Mexikos Nearshoring-Boom 2026: USMCA-Überprüfung und Marktausblick
Marktüberblick: 6 Milliarden USD Nearshoring-Investitionen, USMCA-Überprüfung 2026 und warum Deutschland der drittstärkste Investor in Mexiko bleibt.
Direct investment in premium industrial parks across Mexico is definitively projected to shatter the US $6 billion threshold in 2025 as the North American supply chain officially decouples from Asian dependency.
The 2026 USMCA Review
The critical 2026 USMCA joint review is aggressively driving North American nearshoring, forcing corporations to rapidly establish Mexican manufacturing bases to satisfy tightening Rules of Origin constraints and maintain duty-free market access.
It is not a passive renegotiation; it is a hard deadline. Missing this compliance window threatens core profitability streams.
Vacancy Rates & Rents
Record-breaking demand for Class A Mexican industrial real estate has driven Tijuana's vacancy rates below an astonishing 2%, forcing incoming US manufacturers into competitive 6-9 month pre-leasing agreements.
| Real Estate Metric (2025) | Current Status | Strategic Action |
|---|---|---|
| Regional Vacancy Rate | Sub 1-2% | Pre-lease early |
| Class A Build-to-Suit | $0.70 - $1.00 NNN | Lock in 5-10 yr terms |
| Lead Time to Entry | 6 - 18 Months | Partner with Shelters |
The Energy Question
Electrical power capacity remains the ultimate constraint in Baja California, sparking massive and rapid private micro-grid and substation cogeneration projects to safely power complex data centers and heavy industrial installations.
- CFE Dependency: Expanding beyond public grid limitations.
- Private Capital: Billions injected directly into localized substation infrastructure.
- Sustainability: Solar-ready roofing mandates hitting Class A leases.
- Energy-Intensive Zoning: Specialized mapping for high-KV demands.
- Due Diligence: Feasibility studies are now 90% power-driven.