23Oct

The Industrial Market Insights for South Bay, Midcounties, Central and Inland Empire are in for the 3rd Quarter 2025

Overview

The "Industrial Market Insights Q3 2025" report by Lee & Associates analyzes the Southern California industrial real estate market, focusing on the South Bay, Midcounties, Central, and Inland Empire submarkets. It highlights macroeconomic drivers, trade trends, port activity, and submarket-specific fundamentals like vacancy rates, net absorption, rents, construction, and top transactions. Overall, the market shows softening conditions with rising vacancies, declining rents in some areas, and stabilizing investor activity amid economic moderation. Ports of Los Angeles (LA) and Long Beach (LB) remain dominant U.S. trade gateways, though competition from East/Gulf Coast ports intensifies.

Macroeconomic Drivers

  • GDP: Real GDP grew 3.8% annualized in Q2 2025, rebounding from a 0.6% Q1 decline, driven by consumer spending and reduced imports. Q3 growth is projected at ~3%.
  • Employment: Unemployment rose to 4.3% in August, with only 22,000 jobs added (downward revisions to prior months). Wage growth of 3.7% year-over-year supports consumer spending.
  • Retail & E-Commerce Sales: E-commerce sales hit $304.2B in Q2 (up 1.4% QoQ, 5.3% YoY), representing 16.3% of total retail sales ($1.87T, up 0.4% QoQ, 3.9% YoY).
  • Trade Partners: Mexico leads U.S. trade at 21%, followed by Canada (17%) and China (10%). Top 15 partners account for 74.2% of activity.
  • Year-End Outlook: GDP growth ~2.6% annualized in Q4, with stable consumer spending despite labor cooling and a government shutdown. Moderate expansion and cooling inflation bode well for 2026 commercial real estate.

Port Activity

LA and LB ports handled ~41% of U.S. imports by TEU market share. West Coast ports lead in throughput, but East/Gulf ports (e.g., NY/NJ, Houston) are gaining.

QuarterPortMonthLoaded Inbound TEUsLoaded Outbound TEUsTotal Loaded TEUsTotal TEUs (2025)Total TEUs (2024)YoY % Change (Month)YoY % Change (Quarter)
Q3LAJuly543,728121,507665,2351,019,837939,6008.54%0.2%


Aug504,514127,379631,893958,355960,597-0.23%


Sep460,044114,693574,737883,053954,706-7.51%
Q3LBJuly468,08191,328559,409944,233882,3767.01%0.7%


Aug440,31895,960536,278901,845913,873-1.32%


Sep388,08485,081473,165797,537829,499-3.85%

Submarket Summaries

South Bay

  • Fundamentals: Vacancy rose to 6.9% (from 6.3% in Q2). Net absorption negative at (757,229) SF. Deliveries: 429,112 SF. Under construction: 244,786 SF.
  • Rents & Sales: Average NNN rent fell to $1.48/SF (down 8.5% YoY). Building sales averaged $291/SF (cap rate 6.4%).
  • Market Trends: Softening conditions with higher availability (9.5%); tenant-favorable market. Investment slowed (13 deals, $75.4M volume).
  • Top Leases (all new): 19801 S Santa Fe Ave (356,642 SF, Confidential); 901 E 233rd St (221,050 SF, Custom Goods); 20846 Normandie Ave (203,877 SF, Hadrian Inc).
  • Top Sales: 3700-3730 Redondo Beach Blvd (99,377 SF, $35.5M, Investment); 2959 E Victoria St (54,500 SF, $23M, Owner-User).

Midcounties

  • Fundamentals: Vacancy fell to 7.3% (from 8.0% in Q2). Net absorption positive at 678,807 SF. Deliveries: 0 SF. Under construction: 493,874 SF.
  • Rents & Sales: Average NNN rent at $1.30/SF (down 16% YoY). Building sales averaged $259/SF (cap rate ~5.0%).
  • Market Trends: Stabilizing with lower direct vacancy; availability at 9.8%. Investment slowed (17 deals, $148.2M volume).
  • Top Leases: 15614-15700 Shoemaker Ave (521,091 SF, Breakthru Beverage CA, New); 8201 Sorensen Ave (234,330 SF, Rove Concepts, Renewal).
  • Top Sales: 6259 Descanso Ave (54,000 SF, $17.4M, Owner-User); 14390 Marquardt Ave (31,308 SF, $17M, Owner-User).

