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cushmanwakefield.com Austin Industrial Q1 2018 MARKETBEAT Economic Indicators Market Indicators (Overall, All Classes) Overall Net Absorption/Overall Asking Rent 4-QTR TRAILING AVERAGE Overall Vacancy Q1 2017 Q1 2018 12-Month Forecast Austin Employment 1,022k 1,058k Austin Unemployment 3.5% 2.7% U.S. Unemployment 4.7% 4.1% Q1 2017 Q1 2018 12-Month Forecast Vacancy 9.5% 9.2% Net Absorption (sf) -209k 88k Under Construction (sf) 593k 1.4M Average Asking Rent* $9.27 $10.08 *Rental rates reflect net asking $psf/year Economy The first quarter of 2018 marked yet another quarter that the Austin unemployment rate ranked as one of the lowest amongst the 50 largest metropolitan areas, coming in at 2.7%. The local Austin unemployment rate also remained ahead of both the Texas rate of 4% and the national rate of 4.1%. Additionally, the rate of job growth in the Austin MSA continued to impress. According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, Austin has added more than 35,000 new jobs in the past 12 months. Many of these new jobs can be attributed to more and more companies relocating or expanding to Austin from other areas, including many Silicon Valley tech companies that are finding the Austin market rich in talent. Market Overview The Austin industrial market posted back-to-back quarters of positive absorption to kick-off 2018 by recording over +88,000 square feet (sf) of overall absorption during the first quarter. Vacancy rates for all industrial product types increased 40 basis points from Q4 2017 to an overall rate of 9.2%. Warehouse vacancy also increased, to 8.6%, while office service (flex) product remained steady from the prior quarter at 9.7%. The average net rental rate for all property types for Q1 2018 was $10.24 per square foot (psf). Warehouse/Distribution rates increased once again as higher priced, newer product bumped average asking rates up to $8.21 psf, while Office service (flex) property types continue to outperform other industrial types, with an overall average rental rate of $13.37 psf. Outlook With nearly 1.5 million square feet (msf) of new industrial product delivered to the market in 2017 and another 1.4 msf currently under construction, Austin should have enough excess space to fill demand for the near future. Despite this increase of new inventory hitting the market, the long-term outlook for the industrial market remains upbeat. Leasing activity remains strong and growth in Austin continues at a torrid pace. With more and more businesses making their way to the region and expanding their business footprints, the sustained economic growth should ultimately lead to a demand for both warehouse/distribution and flex space. 2% 5% 7% 10% 12% 15% 17% 20% 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 Q1 18 AUSTIN INDUSTRIAL Historical Average = 10% $5 $6 $7 $8 $9 $10 $11 -100 100 300 500 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 Q1 18 Net Absorption, SF (thousands) Asking Rent, $ PSF
Transcript
Page 1: Austin Industrial MarketBeat 1Q 2018 · 2018-06-12 · Furthermore, Austin’s housing market continues to sizzle at a record pace. According to the Austin Board of Realtors, home

cushmanwakefield.com

AustinIndustrial Q1 2018

MARKETBEAT

Economic Indicators

Market Indicators (Overall, All Classes)

Overall Net Absorption/Overall Asking Rent4-QTR TRAILING AVERAGE

Overall Vacancy

Q1 2017 Q1 201812-Month

Forecast

Austin Employment 1,022k 1,058k

Austin Unemployment 3.5% 2.7%

U.S. Unemployment 4.7% 4.1%

Q1 2017 Q1 201812-Month

Forecast

Vacancy 9.5% 9.2%

Net Absorption (sf) -209k 88k

Under Construction (sf) 593k 1.4M

Average Asking Rent* $9.27 $10.08

*Rental rates reflect net asking $psf/year

EconomyThe first quarter of 2018 marked yet another quarter that the Austin unemployment rate ranked as one of the lowest amongst the 50 largest metropolitan areas, coming in at 2.7%. The local Austin unemployment rate also remained ahead of both the Texas rate of 4% and the national rate of 4.1%. Additionally, the rate of job growth in the Austin MSA continued to impress. According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, Austin has added more than 35,000 new jobs in the past 12 months. Many of these new jobs can be attributed to more and more companies relocating or expanding to Austin from other areas, including many Silicon Valley tech companies that are finding the Austin market rich in talent.

Market OverviewThe Austin industrial market posted back-to-back quarters of positive absorption to kick-off 2018 by recording over +88,000 square feet (sf) of overall absorption during the first quarter. Vacancy rates for all industrial product types increased 40 basis points from Q4 2017 to an overall rate of 9.2%. Warehouse vacancy also increased, to 8.6%, while office service (flex) product remained steady from the prior quarter at 9.7%. The average net rental rate for all property types for Q1 2018 was $10.24 per square foot (psf). Warehouse/Distribution rates increased once again as higher priced, newer product bumped average asking rates up to $8.21 psf, while Office service (flex) property types continue to outperform other industrial types, with an overall average rental rate of $13.37 psf.

OutlookWith nearly 1.5 million square feet (msf) of new industrial product delivered to the market in 2017 and another 1.4 msf currently under construction, Austin should have enough excess space to fill demand for the near future. Despite this increase of new inventory hitting the market, the long-term outlook for the industrial market remains upbeat. Leasing activity remains strong and growth in Austin continues at a torrid pace. With more and more businesses making their way to the region and expanding their business footprints, the sustained economic growth should ultimately lead to a demand for both warehouse/distribution and flex space.

2%

5%

7%

10%

12%

15%

17%

20%

2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 Q1 18

AUSTIN INDUSTRIAL

Historical Average = 10%

$5

$6

$7

$8

$9

$10

$11

-100

100

300

500

2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 Q1 18

Net Absorption, SF (thousands) Asking Rent, $ PSF

Page 2: Austin Industrial MarketBeat 1Q 2018 · 2018-06-12 · Furthermore, Austin’s housing market continues to sizzle at a record pace. According to the Austin Board of Realtors, home

MARKETBEAT

About Cushman & WakefieldCushman & Wakefield is a leading global real estate services firm with 45,000 employees in more than 70 countries helping occupiers and investors optimize the value of their real estate. Cushman & Wakefield is among the largest commercial real estateservices firms with revenue of $6 billion across core services of agency leasing, asset services, capital markets, facility services (C&W Services), global occupier services, investment & asset management (DTZ Investors), project & development services, tenant representation, and valuation & advisory. To learn more, visit www.cushmanwakefield.com or follow @CushWake on Twitter.

Copyright © 2018 Cushman & Wakefield. All rights reserved. The information contained within this report is gathered from multiplesources considered to be reliable. The information may contain errors or omissions and is presented without any warranty orrepresentations as to its accuracy.

AustinIndustrial Q1 2018

Key Lease Transactions Q1 2018

PROPERTY SF TENANT TRANSACTION TYPE SUBMARKET

Heritage Crossing 5 107,780 Goodwill Direct Round Rock

Parmer 7.3 83,470 Hyliion Direct Far Northwest

Corridor Park Building 7 57,600 Uplift Desk Direct Round Rock

Vista Park 7 57,500 XPO Last Mile Direct Round Rock

Key Sales Transactions Q1 2018

PROPERTY SF SELLER/BUYER PRICE / $PSF SUBMARKET

Global Business Park, Tuscany Distribution Center, & Metric Center A & B 459,585 ATCAP Partners / Dalfen America Corp Undisclosed Northeast & North Central

1307 Smith Road 133,000 GPT Austin Owner LLC / 1307 Smith Westward LTD Undisclosed Northeast

8319 N. Lamar Blvd 55,000 PP-BVD, Inc. / Endeavor RE Group Undisclosed North Central

SUBMARKET INVENTORYOVERALL

VACANCY RATE

YTD NET OVERALL

ABSORPTIONUNDER CNSTR

DIRECT WEIGHTED

AVG.

NET RENT(MF)

DIRECT WEIGHTED

AVG.

NET RENT(OS)

DIRECT WEIGHTED

AVG.

NET RENT(W/D)

Central 18,900 0% 0 0 N/A N/A N/A

Far Northwest 1,787,939 13.3% -57,075 178,440 N/A $14.71 $9.30

North Central 6,240,906 11.6% -10,506 0 $10.78 $13.80 $8.75

Northeast 11,420,670 9.3% -30,979 0 N/A $13.20 $7.20

South Central 1,734,969 2.5% 1,608 107,453 N/A $14.08 $8.80

Southeast 10,875,123 10.7% 176,908 249,911 N/A $12.88 $7.20

Southwest 278,270 7.3% 932 0 N/A $13.55 $7.80

Round Rock 8,090,684 7.3% 46,425 889,263 N/A $11.40 $8.45

AUSTIN TOTALS 41,563,750 9.2% 88,415 1,425,067 $10.78 $13.37 $8.21*Rental rates reflect asking $psf/year MF = Manufacturing OS = Office Service/Flex W/D = Warehouse/Distribution

Cushman & Wakefield200 W Cesar Chavez StSuite 250Austin, TX 78701cushmanwakefield.com

For more information, contact:Jeff GravesAssociate Director, ResearchTel: +1 512 474 [email protected]

Page 3: Austin Industrial MarketBeat 1Q 2018 · 2018-06-12 · Furthermore, Austin’s housing market continues to sizzle at a record pace. According to the Austin Board of Realtors, home

cushmanwakefield.com

AustinIndustrial Q4 2017

MARKETBEAT

Economic Indicators

Market Indicators (Overall, All Classes)

Overall Net Absorption/Overall Asking Rent4-QTR TRAILING AVERAGE

Overall Vacancy

Q4 2016 Q4 201712-Month

Forecast

Austin Employment 1,014k 1,037k

Austin Unemployment 3.4% 2.8%

U.S. Unemployment 4.7% 4.1%

Q4 2016 Q4 201712-Month

Forecast

Vacancy 6.4% 8.8%

Net Absorption (SF) 116k 334k

Under Construction (SF) 841k 950k

Average Asking Rent* $9.71 $9.24

*Rental rates reflect net asking $psf/year

EconomyThe Austin market wrapped up 2017 much like it began – with job growth continuing to outpace national averages and an unemployment rate that remains one of the lowest in the country, coming in at a record low of 2.8% versus the national average of 4.1%. Fortune 500 companies including Facebook, Google, Indeed, Expedia and others proved they were bullish on the future of Austin by signing massive office leases in 2017. Furthermore, Austin’s housing market continues to sizzle at a

record pace. According to the Austin Board of Realtors, home sales in Austin jumped 2.2% from 2016, while the median home price increased 4.3% within the same time period.

Market OverviewThe Austin industrial market bounced back with positive absorption to close out 2017 by recording nearly +334,000 square feet (SF) of overall absorption during the third quarter of 2017. Vacancy rates for all industrial product types decreased 70 basis points from Q3 2017 to an overall rate of 8.8%. Warehouse vacancy also decreased, to 7.8%, while office service (flex) product dipped 140 basis points from the previous quarter to 9.8%. The average net rental rate for all property types for Q4 2017 was $9.24 per square foot (PSF). Warehouse/Distribution rates rose slightly to $6.86 PSF, while Office service (flex) property types continue to outperform other industrial types, with an overall average rental rate of $12.55 PSF.

OutlookWith nearly 1.5 million square feet (SF) of new industrial product delivered to the market in 2017 and another million square feet currently under construction, Austin should have enough excess space to fill demand for the near future. Despite this increase of new inventory hitting the market, the long-term outlook for the industrial market remains upbeat. Leasing activity remains strong and growth in Austin continues at a torrid pace. With more and more businesses making their way to the region and expanding their business footprints, the sustained economic growth should ultimately lead to a demand for both warehouse/distribution and flex space.

