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Prologis, commercial real estate giant with Denver ties, snaps up competitor for $8.4 billion

Company absorbs DCT Industrial’s 71 million square-foot portfolio

PROLOGIS17 Denver-based ProLogis CEO Walt Rakowich, ...
Denver Post file
Prologis solar panel-testing site in Denver in 2010 file photo.
Joe Rubino - Staff portraits in The Denver Post studio on October 6, 2022. (Photo by Eric Lutzens/The Denver Post)
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with offices in Denver, announced this week it has acquired a Denver-based competitor and its entire 71 million square-foot portfolio for $8.4 billion. 

The purchase, described in a news release as a “merger agreement,” was announced by Prologis and the now acquired in a news release Sunday.  The deal, which includes Prologis taking on DCT’s debt, was was stock-for-stock transaction.

Prologis said the buy, which brings in 215 acres of land under contract or option to be developed, strengthens its footprint in high-growth markets like Southern California, the San Francisco Bay Area, South Florida, Seattle and New York.

“DCT’s team is as good as it gets, and we expect a number to join us to help manage the portfolio, execute on
capital deployment activities and make long-term contributions to the Prologis platform,”  Eugene F. Reilly, Prologis CEO for the Americas, said in a news release. “This deal also diversifies our customer roster through the addition of some 500 new relationships.”

Its corporate headquarters is in San Francisco, but Prologis has an operations base in Denver’s Z Block development. It owns , a 5.7 million square-foot industrial park in Aurora that is home to Amazon’s first local fulfillment center.

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