(BLOOMBERG) – Quintessential mall stores from Macy’s to Kay Jewellers to Gap are plotting a post-Covid future – and traditional shopping centres will not play as much of a role in it.

Signet Jewellers, which owns chains such as Kay and Zales, says it will expand in off-mall locations while continuing to pull back from the old-school gallerias where it has long had a major presence. The company also plans to add more kiosks in underserved markets.

This brings “an opportunity for a better economic model”, Signet’s chief financial officer (CFO) Joan Hilson said. “The foot traffic for off-mall locations is better than what we’re seeing in the mall, certainly in this time. It’s really important, and we see that shift continuing.”

Retailers in the United States are abandoning enclosed malls in growing numbers as the rise of online shopping transforms the industry – a trend that has accelerated during the coronavirus pandemic. Almost a third of retail CFOs are planning to scale back their mall presence, according to a recent survey from consulting firm BDO USA.

That is throwing into question the future of hundreds of traditional malls, already financially struggling before the pandemic, as they grapple with expensive real estate and fewer tenants who want to be there.

“Even those that haven’t been distressed are being hurt by the lack of foot traffic in the mall,” said Mr David Berliner, head of BDO’s restructuring and turnaround unit. Some are talking about relocating stores from malls to nearby centres anchored by merchants like Walmart “because they’re going to get more foot traffic than they’re getting at the mall now”.

Signet exemplifies that kind of shift. It closed 395 stores last year, mostly in malls, and plans to shutter another 100 this year. At the same time, it has shifted 33 mall stores to off-mall locations. Some of its outlet stores are now in so-called lifestyle centres – open-air markets with dining and other activities – and in locations next to popular stores like Ross Dress for Less. Signet’s Kay bridal business, in particular, is doing better in off-mall locations than at enclosed shopping centres.

Similarly, Gap said in October that it was pulling back from malls, where its brands have long been staples, due to high rent and weaker performance. The company, which owns Banana Republic and Old Navy in addition to its namesake chain, wants 80 per cent of its stores to be outside of enclosed centres by 2023.

Department store chain Macy’s said it is testing off-mall locations in Dallas, Atlanta and the Washington metro area; Bath & Body Works is also looking to add more off-mall locations. Beauty retailer Sephora plans to open dozens of freestanding stores in addition to 200 shops this year inside Kohl’s, which operates almost entirely off-mall.

For retailers, there are many advantages to leaving the old-school enclosed shopping centres. Rent can be “substantially” lower elsewhere, the hours of operation are more flexible, customer parking is easier and building costs are lower, said Mr Ivan Friedman, chief executive officer of RCS Real Estate Advisers.

Bath & Body Works also cited “significantly higher conversion rates” – a reference to the proportion of shoppers who make a purchase – in a recent earnings call. Same-store sales, a key metric, were about twice as high in its off-mall locations last year, it said.

The pandemic has accelerated what some see as a long overdue culling of locations.

“Everybody felt before Covid-19 that they had 20 per cent too many brick-and-mortar stores,” Mr Friedman said.

That is hurting malls disproportionately. Occupancy rates in the third quarter were about 87 per cent at malls – meaning roughly one in every eight storefronts was empty – compared with about 92 per cent at off-mall locations, according to a report from real estate data firm Green Street. Landlords last year also collected a higher proportion of rents from tenants at off-mall centres, suggesting their better financial health.

Enclosed malls have already seen a pullback in speciality shops like record and card stores, making them overly concentrated in apparel, a category that has struggled during the pandemic. As Mr Friedman put it: “How many different shoe stores can you go to?”

That feeling of sameness is driving shoppers instead to a newer generation of open-air centres that include housing or office space, BDO’s Mr Berliner said.

“A lot of these mixed-use centres now are trying to recapture that town hall feel,” he said. “That’s where people want to go again, instead of just these rectangular indoor boxes, where everything is the same.”