All posts by singlemalt

Native Angeleno and Industrial real estate agent since 1994.

High Land Value As a Percentage of Total Property Value in Los Angeles

In the WSJ article, The U.S. Is Running Out of Land, a professor of finance who studies land values cites that “Land now accounts for 47% of U.S. home values…That is up from 38% in 2012 and less than 20% in the early 1960s.”

So that intrigued me and I pulled a sample of 1,315 industrial zoned parcels from Downtown Los Angeles to the City of Vernon. See below graphic. Dividing the Los Angeles County Assessor Land Value amount by the Total Assessment results in 71% of these industrial properties’ value is the land component. The Total Assessment includes improvements such as warehouse and manufacturing buildings constructed on the land.

That is a strikingly high percentage for land value but should not be surprising given the rapid increase in prices per square foot for land sales in the last decade. In the top section of the graphic, which is the DTLA Arts District, land values have ranged from $300-450/SF in recent years. In the bottom section, City of Vernon land was not long ago $50-100/SF and is now approaching $200/SF.

The Central Los Angeles Industrial Market has been an Infill Market for many years which has resulted in rapid increases in land values. If you own land in this area feel free to contact us.

Sale-Leaseback Explained

Sale Leaseback graphic

Sale-Leaseback transactions occur when a property owner sells their real estate and becomes a tenant of the property. It’s a great way for a property owner to obtain a cash infusion for capital spending for their business or to retire debt.

Sale-Leasebacks are particularly well suited to peak periods of the real estate cycle, when prices are at their peak. And prices have never risen faster or been higher in the Los Angeles industrial real estate market than now.

Feel free to contact us with any questions.

Distillery for Lease, DTLA Arts District

Distillery in Downtown Los Angeles Arts District, for rent
  • Prime Arts District location, with famed restaurant Bestia down the street and Soho Warehouse across Santa Fe Ave.
  • Turn-key state of the art distillery built in 2016 with brand new equipment
  • Brick walled tasting room with high ceilings, polished concrete floors and industrial bar
  • Still room with observation window, bottling & labeling machines, ethanolstorage tanks and water treatment system
  • Large warehouse in back with loading dock and alley access
  • Three (3) parking spots and additional parking is available
  • Rent: $18,000.00 NNN
  • Operating expenses: $1,600.00/Mo or $0.36/SF
  • Contact us with interest.

This property is listed by a separate firm.

Cooler Freezer Warehouses & Food Processing Buildings – Available Listings in Los Angeles

Cold Storage Warehouse with many dock high loading doors with insulated dock seals for refrigerated truck trailer loading of frozen food products.

In the past few years the Southern California industrial market has been very tight in available cold storage warehouses and food production facilities. Here is a current list of buildings that have some of the following food improvements: freezer, cooler, floor drains, clarifier, refrigerated staging areas, and food grade production rooms. Locations include Los Angeles, Orange, and San Bernardino (Inland Empire) counties. Available for lease or sale / purchase by a variety of firms.

Understanding Current Economic Inflation

If you want to have a thorough understanding of the causes for the current economic inflation, then this is the best article I’ve read on the subject recently. Christopher Thornberg of Beacon Economics has an excellent grasp of the details. Surprisingly the cause is not primarily supply chain kinks, but rather consumer demand. And Christopher details what has been driving demand and how the Federal Reserve has blundered in managing the money supply in countering inflation.

Below is the linked article.

What the Fed’s Rate Hike Means… and Doesn’t Mean (beaconecon.com)