2%

5%

7%

10%

12%

15%

17%

20%

2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 Q4

AUSTIN INDUSTRIAL

Historical Average = 10%

$5

$6

$7

$8

$9

$10

-100

100

300

500

2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017

Net Absorption, SF (thousands) Asking Rent, $ PSF

Page 4: Austin Industrial MarketBeat 1Q 2018 · 2018-06-12 · Furthermore, Austin’s housing market continues to sizzle at a record pace. According to the Austin Board of Realtors, home

MARKETBEAT

About Cushman & WakefieldCushman & Wakefield is a leading global real estate services firm with 45,000 employees in more than 70 countries helping occupiers and investors optimize the value of their real estate. Cushman & Wakefield is among the largest commercial real estateservices firms with revenue of $6 billion across core services of agency leasing, asset services, capital markets, facility services (C&W Services), global occupier services, investment & asset management (DTZ Investors), project & development services, tenant representation, and valuation & advisory. To learn more, visit www.cushmanwakefield.com or follow @CushWake on Twitter.

Copyright © 2018 Cushman & Wakefield. All rights reserved. The information contained within this report is gathered from multiplesources considered to be reliable. The information may contain errors or omissions and is presented without any warranty orrepresentations as to its accuracy.

AustinIndustrial Q4 2017

Key Lease Transactions 2017

PROPERTY SF TENANT TRANSACTION TYPE SUBMARKET

Corridor Park 184,833 Wayne Fueling Systems Lease Round Rock

Vista Park 5 86,700 Flooring Services SW, LTD Lease Round Rock

Southpark Commerce Center 4 75,051 HD Supply Facilities Maint. Lease Southeast

Key Sales Transactions 2017

PROPERTY SF SELLER/BUYER PRICE / $PSF SUBMARKET

Southpark Commerce 1-3 470,886 Clarion Partners/Colony Capital $50,600,000 / $107 Southease

11000 Middle Fiskville Rd 332,345 Golfsmith/BH Properties $20,500,000 / $61 North Central

210 E. Saint Elmo Rd. 102,194 Veritiv Corp/Gramercy Property Trust $9,700,000 / $95 South Central

Cushman & Wakefield200 W. Cesar Chavez StSuite 250cushmanwakefield.com

For more information, contact:Jeff Graves, Sr. GIS & Research AnalystTel: +1 512 474 [email protected]

SUBMARKET INVENTORYOVERALL

VACANCY RATE

YTD NET OVERALL

ABSORPTIONUNDER CNSTR

DIRECT WEIGHTED

AVG.

NET RENT(MF)

DIRECT WEIGHTED

AVG.

NET RENT(OS)

DIRECT WEIGHTED

AVG.

NET RENT(W/D)

Central 18,900 0% 0 0 N/A N/A N/A

Far Northwest 1,787,939 8.0% 128,943 63,440 N/A $14.73 $6.34

North Central 6,123,472 12.9% -239,539 0 $8.40 $13.87 $6.86

Northeast 11,420,670 10.3% -68,136 0 N/A $13.90 $6.94

Northwest 0 0.0% 0 0 N/A N/A N/A

South Central 1,726,037 2.4% 30,668 107,453 N/A $13.92 $7.75

Southeast 10,016,478 8.4% 97,033 365,111 N/A $12.35 $7.28

Southwest 278,270 5.6% 6,460 0 N/A $13.41 $7.06

Round Rock 8,090,684 9.1% -6,325 414,413 N/A $11.52 $8.15

AUSTIN TOTALS 39,462,450 8.8% -50,896 950,417 $8.40 $12.55 $6.86*Rental rates reflect asking $psf/year MF = Manufacturing OS = Office Service/Flex W/D = Warehouse/Distribution

Page 5: Austin Industrial MarketBeat 1Q 2018 · 2018-06-12 · Furthermore, Austin’s housing market continues to sizzle at a record pace. According to the Austin Board of Realtors, home

cushmanwakefield.com

AustinIndustrial Q3 2017

MARKETBEAT

Economic Indicators

Market Indicators (Overall, All Classes)

Overall Net Absorption/Overall Asking Rent4-QTR TRAILING AVERAGE

Overall Vacancy

Q3 2016 Q3 201712-Month

Forecast

Austin Employment 1,004k 1,022k

Austin Unemployment 3.3% 3.1%

U.S. Unemployment 4.9% 4.4%

Q3 2016 Q3 201712-Month

Forecast

Vacancy 7.5% 9.5%

Net Absorption (SF, YTD) 494k -385k

Under Construction (SF) 654k 736k

Average Asking Rent* $9.75 $9.34

*Rental rates reflect net asking $psf/year

EconomyThe Austin economy continued to show its vitality to close out Q3 2017. The city’s unemployment rate of 3.1% remains significantly

lower than the national average of 4.4% and state average of 4.2%. Local job growth, while not as robust as 2016, continues to outpace national and state averages as well. High-tech and creative industries continue to fuel this economic expansion as companies such as Facebook, Google, and Amazon confirm their faith in Austin. The city’s continued ability to maintain low

unemployment rates while effectively generating jobs indicates a strong and healthy local economy.

Market OverviewThe Austin industrial market experienced nearly 385,000 square feet (SF) of negative absorption during the third quarter of 2017. Several large move-outs, including Pearson Inc. which vacated 135,442 SF at 905 West Howard, helped push absorption levels lower. Vacancy rates for all industrial product types remain below historical levels, coming in at 9.5% to end Q3 2017. Warehouse vacancy increased 190 basis points from Q2 2017 to 8.4%, while office service (flex) product dropped 80 basis points from the previous quarter to 11.2%. The average net rental rate for all property types for Q3 2017 was $9.34 per square foot (PSF). Warehouse/Distribution rates rose slightly to $6.72 PSF, while Office service (flex) property types continue to outperform other industrial types, with an overall average rental rate of $12.52 PSF.

OutlookWhile vacancy rates for Austin industrial product remain healthy in comparison to historical averages, a trend of negative absorption seems to point to signs of a softening industrial market. With more than 850,000 SF of new industrial product already delivered in 2017 and another 750,000 SF set to deliver by year’s end, higher vacancies appear to be on the horizon as

landlords work to fill excess space. With this increase in vacancy looming, we can assume industrial product asking rates will gradually decline as landlords discount rates in order to attract tenants. All of this withstanding, the long-term outlook for the industrial market remains upbeat. Population growth in Austin continues at a torrid pace, and more and more businesses are making their way to the region and expanding their business footprints. This sustained economic growth should ultimately lead to a demand for both warehouse/distribution and flex space.

2%

5%

7%

10%

12%

15%

17%

20%

2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 Q3

AUSTIN INDUSTRIAL

Historical Average = 10%

$5

$6

$7

$8

$9

$10

-100

100

300

500

2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 Q3

Net Absorption, SF (thousands) Asking Rent, $ PSF

Page 6: Austin Industrial MarketBeat 1Q 2018 · 2018-06-12 · Furthermore, Austin’s housing market continues to sizzle at a record pace. According to the Austin Board of Realtors, home

AustinIndustrial Q3 2017

MARKETBEAT

About Cushman & WakefieldCushman & Wakefield is a leading global real estate services firm that helps clients transform the way people work, shop, and live. Our43,000 employees in more than 60 countries help investors and occupiers optimize the value of their real estate by combiningour global perspective and deep local knowledge with an impressive platform of real estate solutions. Cushman & Wakefield is amongthe largest commercial real estate services firms with revenue of $5 billion across core services of agency leasing, asset services,capital markets, facility services (C&W Services), global occupier services, investment & asset management (DTZ Investors), project &development services, tenant representation, and valuation & advisory. To learn more, visit www.cushmanwakefield.com or follow@CushWake on Twitter.

Copyright © 2017 Cushman & Wakefield. All rights reserved. The information contained within this report is gathered from multiplesources considered to be reliable. The information may contain errors or omissions and is presented without any warranty orrepresentations as to its accuracy.

Key Lease Transactions Q3 2017

PROPERTY SF TENANT TRANSACTION TYPE SUBMARKET

Corridor Park 184,833 Wayne Fueling Systems Lease Round Rock

Vista Park 5 86,700 Flooring Services SW, LTD Lease Round Rock

11000 N. I-35, Bldg B 49,500 FEMA Lease North Central

Key Sales Transactions Q3 2017

PROPERTY SF SELLER/BUYER PRICE / $PSF SUBMARKET

14050 Summit Dr. 53,100 BTI Austin LLC / 2017 Summit Park LP Undisclosed North Central

501 Waller St. 35,000 WBH LTD / WC 5th & Waller, LLC $6,640,000 / $189 East

3841 Ranch Road 620 32,697 D&M Dixon / MBSB Commercial Holdings Undisclosed Southwest

Cushman & Wakefield200 W. Cesar Chavez StSuite 250cushmanwakefield.com

For more information, contact:Jeff Graves, Sr. GIS & Research AnalystTel: +1 512 474 [email protected]

SUBMARKET INVENTORYOVERALL

VACANCY RATE

YTD NET OVERALL

ABSORPTIONUNDER CNSTR

DIRECT WEIGHTED

AVG.

NET RENT(MF)

DIRECT WEIGHTED

AVG.

NET RENT(OS)

DIRECT WEIGHTED

AVG.

NET RENT(W/D)

Central 18,900 0% 0 0 N/A N/A N/A

Far Northwest 1,664,349 6.9% 79,038 231,030 N/A $14.40 $6.46

North Central 6,160,796 15.5% -253,776 0 $8.74 $13.74 $6.79

Northeast 11,728,259 13.2% -331,507 39,150 N/A $9.51 $6.90

Northwest 0 0.0% 0 0 N/A N/A N/A

South Central 1,799,537 2.9% 27,853 0 N/A $14.68 $7.49

Southeast 10,178,657 10.5% 43,179 465,371 N/A $13.31 $7.08

Southwest 376,181 8.9% -1,000 0 N/A $10.50 $7.60

Round Rock 6,915,420 6.4% 51,436 0 N/A $11.52 $8.15

AUSTIN TOTALS 38,842,099 9.5% -384,777 735,551 $8.77 $12.52 $6.72*Rental rates reflect asking $psf/year MF = Manufacturing OS = Office Service/Flex W/D = Warehouse/Distribution

Page 7: Austin Industrial MarketBeat 1Q 2018 · 2018-06-12 · Furthermore, Austin’s housing market continues to sizzle at a record pace. According to the Austin Board of Realtors, home

cushmanwakefield.com

AustinIndustrial Q2 2017

MARKETBEAT

Economic Indicators

Market Indicators (Overall, All Classes)

Overall Net Absorption/Overall Asking Rent4Q TRAILING AVERAGE

Overall Vacancy

Q2 2016 Q2 2017 12-Month Forecast

Austin Employment 994k 1,023k

Austin Unemployment 3.0% 3.6

U.S. Unemployment 4.9% 4.4%

Q2 2016 Q2 2017 12-Month Forecast

Vacancy 7.7% 8.6%

Net Absorption (SF, YTD) 242k -75k

Under Construction (SF) 414k 964k

Average Asking Rent* $9.66 $9.21

*Rental rates reflect net asking $psf/year

EconomyThe Austin economy remained steadfast to close out the first half of 2017. With an unemployment rate of 3.6%, Austin remains significantly lower than the national average of 4.4%, and job growth in the region also continues to outpace national averages. According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor statistics, the Austin MSA added more than 29,000 new jobs to the area in the past 12 months, a 2.9% increase. Construction remains robust across Austin as well. Several high-profile construction projects reflect the confidence taking place in the city, including the 37-story Fairmont Hotel in downtown Austin, as well as The Independent, a 58-story residential tower that will be the tallest residential tower west of the Mississippi once it is completed in 2018.

