Headquarters at Pier 1 in San Francisco | |
| Company type | Public |
|---|---|
| Industry | Real estate |
| Predecessor | AMB Property Corporation |
| Founded | 1983; 42 years ago (1983) |
| Founders |
|
| Headquarters | Pier 1, San Francisco, California ,United States |
Area served | |
Key people | |
| Products | Industrial real estate |
| Revenue | |
| AUM | |
| Total assets | |
| Total equity | |
Number of employees | 2,703 (2024)[3] |
| Website | prologis |
| Footnotes / references [4][5][6] | |
Prologis, Inc. is areal estate investment trust headquartered inSan Francisco, California that invests in logistics facilities.[6] The company was formed through the merger of AMB Property Corporation and Prologis in June 2011, which made Prologis the largest industrial real estate company in the world.[7][8] As of 2025, the company operates more than 15,000 land acres and over 6,000 buildings[9] comprising about 1.3 billion square feet in 20 countries[10][11] acrossNorth America,Latin America,Europe, andAsia.[12] According to The Economist, its business strategy is focused on warehouses that are located close to huge urban areas where land is scarce.[13] It serves about 6,600 tenants.[14] Prologis began to expand its non-real estate business, Essentials, in 2018, offering customers solar power, racking systems, forklifts, generators,[15]EV charging infrastructure,[16] and other logistics tech equipment for purchase.
AMB, the earliest predecessor of Prologis, was formed in 1984. In its present form, Prologis was created in 2011 through the merger of AMB and ProLogis, both multinational real estate companies based in the United States.[17]
In 1983,Hamid Moghadam and Doug Abbey founded Abbey, Moghadam and Company,[18] an investment manager serving institutions.[19] T. Robert Burke joined the company in 1984, establishing AMB Property Corporation, investors in office, industrial and communityshopping centers on behalf of largeinstitutional investors.[18] During thesavings and loan crisis, the company avoided significant financial repercussions by investing in industrial parks and shopping centers, and began to exit the office market in 1987.[18] AMB launched its first private equity fund in 1989, which focused on industrial and retail properties.[19]
In late 1997,[19] AMB became apublic company via aninitial public offering, with more than US$2.8 billion under management.[18] In 1999, the company sold its retail portfolio to focus solely on the industrial sector, then made its first overseas investment in 2002, developing a facility forProcter & Gamble.[19] That year, AMB initiated an international expansion program focused on buying and developing distribution facilities near global trade hubs, particularly in growth markets such asLatin America,Asia,[12] and Europe.[18] AMB added an internal development division in 2004 and, by 2011, was expanding its operations in China and Brazil.[19]
Real Estate entrepreneurWilliam Sanders formed Security Capital Industrial Trust (SCI), a legacy company of Prologis,[20] in 1991, and it became apublic company via anIPO in 1994.[19]
ProLogis, Inc. (then with a capitalized L) was incorporated on November 24, 1997 under the leadership of K. Dane Brooksher, a former KPMG senior executive.[21]
SCI officially changed its name to ProLogis Trust in July 1998, then active in 84 markets in 12 countries, with a market capitalization of nearly $5 billion.[22] In November 1998, ProLogis Trust acquired Meridian Industrial Trust for $862.5 million in stock, and was the largest owner of industrial and warehouse properties in the U.S.[23] ProLogis Trust formed its first property funds in 1999 and entered the Japanese market in 2001, the same year it shortened its name to ProLogis. In 2003, ProLogis was added to theS&P 500 Index and entered the Chinese market, forming its first joint venture in China with Suzhou Logistics Center Co. Ltd.[18] In 2004, the company acquired Keystone Industrial Trust for $1.6 billion.[24] Brooksher retired as chairman and CEO on December 31, 2004.[25]
In 2005, Prologis was headquartered inAurora, Colorado, and acquiredCatellus Development Corporation for $3.6 billion,[17] later selling a portfolio of those assets with rights to the Catellus name toTPG Capital, in 2011, for $505 million.[26]
In 2006, ProLogis became aFortune 1000 company and the ProLogis European Properties Fund became apublic company.[18] Following aggressive expansion[17] and heavy borrowing,[19] ProLogis' CEO Jeffrey Schwartz was replaced by Walter Rakowich in 2008,[27] who implemented cost-cutting efforts, raising capital and selling assets.[17] In December 2008, ProLogis sold a portfolio of assets to theGovernment of Singapore Investment Corporation,[17] with which it formedGlobal Logistic Properties.[28]
The company sold its China operations and some of its Japanese interests toGIC Private Limited for $1.3 billion in 2009.[18] That August, ProLogis secured financing fromDeutsche Pfandbriefbank and an unidentified German bank for two of its funds.[29]The Blackstone Group acquired a portfolio of assets from the company in late 2010 for $1 billion.[17]
In March 2011, before the merger with ProLogis, AMB Property formed a €470 million joint venture withAllianz Real Estate.[30] Agreed to in January 2011, AMB Property Corporation contracted to buy the larger ProLogis for $8.7 billion, with the new entity named Prologis.[30][27][31][32] Prologis would then be based inSan Francisco, AMB's hometown, and maintain an office inDenver, Colorado, where ProLogis was based.[17]
