Are Warehouses Better Than Skyscrapers for Real Estate Investors?


Interesting read from JLLRealViews.com, The new trophy buildings of U.S. real estate, on the increasingly global competition for US Industrial real estate...

Move over, iconic Manhattan skyscrapers: warehouses are becoming a big play for global investors, too. It used to be that global investors focused on U.S. real estate investment were only interested in glitzy office towers in just a handful of high profile locations, like Manhattan, Los Angeles or Miami.
Now, those investors – hailing from locations as diverse as the Middle East, Germany, Singapore, China and Canada – are feeling pressure to achieve returns. To find opportunities in a competitive market, they are looking beyond tall towers to the more horizontal planes of the country’s strategic logistics corridors filled with enormous “big box” institutional-quality distribution centers.

Over the last five years, ownership of industrial real estate has been illustrated by a phenomenon of major investors building or aggregating large-scale portfolios across the country instead of taking on buildings one-by-one. Most notably, the 2015 acquisition of the Industrial Income Trust’s (IIT) 58 million-square-foot, $4.55 billion U.S. industrial portfolio made Singapore-based Global Logistics Properties (GLP) the second-largest owner of industrial property in the United States, second only to San Francisco-based Prologis. Additionally, the Abu Dhabi Investment Authority (ADIA) and PSP Investments of Canada purchased Exeter’s entire portfolio of industrial assets in December for $3.2 billion, comprising of roughly 58 million square feet.