Central

  • Fundamentals: Vacancy rose to 7.1% (from 6.8% in Q2). Net absorption negative at (465,078) SF. Deliveries: 157,715 SF. Under construction: 749,742 SF.
  • Rents & Sales: Average NNN rent steady at $1.41/SF. Building sales averaged $295/SF.
  • Market Trends: Slight softening; availability at 8.5%, occupancy 92.9%. Steady sales (25 deals, $190.4M volume).
  • Top Leases: 8500 Rex Rd (335,600 SF, Million Dollar Baby Classic, New); 4885 E 52nd Pl (210,347 SF, Uniuni, New).
  • Top Sales: 4400 Pacific Blvd (253,200 SF, $48.8M, Investment); 7400 Bandini Blvd (94,937 SF, $38.5M, Owner-User).

Inland Empire

  • Fundamentals: Vacancy rose to 8.9% (from 8.1% in Q2). Net absorption negative at (746,596) SF. Deliveries: 5,299,580 SF. Under construction: 6,036,579 SF.
  • Rents & Sales: Average NNN rent up to $1.00/SF (from $0.98 in Q2, down 12% YoY). Building sales averaged $252/SF (cap rate 5.9%).
  • Market Trends: Balancing with high availability (12.3%); occupancy ~91%. Investment surged (55 deals, $777.2M volume).
  • Top Leases: 5690 Industrial Pky (844,311 SF, iDC Logistics, New); 13052 Jurupa Ave (827,578 SF, Elogistek, New).
  • Top Sales: 11991 Landon Dr (765,456 SF, $208.76M, Investment); 22491 Harley Knox Blvd (348,375 SF, $90.6M, Investment).

The report emphasizes logistics and manufacturing as key industries in transactions, with a tenant-favorable shift prioritizing occupancy over rent growth. Data sourced from AIR CRE, CoStar, and internal databases.

24Apr

The 1st Quarter 2025 Industrial Market Report for South Bay - Los Angeles - Long Beach is out.

South Bay Submarket Q1 2025 Overview Summary

  • Vacancy/Availability: The vacancy rate rose to 5.6%, up 70 basis points year-over-year, with Carson (7.9%), Compton (9.7%), and Rancho Dominguez (10.8%) seeing the largest increases. High-end properties now take 12.2 months to lease, shifting leverage to tenants. Landlords are offering more concessions, with 10.28 million square feet of vacant/available space. The market needs to absorb 5.1 million square feet to return to a 3% vacancy rate.
  • Rental Rates: Average asking rents fell to $1.61 NNN, down 1.4% quarter-over-quarter and 8.0% year-over-year. After a 118% rent surge from Q2 2020 to Q2 2023, increased vacancy (10 MSF added) is driving further declines until leasing rebounds.
  • Construction: Construction totals 1.4 MSF, with 360,466 SF delivered in Q1. Seven buildings are under construction, but new starts are limited, and no projects are preleased. Developers are pausing, waiting for tenants or better market conditions, which may increase vacancy if leasing doesn’t improve.
  • Leasing Activity/Absorption: Net absorption was positive at 561,683 SF, but cumulative absorption since Q1 2023 is negative at -4.7 million SF. Leasing volume hit 1.3 million SF across 103 transactions, below the historical 2.5 million SF quarterly average. Buildings now take six months to lease.
  • Sales Activity/Investment Trends: Investor caution persists due to high interest rates and economic uncertainty, widening the bid-ask spread. Despite lower deal volume, the South Bay attracts capital due to high rents and limited land. The region is poised for an investment rebound as borrowing costs ease.

The South Bay market faces challenges with rising vacancy and declining rents but retains strong fundamentals for future growth.

Additional Reports for Midcounties, Central and Inland Empire Included.

04Nov

The 18,000 SF Industrial Property at 125 W. 157th St in Gardena, CA in now in Escrow.