Market OverviewThe Austin Industrial market rebounded from the negative absorption we saw in Q1 2017. Absorption was up for Q2 2017, totaling approximately 135,000 square feet (SF) overall. The Southeast (SE) submarket experienced the majority of this absorption, recording 137,000 SF overall. Vacancy rates for all industrial product types remain low, with an overall rate of 8.6%. Although vacancy has risen from the historic lows we’ve seen recently, demand in the market is strong and leasing activity remains healthy. The average net rental rate for all property types for Q2 2017 was $9.21 per square foot (PSF). Office service (flex) property types continue to perform strongly, with an overall average rental rate of $12.51 psf. As has been the case over the last year, this trend can be attributed to the continued demand for “value” office space as traditional office users are squeezed out of higher priced office product. Subsequently, many landlords are seeing this as an opportunity to maximize rents and market flex space as a pure office alternative.

OutlookThe Austin industrial market will more than likely continue to trend upward. Overall vacancy rates are maintaining a healthy level while rental rates remain stable. Deliveries appear to be in balance with market demand with more than 900,000 square feet of industrial product under construction. As population growth continues and more and more businesses flock to the capital city and expand their business footprints, we should expect to see demand for both warehouse/distribution and flex space increase as we move into the second half of 2017 and continue this trend well into 2018. 2%

5%

7%

10%

12%

15%

17%

20%

2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 Q2 2017

AUSTIN INDUSTRIAL

Historical Average = 11%

$5

$6

$7

$8

$9

$10

-100

100

300

500

2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 Q2 2017

Net Absorption, SF (thousands) Asking Rent, $ PSF

Page 8: Austin Industrial MarketBeat 1Q 2018 · 2018-06-12 · Furthermore, Austin’s housing market continues to sizzle at a record pace. According to the Austin Board of Realtors, home

AustinIndustrial Q2 2017

MARKETBEAT

About Cushman & WakefieldCushman & Wakefield is a leading global real estate services firm that helps clients transform the way people work, shop, and live. Our43,000 employees in more than 60 countries help investors and occupiers optimize the value of their real estate by combiningour global perspective and deep local knowledge with an impressive platform of real estate solutions. Cushman & Wakefield is amongthe largest commercial real estate services firms with revenue of $5 billion across core services of agency leasing, asset services,capital markets, facility services (C&W Services), global occupier services, investment & asset management (DTZ Investors), project &development services, tenant representation, and valuation & advisory. To learn more, visit www.cushmanwakefield.com or follow@CushWake on Twitter.

Copyright © 2017 Cushman & Wakefield. All rights reserved. The information contained within this report is gathered from multiplesources considered to be reliable. The information may contain errors or omissions and is presented without any warranty orrepresentations as to its accuracy.

Key Lease Transactions Q2 2017

PROPERTY SF TENANT TRANSACTION TYPE SUBMARKET

TechRidge Three.1 76,000 Kompan Lease Northeast

TechRidge Two.1 46,000 AG&M Granite Lease Northeast

7307 Burleson Rd. 35,000 Evolution Salt Lease Southeast

Key Sales Transactions Q2 2017

PROPERTY SF SELLER/BUYER PRICE / $PSF SUBMARKET

210 E. Saint Elmo Rd. 102,194 Veritiv Corp/Gramercy Property Trust $9,700,000 / $95 South Central

306 Tradesmen Park Dr. 52,440 Paint Sundries LLC/300 Tradesmen LLC Undisclosed Round Rock

2310 Donley Dr. 24,700 Jammer, LLC/Boost Logic $1,800,000 / $73 North Central

Cushman & Wakefield200 W. Cesar Chavez StSuite 250cushmanwakefield.com

For more information, contact:Jeff Graves, Sr. GIS & Research AnalystTel: +1 512 474 [email protected]

SUBMARKET INVENTORY OVERALLVACANCY RATE

YTD NET OVERALL ABSORPTION UNDER CNSTR

DIRECT WEIGHTED AVG.

NET RENT(MF)

DIRECT WEIGHTED AVG.

NET RENT(OS)

DIRECT WEIGHTED AVG.

NET RENT(W/D)

Central 18,900 0% 0 0 N/A N/A N/A

Far Northwest 1,664,349 5.7% 62,620 231,030 N/A $14.38 $6.46

North Central 6,160,796 8.9% -146,472 0 $8.68 $13.57 $6.88

Northeast 11,728,259 9.7% -72,132 39,150 N/A $9.55 $6.83

Northwest 0 0.0% 0 0 N/A N/A N/A

South Central 1,799,537 2.5% 18,221 0 N/A $14.68 $7.21

Southeast 9,981,007 9.8% 13,583 694,094 N/A $13.05 $8.08

Southwest 376,181 4.1% 2,750 0 N/A $8.40 $7.60

Round Rock 6,915,420 7.2% 46,973 0 N/A $11.00 $7.33

AUSTIN TOTALS 38,644,449 8.6% -74,457 964,274 $8.68 $12.51 $6.45*Rental rates reflect asking $psf/year MF = Manufacturing OS = Office Service/Flex W/D = Warehouse/Distribution

Page 9: Austin Industrial MarketBeat 1Q 2018 · 2018-06-12 · Furthermore, Austin’s housing market continues to sizzle at a record pace. According to the Austin Board of Realtors, home

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AustinIndustrial Q1 2017

MARKETBEAT

Economic Indicators

Market Indicators (Overall, All Classes)

Overall Net Absorption/Overall Asking Rent4Q TRAILING AVERAGE

Overall Vacancy

Q1 2016 Q1 2017 12-Month Forecast

Austin Employment 987k 1,016k

Austin Unemployment 3.3% 3.4%

U.S. Unemployment 4.9% 4.8%

Q1 2016 Q1 2017 12-Month Forecast

Vacancy 6.8% 9.5%

Net Absorption (SF, YTD) 172k -209k

Under Construction (SF) 370k 593k

Average Asking Rent* $9.72 $9.27

*Rental rates reflect net asking $psf/year

EconomyThe Austin economy remained robust in the first quarter of 2017. Job growth remains strong and the unemployment rate is still one of the lowest in the country, coming in at 3.4% versus the national average of 4.8%. Nationally, the technology sector is the leading industry for real estate expansion and that is certainly the case in Austin as more and more tech companies relocate to or expand operations in the capital city. Additionally, Austin’s tourism industry continues to thrive, with millions of visitors making their way to Austin each year and pumping millions of dollars into the local economy.

Market OverviewThe Austin Industrial market saw its streak of positive absorption come to an end as the market recorded negative net absorption of 209,000 square feet (SF) to end the first quarter of 2017. New deliveries totaling 335,946 SF helped push vacancy rates higher for all industrial product types, with an overall rate of 9.5%. Warehouse/distribution vacancy was the lowest of all product types with an overall rate of 7.7%. Although vacancy has risen from the historic lows we’ve seen recently, demand in the market is strong and leasing activity remains healthy. Several new deliveries, including the 116,000 SF flex building at TechRidge, have lessened the supply deficit and several other large facilities, such as the 231,000 SF Brushy Creek Corporate Center, have broken ground and will further add to supply levels. The average net rental rate for all property types for Q1 2017 was $9.27 per square foot (PSF). Office service (flex) property types continue to perform strongly, with an overall average rental rate of $12.60 psf. This property type has consistently mirrored Austin’s red-hot office market, as traditional office users are priced out of expensive space and turn to “value” office alternatives.

OutlookConsistent demand for newer warehouse and flex properties have pushed developers to fill voids in the market. As of close of 1st quarter 2017, there is approximately 600,000 square feet of industrial product under construction and another 1.5 Million SF of proposed industrial product in the pipeline. Although vacancy rates have crept upward when compared to the record lows we experienced in 2016, healthy leasing activity and an ever-expanding population base should keep demand for both warehouse/distribution and flex space strong throughout 2017.

2%

5%

7%

10%

12%

15%

17%

20%

2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 Q1 17

AUSTIN INDUSTRIAL

Historical Average = 11%

$5

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$7

$8

$9

$10

-100

100

300

500

2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 Q1 2017

Net Absorption, SF (thousands) Asking Rent, $ PSF

Page 10: Austin Industrial MarketBeat 1Q 2018 · 2018-06-12 · Furthermore, Austin’s housing market continues to sizzle at a record pace. According to the Austin Board of Realtors, home

AustinIndustrial Q1 2017

MARKETBEAT

About Cushman & WakefieldCushman & Wakefield is a leading global real estate services firm that helps clients transform the way people work, shop, and live.The firm’s 43,000 employees in more than 60 countries provide deep local and global insights that create significant value foroccupiers and investors around the world. Cushman & Wakefield is among the largest commercial real estate services firms withrevenue of $5 billion across core services of agency leasing, asset services, capital markets, facility services (C&W Services), globaloccupier services, investment & asset management (DTZ Investors), project & development services, tenant representation, andvaluation & advisory. To learn more, visit www.cushmanwakefield.com or follow @CushWake on Twitter.

Copyright © 2017 Cushman & Wakefield. All rights reserved. The information contained within this report is gathered from multiplesources considered to be reliable. The information may contain errors or omissions and is presented without any warranty orrepresentations as to its accuracy.

Key Lease Transactions Q1 2017

PROPERTY SF TENANT TRANSACTION TYPE SUBMARKET

Vista Park 4 45,900 Central Transportation Systems Lease Round Rock

2325 Ben White Blvd 40,957 Austin Warehouse & Distribution Sublease Southeast

Longhorn Center 12,909 Illusions Rentals Lease Far Northwest

Key Sales Transactions Q1 2017

PROPERTY SF SELLER/BUYER PRICE / $PSF SUBMARKET

Southpark Commerce 1-3 470,886 Clarion Partners/Colony Capital $50,600,000 / $107 Southease

11000 Middle Fiskville Rd 332,345 Golfsmith/BH Properties $20,500,000 / $61 North Central

17 Cypress Blvd 98,702 World Class Capital/Round Rock ISD $6,711,736 / $68 Round Rock

Cushman & Wakefield200 W. Cesar Chavez StSuite 250cushmanwakefield.com

For more information, contact:Jeff Graves, Sr. GIS & Research AnalystTel: +1 512 474 [email protected]

SUBMARKET INVENTORY OVERALLVACANCY RATE

YTD NET OVERALL ABSORPTION UNDER CNSTR

DIRECT WEIGHTED AVG.

NET RENT(MF)

DIRECT WEIGHTED AVG.

NET RENT(OS)

DIRECT WEIGHTED AVG.

NET RENT(W/D)

Central 18,900 0% 0 0 N/A N/A N/A

Far Northwest 5,685,270 7.0% 54,013 231,030 N/A $14.90 $5.23

North Central 5,059,583 8.5% -42,360 0 $8.74 $12.72 $7.80

Northeast 9,465,180 7.9% -9,172 51,200 N/A $9.92 $6.84

Northwest 205,561 0.0% 0 0 N/A $9.23 $6.08

South Central 1,064,820 2.8% -12,252 0 N/A $15.63 $8.19

Southeast 9,648,768 9.1% -123,160 272,500 N/A $11.89 $8.38

Southwest 259,731 5.0% 0 0 N/A $8.00 N/A

Round Rock 6,912,936 8.9% -76,088 38,400 N/A $7.98 $6.33

AUSTIN TOTALS 38,320,749 9.5% -209,019 593,130 $8.74 $12.60 $6.48*Rental rates reflect asking $psf/year MF = Manufacturing OS = Office Service/Flex W/D = Warehouse/Distribution

Page 11: Austin Industrial MarketBeat 1Q 2018 · 2018-06-12 · Furthermore, Austin’s housing market continues to sizzle at a record pace. According to the Austin Board of Realtors, home

cushmanwakefield.com

AustinIndustrial Q4 2016

MARKETBEAT

Economic Indicators

Market Indicators (Overall, All Classes)

Overall Net Absorption/Overall Asking Rent4Q TRAILING AVERAGE

Overall Vacancy

Q4 15 Q4 16 12-Month Forecast

Austin Employment 978k 997k

Austin Unemployment 3.4% 3.5%

U.S. Unemployment 5.0% 4.8%

Q3 15 Q4 16 12-Month Forecast

Vacancy 6.1% 6.4%

Net Absorption (SF, YTD) 1.77M 611K

Under Construction (SF) 347k 841k

Average Asking Rent* $9.94 $9.71

*Rental rates reflect net asking $psf/year

EconomyThe Austin market wrapped up 2016 much like it began – with population in the metro area increasing at a record pace, phenomenal job growth, and an unemployment rate that remains one of the lowest in the country, coming in at 3.5% versus the national average of 4.8%. The technology sector is still the driving force behind this success and Fortune 500 companies continue to move to or expand their operations in Austin. This has an indirect benefit for smaller businesses and the economy as a whole. Austin’s tourism industry remains robust as well. According to the Austin Convention & Visitors Bureau, there were more than 24 million visitors to Austin in 2016, which led to an economic impact of $7 billion to the Live Music Capital of the World.

