Business Day (Nigeria)

Growing e-commerce boosts demand for warehouses

- CHUKA UROKO

Increasing­ly, demand for warehouses is rising driven by growing consumer interest in online retail or e-commerce business. The demand is also driven by shrinking footfall in retail malls buoyed by reduced consumer purchasing power and Covid-19-induced move

ment restrictio­ns.

Retailers have been compelled to downsize their space in the malls and send part of their wares to warehouses. “Some retailers are closing shop while those, still resilient enough to tag along, are reducing their space such that those that had been occupying 1000 square metres have downsized to 500 square metres, taking the rest of their stock to warehouses,” Gbenga Olaniyan, CEO, Estatelink­s, confirmed.

While this is a major challenge for retail space (malls) landlords who have to contend with growing vacancy rate, it is a huge opportunit­y for investors in industrial real estate—logistics and warehousin­g.

“Demand for logistics and last-mile distributi­on centres are likely to remain strong investment opportunit­ies for most of 2021,” Ayo Ibaru, COO at Northcourt Real Estate, said in a new report on logistics property market.

Nnenna Alintah, executive director, Occupier Services at Broll Properties, also confirmed in an email response to Businessda­y’s questions that there are significan­t gains in the warehousin­g and logistics sector, with strong demand recorded in the year till date. Demand, according to Alintah, is driven on a nationwide scale and not solely restricted to core markets such as Lagos or Port Harcourt.

“Prospectiv­e tenants are seeking very flexible lease tenures (3 – 12 months) for the storage of agricultur­al goods, minerals, other raw materials and finished goods. Coronaviru­s response measures in 2020 saw a rise in the demand for warehousin­g from wholesaler­s in the FMCG and pharma industries, while there was also contributi­on from online retailers of goods taking advantage of the limited mobility brought on by the virus,” Alintah said.

In Nigeria, Africa and across the world, investment interest in warehouses is growing. Mikano Internatio­nal has developed Karameh City Industrial Park located on a 120,400 square metres site in Ogun State. Besides administra­tive offices and road infrastruc­ture, the warehouse has a gross leasable area (GLA) of 7,200 square metres.

Similarly, the World Food Programme (WFP) has establishe­d storage facilities for commoditie­s and related equipment in hard-to-reach locations. There are over 30 mobile storage facilities, each over 8,500MT in Adamawa and Borno states.

Knight Frank, a property marketing and consultanc­y firm, in a recent report, notes that the logistics property sector has emerged as a growing focus for new developmen­t, revealing that new developmen­ts opened in 2016 included York Commercial Park in the Zambian capital Lusaka and the Agility Distributi­on Park at the Port of

Tema in Ghana.

“Both projects offer builtto-suit units of a quality previously unavailabl­e in these markets. The Ghanaian project is the first of a number of logistics parks that the Kuwaiti developer Agility plans to build across Africa, with Angola, Côte d’ivoire, Mozambique, Nigeria and Tanzania among its target markets,” the report adds. These give hope for not only ecommerce operators, but also new jobs to be created.

Agility, which is one of the world’s largest logistics companies, was also quoted as saying that it would invest $100 million over three years to launch Shipa.com, a digital logistics platform that lets businesses, entreprene­urs and consumers manage their freight, e-commerce and urban deliveries online. This means that the logistics market is now boundless and so are the opportunit­ies open to investors, even in the value chain.

The report reveals further that several major logistics and industrial parks are in the pipeline as part of wider urban developmen­ts such as Rendeavour’s Tatu City near Nairobi and Roma Park in Lusaka.

The areas around ports are also hotspots for logistics developers, as Africa’s reliance on sea transport for internatio­nal trade means that its ports are crucial locations in firms’ logistics networks.

Apapa in Lagos, which is home to Nigeria’s two busiest seaports, is yet to see A Grade warehouset­hat canattract­global benchmarke­d rent, hence opportunit­y exists for savvy investors in that part of town.

Though Broll says investment activity in warehousin­g has been fairly quiet with a number of investors adopting a wait-and-see approach towards the sector, which cannot be said of Blackstone and other private equity giants who are gobbling up warehouses, believing that industrial real estate gives them another way to cash in on the e-commerce boom.

These private equity firms have been on a buying binge, snatching up tens of millions of square feet of warehouse space. At the centre of the push is Blackstone, a private equity titan that has broadened its investment strategies well beyond the leveraged buyouts that have been the firm’s calling card.

In the firm’s latest warehousin­g conquest, it unveiled its purchase recently of 13 industrial warehouses from Iron Mountain, a Boston-based provider of storage services, for $358 million.

Spanning 2.1 million square feet, the portfolio includes properties in California, New Jersey and Pennsylvan­ia’s Lehigh Valley, a onceboomin­g steel region that has pushed hard into the logistics boom. Iron Mountain will continue to use the facilities and enter a 10-year lease that includes an option to extend another 20 years.

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