VACANCY HITS NEW LOW ON RED-HOT DEMAND Industrial users leased 1.8 million SF of space in the third quarter. It was the most three-month net absorption in 17 years. The strong tenant expansion also drove down the vacancy rate to an all-time low. The intensified demand reflects national trends. Businesses are reacting to pandemic-fueled e-commerce growth along with disruptions at several points in the global supply chain, affecting everything from raw materials to finished goods….
Q2 2021 ORANGE COUNTY INDUSTRIAL MARKET REPORT
Q3 2020 ORANGE COUNTY OFFICE MARKET REPORT Encouraged by effective vaccine distribution and improved economic data, companies in the second quarter leased the most industrial space in a three-month period in Orange County since 2015. Net absorption totaled more than 1.1 million SF in Q2 and more than 2 million SF since the third quarter of last year. It’s been 23 quarters since growth topped 1 million SF. In the last three quarters the vacancy…
Q2 2021 ORANGE COUNTY OFFICE MARKET REPORT
MARKET IMPROVES ON VACCINES, ECONOMIC NEWS With encouraging economic news and an effective vaccination campaign that dramatically reduced infections, the office market showed hints of stabilization as companies hold to their plans for post-Covid office re-openings in the third quarter. Second-quarter net absorption was negative 169,466 SF, a significant improvement from the negative 2.3-million-SF total of the previous three quarters. But for the new space included in the 117.4-million-SF inventory in Q2, net growth would…
Q3 2020 ORANGE COUNTY OFFICE MARKET REPORT
COVID HITS THE AIRPORT MARKET Companies in the Airport market shed a near-record volume of space in the third quarter, forcing the countywide office vacancy rate up 73 basis points to 11.6%, as the economic shock of the Covid pandemic rippled through the county. The Airport market, which has 37% of the county’s 117- million-SF inventory, was 724,151 SF in the red in the third quarter, the most negative absorption since Q4 2007. It drove…
Q3 2020 ORANGE COUNTY INDUSTRIAL MARKET REPORT
DESPITE COVID, LEASING ACTIVITY GAINS The Covid-19 pandemic eased its grip on the industrial market as third-quarter leasing activity bounced back along with slight improvement in overall absorption. Rental rates in 2020 have increased at a slower rate than any year since 2008. Net absorption was 150,642 SF in the red in the third quarter, but that was an improvement from Q2, when tenants shed 359,636 SF and as Orange County and much of the…
Q2 2020 ORANGE COUNTY OFFICE MARKET REPORT
ACTIVITY SWOONS FROM COVID-19 LOCKDOWN Leasing activity slowed dramatically in the second quarter as the economic disruption of Covid-19 forced companies to temporarily close offices, furlough workers and transition others to work remotely. There were 252 lease transactions from April through June, a 43% reduction compared to the first quarter. The volume of space leased in Q2 also fell 39% to 1.1 million SF. In contrast, there was more leasing during the worst of the…
Q2 2020 ORANGE COUNTY INDUSTRIAL MARKET REPORT
Demand Flags Amid Covid-19 Uncertainty The sudden economic downturn brought on by the Covid-19 pandemic dramatically cut second-quarter leasing activity and deal volume to their lowest levels since the 2008-09 recession. Net absorption also fell into the red in Q2 as the vacancy rate ticked up 30 basis points to 3.5%. There were 367 lease deals in Q2, a nearly 26% decline from the first quarter, and leasing volume fell 51% to 2,072,884 SF, an…
Q1 2020 ORANGE COUNTY INDUSTRIAL MARKET REPORT
Coronavirus Hobbles Strong Market Demand for industrial space through March was the strongest of the last 15 quarters, pushing the vacancy rate down to 3.4% just as California, the nation and world were hit with the biggest health crisis in 100 years, throwing the global economy into reverse. Nearly 10 million U.S. workers, including 1 million Californians, sought initial jobless claims in the last two weeks of March. Cal State Fullerton said the index in…
Q1 2020 ORANGE COUNTY OFFICE MARKET REPORT
VIRUS THREATENS OFFICE GROWTH Healthy tenant demand for office space continued through the first half of March when the global coronavirus crisis hit home. For most of last year companies were expanding their office footprints in Orange County and lately finding the effective rents in premium buildings to be irresistible. Virtually overnight, however, and barely a decade after the last recession people are speaking of a “new normal” but without yet knowing exactly what it…