Market OverviewThe Austin Industrial market recorded just over 116,000 square feet (SF) of overall absorption during Q4 2016. The Northeast (NE) led all submarkets, recording 89,788 SF of overall absorption. Vacancy rates for all industrial product types remain low, with an overall rate of 6.4%, down from the 7.5% rate recorded in Q3 2016. Although absorption has slowed somewhat as compared to previous quarters, lack of supply should continue to keep vacancy rates low and push rental rates upward. The average net rental rate for all property types for Q4 2016 was $9.71 per square foot (PSF). Office service (flex) property types continue to perform strongly, with an overall average rental rate of $11.71 psf. This property type has consistently mirrored Austin’s red-hot office market, as traditional office users are priced out of expensive space and turn to “value” office alternatives.

OutlookAs we kick-off 2017, we can expect to see the industrial market continue its upward trend. Demand for quality warehouse and flex properties has pushed construction starts as developers look to fill voids in the market. As of close of 4th quarter 2016, there is currently more than 840,000 square feet of industrial product under construction as compared to 340,000 SF at the same time in 2015. With overall vacancy rates at near record lows and asking rates on the rise, we should see these newer deliveries leased up steadily. With population growth expected to continue, we will likely see demand for both warehouse/distribution and flex space increase throughout 2017.

2%

5%

7%

10%

12%

15%

17%

20%

2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 Q4

AUSTIN INDUSTRIAL

Historical Average = 11%

$5

$6

$7

$8

$9

$10

-100

100

300

500

2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 Q4

Net Absorption, SF (thousands) Asking Rent, $ PSF

Page 12: Austin Industrial MarketBeat 1Q 2018 · 2018-06-12 · Furthermore, Austin’s housing market continues to sizzle at a record pace. According to the Austin Board of Realtors, home

AustinIndustrial Q4 2016

MARKETBEAT

About Cushman & WakefieldCushman & Wakefield is a leading global real estate services firm that helps clients transform the way people work, shop, and live.The firm’s 43,000 employees in more than 60 countries provide deep local and global insights that create significant value foroccupiers and investors around the world. Cushman & Wakefield is among the largest commercial real estate services firms withrevenue of $5 billion across core services of agency leasing, asset services, capital markets, facility services (C&W Services), globaloccupier services, investment & asset management (DTZ Investors), project & development services, tenant representation, andvaluation & advisory. To learn more, visit www.cushmanwakefield.com or follow @CushWake on Twitter.

Copyright © 2016 Cushman & Wakefield. All rights reserved. The information contained within this report is gathered from multiplesources considered to be reliable. The information may contain errors or omissions and is presented without any warranty orrepresentations as to its accuracy.

Key Lease Transactions 2016

PROPERTY SF TENANT TRANSACTION TYPE SUBMARKET

Southpark Commerce Center 145,000 Austin Lighthouse Lease Southeast

Heritage Crossing 126,782 LKQ Corporation Lease Round Rock

116 E. Old Settlers 122,012 UPS Sublease Round Rock

Key Sales Transactions 2016

PROPERTY SF SELLER/BUYER PRICE / $PSF SUBMARKET

Tech Ridge I,II,III 1,023,120 TA Realty/Stockbridge $53,000,000 / $52 Northeast

Met Center 15 257,000 Daymark Realty/Virtua Partners 28,000,000 / $109 Southeast

Parmer Business Park 257,000 RREEF/Eurus Capital Partners Undisclosed Far Northwest

Cushman & Wakefield200 W. Cesar Chavez StSuite 250cushmanwakefield.com

For more information, contact:Jeff Graves, Sr. GIS & Research AnalystTel: +1 512 474 [email protected]

SUBMARKET INVENTORY OVERALLVACANCY RATE

YTD NET OVERALL ABSORPTION UNDER CNSTR

DIRECT WEIGHTED AVG.

NET RENT(MF)

DIRECT WEIGHTED AVG.

NET RENT(OS)

DIRECT WEIGHTED AVG.

NET RENT(W/D)

Central 18,900 0% 0 0 N/A N/A N/A

Far Northwest 4,456,859 1.2% -34,135 30,000 N/A $14.95 $5.43

North Central 9,600,964 4.2% 251,797 0 $7.80 $12.71 $7.88

Northeast 12,546,533 14.7% -29,439 551,200 N/A $9.18 $6.49

Northwest 4,139,606 2.3% 158,976 0 N/A $9.03 $6.23

South Central 1,354,422 8.2% -60,737 0 N/A $16.53 $8.29

Southeast 9,938,982 7.3% 55,475 220,965 N/A $11.64 $8.40

Southwest 272,660 2.3% 20,883 0 N/A $11.96 N/A

Round Rock 3,712,935 6.1% 131,575 38,400 N/A $7.58 $6.30

AUSTIN TOTALS 46,041,861 6.4% 611,005 840,565 $7.80 $11.71 $6.92*Rental rates reflect asking $psf/year MF = Manufacturing OS = Office Service/Flex W/D = Warehouse/Distribution

Page 13: Austin Industrial MarketBeat 1Q 2018 · 2018-06-12 · Furthermore, Austin’s housing market continues to sizzle at a record pace. According to the Austin Board of Realtors, home

cushmanwakefield.com

Industrial Snapshot Q2 2016Austin

MARKETBEAT

Economic Indicators

Market Indicators (Overall, All Classes)

Overall Net Absorption/Overall Asking Rent4Q TRAILING AVERAGE

Overall Vacancy

Q2 2015 Q2 2016 12-Month Forecast

Austin Employment 953k 987k

Austin Unemployment 3.3% 3.0%

U.S. Unemployment 5.4% 4.9%

Q2 2015 Q2 2016 12-Month Forecast

Vacancy 8.6% 7.7%

Net Absorption (sf) 594k 242k

Under Construction (sf) 411k 349k

Average Asking Rent* $9.36 $9.66

*Rental rates reflect net asking $psf/year

EconomyThe Austin economy continues to impress. With an unemployment rate of 3.0%, Austin’s jobless rate remains significantly lower than the national average of 4.9%. Job growth in the region also continues to outpace national averages. According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, the Austin MSA added more than 34,000 new jobs to the area in the past 12 months, a 3.6% increase. Population figures continue to follow a similar path. A recent demographic study by the City of Austin indicated there was a net population gain of more than 150 people per day added to the Austin MSA. This includes Georgetown, TX, a north Austin suburb, which was recently ranked #1 as the fastest growing city in the country according to the U.S. Census Bureau.

Market OverviewThe Austin Industrial market recorded 242,070 square feet (sf) of overall absorption during Q2 2016. The North Central (NC) submarket experienced the majority of this absorption, recording 138,414 sf overall. Vacancy rates for all industrial product types remain low, with an overall rate of 7.7%, compared to 8.6% in Q2 2015. Continued strong absorption rates coupled with lack of supply should continue to lower vacancy rates and subsequently push rental rates higher. The average net rental rate for all property types for Q2 2016 was $9.66 per square foot (psf), which was up $0.06 psf from Q1 2016. Additionally, office service property types continue to perform strongly, with an overall average rental rate of $11.64 psf. As has been the case over the last year, this trend can be attributed to the continued demand for “value” office space as traditional office users are squeezed out of higher priced office product. Subsequently, many landlords are seeing this as an opportunity to maximize rents and have begun marketing flex space as pure office.

OutlookThe Austin industrial market will more than likely continue to trend upward. Overall vacancy rates are maintaining a very healthy level while rental rates continue to rise. Deliveries appear to be in balance with market demand with more than 349,000 square feet of industrial product under construction. As population growth continues and more and more businesses flock to the capital city and expand their business footprints, we can expect to see demand for both warehouse/distribution and flex space increase as we move into the second half of 2016 and continue this trend well into 2017. 2%

5%

7%

10%

12%

15%

17%

20%

2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016

AUSTIN INDUSTRIAL

Historical Average = 11%

$5

$6

$7

$8

$9

$10

-100

100

300

500

2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016

Net Absorption, SF (thousands) Asking Rent, $ PSF

Page 14: Austin Industrial MarketBeat 1Q 2018 · 2018-06-12 · Furthermore, Austin’s housing market continues to sizzle at a record pace. According to the Austin Board of Realtors, home

Industrial Snapshot Q2 2016Austin

MARKETBEAT

About Cushman & WakefieldCushman & Wakefield is a leading global real estate services firm that helps clients transform the way people work, shop, and live.The firm’s 43,000 employees in more than 60 countries provide deep local and global insights that create significant value foroccupiers and investors around the world. Cushman & Wakefield is among the largest commercial real estate services firms withrevenue of $5 billion across core services of agency leasing, asset services, capital markets, facility services (C&W Services), globaloccupier services, investment & asset management (DTZ Investors), project & development services, tenant representation, andvaluation & advisory. To learn more, visit www.cushmanwakefield.com or follow @CushWake on Twitter.

Copyright © 2016 Cushman & Wakefield. All rights reserved. The information contained within this report is gathered from multiplesources considered to be reliable. The information may contain errors or omissions and is presented without any warranty orrepresentations as to its accuracy.

Key Lease Transactions Q2 2016

PROPERTY SF TENANT TRANSACTION TYPE SUBMARKET

116 E. Old Settlers 122,012 UPS Sublease Round Rock

Expo 13 32,000 Ketra Lease Southeast

Southpark Commerce Center 4 25,680 Ingersoll-Rand Lease Southeast

Key Sales Transactions Q2 2016

PROPERTY SF SELLER/BUYER PRICE / $PSF SUBMARKET

Met Center 15 257,000 Daymark Realty/Virtua Partners $28,000,000 / $109 Southeast

210 E. Saint Elmo 102,194 William Bell/Veritiv Operating Co. Undisclosed South Central

Howard Lane Distribution Center 77,484 Seetha Singh/John Lewis Co. $3,500,000 / $45 North Central

Cushman & Wakefield200 W. Cesar Chavez StSuite 250cushmanwakefield.com

For more information, contact:Jeff Graves, Sr. GIS & Research AnalystTel: +1 512 474 [email protected]

SUBMARKET INVENTORY OVERALLVACANCY RATE

YTD NET OVERALL ABSORPTION UNDER CNSTR

DIRECT WEIGHTED AVG.

NET RENT(MF)

DIRECT WEIGHTED AVG.

NET RENT(OS)

DIRECT WEIGHTED AVG.

