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Simon Property Keeps Betting on Premium Locations as Retail Occupancies Rise | PYMNTS.com

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In a commercial real estate environment still grappling with inflationary pressures, evolving consumer behavior and global economic uncertainty, observers would be forgiven for embracing prevailing narratives about the death of brick-and-mortar retail.

But as uncertainty prevails, some firms are finding their footing by leaning on a combination of disciplined capital allocation, high-quality assets and strategic growth investments.

That was the news Simon Property Group’s executives shared on Monday (Aug. 4) during the company’s second quarter 2025 earnings call, stressing that that scale, location and operational rigor can yield durable financial results.

“We delivered another successful quarter, driven by the quality of our portfolio and disciplined execution,” said Simon Property Group President and CEO David Simon. “Our strategic investments and A-rated balance sheet position us for sustained long-term cash flow growth.”

The company’s management raised its full-year 2025 guidance, setting Real Estate FFO between $12.45 and $12.65 per share. The upward revision reinforces Simon’s narrative: even amid macro turbulence, its diversified real estate platform continues to generate steady cash flow.

Read more: Simon Property Group: Elimination of De Minimis Exemption Provides ‘Material Benefit’ to US Retailers 

Consumer Expectations and the New Retail Equation

Even as inflationary concerns and high interest rates continue to pressure household budgets, shoppers are still engaging with in-person retail — particularly in premium, well-located centers.

At the property level, Simon’s U.S. Malls and Premium Outlets segment, which accounts for over 70% of Net Operating Income (NOI), demonstrated renewed strength. Occupancy reached 96% as of June 30, an increase of 40 basis points year-over-year.

Base minimum rent per square foot climbed to $58.70, a 1.3% increase, while reported tenant sales per square foot rose to $736, suggesting continued consumer engagement with physical retail experiences.

Geographically, Simon’s NOI remains concentrated in high-income, high-tourism states. Florida (19.2%), California (13.8%) and Texas (10.2%) represent the lion’s share of U.S. contributions, positioning Simon to benefit from population migration trends, international tourism rebounds and luxury spending resilience.

In June, Simon acquired its partner’s interest in the retail and parking components of Brickell City Centre in Miami, consolidating full ownership of the high-profile urban asset. While terms were undisclosed, the move underscores Simon’s appetite for trophy properties in gateway markets. Brickell’s dense urban footprint and proximity to affluent consumers align with Simon’s broader strategy of controlling iconic assets in prime locations.

The continued rise of eCommerce is no longer viewed as a death knell for physical retail but as a catalyst for transformation. Simon’s strategic equity stakes in digital platforms and hybrid retail operators like Rue Gilt Groupe and Catalyst Brands indicate a willingness to straddle both worlds. Consumers today aren’t choosing between online and in-person — they want both, seamlessly.

The PYMNTS Intelligence report, “2024 Global Digital Shopping Index,” gleaned insights from a survey of nearly 14,000 consumers across seven countries about their omnichannel buying behaviors and preferences. The results revealed roughly four in 10 consumers are now Click-and-Mortar™ shoppers, favoring purchasing journeys that combine the digital and the physical over pure-play brick-and-mortar or eCommerce.

Navigating Sector, Macro and Global Headwinds

As macro uncertainties persist, the strength of Simon’s Q2 may be less about beating expectations and more about restoring belief in the resilience of the American shopper.

Yet despite its strong fundamentals, Simon is not insulated from structural and cyclical risks. The competitive threat of eCommerce persists, particularly in commodity retail categories. Lease renegotiations, tenant bankruptcies and mall footfall volatility remain watch points, per the company’s investor call.

Simon leadership also flagged global risk factors, including geopolitical instability, supply chain disruptions and foreign currency volatility, given its exposure to Europe and Asia.

Management acknowledged these headwinds but pointed to diversified income streams, tier-one property locations and disciplined cost management as key buffers.

Ultimately, the broader retail narrative may remain muddied by disruption and doubt, but Simon Property Group’s results underscore that where consumer confidence intersects with quality, retail may be both viable and vibrant.

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Experian Unveils New AI Tool for Managing Credit and Risk Models | PYMNTS.com

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Experian Assistant for Model Risk Management is designed to help financial institutions better manage the complex credit and risk models they use to decide who gets a loan or how much credit someone should receive. The tool validates models faster and improves their auditability and transparency, according to a Thursday (July 31) press release.

The tool helps speed up the review process by using automation to create documents, check for errors and monitor model performance, helping organizations reduce mistakes and avoid regulatory fines. It can cut internal approval times by up to 70% by streamlining model documentation, the release said.

It is the latest tool to be integrated into Experian’s Ascend platform, which unifies data, analytics and decision tools in one place. Ascend combines Experian’s data with clients’ data to deliver AI-powered insights across the credit lifecycle to do things like fraud detection.

Last month, Experian added Mastercard’s identity verification and fraud prevention technology to the Ascend platform to bolster identity verification services for more than 1,800 Experian customers using Ascend to help them prevent fraud and cybercrime.

The tool is also Experian’s latest AI initiative after it launched its AI assistant in October. The assistant provides a deeper understanding of credit and fraud data at an accelerated pace while optimizing analytical models. It can reduce months of work into days, and in some cases, hours.

Experian said in the Thursday press release that the model risk management tool may help reduce regulatory risks since it will help companies comply with regulations in the United States and the United Kingdom, a process that normally requires a lot of internal paperwork, testing and reviews.

