Industrial
warehouse sales in Miami-Dade tailed off in 2016 amid stagnating rental rates,
despite a growing demand for warehouse space and high occupancy levels,
according to a recently released market report.
Speaking
before an audience of real estate professionals on Friday, Todd Watson, senior
vice president for real estate investment firm DCT Industrial Trust, said
industrial warehouse owners are feeling pressure to sell rather than hold onto
properties because the margins from rental income doesn’t justify the cap
rates. “It makes it tough for guys like me to put capital out there when the
rental rates are not coming in,” Watson said.
Watson
was part of a panel at the Coral Gables Country Club who joined together to
discuss the 2017 industrial report by the Commercial Industrial Association of
Florida. The other panelists were Scott Gregory, vice president of real estate
development and logistics firm Prologis; Jeff
Bercow, a partner in Bercow, Radell, Fernandez & Larkin; and Jose
Juncadella, principal of commercial real estate brokerage Fairchild Partners.
In
2016, there were 106
sales in Miami-Dade for a combined $373 million,
totaling 4.3 million square feet. That’s a substantial drop compared to the
previous year when 7.1 million total square feet sold for $570 million. In
addition, 146 transactions took place in 2015. Over the course of 12 months,
the average sale price per-square-foot increased from $79 to $86.
Meanwhile,
three out of seven geographical sectors in Miami-Dade identified in the report
saw the average rental rate per square foot drop below $10 from 2015 to 2016.
Four sectors that had vacancy rates between 4 to 6 percent in 2015 experienced
2 percent increases in 2016.
Gregory
said he doesn’t expect to see much growth in the
industrial market in 2017
even with the Port of Miami being able to accommodate bigger tanker ships
coming from the expansion of the Panama Canal. “I don’t think it is going to
move the needle on demand,” Gregory said. “The big driver for more demand will
be increases in local consumption.”
Easton
said there is a green wild card for industrial warehouse landlords and
developers on the horizon. With passage of the medical marijuana constitutional
amendment last year, firms authorized by state health officials to produce and
distribute cannabis will need massive warehouses for their operations.
Original
Content The Real Deal
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