October 31 2024

SPOOKY! Kamala's economic policies shut down businesses, turning our communities into ghost towns- as Spirit Halloween creeps in.

 



This Halloween, a record number of Spirit Halloween storefronts have opened nationwide to fill the empty retail spaces of shuddered businesses. Kamala's inflation crisis has caused businesses to close as she even admits the American Dream is no longer achievable under her administration. Meanwhile, the spooky short-term leasing store continues to swoop into storefronts left ghostly vacant by Kamala Harris's economic failures which have been driven out of business by haunting inflation.

 

Spirit Halloween capitalizes on the haunting, eerie economic conditions by leasing these retail skeletons and turning them into spooky hubs, resurrecting these empty spaces in vacant shopping centers left in the dust by Kamalanomics. 

 

According to a new study, Spirit's most popular haunt locations once belonged to big names like Rite Aid, Tuesday Morning, Bed Bath & Beyond, and Sears- who have sadly been forced to file for bankruptcy. 

 

Put simply, Kamala Harris’s economic failures force businesses to close their doors at record pace.

 

ICYMI: Consumers reach their breaking point, forcing retailers to shutter stores at a worrying pace

 

  • “Family Dollar has announced 677 store closings this year. Walgreens is closing 259. Big Lots is closing 360. LL Flooring is shutting down entirely.”

 

  • “Major retailers have announced 6,189 store closures so far this year, already outpacing last year’s total of 5,553, according to Coresight Research. Chains are on track to close the highest number of stores in 2024 than any year since 2020, when the Covid-19 pandemic decimated the industry.”

 

  • “Companies have raised prices higher than many consumers can afford and interest rates have soared, making it more expensive to borrow money for big-ticket items or to get a mortgage or a car loan. Consumers have reached their breaking point and are pulling back on items they don’t absolutely need.”

 

  • “...prices are still up around 20% from 2020. In short, if people are paying more for their car, their home and their credit card every month, there’s less money to go around for other things.”

 

  • “Higher interest rates and greater macroeconomic uncertainty pressured consumer demand more broadly, resulting in weaker spend across home improvement projects,’ Ted Decker, Home Depot’s CEO, said in August.”

 

  • “More than 80 companies that sell discretionary goods have filed for bankruptcy through September, up 27% from a year ago, as the sector continues to be hit hard by increasingly budget-conscious consumers, according to S&P Global Market Intelligence. Tupperware, Big Lots and Joann Fabric have been among the largest consumer bankruptcies.”

 

  • "A similar shift is playing out in the restaurant industry, where consumers looking to save money have pulled back on dining out. Casual dining restaurant chains have struggled as consumers eat at home or gravitate toward cheaper fast-casual restaurants such as Chipotle and fast-food chains like Chick-fil-A. Red Lobster, Roti, Tijuana Flats, Buca di Beppo and other restaurant chains have filed for bankruptcy this year and closed hundreds of restaurants. Denny’s said this week it’s closing 150 restaurants.”
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