NET RENT(W/D)

Central 18,900 0% 0 0 N/A N/A N/A

Far Northwest 4,456,859 1.7% (36,478) 30,000 N/A $14.93 $5.34

North Central 9,600,964 5.2% 188,264 0 $7.80 $12.81 $7.88

Northeast 12,121,947 14.4% (35,780) 180,395 N/A $9.13 $6.50

Northwest 4,139,606 4.4% 48,079 0 N/A $8.98 $6.14

South Central 1,434,649 7.6% 5,993 0 N/A $17.44 $8.24

Southeast 9,725,951 6.8% 109,554 58,005 N/A $11.72 $8.47

Southwest 272,660 2.7% 13,383 0 N/A $11.70 N/A

Round Rock 3,644,669 6.1% 120,721 80,340 N/A $7.58 $6.30

AUSTIN TOTALS 45,614,617 7.7% 413,736 348,740 $7.80 $11.64 $6.90*Rental rates reflect asking $psf/year MF = Manufacturing OS = Office Service/Flex W/D = Warehouse/Distribution

Page 15: Austin Industrial MarketBeat 1Q 2018 · 2018-06-12 · Furthermore, Austin’s housing market continues to sizzle at a record pace. According to the Austin Board of Realtors, home

Industrial Snapshot Q1 2016Austin

MARKETBEAT

Economic Indicators

Market Indicators (Overall, All Product Types)

Overall Net Absorption/Asking Rent4Q TRAILING AVERAGE

Overall Vacancy

Q1 15 Q1 16 12-Month Forecast

Austin Employment 944k 985k

Austin Unemployment 3.5% 3.2%

U.S. Unemployment 5.6% 4.9%

Q1 15 Q1 16 12-Month Forecast

Vacancy 9.6% 6.8%

Net Absorption (sf) 256k 172k

Under Construction (sf) 348k 370k

Average Asking Rent* $9.36 $9.72

*Rental rates reflect asking $psf/year

EconomyThe first quarter of 2016 marked yet another quarter that the Austin unemployment rate ranked as one of the lowest amongst the 50 largest metropolitan areas, coming in at 3.2% (as of March 2016). The local Austin unemployment rate also remains ahead of both the Texas rate of 4.5% and the national rate of 4.9%. Additionally, the rate of job growth in the Austin MSA continues to impress. According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, Austin has added more than 39,800 new jobs in the past 12 months, ranking it 3rd nationally. Many of these new jobs can be attributed to more and more companies relocating or expanding to Austin from other areas, including many Silicon Valley tech companies that are finding the Austin market rich in talent. Austin’s unique vibes, original cuisine, and spectacular music has only fueled this popularity and the city’s continued economic growth is reflective of that.

Market OverviewThe Austin Industrial market recorded 171,666 square feet (sf) of overall absorption during Q1 2016. The Southeast (SE) submarket experienced the majority of this absorption, recording 134,303 sf overall. Vacancy rates for all industrial product types remain low, with an overall rate of 6.8%, compared to 9.6% in Q1 2015. Continued strong absorption rates coupled with lack of supply should continue to lower vacancy rates and subsequently push rental rates higher. The average net rental rate for all property types for Q1 2016 was $9.72 per square foot (psf), which was up $0.36 psf from the same quarter in 2015, an increase of 3.8%. Additionally, office service property types continue to perform strongly, with an overall average rental rate of $11.36 psf. This trend can be attributed to the continued demand for “value” office space as traditional office users are squeezed out of higher priced office product.

OutlookAustin continues to be an attractive destination for growing businesses. Large, established companies such as Amazon, Oracle, Apple, Google, and others have shown their commitment to Austin and continue to expand their presence in the capital city. Additionally, existing local companies are continuing to add to their current footprints as their businesses reap the benefits of a strengthening economy. Nationally, the spotlight continues to shine on Austin. In January, Forbes named Austin No.1 for “America’s Next Boom Towns”. This is evident as Austin’s population growth continues to climb at a record pace. With this increased population, demand for both warehouse/distribution and flex space will increase, and as supply continues to lag behind, higher rental rates and lower vacancy rates will continue across most Austin submarkets.

2%

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7%

10%

12%

15%

17%

20%

2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 Q1 16

AUSTIN INDUSTRIAL

Historical Average = 11%

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$10

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500

2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 Q1 16

Net Absorption, SF (thousands) Asking Rent, $ PSF

Page 16: Austin Industrial MarketBeat 1Q 2018 · 2018-06-12 · Furthermore, Austin’s housing market continues to sizzle at a record pace. According to the Austin Board of Realtors, home

Industrial Snapshot Q1 2016Austin

MARKETBEAT

Oxford Commercial is an independently owned and operated member of the Cushman & Wakefield Alliance. Through the Alliance, Oxford clients benefit from seamless access to the global Cushman & Wakefield (C&W) platform. Cushman & Wakefield advises and represents clients on all aspects of property occupancy and investment. The firm’s 43,000 employees in more than 60 countries provide deep local and global insights that create significant value for occupiers and investors around the world. It offers a complete range of services to its occupier and investor clients for all property types, including leasing, sales and acquisitions, equity, debt and structured finance, corporate finance and investment banking, appraisal, consulting, corporate services, and property, facilities, project and risk management. For further information, please visit our website, www.oxfordcommercial.com or follow @OxfordCRE.

Copyright © 2016 Cushman & Wakefield. All rights reserved. The information contained within this report is gathered from multiple sourcesconsidered to be reliable. The information may contain errors or omissions and is presented without any warranty or representations as to itsaccuracy. Alliance firms are independently owned and operated.

Key Lease Transactions Q1 2016

PROPERTY SF TENANT TRANSACTION TYPE SUBMARKET

Heritage Crossing 126,782 LKQ Corporation Lease Round Rock

NorhTech 6 111,300 Unknown Lease Northwest

Heritage Crossing 1 95,672 Goodwill Industries Lease Round Rock

Harris Ridge 5 54,460 Sheri Hill Lease Northeast

Key Sales Transactions Q1 2016

PROPERTY SF SELLER/BUYER PRICE / $PSF SUBMARKET

Parmer Business Park 257,000 RREEF/Eurus Capital Partners Undisclosed Far Northwest

Stock Building Supply 241,564 Capital Comm Invest./JLM Financial Undisclosed Southeast

Bergstrom Technology Center 204,346 DivcoWest/Capital Comm Invest. Undisclosed Southeast

Wall St & Burleson Rd Portfolio 163,063 Industry Capital/Saber Realty Partners $13,550,000 / $83 Southeast/Northeast

Cushman & Wakefield / OxfordCommercial200 W. Cesar Chavez StreetSuite 250www.oxfordcommercial.com

For more information, contact:Jeff Graves, Director of GIS and ResearchTel: +1 512 474 [email protected]

SUBMARKET INVENTORY OVERALLVACANCY RATE

YTD NET OVERALL ABSORPTION UNDER CNSTR

DIRECT WEIGHTED AVG.

NET RENT(MF)

DIRECT WEIGHTED AVG.

NET RENT(OS)

DIRECT WEIGHTED AVG.

NET RENT(W/D)

Central 18,900 0% 0 0 $7.80 N/A N/A

Far Northwest 4,480,259 1.9% (21,199) 0 N/A $15.01 $5.28

North Central 9,892,596 5.7% 49,850 0 N/A $12.87 $7.80

Northeast 12,043,527 15.9% (56,775) 96,000 N/A $9.30 $6.60

Northwest 4,139,606 5.2% 5,981 0 N/A $9.12 $6.00

South Central 1,434,649 7.0% 15,052 0 N/A $17.73 $8.28

Southeast 9,565,951 5.9% 134,303 193,600 N/A $11.65 $8.33

Southwest 272,660 2.8% 23,383 0 N/A $11.73 N/A

Round Rock 3,606,469 8.4% 21,071 80,340 N/A $7.56 $6.24

AUSTIN TOTALS 45,454,617 6.8% 171,666 369,940 $7.80 $11.76 $6.84*Rental rates reflect asking $psf/year MF = Manufacturing OS = Office Service/Flex W/D = Warehouse/Distribution

Page 17: Austin Industrial MarketBeat 1Q 2018 · 2018-06-12 · Furthermore, Austin’s housing market continues to sizzle at a record pace. According to the Austin Board of Realtors, home

Industrial Snapshot Q4 2015Austin

MARKETBEAT

Economic Indicators

Market Indicators (Overall, All Product Types)

Overall Net Absorption/Asking Rent

4Q TRAILING AVERAGE

Overall Vacancy

Q4 14 Q4 1512-Month

Forecast

Austin Employment 927k 955k

Austin Unemployment 3.7% 3.1%

U.S. Unemployment 5.7% 5.0%

2014 201512-Month

Forecast

Vacancy 8.7% 6.1%

Net Absorption (sf) 1.1M 1.8M

Under Construction (sf) 329k 347k

Average Asking Rent* $9.12 $9.94

*Rental rates reflect gross asking $psf/year

EconomyThe fourth quarter of 2015 marked another consecutive quarter

that the Austin unemployment rate ranked as one of the lowest

amongst the 50 largest metropolitan areas, coming in at 3.1%

(as of December 2015). The local Austin unemployment rate also

remains ahead of both the Texas rate of 4.6% and the national

rate of 5.0%. Additionally, the Austin MSA continues to be a

major job producer, adding more than 32,000 jobs to the area

between October 2014 to October 2015 (U.S. Bureau of Labor

Statistics). Austin continues to be at the top of the list of fastest

growing cities. According to Forbes.com, Austin ranks number

one in net in-migration population out of the 53 largest U.S.

metro areas. This influx of new residents to the Austin area is

due in large part to low unemployment rates and strong job

growth, indicating an extremely healthy economy.

Market OverviewThe Austin Industrial market recorded 385,165 square feet (sf) of

overall absorption during Q4 2015. This number brought the

2015 year-to-date total of overall absorption to more than 1.7

million sf. The Northeast (NE) submarket experienced the

strongest amount of absorption, recording 139,063 sf of overall

absorption. Vacancy rates in the Austin market continued their

decline, as the overall vacancy decreased to 6.1% compared to

6.9% in Q3 2015. Continued strong absorption rates coupled

with low vacancy rates continue to raise average asking net

rental rates. The average net rental rate for all property types

rose to $9.94 per square foot (psf) for Q4 2015, an increase of

$0.10 psf from Q3 2015. Additionally, office service property

types reported a significant increase, jumping $0.24 psf from the

previous quarter to an average rental rate of $11.40 psf.

OutlookThe Austin market continues to sizzle as more and more

companies move or expand into the area. Demand for qualified

employees has led to a surge in population, record low

unemployment rates and increased job growth across the greater

Austin region. As population grows, need for both warehouse/

distribution and flex space will increase. Additionally, office

service “flex space” continues to be a go-to, cost effective

alternative for traditional office users looking to expand. This

demand will most likely continue to push these rates even higher

until developers catch up with demand and increase inventory. In

the meantime, we can expect to see higher rental rates and

lower vacancy rates across most Austin submarkets.2%

5%

7%

10%

12%

15%

17%

20%

2011 2012 2013 2014 2015

AUSTIN INDUSTRIAL

Historical Average = 12%

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$7

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$10

-100

100

300

500

2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015

Net Absorption, SF (thousands) Asking Rent, $ PSF

Page 18: Austin Industrial MarketBeat 1Q 2018 · 2018-06-12 · Furthermore, Austin’s housing market continues to sizzle at a record pace. According to the Austin Board of Realtors, home

Industrial Snapshot Q4 2015Austin

MARKETBEAT

Oxford Commercial is an independently owned and operated member of the Cushman & Wakefield Alliance. Through the Alliance, Oxford

clients benefit from seamless access to the global Cushman & Wakefield (C&W) platform. Cushman & Wakefield advises and represents

clients on all aspects of property occupancy and investment. The firm’s 43,000 employees in more than 60 countries provide deep local and

global insights that create significant value for occupiers and investors around the world. It offers a complete range of services to its occupier

and investor clients for all property types, including leasing, sales and acquisitions, equity, debt and structured finance, corporate finance and

investment banking, appraisal, consulting, corporate services, and property, facilities, project and risk management. For further information,

please visit our website, www.oxfordcommercial.com or follow @OxfordCRE.

Copyright © 2016 Cushman & Wakefield. All rights reserved. The information contained within this report is gathered from multiple sources

considered to be reliable. The information may contain errors or omissions and is presented without any warranty or representations as to its

accuracy. Alliance firms are independently owned and operated.

