Warehouses Find Insulation From U.S. Banking Crisis

Tight capacity, high leasing rates offer guardrails for industrial real estate, executives say

An Amazon distribution center under construction in Detroit in 2021, when the company was in the midst of a rapid expansion of its logistics network.Photo: Jim West/Zuma Press

Industrial real-estate executives expect only limited fallout from the turmoil that has engulfed the U.S. banking sector, even as warehouse developers grapple with the rising interest rates and weakening demand that are dampening construction following a period of historic growth. 

“The availability of credit might likely be diminished in the short term as banks will begin to be more stringent on underwriting,” said Craig Meyer, president of industrial for the Americas at real-estate services firm JLL. He said he expects new projects this year will “be down as a result of some of these couple of financial issues, the increasing cost of capital and then the availability of capital.”

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