U.S. Industrial Real Estate Markets Now In Recovery
Outlook For Warehouses and Other Industrial Properties Best in
Several Years, Positives -- Stronger Absorption, Falling Vacancies and Improving Cap Rates -- Outweighing
Stubbornly Soft Rents and Historically Weak Sales Volume
July 21, 2010
The U.S. industrial real estate market now appears to be headed into recovery after several quarters of
negative absorption.
With the economy sending out mixed signals but generally gaining strength, absorption of industrial buildings
turned positive in the second quarter following six consecutive quarters of net loss, CoStar Group reported in
its State of the Commercial Real Estate Industry Mid-Year 2010 Industrial Review & Outlook. The national
industrial vacancy rate declined for the first time in two years, according to the company's most recent
analysis of industrial property markets.
For owners, the warehouse sector is still working through some significant market turbulence. Broad-based
growth in rental rates probably won’t resume until 2011, and the investment sales market remains choppy, with
total transaction volume still well below the historical average. Liquidity hasn't yet returned for owners and
industrial capitalization rates and pricing, though improving, still show a mixed picture.
But overall, "we think the outlook is better than it has been in a few years," said Jay Spivey, CoStar Director
of Analytics, who teamed with CoStar Director of Advisory Services Hans Nordby earlier this week to present the
findings and forecast to CoStar clients.
Leasing: Activity is Up
CoStar Group reported 13 million square feet of positive net absorption in the second quarter -- the first
positive reading since mid-2008, a period that has experienced far more severe and dramatic demand declines
than the years of the dot-com collapse and economic recession of the early 2000s.
"It’s been a long time coming. We think the outlook is good and we’ll continue to see positive absorption,"
Spivey said.
In 2009, every major metro market except Houston saw negative absorption, including significant losses in
Chicago, San Francisco and South Florida. Fast-forwarding to second-quarter 2010, more than half of the top 20
industrial markets tracked by CoStar saw positive absorption, led by the warehousing and distribution
powerhouse Inland Empire region in Southern California at 4.8 million square feet; Orange County, CA (4.5
million sf), South Florida and Philadelphia (each gaining 2.8 million square feet).
San Francisco and Los Angeles have been slower to recover, leading the nation with negative absorption of
around 5 million square feet each in second-quarter 2010.
Little New Supply in Sight
New industrial deliveries as a percentage of total inventory continued to decline in the second quarter -- a
trend expected to continue through 2012. And 2010 will likely mark an all-time low in deliveries, with little
new supply entering the pipeline over the next two years. In fact, more properties are being taken out of
inventory due to obsolescence and other factors than are being added in new construction.
Lending constraints will continue to keep a clamp on new construction and the lack of new supply will allow the
market to recover more speedily, Spivey noted.
The Inland Empire led the nation in space under construction at 3.4 million square feet -- but that's still a
90% decline from the 30 million square feet under construction at the peak of the market. The numbers tell
similar stories in major distribution markets such as Atlanta, Philadelphia and Chicago.
Vacancy: Steady Gains Ahead
Given the positive absorption and low levels of construction, the national vacancy rate edged down in the
quarter from 10.1% to 10%, the first drop in over two years. Availability (space being marketed even though it
may not yet be vacant) also edged down from 14.8% to 14.7%.
While the dot-com era saw almost four years of relentless vacancy increases, the most recent downturn saw only
six quarters of erosion in vacancies. CoStar believes vacancies have leveled and will decline steadily over the
next four years down to about 8%. The rate of vacancy increases actually peaked in second-quarter 2009 and has
slowly decreased ever since, finally reaching a tipping point last quarter, Spivey noted.
Similar to positive absorption, more than half the top U.S. markets are now seeing vacancy rate declines,
including Inland Empire (-0.6%) Northern New Jersey (-0.4%) and South Florida and Minneapolis (each -0.3%).
As they have since 2008, rental rates continued to fall in the second quarter but at a less rapid rate. Despite
positive news on vacancies and absorption, positive rent growth is still probably a year or two away.
Investment Sales: A Market in Transition
On the down side, sales transaction volume remains low by historical standards. Liquidity has not returned to
the industrial market and the time that properties sit on the market before being sold -- and the number of
properties withdrawn from the market without being sold -- continues to rise.
However, the second quarter saw a slight narrowing of the gap between asking and actual sales prices, possibly
an indication that buyers and sellers are starting to agree on pricing.
Significant trades during the quarter included the sale by Industrial Developments International (IDI) of a
nine-property bulk portfolio to Cabot Properties, Inc. on June 2 for $115 million, and IDI’s sale of the
687,118-square-foot Weston Business Center to RREEF America LLC for $65 million. The former DHL distribution
facility in Breinigsville, PA, sold for $58.3 million in May.
Industrial cap rates still reveal a bit of a mixed picture. On industrial deals of $20 million and above, cap
rates fell to 8%, largely because of the demand for high-quality assets by institutional investors who will pay
more for bigger and newer assets, Nordby said.
Over the last couple of quarters, most of the lower sale price tranches are also seeing stabilized or declining
cap rates in the 8.5% to 9% range, showing increased and broad-based interest in industrial by investors,
Nordby said.
But the higher-end deals are still garnering the most attention. On trades exceeding $120 per square foot, the
average price per square foot on deals of $20 million or more is starting to spike upward, while transactions
at lower price points are still flat or down on a per-pound basis.
"What I’m hearing from our institutional investor clients is that gateway CBD office markets, and also coastal
apartments, are becoming a little rich, and those investors are starting to look at other asset classes,"
Nordby said. "There’s more institutional investor interest in warehouses. It's coming and it will eventually
show up in the price per pound."
|