Owngarden | Moment | Getty ImagesFive years ago, when the pandemic pushed e-commerce to new highs, the industrial warehouse space became the biggest commercial real estate play around.
It began to slow in 2022, but now economic uncertainty brought on by constantly changing tariff policy and persistently high inflation is taking a greater toll on the previously hot real estate sector.
Just 27 million square feet of industrial space was absorbed in the first half of this year, and demand fell by 11.3 million in the second quarter alone — the first quarterly drop since 2010 — according to an August report from NAIOP, a commercial real estate development association.Since the uncertainty is ly to continue through the end of this year, NAIOP jects that net absorption will be "nearly flat" over the second half of this year."Demand for industrial space is expected to recover somewhat after occupiers have time to adjust to a new tariff regime," the report's wrote.
"However, higher tariffs and slowing employment growth will ly result in slower demand growth than that experienced from 2020 to 2022 or in the six years that preceded the pandemic."Get perty Play directly to your inboxCNBC's perty Play with Diana Olick covers new and evolving opportunities for the real estate investor, dered weekly to your inbox.
here to get access today.NAIOP predicts absorption will rebound starting in the second quarter of 2026, with full-year absorption totaling 119.3 million square feet.
It expects another 109.7 million square feet of absorption in the first half of 2027.As for this year's industrial perty sales, they are just matching last year's pace, according to a separate report from Yardi.
Industrial sales totaled $74.3 billion in 2024, which was up 14.7% from 2023 but down from the all-time high of $129.8 billion in 2021, the report said.Price appreciation has also cooled after huge gains between 2019 and 2022, when the average sale price of an industrial perty jumped 54%."Capital was cheap, and investors wanted to fit from record rent growth resulting from historically low industrial vacancy rates on top of supply falling behind," the report noted.So far this year, the average sale price for industrial transactions was just 6% higher than the 2022 average, according to the Yardi report.The national industrial vacancy rate in July was 9.1%, up 10 basis points from June and up 270 basis points from July 2024.
In-place rents, however, were still up 6.1% year over year.
"We've watched the industrial investment market move from darling to resilient over the past few years, but we anticipate activity and interest to ramp up with the expectation of economic clarity coupled with growing demand for space," said Peter Kolaczynski, director for Yardi Re, in a release.