September 13, 2022

The Great Decoupling: Effects on Industrial Real Estate

The Great Decoupling: Effects on Industrial Real Estate

Beginning slowly in the 1970s and picking up pace in the 1990s, businesses from numerous countries started outsourcing manufacturing to China to benefit from a ready and affordable workforce. As this trend picked up speed, the country eventually gained the nickname “The World’s Factory.” Consequently, for most of the late 20th and early 21st centuries, you could find “Made in China” stamped on virtually everything from consumer electronics to furniture to athletic wear.

Things change, however. For various reasons, China has begun to lose its grip on the global manufacturing community over the past few years. This shift away from China has directly impacted the U.S. industrial real estate market.

What is The Great Decoupling?

Recent events have not been kind to the Chinese manufacturing sector. First, a U.S.-China trade war made sourcing from China prohibitively expensive for U.S. businesses across a variety of industries due to a substantial list of tariffs on Chinese goods and raw materials. Then the COVID-19 pandemic shut down China’s manufacturing sector and ports and continued to do so off and on for almost two years. As a result, the cost benefits of manufacturing in China began to dwindle for U.S. businesses, so “The Great Decoupling” began.

The Great Decoupling refers to an exodus of production from China as businesses seek to improve supply chain resilience. These circumstances have been beneficial for a variety of other countries in Southeast Asia, including India, Vietnam, and Malaysia, among others.

But what does The Great Decoupling mean for the United States? As U.S. businesses decouple their supply chains from China, are they bringing those assets home?

The Great Decoupling and U.S. Industrial Real Estate

Business media and U.S. manufacturing stakeholders periodically claim that a manufacturing resurgence is on the horizon every year or two for the better part of the last 15 years. However, while some businesses have certainly reshored their production to the United States before recent troubles, the numbers weren’t significant enough to demonstrate any real movement toward rebuilding the U.S. manufacturing sector.

However, things appear to be looking up for the U.S. reshoring movement. In 2021, interest in reshoring was clearly on its way up, given that 92% of executives expressed positive sentiments toward reshoring in a Kearney report, and 83% of North American manufacturers reported they were likely or extremely likely to reshore production in a Thomasnet survey. Now, those sentiments appear to be coming to fruition in 2022. For example:

In commercial real estate, demand for viable manufacturing properties has increasingly contributed to industrial real estate demand this year. This demand can probably be attributed to a mixture of domestic expansion and reshoring efforts as companies attempt to stabilize their supply chains.

While the impact of the pandemic itself on global supply chains has begun to wane—except in China, where the country’s zero-tolerance policy for COVID-19 means that closures still happen—most of the primary drivers for reshoring remain. Port delays, container shortages, severe weather events, and transportation capacity issues will continue for the foreseeable future. As such, interest in relocating production to the U.S. will also continue to rise.

The real estate sector would do well to recognize the potential in this trend. Developers will want to ensure new factories are ready to handle heavy automation, smart technologies, and sustainable solutions, which will all be key to attracting the next generation of manufacturing tenants.

About Phoenix Investors

Founded by Frank P. Crivello in 1994, Phoenix Investors and its affiliates (collectively “Phoenix”) are a leader in the acquisition, development, renovation, and repositioning of industrial facilities throughout the United States. Utilizing a disciplined investment approach and successful partnerships with institutional capital sources, corporations and public stakeholders, Phoenix has developed a proven track record of generating superior risk adjusted returns, while providing cost-efficient lease rates for its growing portfolio of national tenants. Its efforts inspire and drive the transformation and reinvigoration of the economic engines in the communities it serves. Phoenix continues to be defined by thoughtful relationships, sophisticated investment tools, cost-efficient solutions, and a reputation for success.

Mr. Frank P. Crivello began his real estate career in 1982, focusing his investments in multifamily, office, industrial, and shopping center developments across the United States. From 1994 to 2008, Mr. Crivello assisted Phoenix Investors in its execution of its then business model of acquiring net lease commercial real estate across the United States. Since 2009, Mr. Crivello has assisted Phoenix Investors in the shift of its core focus to the acquisition of industrial real estate throughout the country.

Given his extensive experience in all aspects of commercial real estate, Mr. Crivello provides strategic and operational input to Phoenix Investors and its affiliated companies.

Mr. Crivello received a B.A., Magna Cum Laude, from Brown University and the London School of Economics, while completing a double major in Economics and Political Science; he is a member of Phi Beta Kappa. Outside of his business interests, Mr. Crivello invests his time, energy, and financial support across a wide net of charitable projects and organizations.

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