Key Lease Transactions 2015

PROPERTY SF TENANT TRANSACTION TYPE SUBMARKET

Braker 12 126,750 Active Power Renewal North Central

Expo 8 122,400 Novitex Lease Southeast

9800 Metric 117,000 Image Microsystems Renewal Northwest

Tuscany 5 107,933 Ginny’s Copying Service Renewal Northeast

Key Sales Transactions 2015

PROPERTY SF SELLER/BUYER PRICE / $PSF SUBMARKET

One83 Office Park 935,255 JLM Financial Investments/ IDM Capital Undisclosed Northeast

Northpointe Trade Center 450,015 Exeter/ADIA JV PSP Investments $20,178,533 / $45 Northeast

2105 Gracy Farms Lane 384,174 Cornerstone Real Estate Advisors $51,000,000 / $133 Northeast

15833 Long Vista Drive 372,606 JV Global Logistic Properties $27,849,878 / $75 Northeast

Cushman & Wakefield / Oxford

Commercial

200 W. Cesar Chavez Street

Suite 250

www.oxfordcommercial.com

For more information, contact:

Jeff Graves, Director of GIS and

Research

Tel: +1 512 474 2400

[email protected]

SUBMARKET TOTAL BLDGS INVENTORYOVERALL

VACANCY RATE

YTD NET

OVERALL

ABSORPTION

UNDER CNSTR

DIRECT WEIGHTED

AVG.

NET RENT(MF)

DIRECT

WEIGHTED AVG.

NET RENT(OS)

DIRECT WEIGHTED

AVG.

NET RENT(W/D)

Central 1 18,900 0.0% 0 0 N/A N/A N/A

Far Northwest 55 4,480,259 0.7% 209,893 0 N/A $9.00 $5.16

North Central 151 9,635,628 2.8% 241,699 0 N/A $13.56 N/A

Northeast 163 12,096,327 12.6% 449,702 153,000 N/A $11.28 $6.36

Northwest 63 4,139,606 5.9% 36,070 0 N/A $9.24 N/A

South Central 42 1,434,649 3.9% (9,782) 0 N/A $16.56 $7.20

Southeast 120 9,484,835 5.6% 533,976 193,600 N/A $12.00 $8.64

Southwest 8 272,660 16.5% (9,500) 0 N/A $13.56 N/A

Round Rock 60 3,606,469 6.7% 319,199 0 N/A $9.12 $6.00

AUSTIN TOTALS 663 45,169,333 6.1% 1,771,257 346,600 - $11.40 $6.48

*Rental rates reflect asking $psf/year MF = Manufacturing OS = Office Service/Flex W/D = Warehouse/Distribution

Page 19: Austin Industrial MarketBeat 1Q 2018 · 2018-06-12 · Furthermore, Austin’s housing market continues to sizzle at a record pace. According to the Austin Board of Realtors, home

Industrial Snapshot Q3 2015AUSTIN

MARKETBEAT

Economic Indicators

Market Indicators

Net Absorption/Asking Rent

4Q TRAILING AVERAGE

Overall Vacancy

www.cushmanwakefield.com

EconomyThe Austin MSA continues to lead both state and national

averages in unemployment levels. For the third quarter of 2015

the local unemployment rate was recorded at 3.2%, lower than

both the Texas rate of 4.4% and the national unemployment rate

of 5.1%. Additionally Austin continues to rank first among the

largest fifty metropolitan areas in the U.S. with the lowest

unemployment rates. In addition, observed job creation

continued to occur as 16,275 jobs were created through the city

from August 2015 to August 2015. The city’s ability to both

maintain low unemployment rates in addition to effectively

generate jobs indicate a strong and healthy local economy.

Market OverviewThe Austin industrial market experienced 535,220 square feet

(sf) of positive absorption during the third quarter of 2015. This

quarter marked the tenth consecutive quarter of positive

absorption in the Austin industrial market, dating back to Q2

2013. The Round Rock (RR) submarket experienced the highest

absorption totals as 186,412 sf was absorbed during Q3. Strong

absorption figures across the entire market led to the continued

drop of overall vacancy. The overall vacancy rate for the third

quarter was recorded at 6.9%, down 1.7 percentage point from

the 8.6% vacancy rate recorded in the second quarter. Low

vacancy and strong absorption figures have contributed to an

expected rise in rental rates. The average direct rental rate

recorded for all property types rose to $9.84 per square foot

(psf), up $0.84 psf from the recorded rent during the second

quarter. Additionally, the average rental rate for office service

property types increased to $11.16 psf, up from $11.04 psf

during the second quarter.

OutlookAs vacancy continues to tighten throughout the Austin industrial

market, it is highly likely that rents across all property types will

approach record highs rates. In particular, there is a high

probability that office service rates maintain their sharp increase.

This is due to the fact that they both provide a more cost

effective type of space for traditional office tenants and that there

is little inventory of this product type in many development

pipelines. With these spaces at such a premium, it is possible

many developments will shift towards the addition of more office

service options to the industrial market as a whole.

Q3 14 Q3 1512-Month

Forecast

Austin Employment 919k 946k

Austin Unemployment 4.0% 3.2%

U.S. Unemployment 6.1% 5.1%

Q3 14 Q3 1512-Month

Forecast

Overall Vacancy 9.4% 6.9%

Net Absorption 16k 535k

Under Construction 439k 392k

Overall Average Asking

Rent$9.00 $9.84

AUSTIN INDUSTRIAL

$5

$6

$7

$8

$9

$10

-100,000

100,000

300,000

500,000

2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 Q3 2015

Net Absorption, SF Asking Rent, $ PSF

2%

6%

10%

14%

18%

22%

2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 Q32015

Historical Average = 13%

Page 20: Austin Industrial MarketBeat 1Q 2018 · 2018-06-12 · Furthermore, Austin’s housing market continues to sizzle at a record pace. According to the Austin Board of Realtors, home

Industrial Snapshot Q3 2015AUSTIN

MARKETBEAT

www.cushmanwakefield.comCopyright © 2015 Cushman & Wakefield. All rights reserved. The information contained within this report is gathered from mult iple sources considered

to be reliable. The information may contain errors or omissions and is presented without any warranty or representations as to its accuracy. Alliance

firms are independently owned and operated.

About Cushman & WakefieldCushman & Wakefield is a global leader in commercial real estate services, helping clients transform the way

people work, shop, and live. The firm’s 43,000 employees in more than 60 countries provide deep local and

global insights that create significant value for occupiers and investors around the world. Cushman & Wakefield

is among the largest commercial real estate services firms in the world with revenues of $5 billion across core

services of agency leasing, asset services, capital markets, facilities services (branded C&W Services), global

occupier services, investment management (branded DTZ Investors), tenant representation and valuations &

advisory. To learn more, visit www.cushmanwakefield.com or follow @Cushwake on Twitter.

SUBMARKET TOTAL BLDGS INVENTORYOVERALL

VACANCY RATE

YTD NET OVERALL

ABSORPTION

UNDER

CNSTR

DIRECT WEIGHTED

AVG. NET RENT(MF)

DIRECT WEIGHTED

AVG. NET RENT(OS)

DIRECT WEIGHTED

AVG. NET RENT(W/D)

Central 2 18,900 0.0% 0 0 N/A N/A N/A

Far Northwest 55 4,480,259 0.1% 213,396 0 N/A $8.04 N/A

North Central 150 9,725,621 3.7% 161,996 0 $5.40 $13.44 $5.64

Northeast 163 12,096,327 13.6% 310,639 153,000 N/A $11.28 $6.24

Northwest 63 4,139,606 6.5% 12,821 0 N/A $9.12 N/A

South Central 42 1,434,649 3.9% (5,654) 0 N/A $16.56 $7.20

Southeast 120 9,394,842 4.5% 424,845 239,205 N/A $10.80 $7.80

Southwest 8 272,660 17.6% (12,500) 0 N/A $13.44 N/A

Round Rock 61 3,659,314 6.9% 280,549 0 N/A $9.48 $6.00

AUSTIN TOTALS 664 45,222,178 6.9% 1,386,092 392,205 $5.40 $11.16 $6.36

*Rental rates reflect asking $psf/year MF = Manufacturing OS = Office Service/Flex W/D = Warehouse/Distribution

Key Lease Transactions Q3 2015

PROPERTY SF TENANT PROPERTY TYPE SUBMARKET

Vista Park 57,750 Kodiak Assembly Solutions Warehouse/Distribution Round Rock

Prologis Corridor Park 7 57,600 Capitol Beverage Warehouse/Distribution Round Rock

Excel Filter Inc. 57,600 Expo 12 Warehouse/Distribution Southeast

The Liquidation Channel 55,000 Corridor Park Pointe E Office Service/Flex Round Rock

Key Sales Transactions Q3 2015

PROPERTY SF SELLER/BUYER PROPERTY TYPE PRICE SUBMARKET

One83 Office Park 935,255JLM Financial Investments/

IDM CapitalOffice Service/Flex Undisclosed Northeast

301 West Howard Lane 292,000 Karlin Real Estate/Casa Marco Warehouse/Distribution Undisclosed Northeast

Director NameTitle

Address Line 1

Address Line 2

Tel: +0 000 000 0000

Fax: +0 000 000 0000

[email protected]

Page 21: Austin Industrial MarketBeat 1Q 2018 · 2018-06-12 · Furthermore, Austin’s housing market continues to sizzle at a record pace. According to the Austin Board of Realtors, home

Cushman & Wakefield | Oxford Commercial

200 W. Cesar Chavez St. Suite 250

Austin, TX 78701

www.cushmanwakefield.com/knowledge

For more information, contact:

Richard Whiteley, Research Analyst

+1 (512) 474 2400

[email protected]

The market terms and definitions in this report are based on NAIOP standards. No

warranty or representation, express or implied, is made to the accuracy or completeness

of the information contained herein, and same is submitted subject to errors, omissions,

change of price, rental or other conditions, withdrawal without notice, and to any special

listing conditions imposed by our principals.

© 2015 Cushman & Wakefield, Inc. All rights reserved.

1

ECONOMIC OVERVIEW

The Austin MSA continues to lead both state

and national averages in unemployment levels.

For the second quarter, the local

unemployment level was recorded at 3.1%,

ahead of both the Texas and U.S.

unemployment rates of 4.1% and 5.3% respectively (U.S. Bureau of

Labour and Statistics). These low unemployment numbers are

especially impressive, when considering that 32,000 jobs were created

from May 2014 to May 2015. Austin has warranted much national

attention for the ability to maintain low unemployment rates amongst

the city’s current population boom. A large portion of the job growth

and generation can be attributed to the rapidly expanding and

burgeoning technology sector, placing Austin as a new powerhouse

on the national “tech” landscape.

VACANCY RATES BEGIN TO DECLINE

Austin experienced 558,202 square feet (sf) of direct absorption

across all industrial property types during Q2 2015. Q2 2015 and

marked the ninth consecutive quarter of positive direct absorption

for the total market, dating back to Q2 2013. The Southeast (SE)

submarket posted the highest levels of absorption for Q2 2015,

recording 365,512 sf of absorption. The Northeast (NE) submarket

also reported a strong quarter of activity experiencing 253,996 sf of

direct absorption. The strong absorption activity in the NE and SE

submarkets contributed to a drop in overall vacancy during this time.

The overall vacancy rate dropped to 8.6% from 9.6% recorded last

quarter. Similarly the largest industrial submarkets, the SE and NE,

reported low overall vacancy rates of 4.7% and 14.8%, respectively.

FLEX/ R&D RATES CONTINUE TO RISE

The average direct asking rental rate recorded for all industrial

property types was $9.36 per square foot (psf) for Q2 2015, 4.0%

higher than the average rental rate of $9.00 psf in Q2 2014. Rental

rates for Flex/R&D properties experienced an increase on a quarter-

to-quarter basis, climbing to $11.04 psf, $0.12 psf higher than the Q2

2015 of $10.92 psf. High increases in Flex/ R&D rates were observed

in the South Central (SC) submarket, and once again in the North

Central (NC) submarket, which has experienced consistent quarterly

escalations in psf rent averages.

