Strong population growth and lower prices are luring industrial investors to secondary cities.
Strong economic and population growth in secondary markets is leading to increased investment in industrial real estate in those areas, according to industry experts.
While institutional investors are targetingsecondary markets for office acquisitions, investments in industrial properties in those markets are increasing at the same time. In 2018, overall U.S. industrial sales volume totaled $54.9 billion, up 8.9 percent year-over-year, according to an Avison Young spring 2019 Global Industrial Market Report. Total sales volume in secondary markets was close to $3.9 billion as of March 2019, a slight drop from $4.1 billion in March 2018. Industrial sales volume is not expected to surpass the high of September 2018, as most transactions during that time were from large platform and company deals.
While institutional investors are targetingsecondary markets for office acquisitions, investments in industrial properties in those markets are increasing at the same time. In 2018, overall U.S. industrial sales volume totaled $54.9 billion, up 8.9 percent year-over-year, according to an Avison Young spring 2019 Global Industrial Market Report. Total sales volume in secondary markets was close to $3.9 billion as of March 2019, a slight drop from $4.1 billion in March 2018. Industrial sales volume is not expected to surpass the high of September 2018, as most transactions during that time were from large platform and company deals.
Prices on industrial assets continued to rise, by 15 percent year-over-year to an average of $116 per sq. ft. As a result, many investors are starting to look at lower-cost secondary markets, according to Avison Young—with rising investment volumes in Greenville, S.C., Charleston, S.C., Memphis, Tenn. and Savannah, Ga. Incidentally, many of those markets saw vacancy declines in the first quarter—Charleston, for example, saw industrial vacancy drop by 140 basis points to 7.1 percent.