Replacement Costs as a Catalyst for Value Growth
Market rents have fallen while replacement costs keep rising, creating a ~20% national discount of market rents to replacement-cost rents26.03.2026 | 06:36 Uhr
Key Takeaways:
- New supply has collapsed (roughly -60% nationally) as higher build costs and wider yields pressure developer economics, which can tighten fundamentals and support rent recovery.
- Replacement costs are being pushed higher by land scarcity and more complex, power-intensive modern buildings raising the bar for new development and potentially extending the runway for rent/value growth.
Factors Shaping the Trajectory of the Market
Industrial real estate, fueled by the rise of eCommerce, was the standout real estate property sector over the last decade. This outperformance was accelerated during COVID as supply chain bottlenecks further accelerated eCommerce sales and led to just-in-case inventory management.
Over the last couple of years, as a result of higher rents and labor costs, tenants have consolidated their requirements, especially in the expensive coastal markets. As a result, market rents have declined by nearly 7% nationally from peak levels, and by over 40% in the Inland Empire1. At the same time, construction costs have increased (hard costs, labor, financing). The confluence of lower rents and higher construction costs (together with wider yields) have led to a pullback in new supply.
The dramatic decline in new supply (down by nearly -60% nationally and by more than -75% in certain major target markets) should help support a recovery in real estate fundamentals and values. Furthermore, we expect new construction to continue to be depressed given market rents sit 20%+ below replacement cost rents on a national basis – for the first time since the Great Financial Crisis (GFC). The substantial discount between market rents and replacement cost rents should provide the opportunity for rents and values to increase before the supply-side response kicks in – a bullish indicator for this cyclical recovery.
Why does replacement cost matter?
Replacement
cost represents the estimated all-in expense required to construct a
comparable building, including land. In practical terms, the replacement
cost rental rate is the minimum rent necessary to justify new
development and achieve a standard development profit. While market
rental rates fluctuate with economic cycles and the balance of supply
and demand, replacement costs remain relatively stable over time and
typically rise at a modest premium to inflation. Moreover, prices for
construction materials and labor rarely decline as sharply as rental
rates during periods of economic stress. Replacement cost for
industrial (and virtually all) real estate has increased meaningfully in
recent years, propelled by supply chain disruptions during the
Covid-era, tariffs, labor constraints and the advent of more
technologically advanced buildings required to meet evolving occupier
preferences.
Land is scarce
Construction costs are
driven by market demand for construction labor and materials, commodity
prices and supply chain disruptions. Land value is theoretically a
derivative of value (rents + yields) and construction costs. In simplest
terms, it can be approximated as the total value of the finished
product less the cost to build and developer profit margin. However, in
practical and empirical terms, land values are stickier than what
theoretical value may suggest. Given commercial land is generally
controlled by well capitalized institutions and individuals, typically
few industrial land sites trade at the depressed pricing levels implied
by residual (theoretical) land valuations. Land has become even scarcer
over the past 15 years as 4.5 billion square feet of industrial product
has been delivered, removing more than 250,000 acres of buildable
industrial land. For example, industrial land pricing at Exit 7A in New
Jersey increased from $20 per buildable square foot in 2013 to $40 per
square foot in 2020. Land prices surged during Covid and by 2023
exceeded $125 per square foot in New Jersey. As such, replacement costs
today are approximately $300 per square foot in Central New Jersey, and
approximately 15% above today’s market rental rate. This upward trend in
land cost – especially in infill locations best positioned to
efficiently serve dense, affluent populations - is expected to
contribute to higher replacement costs going forward.
Replacement Cost Impact on Rents and Values
As
with all assets, rents and values ultimately reflect supply and demand.
Market rents (what price a landlord can command for space) are a
function of various cyclical and structural forces. Supply, in turn,
reacts to that demand. As rents rise, developers add new supply, which
absorbs excess demand, bringing rents down. New supply however depends
on the cost to build. Replacement cost determines the financial
feasibility of building new supply and therefore provides strong
indications of the trajectory of supply. When the cost and barriers to
build are low, new supply can react quickly, eroding excess rental
growth thereby creating a ceiling on value appreciation. When the cost
to build is high, new supply is more limited, providing a runway for
rents and values to grow.
Building and locational quality matter most
Replacement
cost provides a guidepost for future value growth only in markets where
demand is sufficient to justify development. At one end of the
spectrum, a market like Cleveland has experienced annual effective
rental growth of 80 basis points2 between 2001 to 2020
(underperforming the Tier 1 markets by more than 250 bps), despite
replacement cost rents remaining consistently above market rents over
that time period. Weak demand and demographics held back rental rate
growth, notwithstanding limited new supply. In contrast, a market like
Miami, with robust demand driven by strong population growth and rising
ecommerce penetration, experienced market rental growth of 3.2% over
that time period. Market rents in Miami stayed in-line with replacement
cost rents and quickly rebounded at points in time where there was a
discount. This bifurcation in market performance is likely to widen as
structural demand drivers (such as the adoption of automation and AI
technology and supply chain shifts) diverge across markets and product
types. In markets with resilient demand, replacement cost and
development economics will largely determine value appreciation in that
subset of “winning” assets and locations.
Current and Future Replacement Costs
While
industrial rents are stabilizing at a cyclical low, replacement costs
are expected to keep increasing (albeit at a slower pace). According to
the Turner Building Cost Index (which includes materials and labor),
year-to-date build costs increased by 3.5% as of Q3 2025 and are 15%
above 2022 levels. Steel prices are up 12.4% y/y, cement increased by
4.6% y/y, and construction wages increased 4.0-6.0% y/y depending on
skill, according to ENR (as of November).