Monday, May 10, 2010

THE INDUSTRIAL REAL ESTATE MARKET IN L.A. IS GROWING STRONGER

In FASCINATING INFORMATION, Trends, Uncategorized, all, statistics |
By Jodi Summers
“This particular cycle has caught us with something we have never seen before. We have been left with a significant amount of industrial space,” observed Ken Jackson, director of sales and acquisitions at Dynamic Builders. “Nonetheless, the demand for industrial space is still strong, he said.”When you are Downtown, and look to the southeast and see the one-story and two-story buildings out there, there are thousands of apparel and general merchandise companies that started there. It shows the huge strength of L.A.”

In 2009, the industrial market had one of the worst years in decades, purchase prices and lease rates reached 10-year lows. The U.S. vacancy rate for industrial properties hit 10.3% at the end of last year, according to the Urban Land Institute. Other firms, such as Grubb & Ellis, peg it slightly higher at 10.7%. Locally, we have always been blessed, as Los Angeles, peaked at 3.3% in the fourth quarter of last year, according to the Los Angeles Economic Development Corporation – up from 2.2% a year earlier.
Now, the industrial property market is slowly returning. “The worst has passed,” confirmed Craig Meyer, a managing director for Jones Lang LaSalle. “We’re clearly at the bottom looking up.”

Major cargo hubs like Los Angeles, Seattle, Kansas City, Houston and Dallas are expected to bounce out of the slump faster than other markets. While Phoenix, Chicago and Detroit are among the cities projected to lag.
Exports are up and manufacturing activity jumped last month to the fastest pace in more than five years. Around the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach, which together handle about 40% of the nation’s cargo container shipments, sales and leasing activity for industrial properties began rising last summer. Cargo volume posted a 28% annual increase in February, reinforcing the continued strengthening of the industrial real estate market.

No comments:

Post a Comment