
SEVEN SUPPLY CHAIN PREDICTIONS FOR 2024
Industrial Business Indicator
Prologis Research tapped into decades of industry experience, proprietary data, and unique property and customer insights to predict seven trends for 2024.
In reviewing our bold predictions for 2023, key themes played out. Development moderated from tightening regulatory landscapes, cap rate expansion and high construction costs. Nearshoring and sustainability requirements met the upswing we anticipated. E-commerce recovered, although it did not translate to leasing outperformance.
1. The global freight recession will reverse, as demonstrated by double-digit growth in port and truck traffic. The Southern California region is likely to be among the first to benefit.
2. The great construction bust will intensify, with global starts hitting the lowest level since the 2008 financial crisis.
3. Latin America will continue to see rent growth at roughly double the global average, driven in part by nearshoring.
4. Annual demand in China will reach the second- highest level on record, helping work through excess supply from the past few years.
5. Technology, especially artificial intelligence, will drive up energy requirements in logistics facilities, incentivizing warehouse owners to double solar capacity.
6. Interest rate declines will double private equity real estate funding in 2024.
7. Cap rate movements will reverse. U.S. and European cap rates will compress while the expansion rotates to Asia.
These predictions are based on insights from our unique platform, and we’ll revisit them at year-end. Our outlook highlights 2024 as a year of healthy demand growth, constrained supply, technological evolution of logistics facilities and a turning of the capital markets cycle.
✓ X U.S. warehouse development starts will drop to a seven-year low, even as rent growth exceeds 10%.
U.S. starts fell 48% y/y to 263 MSF, the lowest level since 2020.
The full-year rent growth estimate is 7% for the U.S as of Q3 2023.
✓ California’s barriers to development will permanently constrain logistics demand, allowing Texas to become the #1 state for net absorption.
Texas markets recorded 60 MSF in net absorption in the four quarters trailing Q3 2023, the highest of all U.S. states.5
✓ Mexico demand will hit a new annual record as nearshoring drives expansion along the border.
Mexico’s main six markets absorbed an estimated 41 MSF in 2023, 8% higher than the prior high in 2022.6
X India will rise from fourth to the third-most-active country for development starts, behind the U.S. and China.
We estimate India’s main eight markets recorded fewer starts than Japan, where starts pulled back but remained elevated at 57 MSF in 2023, behind China (90 MSF) and the U.S. (263 MSF).7
✓ Build-to-suit rents will reach new levels in the U.S. and Europe as market rents are capitalized at 5%, despite falling land and construction costs.
Construction costs and cap rate expansion combined as expected, driving up replacement cost rents and slowing build-to-suit starts, by 38% from the prior three years.
X E-commerce leasing will bounce back to become the second-most-active year on record (after 2021).
E-commerce sales growth recovered and outperformed in 2023, rising by 8% year to date in the U.S.
E-commerce leasing, however, remained moderate.
✓ Demand for sustainable warehouses will grow rapidly. Installed rooftop solar capacity will double, and EV truck charging capacity will exceed 10 megawatts.
Solar capacity grew 50% in 2023 but was held back by supply chain issues.
More than 10 megawatts of EV truck charging was installed in Southern California alone in 2023.
Source: National Bureau of Statistics, Prologis Research forecast.
Source: Govini, Stanford University.
Source: International Energy Agency.
Source: Consensus Economics, December.
Source: CBRE, C&W, JLL and CoStar, for markets wherein Prologis operates.
Source: CBRE, Prologis Research estimates.
Source: Prologis Research estimates based on JLL data.
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