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Over the past year, industrial growth in Mexico was concentrated among a relatively small number of companies. What stands out is that many of the firms behind that expansion were not among the country’s largest occupiers, even though company size is typically associated with higher absorption volumes.
According to SiiLA, between the first quarter of 2025 and the first quarter of 2026, about 570 of the more than 5,000 companies occupying industrial space nationwide expanded their operations. In practical terms, this means that fewer than one in ten companies absorbed space during the past year.
However, within that group, the largest occupiers did not necessarily account for the expansion observed. While the 100 companies that absorbed the most space accounted for nearly 60% of all absorption recorded during the period analyzed, the country’s 100 largest occupiers—responsible for 31% of the national industrial inventory—explained less than half of that growth.
This is relevant because it shows that market structure and growth dynamics do not necessarily evolve in the same way. In fact, growth dynamics (Gini = 0.95) tend to be considerably more concentrated than occupancy (Gini = 0.70). This implies that demand cycles do not replicate the market’s composition, but instead temporarily compress around a subset of companies.
This, however, does not mean company size ceases to matter. On the contrary, approximately 67.5% of the observed differences in absorption can be attributed to occupiers’ prior size (R² = 0.675). Put differently, companies with larger occupied footprints tended to record more significant expansions than smaller occupiers. The pattern was observed both in absolute terms (Pearson = 0.79) and relative terms (Spearman = 0.80), as the largest occupiers frequently appeared among the companies that absorbed the most space.
Nevertheless, that relationship was not proportional. The data show that a 1% increase in occupied space was associated, on average, with an approximately 0.62% increase in cumulative absorption. In other words, larger companies tended to expand more, but each additional increase in size tended to translate into relatively lower growth.
Taken together, the findings suggest that, at least during the past year, changes in industrial demand depended on the expansion decisions of a relatively small number of companies. The direct implication is that the growth, investment, or relocation plans of a handful of occupiers can significantly influence the market’s trajectory.
To learn more about these trends and access detailed information on Mexico’s industrial sector, visit SiiLA Market Analytics or contact us at contacto@siila.com.mx.











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