OUTLOOK

The industrial market continues to operate in optimal conditions

throughout the Austin MSA. Many landlords continue to report both

low vacancies in, Flex/ R&D and Warehouse/ Distribution property

types. Recent construction has remained focused on generating large

vacant blocks for users needing traditional Warehouse/ Distribution

spaces. However the recent trend of extremely high demand for Flex/

R&D properties, combined with the inflated rates these spaces are

quoting, create a landscape in which these property types might yield

the greatest returns for both developers and landlords. Such

situations could lead to many groups kicking off new construction for

Flex/ R&D projects. Additionally, the case and need for these types of

“value-office” properties is especially strong as a result of an office

market which continues to tighten in vacancy and post historically

high rental rates. The existing circumstances will likely contribute to

an evolving industrial real estate market in the city as whole.

STATS ON THE GO

Q2 2014 Q2 2015

Y-O-Y CHANGE

12 MONTH FORECAST

Overall Vacancy 9.8% 8.6% -1.2 pp

Direct Asking Rents (psf/yr) $9.00 $9.36 4.0%

YTD Direct Absorption (sf) 408,839 757,749 85.3%

OVERALL RENTAL VS. OVERALL RATES

NEW SUPPLY

0.0%

5.0%

10.0%

15.0%

20.0%

$2.00

$4.00

$6.00

$8.00

$10.00

$12.00

2011 2012 2013 2014 Q2 2015

psf

/yr

OVERALL RENT OVERALL VACANCY

0

172,8

00

263,1

55

452,3

41

89,6

00

0

250,000

500,000

2011 2012 2013 2014 YTD 2015

SF

Q2 2015 AUSTIN, TX

INDUSTRIAL SNAPSHOT

MARKETBEAT

A Cushman & Wakefield Research Publication

Page 22: Austin Industrial MarketBeat 1Q 2018 · 2018-06-12 · Furthermore, Austin’s housing market continues to sizzle at a record pace. According to the Austin Board of Realtors, home

Cushman & Wakefield | Oxford Commercial

200 W. Cesar Chavez St. Suite 250

Austin, TX 78701

www.cushmanwakefield.com/knowledge

For more information, contact:

Richard Whiteley, Research Analyst

+1 (512) 474 2400

[email protected]

The market terms and definitions in this report are based on NAIOP standards. No

warranty or representation, express or implied, is made to the accuracy or completeness

of the information contained herein, and same is submitted subject to errors, omissions,

change of price, rental or other conditions, withdrawal without notice, and to any special

listing conditions imposed by our principals.

© 2015 Cushman & Wakefield, Inc. All rights reserved.

2

AUSTIN, TX

SUBMARKET INVENTORY OVERALL VACANCY

RATE

YTD USER SALES

ACTIVITY

UNDER CONSTRUCTION

YTD CONSTRUCTION COMPLETIONS

YTD DIRECT NET

ABSORPTION

YTD OVERALL NET ABSORPTION

DIRECT WEIGHTED

AVERAGE NET

RENTAL RATE

MF R/D W/D

Central 18,900 0.0% 0 0 0 0 0 N/A N/A N/A

Far Northwest 4,480,259 4.4% 0 0 0 55,227 55,227 N/A $12.12 $5.16

North Central 9,725,621 6.0% 0 0 0 55,707 55,707 $5.40 $12.48 $6.36

Northeast

Northwest

South Central

Southeast

Southwest

Round Rock

12,096,327

4,139,606

1,434,649

9,223,111

272,660

3,578,300

14.8%

7.0%

4.0%

4.7%

16.2%

13.1%

302,604

0

0

0

0

0

153,600

0

0

239,205

19,150

0

89,600

0

0

0

0

0

218,178

(2,971)

(7,378)

353,599

(8,750)

94,137

247,178

(2,971)

(7,378)

416,922

(8,750)

94,137

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

$11.16

$9.36

$16.56

$10.32

$13.32

$8.76

$6.24

N/A

$7.20

$7.80

N/A

$6.12

TOTALS 44,969,433 8.6% 302,604 411,955 89.600 757,749 850,872 $5.40 $11.04 $6.24

* RENTAL RATES REFLECT ASKING $PSF/YEAR MF = MANUFACTURING R/D = RESEARCH/DEVELOPMENT W/D = WAREHOUSE/DISTRIBUTION

MARKET HIGHLIGHTS

SIGNIFICANT Q2 2015 LEASE TRANSACTIONS SUBMARKET TENANT PROPERTY TYPE SQUARE FEET

Expo 8 SE Novatex Warehouse/Distribution 122,400

Expo 11 SE Kendra Scott Design Manufacturing 64,800

Corridor Park Pointe E* RR Flight Director Flex/R&D 61,766

SIGNIFICANT Q2 2015 SALE TRANSACTIONS SUBMARKET BUYER PURCHASE PRICE / $PSF SQUARE FEET

2105 Gracy Farms Lane NC Cornersone RE Advisers Undisclosed 381,062

13301 McCallen Pass NE General Motors Undisclosed 302,604

3912-3920 Gattis School Road RR Longview Equity Partners Undisclosed 160,971

SIGNIFICANT Q2 2015 CONSTRUCTION COMPLETIONS SUBMARKET MAJOR TENANT COMPLETION DATE BUILDING SQUARE FEET

(% LEASED)

Tuscany 9 NE Speculative Q2 2015 89,600 (0%)

SIGNIFICANT PROJECTS UNDER CONSTRUCTION SUBMARKET MAJOR TENANT COMPLETION DATE BUILDING SQUARE FEET

(% LEASED)

Harris Ridge Business Center- Building 5 NE Speculative Q1 2016 153,000 (0%)

Expo Center 11 SE Kendra Scott Design Q4 2015 130,002 (50%)

Expo Center 10 SE Speculative Q4 2015 109,203 (0%)

*RENEWAL- NOT INCLUDED IN LEASING STATISTICS

Page 23: Austin Industrial MarketBeat 1Q 2018 · 2018-06-12 · Furthermore, Austin’s housing market continues to sizzle at a record pace. According to the Austin Board of Realtors, home

Cushman & Wakefield | Oxford Commercial

200 W. Cesar Chavez St. Suite 250

Austin, TX 78701

www.cushmanwakefield.com/knowledge

For more information, contact:

Richard Whiteley, Research Analyst

+1 (512) 474 2400

[email protected]

The market terms and definitions in this report are based on NAIOP standards. No

warranty or representation, express or implied, is made to the accuracy or completeness

of the information contained herein, and same is submitted subject to errors, omissions,

change of price, rental or other conditions, withdrawal without notice, and to any special

listing conditions imposed by our principals.

© 2015 Cushman & Wakefield, Inc. All rights reserved.

1

ECONOMIC OVERVIEW

The Austin MSA continues to lead both state

and national averages in unemployment levels.

For the first quarter 2015, the local

unemployment level was recorded at 3.4%,

lower than both the Texas unemployment rate

of 4.3% and the U.S. unemployment rate of 5.8% (U.S. Bureau of

Labour and Statistics). Job creation also remained strong during Q1

2015, as 8,600 jobs were generated from January 2015- February

2015 alone. Austin has warranted much national attention for the

ability to maintain low unemployment rates amongst the current

population boom. Much of this job growth and high employment rate

can be attributed to city’s rapidly expanding technology sector.

VACANCY RATES INCREASE SLIGHTLY

Austin experienced 199,547 square feet (sf) of direct absorption

across all industrial property types during Q1 2015. Q1 2015 marked

the eighth consecutive quarter of positive direct absorption for the

total market, dating back to Q2 2013. The Round Rock (RR)

submarket posted the highest levels of absorption for Q1 2015,

recording 85,241 sf of absorption. The North Central (NC) and

Northwest (NW) submarkets also reported strong quarters of

activity 69,509 sf (NC submarket) and 59,053 sf respectively of direct

absorption. However in spite of the positive absorption observed in

some submarkets such as the NE, SE, and SW, all experienced

negative direct absorption for the quarter. This negative absorption

coupled with construction deliveries in the third and fourth quarters

of 2014 contributed to a slight rise in the vacancy rate for Q1 2015.

The Q1 2015 overall vacancy rate was recorded at 9.6%, 0.9

percentage point higher than the Q4 2014 rate of 8.7%.

RENTAL RATES CONTINUE STEADY CLIMB

The average direct rental rate recorded for all industrial property

types was $9.36 per square foot (psf) for Q1 2015, 4.0% higher than

the average rental rate of $9.00 psf in Q1 2014. Rental rates for

Flex/R&D properties remained consistent on a quarter-to-quarter

basis. However the Q1 2015 average rate for Flex/R&D property

types of $10.92 psf is 3.4% higher than the Q1 2014 average for Flex/

R&D properties of $10.56 psf. The highest increases in Flex/R&D

rates on both a quarter-over-quarter and year-over-year basis were

observed in the North Central submarket.

OUTLOOK

Based upon the continued hikes in rental rates for Flex/R&D

properties in the overall Austin market, it is clear that landlords are

responding to an ever increasing demand for these spaces. This

demand is driven both by them serving as more economical and

fiscally responsible alternatives to traditional office space and that

many serve as call and data centres to support the burgeoning

technology sector dominating the Austin economy. As the technology

presence continues to grow and flourish throughout the city, it is

highly unlikely that rents and the subsequent demand for Flex/R&D

properties will diminish. However, this focus on Flex/R&D is not to

discredit a large amount of activity in Warehouse/Distribution

properties, as many companies renewed large blocks of space in their

existing homes (Image Microsystems, Life Technologies). Such activity

can speak to many companies’ desires to maintain their existing

presence in the city; as Austin continues to strengthen its presence

on the national scene.

STATS ON THE GO

Q1 2014 Q1 2015

Y-O-Y CHANGE

12 MONTH FORECAST

Overall Vacancy 9.4% 9.6% 0.2 pp

Direct Asking Rents (psf/yr) $9.00 $9.36 4.0%

YTD Direct Absorption (sf) 348,939 199,547 -42.8%

OVERALL RENTAL VS. OVERALL RATES

NEW SUPPLY

0.0%

5.0%

10.0%

15.0%

20.0%

$2.00

$4.00

$6.00

$8.00

$10.00

$12.00

2011 2012 2013 2014 Q1 2015

psf

/yr

OVERALL RENT OVERALL VACANCY

0 172,8

00

263,1

55

452,3

41

347,9

55

0

250,000

500,000

2011 2012 2013 2014 YTD 2015

SF

Q1 2015 AUSTIN, TX

INDUSTRIAL SNAPSHOT MARKETBEAT

A Cushman & Wakefield Research Publication

Page 24: Austin Industrial MarketBeat 1Q 2018 · 2018-06-12 · Furthermore, Austin’s housing market continues to sizzle at a record pace. According to the Austin Board of Realtors, home

Cushman & Wakefield | Oxford Commercial

200 W. Cesar Chavez St. Suite 250

Austin, TX 78701

www.cushmanwakefield.com/knowledge

For more information, contact:

Richard Whiteley, Research Analyst

+1 (512) 474 2400

[email protected]

The market terms and definitions in this report are based on NAIOP standards. No

warranty or representation, express or implied, is made to the accuracy or completeness

of the information contained herein, and same is submitted subject to errors, omissions,

change of price, rental or other conditions, withdrawal without notice, and to any special

listing conditions imposed by our principals.

© 2015 Cushman & Wakefield, Inc. All rights reserved.

