"The summer has not brought any appreciable increase in industrial real estate activity," he tells GlobeSt.com. "In fact, the latest data I've seen shows just the opposite seems to be true. Sales transaction volume actually is decreasing quarter-over-quarter as of early September." By contrast, he says, the office sector is seeing a measured pick-up, albeit from a very low base of activityin Q1 and Q2, while apartment transaction activity appears roughly in-line with Q2.
The Q2 industrial report pegs overall vacancies at 9.4%, 180 basis points above the cyclical low achieved in 2007. Significantly, the vacancy rate for investor-owned property soared to 12.5%, 100 basis points higher than the Q1 figure, indicating that corporate-owned product is faring better. Some 90% of local markets reported a rise in vacancy in Q2, and only eight markets showed positive absorption equivalanent to 1.5% of existing inventory. According to the report, the top 10 to 15 markets accounted for more than half the total overally vacancy decline.
As would be expected in a period of rising vacancies, rents have declined. While asking rates dropped only 1.6% in the quarter, JLL estimates effective rates sustained a much greater hit. The report says discounts as large as 25% below the quoted asking rate are not uncommon. Gelormini says this trend also appears to have continued into Q3.
But he also reminds that the beginning of a positive shift in trends could be somewhat masked. "We are witnessing the beginnings of a production recovery in the US, led by the manufacturing and housing industries (as positive contributors to GDP)," he says. "But until we see this translate into sustained, material growth in indicators such as retail sales and employment, fundamentals in all property types will not be able to stabilize."
There's also a natural in commercial real estate, he adds, with leasing activity trailing rather than leading economic improvement. "We'll continue to deal with the negative impact of earlier macroeconomic pain for several more months," he notes.
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