Chino Industrial Warehouse Market News
Track the latest in Chino industrial real estate with our market updates—covering leasing velocity, new park announcements, and major tenant moves across Chino, Ontario, Eastvale, Jurupa Valley, and Rancho Cucamonga. We summarize shifts in vacancy, rental trends, and construction timelines so your team can plan with confidence.
Our news feed highlights active availabilities, notable subleases, and infrastructure projects impacting freight and commute times (SR-60 improvements, I-10/I-15 interchanges, CA-71 upgrades). Whether you’re expanding a regional network or launching a new facility, these snapshots help you time the market and move decisively.
We also publish comparative insights—Chino vs. Ontario Airport District vs. Mira Loma—so you can weigh transportation access, labor draws, and rate differentials across submarkets. Subscribe and stay in front of new inventory before it hits broad distribution.
Encon News
The Warehouse Matrix | Presented by: Encon Commercial

Mortgage rates top 7% for the first time since 2002 | CNN Business | Presented by: Encon Commercial
Mortgage rates top 7% for the first time since 2002 | CNN Business , more details : https://www.breaking7.com/NewDetails/71450606
U.S. National Industrial Report September 2022 | CommercialEdge | Presented by: Encon Commercial
Interest Rate Increase Expected Again ! | Presented by: Encon Commercial
The Federal Reserve has announced that they are raising the Fed Funds Rate by 0.75%
The Prime Rate will now be 6.25%
🏠 Mortgage Rates Soar | Presented by: Encon Commercial
Mortgage rates soar
Data: Freddie Mac. Chart: Tory Lysik/Axios
Mortgage rates passed 6% for the first time since 2008, as an inflation-throttled economy squeezes homeowners and leaves potential buyers with few affordable options, Axios managing editor Javier E. David writes.
Why it matters: There’s little relief in sight for renter or homeowner sticker shock. Inflation has put the Fed on the path to higher interest rates, even as the economy loses momentum.
What’s happening: Rates are surging and home prices have fallen — but not enough for would-be homeowners to jump into a market that seems to have mostly downside.
What we’re watching: Eventually — but certainly not any time soon — the Fed will be able to declare its mission against inflation accomplished, even at the cost of forcing the economy into an outright recession.
That will nudge down mortgage rates, Melissa Cohn, regional vice president at William Raveis Mortgage, tells Axios by email.
But rates probably “won’t go back to 3% — we would need another unwanted global crisis for that to happen.”