2

AUSTIN, TX

SUBMARKET INVENTORY OVERALL VACANCY

RATE

YTD USER SALES

ACTIVITY

UNDER CONSTRUCTION

YTD CONSTRUCTION COMPLETIONS

YTD DIRECT NET

ABSORPTION

YTD OVERALL NET ABSORPTION

DIRECT WEIGHTED

AVERAGE NET

RENTAL RATE

MF R/D W/D

Central 18,900 0.0% 0 0 0 0 0 N/A N/A N/A

Far Northwest 4,480,259 4.5% 0 0 0 47,499 47,499 N/A $11.76 $5.16

North Central 9,725,621 5.9% 0 0 0 69,509 69,509 $5.40 $12.36 $6.48

Northeast

Northwest

South Central

Southeast

Southwest

Round Rock

12,006,106

4,139,606

1,434,649

9,223,111

272,660

3,578,300

16.3%

5.6%

3.6%

8.8%

17.6%

13.4%

0

0

0

0

0

0

89,600

0

0

239,205

19,150

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

(35,818)

59,053

(1,724)

(11,713)

(12,500)

85,241

(35,818)

59,053

(1,724)

44,987

(12,500)

85,241

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

$11.04

$9.24

$16.56

$10.68

$13.44

$8.88

$6.00

$N/A

$7.20

$7.08

N/A

$6.24

TOTALS 45,050,853 9.6% 0 347,955 0 199,547 256,247 $5.40 $10.92 $6.24

* RENTAL RATES REFLECT ASKING $PSF/YEAR MF = MANUFACTURING R/D = RESEARCH/DEVELOPMENT W/D = WAREHOUSE/DISTRIBUTION

MARKET HIGHLIGHTS

SIGNIFICANT Q1 2015 LEASE TRANSACTIONS SUBMARKET TENANT PROPERTY TYPE SQUARE FEET

Metric Center 4* NC Image Microsystems Warehouse/Distribution 117,000

Southpark Commerce Center I* SE Life Technologies Warehouse/Distribution 103,645

Southpark F* SE Ambion Diagnostics Warehouse/Distribution 67,645

SIGNIFICANT Q1 2015 SALE TRANSACTIONS SUBMARKET BUYER PURCHASE PRICE / $PSF SQUARE FEET

15833 Long Vista Drive RR JV Global Logistic Properties $27,849,878 / $75 372,606

12555 Harris Branch Parkway NE JV Global Logistic Properties $21,076,297 / $57 371,200

7100 Metropolis Drive SE CyrusOne Undisclosed 172,000

SIGNIFICANT Q1 2015 CONSTRUCTION COMPLETIONS SUBMARKET MAJOR TENANT COMPLETION DATE BUILDING SQUARE FEET

(% LEASED)

N/A

SIGNIFICANT PROJECTS UNDER CONSTRUCTION SUBMARKET MAJOR TENANT COMPLETION DATE BUILDING SQUARE FEET

(% LEASED)

Expo Center II SE Speculative Q4 2015 130,002 (0%)

Expo Center 10 SE Speculative Q4 2015 109,203 (0%)

Tuscany 9 NE Speculative Q2 2015 89,600 (0%)

* RENEWAL - NOT INCLUDED IN LEASING ACTIVITY STATISTICS

Page 25: Austin Industrial MarketBeat 1Q 2018 · 2018-06-12 · Furthermore, Austin’s housing market continues to sizzle at a record pace. According to the Austin Board of Realtors, home

Cushman & Wakefield | Oxford Commercial

200 W. Cesar Chavez St. Suite 250

Austin, TX 78701

www.cushmanwakefield.com/knowledge

For more information, contact:

Greg Bacus, Research Director

+1 (512) 474 2400

[email protected]

The market terms and definitions in this report are based on NAIOP standards. No

warranty or representation, express or implied, is made to the accuracy or completeness

of the information contained herein, and same is submitted subject to errors, omissions,

change of price, rental or other conditions, withdrawal without notice, and to any special

listing conditions imposed by our principals.

© 2015 Cushman & Wakefield, Inc. All rights reserved.

1

ECONOMIC OVERVIEW

The Austin area continues to lead both state

and national averages for many economic

indicators including: a 3.9% unemployment rate

for the Austin MSA and generating 28,600 jobs

from November 2013 to November 2014 (U.S.

Bureau of Labor and Statistics). The jobs generated for the past year

place Austin 9th among major U.S. cities in job production. Of those

new jobs, 1,000 of these new jobs can be attributed to the

manufacturing industry. Advanced manufacturing has long been a

constant facet of the Austin business climate, and demand for the

products provided by companies such as Freescale Semiconductors,

National Instruments, and IBM will continue to drive and support the

city’s expanding economy.

VACANCY RATES CONTINUE TO DECLINE

Austin experienced 497,725 square feet (sf) of direct absorption

across all industrial property types during Q4 2014, and 1.1 million sf

of absorption for all of 2014. Q4 2014 marked the seventh

consecutive quarter of positive direct absorption for the total market,

dating back to Q2 2013. The Northeast submarket experienced the

most activity during Q4 2014 with 139,014 sf absorbed. However, the

Southeast submarket posted the highest year-end total across all

submarkets, absorbing 356,132 sf for the year. The past quarter’s

absorption coupled with historic strong positive absorption numbers

continue to lower the overall vacancy rate, to 8.7% at the end of Q4

2014, 1.0 percentage point lower than the overall vacancy rate of

9.7% seen at the end of Q4 2013. The Southeast submarket overall

vacancy rate continues to tighten on a quarter-to-quarter basis from

11.2% seen in Q3 2014, to a rate of 7.0% in Q4 2014. Slight decreases

were also observed in the Far Northwest and Southwest submarkets,

particularly with tenants occupying Flex/R&D spaces.

RENTAL RATES STEADILY CLIMB

The average direct rental rate recorded for all industrial property

types was $9.12 per square foot (psf) for Q4 2014, 1.3% higher than

the average rental rate of $9.00 psf in Q4 2013. Average rental rates

for Flex/R&D property types continue to steadily rise, increasing to

an average rate of $10.92 psf for Q4 2014, higher than the Q3 2014

average of $10.68 psf, and 4.5% higher than the Q4 2013 average of

$10.44 psf. Additionally, on a year-to-year basis the average rental

rate of Warehouse/ Distribution property types increased 6.19%

from $5.64 psf in Q4 2013, to $6.00 psf in Q4 2014.

OUTLOOK

The Austin office market continues to consistently experience high

levels of absorption decreasing overall vacancy and driving higher

rental rates. As a result, many tenants and users continue to seek

more affordable options for their office needs, turning them to

Flex/R&D “value” office alternatives. This trend has been quite

apparent in previous quarters and continued throughout Q4 2014.

The increased demand for such Flex/R&D properties has resulted in

an observable rise in rental rates for these property types. In the Far

Northwest and Southwest submarkets, the increase in rates is most

dramatics as these areas have experienced high levels of office

absorption. It is likely that as the overall vacancy for office products

continues to tighten and rental rates continue to rise, demand for

cheaper alternative in Flex/R&D “value” office options will increase,

as will the subsequent rental rates for these industrial property types.

STATS ON THE GO

Q4 2013 Q4 2014

Y-O-Y CHANGE

12 MONTH FORECAST

Overall Vacancy 9.7% 8.7% -1.0pp

Direct Asking Rents (psf/yr) $9.00 $9.12 1.3%

YTD Direct Absorption (sf) 1,234,562 1,061,010 14.1%

DIRECT RENTAL VS. VACANCY RATES

NEW SUPPLY

0.0%

5.0%

10.0%

15.0%

20.0%

$0.00

$2.00

$4.00

$6.00

$8.00

$10.00

2010 2011 2012 2013 Q4 2014

psf

/yr

DIRECT NET RENTAL RATE DIRECT VACANCY RATE

0

172,8

00

263,1

55

452,3

41

328,8

05

0

200,000

400,000

600,000

2011 2012 2013 2014 2015

NEW SUPPLY

Q4 2014 AUSTIN, TX

INDUSTRIAL SNAPSHOT MARKETBEAT

A Cushman & Wakefield Research Publication

Page 26: Austin Industrial MarketBeat 1Q 2018 · 2018-06-12 · Furthermore, Austin’s housing market continues to sizzle at a record pace. According to the Austin Board of Realtors, home

Cushman & Wakefield | Oxford Commercial

200 W. Cesar Chavez St. Suite 250

Austin, TX 78701

www.cushmanwakefield.com/knowledge

For more information, contact:

Greg Bacus, Research Director

+1 (512) 474 2400

[email protected]

The market terms and definitions in this report are based on NAIOP standards. No

warranty or representation, express or implied, is made to the accuracy or completeness

of the information contained herein, and same is submitted subject to errors, omissions,

change of price, rental or other conditions, withdrawal without notice, and to any special

listing conditions imposed by our principals.

© 2015 Cushman & Wakefield, Inc. All rights reserved.

2

AUSTIN, TX

SUBMARKET INVENTORY OVERALL VACANCY

RATE

YTD LEASING ACTIVITY

YTD USER SALES

ACTIVITY

UNDER CONSTRUCTION

YTD CONSTRUCTION COMPLETIONS

YTD DIRECT NET

ABSORPTION

YTD OVERALL NET ABSORPTION

DIRECT WEIGHTED

AVERAGE NET

RENTAL RATE

HT MF R/D W/D

Central 18,900 0.0% N/A 0 0 0 0 0 N/A N/A N/A N/A

Far Northwest 4,480,259 4.4% N/A 0 0 0 55,226 55,226 N/A N/A $11.16 $5.16

North Central 9,725,621 5.6% N/A 0 0 0 48,755 (68,245) N/A $5.40 $11.04 $6.36

Northeast

Northwest

South Central

Southeast

Southwest

Round Rock

12,132,516

4,200,806

1,434,649

9,223,111

272,660

3,554,184

14.4%

6.2%

3.5%

7.0%

11.9%

13.0%

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

0

0

0

0

0

0

89,600

0

0

239,205

0

0

120,000

0

0

0

0

332,341

286,081

186,145

2,393

356,132

(750)

127,628

372,481

186,145

2,393

356,132

(8,250)

138,628

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

$5.76

N/A

N/A

$11.28

$7.32

$12.96

$11.76

$13.56

$9.00

$5.76

$5.40

$7.20

$6.60

N/A

$6.00

TOTALS 45,214,437 8.7% N/A 0 328,805 452,341 1,061,010 1,009,751 N/A $5.64 $10.92 $6.00

* RENTAL RATES REFLECT ASKING $PSF/YEAR HT= HIGH TECH MF = MANUFACTURING R/D = RESEARCH/DEVELOPMENT W/D = WAREHOUSE/DISTRIBUTION

MARKET HIGHLIGHTS

SIGNIFICANT 2014 LEASE TRANSACTIONS SUBMARKET TENANT PROPERTY TYPE SQUARE FEET

Pecan 130 Business Park NE FedEx Ground W/D 250,000

Southpark Commerce Center III* SE Calendar Club W/D 202,000

130 Commerce NE Cortec Precision Sheetmetal W/D 150,000

SIGNIFICANT 2014 SALE TRANSACTIONS SUBMARKET BUYER PURCHASE PRICE / $PSF SQUARE FEET

Braker Center NC Westmount Realty Capital Undisclosed 537,000

Southpark Commerce Center IV SE Realty Associates Fund Undisclosed 417,400

15833 Long Vista Drive RR IndCor Properties $20,876,792/ $56 372,606

SIGNIFICANT 2014 CONSTRUCTION

COMPLETIONS

SUBMARKET MAJOR TENANT COMPLETION DATE BUILDING SQUARE FEET

(% LEASED)

Heritage Crossing 1 RR N/A Q1 2014 222,454 (0%)

Pecan 130 Business Park A NE El Lago Q2 2014 120,000 (20.0%)

Heritage Crossing 3 RR Magnetic Clay Q4 2014 109,887 (23.1%)

SIGNIFICANT PROJECTS UNDER

CONSTRUCTION

SUBMARKET MAJOR TENANT COMPLETION DATE BUILDING SQUARE FEET

(% LEASED)

Expo Center II SE N/A Q4 2015 130,002 (0.0%)

Expo Center 10 SE N/A Q4 2015 109,203 (0.0%)

Tuscany 9 NE N/A Q2 2015 89,600 (0.0%)

* RENEWAL - NOT INCLUDED IN LEASING ACTIVITY STATISTICS


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