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		Garments for lease: 'rental' apparel brings new wrinkles for retail 
		stores
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		 [September 18, 2019]  By 
		Sonya Dowsett and Melissa Fares 
 MADRID/NEW YORK (Reuters) - Lisa Batitto, 
		54, says she has virtually stopped buying clothes ever since she started 
		renting them.
 
 The New Jersey-based museum publicist spends $277 a month on three 
		subscriptions, including one from New York & Company, a women's 
		mid-price clothing chain with hundreds of U.S. stores.
 
 This is less than what she previously spent, she said. "I still have 
		clothes in my closet from when I was buying, but I can't tell you the 
		last time I bought anything," she said.
 
 From New York & Company, owned by RTW Retailwinds Inc. <RTW.N>, to 
		Bloomingdale's <M.N> and Banana Republic of Gap Inc. <GPS.N>, more 
		retailers are offering to lend out their clothing for a monthly rental 
		rate.
 
 Even fast-fashion stalwart H&M <HMb.ST>, with nearly 5,000 stores 
		globally, said in August it would include a limited rental service 
		featuring its premium-priced collection made from recycled fibers in a 
		revamped central Stockholm store.
 
 The services cater to a growing number of people like Batitto who want 
		to purchase just a few items and rent the rest.
 
 But the strategy comes with risks. It costs a lot to ship items back and 
		forth, and it remains to be seen if rental clothes will cannibalize 
		retail sales over the longer term.
 
		
		 
		
 Fees roughly range from $50 to $160 per month to rent several items, 
		with an option to buy at a discount. While most services are online, 
		some stores are creating space for people to drop off, browse or collect 
		clothing available for lease.
 
 San Francisco-based fashion rental service Le Tote bought the operations 
		of Lord + Taylor stores from struggling Canadian department store 
		operator Hudson's Bay Co <HBC.TO> last month. Inside the next nine 
		months, it plans to build drop-off lockers and large display areas in 38 
		Lord + Taylor department stores.
 
 Competitor Rent the Runway has expanded its physical drop-off network 
		over the past year with 25 points for customers to return garments in 
		its own stores plus some WeWork locations and Nordstrom stores in the 
		Los Angeles area.
 
 Rent the Runway can turn around an item in as little as a day, a company 
		spokeswoman said. The company opened a 300,000 square foot fulfillment 
		center in Texas in July in addition to its New Jersey facility to deal 
		with increased demand.
 
 The risk is rental services could take spend away from traditional sales 
		in a sector where changing shopping habits and falling prices have 
		nearly halved the percentage spend on apparel by the average U.S. 
		consumer over the past 30 years.
 
 In addition, physical stores are struggling with online competition from 
		players like Amazon. Year-to-date announced store closures have already 
		exceeded the total recorded for 2018, said Coresight Research in a 
		recent note.
 
 The U.S. garment rental market, excluding costumes, was worth $1 billion 
		in 2018, less than 1% of the total apparel market, according to 
		GlobalData. But it grew 24% in that year compared to 5% for the wider 
		clothing market, data shows.
 
 That growth can come with a hefty price tag.
 
 At Le Tote, once subscribers drop off boxes containing up to 15 items of 
		clothing, a chain of activity will start to ready items for their next 
		assignment. Le Tote currently ships boxes to its online subscribers 
		using USPS Priority.
 
 
		
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			Lisa Batitto shows a dress she rented from a clothing rental site at 
			her home in Montclair, New Jersey, U.S., August 30, 2019. 
			REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton 
            
			 
"Shipping is our biggest cost, so having these stores as touch points for 
customers to come in, pick up and drop off significantly reduces our shipping 
costs," Chief Executive Rakesh Tondon said in an interview.
 CaaStle, a New York-based company that provides technology and logistics for the 
New York & Company, Bloomingdale's and Banana Republic rental services amongst 
others, branched out from its own Gwynnie Bee women's apparel business in 2018 
to set up rental services for others.
 
Contrary to analysts' concerns that rental could cannibalize sales, offering 
rental captures more revenue as consumers buy clothes in addition to their 
subscription, said CaaStle Chief Executive Officer Christine Hunsicker in an 
interview.
 Rental platforms buy clothing wholesale from brands, but many are introducing 
revenue-sharing models whereby platforms allow brands to upload items for lease 
and then take care of cleaning and delivery in return for a share in the 
revenue.
 
This model is better for cash-flow but not as profitable, said Le Tote CEO 
Tondon. Le Tote raised around $75 million over the past five years from 
investors including Azure Capital, Sway Ventures and Google Ventures, and has 
been profitable at the operating level for over three years, he said.
 Jeans maker Levi Strauss & Co <LEVI.N>, which operates under a revenue-sharing 
model with Rent the Runway, has increased offerings on the platform from 12 
items when it launched in November to 29 currently, including skinny jeans and 
embroidered denim jackets.
 
"When the product comes back, they put it back to like-new," Levi's Chief 
Executive Chip Bergh said in an interview. 
 
 Brands from Levi's to upmarket U.S. label Rebecca Taylor - whose silk dresses 
retail at hundreds of dollars - are putting more stock to rent to open new 
revenue streams, capture new customers and harvest valuable feedback, they say.
 
 Tiarra Phillips, an 18-year-old college student from a small town in Georgia in 
the southern United States pays $69.95 a month for her subscription to Express, 
a fashion mall brand whose rental service is also powered by CaaStle.
 
 Phillips said she has never been to one of Express's network of over 600 
physical stores, but has rented items ranging from leggings to dresses.
 
 "They tell you not even to wash it, to just wear it and send it back and then 
you get a new box, so I don't really have to do anything; I can just sit at 
home," she said.
 
 (Additional reporting by Anna Ringstrom in Stockholm; editing by Vanessa 
O'Connell and Edward Tobin)
 
				 
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