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marmar

(80,060 posts)
Mon Feb 15, 2021, 07:59 PM Feb 2021

Visits to "Places of Commerce" Still in Collapse Mode. Have Some of these Massive Shifts Become.....


Visits to “Places of Commerce” Still in Collapse Mode. Have Some of these Massive Shifts Become Permanent?
by Wolf Richter • Feb 15, 2021 •

People and businesses have changed how they do things. And it shows up in the GPS data.
By Wolf Richter for WOLF STREET.



One of the high-frequency data sets that came out of the Pandemic, and that we have been following to track the progress of the US economy, is an index by the American Enterprise Institute that tracks, based on cellphone GPS data, the number of people visiting “places of commerce” in the current week compared to the number of visits in the pre-Pandemic week ended January 15, 2020.

These “places of commerce” include offices, stores, malls, restaurants, hotels, movie theaters, airports, hospitals, other places of commerce and other points of interest in the 40 largest metro areas. The “Foot Traffic Index” measures how many people arrived at these locations, regardless of how they got there – by car, on foot, or by whatever other means.

What is stunning is the lack of recovery since June, and the deterioration in recent months to where the indexes of the 40 metros have dropped into a range that is between 71% and 38% of their foot traffic in January 2020 – the range between the two parallel red lines – according to the AEI’s index for the week through February 7, 2021 (click on the chart to enlarge it):



The top bold blue line is Kansas City (at 71% of January 2020 foot traffic). The bottom bold green line is San Jose (40%) and the thin gray dropping below San Jose is New York (38% of January 2020 foot traffic).

The bold lines in between Kansas City and San Jose represent Nashville (66%), Atlanta (60%), Detroit (54%), San Diego (50%), and Los Angeles (45%). Source: AEI Housing Center and Safegraph.com

Some of the obvious reasons.

Tourism: In San Francisco (41%), international tourism has collapsed, and domestic tourism is down too, many hotels remain closed, and others are nearly empty. New York City (at 38% of January 2020 foot traffic), Las Vegas (at 48%), Miami (at 51%) and some other cities with a big tourism industry are also impacted by the collapse of international tourism. ..............(more)

https://wolfstreet.com/2021/02/15/visits-to-places-of-commerce-still-in-collapse-mode-have-some-of-these-massive-shifts-become-permanent/




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Visits to "Places of Commerce" Still in Collapse Mode. Have Some of these Massive Shifts Become..... (Original Post) marmar Feb 2021 OP
Kick and recommend for visibility. Very informative! bronxiteforever Feb 2021 #1
Neat. I wonder if there will be a correlation between CV outbreaks and tie in to amount of SWBTATTReg Feb 2021 #2
Drove by Fisherman's wharf area this weekend and was surprised at the number of people I saw walking kimbutgar Feb 2021 #3
I was in SF in October for work, before the most recent lockdown.... marmar Feb 2021 #4

SWBTATTReg

(26,395 posts)
2. Neat. I wonder if there will be a correlation between CV outbreaks and tie in to amount of
Mon Feb 15, 2021, 08:18 PM
Feb 2021

commerce traffic? I noticed that KC and STL Missouri are in the high range (both cities, level of commerce activity)? What does look interesting is that all of the cities seem to follow each other in trends, upwards, they all go upwards, downwards, they all go downwards.

Neat, neat, neat!

kimbutgar

(27,552 posts)
3. Drove by Fisherman's wharf area this weekend and was surprised at the number of people I saw walking
Mon Feb 15, 2021, 08:23 PM
Feb 2021

Around. Pier 13 was thriving again. But today I took Bart to the airport and had to walk to the international terminal. It was a ghost town. Last time I was in that terminal was September of 2019 and it was crowded.

marmar

(80,060 posts)
4. I was in SF in October for work, before the most recent lockdown....
Mon Feb 15, 2021, 08:33 PM
Feb 2021

..... total ghost town. I stayed in one of those large convention hotels in SOMA and felt like I was the only guest.

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