whopping 50% of all property deals in this charming region. If you didn’t know better, one might think the retail renaissance is the new cosmic joke, with the universe throwing us a curveball right when we were ready to retire our shopping bags for good.
US-based Realty Income, which recently splurged a cool $950 million on the Bellagio casino in Las Vegas, appears to have reconfigured its priorities to prioritizing retail. Just this year, they scooped up eight retail parks in a deal worth €220 million, cementing their position as the ultimate shopping fanatics. It’s as if they’ve turned investing into a series of questionable life choices we can all get behind.
Statistics are spilling over with contradictions: AIB’s latest retail report mentions that in-store spending rose by 2% compared to last year, making everyone rethink what they thought they knew. The EY Future Consumer index showed that a staggering 70% of consumers gravitate toward physical stores for everyday items—probably because scrolling through options at home isn’t as fulfilling as grabbing a random candle at a mall.
Jean McCabe, chief executive of Retail Excellence Ireland (and surely someone who deserves a medal for managing all that chaos) remarked that customers are returning to stores for the “customer experience.” Because what says “experience” more than standing in long lines only to realize someone else snagged the last pair of your size? Retail is shifting. Shopping centres now consist of gourmet dining, pockets of fun, and an emerging abundance of Irish brands, making them collective hubs of joy-filled despair.
Brendan McDowell of BPerfect Cosmetics started with just an online presence and graduated to 13 physical stores. Talk about a glow-up! After testing waters with pop-up stores that were all the rage, he realized there was a goldmine waiting to be unearthed—like stumbling upon a treasure map only to find it scribbled on a napkin. After all, negotiating short-term lease deals during a pandemic is akin to swiping on Tinder, isn’t it? You might find a match or nothing at all, but it’s worth the gamble!
