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These are South Florida’s biggest industrial sales of 2024

Top 10 deals include Blackstone selling two warehouse portfolios for more than a half-billion dollars

Blackstone’s Steven Schwarzman, Link Logistics’ Luke Petherbridge, Longpoint’s Dwight Angelini, Ares Management’s Michael Arougheti, Tishman Speyer’s Rob Speyer and Hillwood’s Ross Perot Jr. (Getty, Linkedin, Link Logistics, Longpoint, Tishman Speyer, Hillwood)
Blackstone’s Steven Schwarzman, Link Logistics’ Luke Petherbridge, Longpoint’s Dwight Angelini, Ares Management’s Michael Arougheti, Tishman Speyer’s Rob Speyer and Hillwood’s Ross Perot Jr. (Getty, Linkedin, Link Logistics, Longpoint, Tishman Speyer, Hillwood)

In the past 12 months, South Florida’s 10 biggest industrial sales totaled a combined $1.1 billion, eclipsing last year’s priciest deals by nearly $300 million.

Link Logistics, the industrial subsidiary of New York-based Blackstone, took advantage of institutional investors’ industrial appetite, selling this year’s top two deals, a pair of warehouse portfolios for more than a half-billion dollars. Link is led by Luke Petherbridge, and Blackstone is led by Steven Schwarzman. 

Across the tri-county region, the top 10 buyers acquired roughly 5 million square feet of industrial space this year, paying an average of $252 a square foot. 

Here are the biggest industrial sales for 2024, based on data provided by Colliers and Cushman & Wakefield:

1. $331.3M | Miami-Dade/Broward/Palm Beach portfolio | Longpoint 

For the second straight year, Longpoint Realty Partners notched the largest industrial purchase in South Florida. Led by CEO Dwight Angelini, Boston-based Longpoint paid Link $331.3 million last month for 10 industrial sites with 26 warehouses in Coconut Creek, Dania Beach, Delray Beach, Hollywood, Miami Gardens and Miami Lakes. That’s $71 million above the $260 million Longpoint paid for 25 warehouses in Miami-Dade and Broward Counties in last year’s top industrial deal. 

2. $206M | Sunrise | Elion Partners

Shortly after the deal with Longpoint, Link sold a five-warehouse portfolio in Sunrise this month to Miami-based Elion Partners for $205.5 million, roughly $44 million more than last year’s second priciest industrial deal, which also involved Blackstone’s subsidiary. Link paid $162 million for a seven-warehouse business park in Deerfield Beach in 2023. 

3. $147M | Miami | Ares Management

In October, Los Angeles-based private equity firm Ares Management scooped up Midway Miami Park for $147 million. Coconut Creek-based Butters Construction & Management and Charleston-based Greystar sold the recently completed complex of seven warehouses in Miami Lakes. Ares’ purchase surpassed last year’s third largest industrial sale by $34 million. Pontegadea, the private equity and real estate arm of Spanish billionaire Amancio Ortega, paid $113 million in 2023 for Bridge Point Cold Logistics Center, a freezer facility in Hialeah. 

4. $107M | Jupiter | Hillwood

Ross Perot Jr., the billionaire son of the late 1992 presidential spoiler candidate Ross Perot, dived into Palm Beach County’s industrial market. In July, Perot’s Dallas-based Hillwood paid $106.5 million for a 1 million-square-foot Amazon fulfillment center in Jupiter. Seller Truist Securities developed the single-story building on 100 acres within the 945-acre Palm Beach Park of Commerce. Hillwood’s acquisition was $40.5 million more than last year’s fourth priciest industrial purchase. Harbert Management Corporation, a Birmingham, Alabama-based investment management firm, paid $66 million for a 17-acre industrial park in Lauderdale Lakes 

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5.  $101M | Pompano Beach | Tishman Speyer

In June, New York-based Tishman Speyer, led by CEO Rob Speyer, purchased a fully leased warehouse complex in Pompano Beach for $101.1 million. Atlanta-based IDI Logistics sold the 35-acre Rock Lake Business Center. The sale was nearly double the price of last year’s fifth largest industrial deal when Chicago-based Walton Street paid $52 million for a Miami complex of three warehouses. 

6. $72M | Deerfield Beach | Brennan Investment and Investcorp

Bahrain-based Investcorp and Rosemont, Illinois-based Brennan Investment Group acquired a Deerfield Beach business park for $72.3 million in January. Los Angeles County Employees Retirement Association sold Powerline Business Park, a collection of 14 warehouses. The Deerfield Beach sale was roughly $21.5 million above the sixth largest industrial deal in 2023. Last year, Prologis paid $50.8 million for an industrial business park in Medley.

7. $60M | Miami | BentallGreenOak and Strategic Capital Partners

In November, Truist Securities sold another South Florida industrial property. New York-based BentallGreenOak, led by co-CEOs Sonny Kalsi and John Carrafiell, and Indianapolis-based Strategic Capital Partners, led by CEO Richard Horn, paid $60 million for a Medley warehouse leased to food distribution company Quirch Foods for the next two decades. The joint venture’s acquisition is roughly $11 million more than the $48.9 million Stockbridge Capital Group paid for six Coconut Creek warehouses in last year’s seventh priciest industrial deal. 

8. $56M | Hialeah | Property Reserve

Salt Lake City, Utah-based Property Reserve acquired a warehouse within Beacon Logistics Park in Hialeah in July from Coral Gables-based Codina Partners and San Antonio-based Affinus Capital. Property Reserve, the real estate investment arm of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, paid $55.8 million, about $12.5 million above last year’s eighth largest industrial sale. In 2023, Orion Real Estate Group paid $43.3 million for a Hialeah Gardens warehouse.

9. $55M | Riviera Beach | LBA Logistics

Also in July, Irvine, California-based LBA Logistics purchased a Riviera Beach warehouse for $55 million from Dalfen Industrial.The deal was $12 million above 2023’s ninth highest industrial sale. Last year, Arden Logistics Parks acquired a three-warehouse complex in West Palm Beach for $43 million.

10. $51M | Weston | Chik-Fil-A

An end-user closed out the top 10 industrial deals of this year. Chik-Fil-A, led by CEO Andrew Truett Cathy, paid $50.5 million in February for a distribution facility in Weston. The Atlanta-based fast food chain’s purchase is roughly $10.7 million above the tenth priciest industrial deal of 2023. Last year, Summit Real Estate Group paid $39.8 million for a Fort Lauderdale warehouse. 

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