Stare out a street-side window for a few minutes and you don’t have to wait long to see a truck from FedEx, UPS, the U.S. Postal Service or some local delivery service scoot on by shuttling brown boxes to seemingly every address on the block.
Delivery of all kinds of goods has become ubiquitous and only keeps growing, especially with so many boutique firms offering subscriptions to regular-use products like razor blades, electric toothbrush heads, pet food, meal delivery kits and countless other items. And then, of course, there’s Amazon and it’s daily deluge.
Stare out a street-side window for a few minutes and you don’t have to wait long to see a truck from FedEx, UPS, the U.S. Postal Service or some local delivery service scoot on by shuttling brown boxes to seemingly every address on the block.
Delivery of all kinds of goods has become ubiquitous and only keeps growing, especially with so many boutique firms offering subscriptions to regular-use products like razor blades, electric toothbrush heads, pet food, meal delivery kits and countless other items. And then, of course, there’s Amazon and it’s daily deluge.
It’s this activity that’s helping drive the fortunes of the U.S. industrial real estate sector. And the findings in our fifth annual study of the sector show there’s little expectation for the tide to turn. Fundamentals in 2018 improved across the board. And while there was some weakening in the bullishness among our readers compared to last year’s study, the overall sentiment remains very optimistic.
Read the full report