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Simon Property Group

  • Activist investor takes increased stake in Macerich

    An activist hedge fund has purchased a 5% stake in Macerich, according to a CNBC report, sending the company’s shares up 12% and fueling talk it could push for a sale of the mall owner.
  • Fast-growing retail 'tiger' in U.S. expansion

    Danish retailer Flying Tiger is ramping up for an aggressive U.S. expansion.
  • Simon exec: New luxury center overdue in Fort Worth

    People who still think of Fort Worth as the poor, cow-town stepchild of Dallas make a big mistake, according to the Simon Property Group executive who led the development of The Shops at Clearfork, the mall giant’s new center there.
  • Simon Property Group vs. Starbucks: Precedent setting?

    Simon Property Group raised eyebrows in the real estate and retail communities this week with the filing a suit that challenged Starbucks’ decision to close 78 Teavana stores in Simon malls. All retailer 379 of the tea shops are slated for closure through next year.  
  • Simon Property Group in unusual legal move against Starbucks

    The nation's largest shopping center operator is suing Starbucks Corp. over its plan to shutter the retailer's 78 Teavana stores in Simon malls.   In a lawsuit filed Aug. 21, Simon Property Group said that Starbucks is breaching its leases by closing the Teavana stores and “shirking its contractual obligations at the expense of Simon’s shopping centers and the dozens of communities they serve and support,” reported the Indianapolis Business Journal.   
  • Woodbury Common agrees to drop New York trade restrictions

    Simon Property Group has agreed to a settlement with the office of New York State Attorney General Eric T. Schneiderman that will have it loosening its stranglehold on the outlet business in Metropolitan New York.   Schneiderman maintained that Simon’s Woodbury Common outlet center in the Hudson River Valley owned a virtual monopoly in the region — including New York City — by virtue of a clause in tenant leases that forbid the opening other outlet stores within a 60-mile radius.   
  • Mall owners take pay cuts

    Macerich CEO Arthur Coppola had the potential for total compensation worth about $12 million in 2016, but his company’s recent proxy filing showed him receiving less than half of that.   Coppola is just one of many senior executives of publicly traded mall-owning companies to feel the sting brick-and-mortar’s right-sizing in his pocketbook, according to a report in the Wall Street Journal.   
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