AVAILABLE: ± 36,000 SF Lot Land

BUILDING SIZE: ±18,000SF

ASKING PRICE: $298 PSF ($5,364,000.00)

APN#: 6129-006-020 & 6129-006-021

ZONING: LA Unincorporated M2

• Free Standing Industrial Building

• Fenced/Paved Yard area

• Dock High Possible

• No City Business Tax

• 3 Ground Level Doors/4 Bathrooms

• Solar Lighting

• Bonus Unfinished Mezzanine

• Glass Kiln/Oven

• Close to 110, 405, 91 and 105 Freeways

21Oct

The Q3 2024 Industrial Real Estate Market Report is out for the Los Angeles - Long Beach area

In Q3 2024, the South Bay submarket saw a continued increase in vacant space, with the vacancy rate rising to 4.4%, up 20 basis points from Q2 and 50 basis points year-over-year. Tenants are becoming more selective, taking advantage of longer decision-making periods. Despite a 7.8% year-over-year decline in average asking rents, rents remained somewhat resilient due to concessions from landlords.

Leasing activity included 1.37 million square feet of new deals, though it was below the 10-year average. Net absorption was positive for the first time in a year, at +669,007 square feet. Construction continues with 1.5 million square feet in progress, which could impact vacancy rates if demand doesn't catch up.

Sales activity increased from Q2 but remained significantly lower than in 2023. Sales volume reached $71.9 million, and average prices per square foot dropped 22.5% year-over-year to $258.92.

19Mar

The Freeway Visible 4.2 acre site on Carson Auto Row at 2403 E. 223rd St. is available For Sale.

Available: ±182,746 SF / ±4.2 acres of Land

Price: $9,685,538.00

Zoning: Commercial Automotive

APNs: 7315-012-002, & 7315-012-804

 Carson Auto Row

Permitted Uses Include Sales, Service, Rental & Leasing of*:  Automobiles, Recreation Vehicles, Trucks, Motorcycles Permitted Uses Click Here

• Potential EV Charging Station

• Close to Southern California Edison Hinson Substation

• Low Business License Fees & Utility Taxes

• Freeway Visibility: ±310,000 Average Daily Volume

*Provided special limitations

18Jul

The 2nd Quarter 2023 Los Angeles - Long Beach Industrial Real Esate Market Report

Every key metric typically used to measure the health of the economy is performing well right now. GDP grew by 2.0% in Q1, and it is estimated to grow by 2.3% in Q2 by the Atlanta Fed . In terms of employment, over the last year the U.S. added 3.8 million jobs and now has an unemployment rate of 3.6%. With regard to inflation, both headline and core inflation are
trending downward. The Consumer Price Index (CPI) rose by 3% year-over-year in June and 0.2% for the month, below consensus estimates of 3.1% and 0.3%. This was the lowest rate of inflation since March 2021. And core inflation, which excludes food and energy prices, rose by 4.8% year-over-year and 0.2% for the month. The annual core inflation level was
the lowest since October 2021, and its monthly gain was the smallest gain since August 2021.

Most economists, forecasters, and business leaders are anticipating that the Fed will continue to raise rates throughout the year until it reaches its target inflation rate. For this reason, most forecasters still believe a mild and shallow recession is likely within the next twelve months. However, a significant minority are anticipating that the US economy will avoid a recession altogether. For example, in its latest forecast, the National Association of Realtors has the economy growing slowly every quarter throughout 2023 and projects the economy to grow by 1.1% for the whole year. 

Regardless of one’s stance on this issue, it is indisputable that the industrial market is in a favorable position to weather most headwinds the economy might face. Total retail sales grew by 1.6% in May 2023 compared to the same period a year ago , and as a percentage of total sales, e-commerce retail sales (one of the key drivers of the industrial sector) now stand at 15.1% – 3.9 percentage points higher than where it stood at its peak prior to the pandemic in Q4 of 2019. With this said, available space continues to increase and there has been a growing sentiment regarding a shift in negotiating power from Landlords to Tenants

20May

The South Bay, Midcounties and Inland Empire all experienced further lease rate and sale price growth and demand continues to outstrip supply.