Completed in June 2011,[19] the merger was one of the biggest real estate deals since theGreat Recession, and created the largest industrial real estate company in the world.[27][17] With a total market value estimated at $24 billion,[31] the new Prologis had around $46 billion in assets under management and logistics and distribution facilities in North America, Europe, Asia and South America.[27][17] AMB CEOHamid R. Moghadam and ProLogis CEO Walter Rakowich were appointed as the new company's co-chiefs, with Moghadam becoming the sole CEO in 2013.[17]
In February 2012, the company sold a 3.5 million square foot portfolio in theUnited Kingdom toThe Blackstone Group for $335 million.[33]
On February 14, 2013, Nippon Prologis REIT, Inc. (NPR), a Japanese real estate investment trust formed by Prologis, completed an IPO on theTokyo Stock Exchange.[34] In March 2013, Prologis formed the Prologis European Logistics Partners Sarl joint venture withNorges Bank Investment Management for US$3.1 billion.[35] In August 2013, in partnership withThe Blackstone Group the company acquired a 17 million square foot portfolio for $960 million fromLehman Brothers.[36][37] In 2013, Prologis announced plans for further expansion in Japan, its second largest market, after the United States.[32]
In 2014, the company completed thespin-off of FIBRA Prologis, its Mexican affiliate (also known as Prologis Property Mexico SA), raising about 7 billion pesos (US$541 million)[38] and sold a 59-property portfolio to TPG for $375 million.[39]
Prologis had reduced its number of managed funds from 23 to 11 by the spring of 2015, and was managing $29 billion in real-estate assets.[40] That quarter, the company sold aSilicon Valley industrial park toFacebook, Inc.[8] With corporate headquarters remaining in San Francisco, that April, Prologis announced a plan to move offices from east Denver, Colorado, to a new building in downtown Denver[41] in 2017.[42] That June, Prologis partnered withNorges Bank Investment Management to buy KTR Capital Partners for $5.9 billion, expanding its real estate portfolio in the U.S. through the Prologis U.S. Logistics Venture.[43][44] In October 2015, it acquired Morris Realty Associates' portfolio of logistics and retail properties in the U.S. for $820 million, selling off the retail assets to an affiliate ofThe Blackstone Group for $374 million.[45]
Prologis formed Prologis Ventures, its venture capital arm, in March 2016, making 20 investments by late 2019.[46] and invested over $250 million in about 50 early- and growth-stage companies by 2024.[47]
By late 2016, Prologis had built large multistory warehouses in Japan,Singapore and China.[48] The company began construction on a three-floor warehouse inSeattle,Washington, in November 2016, which was the first multi-story warehouse in the country.[49] The following month, Prologis also outlined plans to build a three-story warehouse in San Francisco.[48] That December, Prologis received two 2016 Eurobuild CEE Awards.[50]
Acquisitions include DCT Industrial Trust for $8.5 billion in August 2018,[51]Liberty Property Trust for $13 billion in January 2020,[52] and, the following month, Industrial Property Trust for $4 billion.[53] In April 2021, the company acquiredHilltop Mall inRichmond, California for $117 million,[54] then, in June 2022, the land belowCalifornia's Great America inSanta Clara, California fromCedar Fair, which leased the land back with plans to close the amusement park by 2033.[55][56] Prologis acquired competitorDuke Realty in October 2022, for $23 billion, completing the largest commercial real estate transaction in the U.S. since the onset of theCOVID-19 pandemic. The following June, it acquired a further 14 million square feet of industrial property fromThe Blackstone Group for $3.1 billion.[57]
Prologis had become the first logistics REIT with an approved science-based carbon-emissions target in 2018; in June 2022, the Science Based Targets initiative validated a commitment by Prologis to reach net-zero emissions by 2040.[58] In 2020, Prologis completed construction of the world's first industrial building to receive Zero Carbon Certification from the International Living Future Institute (ILFI) in Eindhoven, Netherlands.[59] In 2024, Prologis built North America’s largest heavy-duty truck charging hub, powered by a microgrid. The Denker Avenue hub is located in Torrance, California.[60] That November, Prologis was ranked second in the nation for on-site solar generation by the Solar Energy Industries Association (SEIA) Solar Means Business Report.[61]
In 2024, Prologis ranked 39th among theDrucker Institute andThe Wall Street Journal's annual Management Top 250 companies for employee engagement and development.[62] That year, the company also gained recognition from theCorporate Knights Global 100,[63]Fast Company[64] andTime.[65] aIt is listed as #465 among theFortune 500.[66]
Since 2016, the company has publishedwhite papers and its ownmarket research, including the quarterlyIndustrial Business Indicator and the annualPrologis Logistics Rent Index.[67][68]
In partnership withOxford Economic Papers, the company determined that, in 2022, $2.7 trillion of goods either produced or sold worldwide passed through Prologis facilities, representing 2.8% of the global GDP with an economic impact of $300 billion.[69][70]