As financial institutions embrace generative AI, the risk management of their credit and risk models must meet regulatory guidelines such as SR 11-7 in the U.S. and SS1/23 in the U.K., the release said. Both aim to ensure models are accurate, well-documented and used responsibly.

SR 11-7 is guidance from the Federal Reserve that outlines expectations for how banks should manage the risks of using models in decision making, including model development, validation and oversight.

Similarly, SS1/23 is the U.K. Prudential Regulation Authority’s supervisory statement that sets out expectations for how U.K. banks and insurers should govern and manage model risk, especially in light of increasing use of AI and machine learning.

Experian’s model risk management tool offers customizable, pre-defined templates, centralized model repositories and transparent internal workflow approvals to help financial institutions meet regulatory requirements, per the release.

“Manual documentation, siloed validations and limited performance model monitoring can increase risk and slow down model deployment,” Vijay Mehta, executive vice president of global solutions and analytics at Experian, said in the release. With this new tool, companies can “create, review and validate documentation quickly and at scale,” giving them a strategic advantage.

For all PYMNTS AI coverage, subscribe to the daily AI Newsletter.

Read more:

Experian and Plaid Partner on Cash Flow Data for Lenders

Experian Targets ‘Credit Invisible’ Borrowers With Cashflow Score

CFPB Sues Experian, Alleging Improper Investigations of Consumer Complaints

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Anthropologie Elevates Maeve in Rare Retail Brand Launch | PYMNTS.com

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Anthropologie is spinning off its Maeve product line as a standalone brand, a rare move in a retail sector where brand extensions have become less common.

The decision reflects shifting strategies among specialty retailers as they work to adapt to changes in women’s fast-fashion and evolving consumer behavior.

Maeve, known for its blend of classic silhouettes and modern flourishes, will now operate independently with dedicated storefronts and separate digital channels, including new social media accounts and editorial content platforms, according to a Monday (Aug. 4) press release. The brand is inclusive, spanning plus, petite, tall and adaptive options, which broaden its reach as the industry contends with demands for representation.

Maeve has nearly 2 million customers and was the most-searched brand on the Anthropologie website over the past year, the release said. It is also a driver of TikTok engagement. Several of the company’s most “hearted” items online are already from the Maeve label.

“Maeve has emerged as a true driver of growth within Anthropologie’s portfolio,” Anu Narayanan, president of women’s and home at Anthropologie Group, said in the release. “Its consistent performance, combined with our customers’ emotional connection to the brand, made this the right moment to evolve Maeve into a standalone identity.”

While many retailers have retreated from new brand creation, opting instead to consolidate or focus on core labels, Anthropologie’s move suggests confidence in cultivating sizable, engaged consumer communities around sub-brands.

Anthropologie is backing Maeve’s standalone debut with a comprehensive marketing campaign, including influencer-driven content, a new Substack, a launch event in New York, and a charitable partnership, per the release. The first Maeve brick-and-mortar store is set to open in Raleigh, North Carolina, in the fall.

The move comes as the apparel sector in the United States sees shoppers valuing not just price and selection, but brand story, inclusivity and digital experience. While the outcome remains to be seen, Anthropologie’s gamble on Maeve reflects a belief that consumers remain eager to embrace distinctive, thoughtfully curated fashion.

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Meta Faces Scrutiny Over AI Prompt Disclosure | PYMNTS.com

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Meta’s artificial intelligence assistant may publicly share user prompts, and its apps may have exploited a technical loophole to track Android users without their knowledge, CPO Magazine reported.

Meta’s AI app introduced a pop-up warning that content entered by users — including personal or sensitive information — may be publicly shared, per a June 20 report. It seems these prompts can be published in the “Discover” feed. The feature, which launched earlier this year, showcases AI-generated content and occasionally displays user-submitted prompts, some of which have included private data such as legal documents, personal identifiers and even apparently audio of minors.

Although users can opt out, the setting is enabled by default, and users must manually disable it, the report said. Privacy advocates argue that no other major chatbot service offers a comparable mechanism that proactively republishes private inputs.

Consumers already have privacy concerns around generative AI. The PYMNTS Intelligence report “Generation AI: Why Gen Z Bets Big and Boomers Hold Back” found that 36% of generative AI users are nervous about these platforms sharing or misusing their personal information, and 33% of non-users are kept from adopting the technology because of the same hesitations.

Separately, Meta may have taken advantage of an Android system vulnerability known as “Local Mess” to harvest web browsing data, per a June 17 CPO Magazine report. The loophole, involving the mobile operating system’s localhost address, potentially allowed Meta and Russian tech company Yandex to listen in on users and correlate their behavior across apps and websites. The tech giants may have been able to do this even when users were browsing in incognito mode or using other privacy protections. This data could be linked to a user’s Meta account or Android Advertising ID.

Meta has since halted sending data to localhost, characterizing the issue as a miscommunication with Google’s policy framework. Privacy watchdogs and experts say both cases could trigger regulatory action in the European Union and other jurisdictions.

Meta is already facing legal action over its privacy practices in an $8 billion lawsuit concerning alleged data misuse.

Google, for its part, is scheduled to appear in court later this month for allegedly violating the privacy of both Android and non-Android mobile phone service users.

For all PYMNTS AI coverage, subscribe to the daily AI Newsletter.

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