Executive summary
The convergence of long-term structural drivers and emerging cyclical tailwinds suggests the industrial sector may be approaching an inflection point, with conditions increasingly supportive of new development. For the industrial sector, development is a critical part of strategy, delivering modern, higher-throughput facilities that expand capacity, enable automation, and improve supply-chain efficiency, supporting tenant growth and long-term competitiveness.
Cyclical signals:
- Supply constraints, including political issues, have created a near-term advantage for experienced, well-capitalized groups with fully entitled projects.
- Demand appears to be improving, with net absorption showing signs of recovery toward pre-pandemic levels.
- Big-box leasing activity, historically a leading indicator for broader market trends, is picking up.
Structural tailwinds:
- Including continued e-commerce growth, warehouse obsolescence, and ongoing supply chain modernization, underscore the need for modern logistics space within a tightening market.
Four key takeaways continue to support our outlook:
- Demand is normalizing and beginning to reaccelerate, led by big-box leasing.
- The existing inventory base is aging and increasingly misaligned with modern tenant requirements, creating durable replacement demand.
- The supply response is structurally constrained by entitlements, land scarcity, infrastructure, and capital, with starts already sharply lower.
- Initiating well-located projects during today’s quieter window can position new product to deliver into the next period of tightening, supporting both occupier needs and risk-adjusted returns.
Well-capitalized, experienced groups holding entitled land sites are positioned to translate these themes into advantage. As big-box demand recovers, they can use data from their own portfolios as well as relationships with tenants and brokers to underwrite with better information, structure pre-leasing or phased delivery, and target submarkets where network optimization is driving the next wave of absorption. The obsolescence gap creates an opportunity to deliver “right-spec” product, with higher clear heights, trailer/storage ratios, enhanced power, and automation-ready layouts.
In a supply-constrained environment, and over the long term more generally, experience navigating entitlements, community processes, and infrastructure requirements becomes a competitive moat, while scale supports tighter procurement, standardized designs, and stronger control of schedule and cost. Finally, with long development lead times and starts down, well-capitalized groups can secure sites or leverage existing land banks, advance entitlements during the current lull, structure capital to withstand lease-up volatility, and deliver into a potentially tighter market with less competing new supply.
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