PROLOGIS, INC. (PLD) 2025 10-K Earnings Analysis
PROLOGIS, INC.2025 Earnings Analysis
69/100
FY2024 → FY2025 Year-over-Year
vs prior annual reportIn FY2025, PROLOGIS, INC.'s revenue grew 7.2% to $8.8B and operating cash flow grew 2% to $5.0B, while overall score dropped 12 to 69 and net income declined 10.8% to $3.3B.
Prologis' FY2025 10-K reveals the global logistics REIT leader with a 1.3 billion square foot portfolio across 20 countries: $2.3B revenue, $3.3B net income, and $5.0B OCF demonstrate the power of owning irreplaceable logistics real estate in high-barrier markets. The moat is holding — e-commerce penetration, supply chain resiliency needs, and limited new supply in prime locations provide structural demand tailwinds. Prologis is now leveraging its scale into data center development and energy solutions (1+ GW solar capacity), expanding the platform beyond traditional logistics. The 46.1% debt ratio and $35.0B long-term debt are typical for REITs but create interest rate sensitivity.
Filing analysis
PROLOGIS, INC. 2025 10-K Analysis
This page reads PROLOGIS, INC.'s 2025 10-K annual report through the EarningsMoat framework: earnings quality, economic moat strength, capital allocation, and key risks. The current overall score is 69/100, or grade D.
PLD Earnings Quality
The earnings-quality module scores 78/100, with Operating Cash Flow: $5.0B, Net Income: $3.3B. The core question is whether reported profit is backed by operating cash flow and recurring business economics. See the earnings quality analysis guide.
PLD Economic Moat Analysis
The moat-strength module scores 82/100, with Scale & Location: 92/100, Structural Demand Drivers: 80/100. The test is whether the advantage can protect returns after competitors react. Read the economic moat analysis guide.
PLD Free Cash Flow vs Net Income
Operating Cash Flow: $5.0B, Net Income: $3.3B is the fastest read on whether accounting earnings turn into cash. The capital-allocation module scores 75/100. For the diagnostic, start with cash flow vs net income.
PLD Key Risks from the Annual Report
The risk module scores 40/100, with Interest Rate Sensitivity: Medium, Trade Policy/Tariffs: Medium. The goal is to separate ordinary disclosure from risks that can change margins, cash flow, leverage, or the moat itself.
Is PLD a High Quality Earnings Stock?
Based on this 2025 filing, PLD needs a closer read before it qualifies as a high-quality earnings candidate: the overall grade is D, and the earnings-quality score is 78/100. This is a research screen, not investment advice.
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Evaluating competitive strength across earnings quality, moat strength, and risk sustainability
Overall Score Trend
Earnings Quality
OCF of $5.0B on $2.3B reported revenue reflects the REIT model where net income includes property gains, development profits, and co-investment venture income beyond rental revenue. The strong OCF confirms the portfolio generates substantial real cash from operations.
Net income of $3.3B exceeds reported revenue of $2.3B, reflecting property disposition gains, development profit recognition, and co-investment venture income. For REITs, FFO (funds from operations) is the more relevant earnings metric, as it adjusts for depreciation and gains/losses on property sales.
ROE of 6.3% on $53.2B equity is modest but typical for REITs with large asset bases and REIT distribution requirements. The real return metric for Prologis is total return including property appreciation, development gains, and dividend yield rather than traditional ROE.
Zero goodwill on $98.7B total assets — all value is in tangible real estate assets. This is the cleanest possible balance sheet for an asset-heavy business, with no impairment risk from intangible overpayment.
Earnings quality scores 78/100 — Prologis generates strong OCF backed by tangible real estate assets with zero goodwill. The REIT accounting model makes traditional metrics (NI > revenue) appear unusual, but the $5.0B OCF and zero goodwill confirm earnings quality. FFO is the appropriate earnings measure for REIT analysis.
Moat Strength
The 10-K describes Prologis as 'the global leader in logistics real estate, operating in high-barrier, high-growth markets across 20 countries' with 1.3 billion square feet. The portfolio is 'concentrated in key commercial hubs, strategically located near end consumers.' This scale and location advantage is virtually impossible to replicate — the land and entitlements in prime logistics locations are finite.
The 10-K identifies long-term demand drivers: '(i) customers repositioning their supply chains to meet rising e-commerce penetration; (ii) growth in global consumption; (iii) increased focus on supply chain efficiency and resiliency; and (iv) the need for modern, well-located facilities.' These structural trends support sustained demand and low vacancy rates.
Prologis is expanding beyond logistics into data centers and energy solutions. The 10-K notes the company is 'leveraging our development capabilities, energy solutions and strategic locations to deliver digital infrastructure requirements through selective development of data centers' with 'more than 1 gigawatt of solar generation and storage capacity.'
Moat strength scores 82/100 — Prologis' moat is built on irreplaceable logistics real estate in high-barrier markets. The 1.3 billion square foot portfolio across 20 countries, combined with structural e-commerce and supply chain demand drivers, creates a durable competitive advantage. The expansion into data centers and energy solutions widens the platform moat.
Capital Allocation
Prologis creates value through build-to-suit and speculative development, then recycles capital by contributing developed properties to co-investment ventures. This capital recycling model — develop, stabilize, contribute — generates development profits while maintaining portfolio quality and accessing institutional capital.
The 10-K describes partnerships with 'many of the world's largest institutional investors through co-investment ventures' that 'broaden our access to capital, and allow us to expand our investment capacity and enhance and diversify our returns, while mitigating our exposure to foreign currency movements.'
Total debt ratio of 46.1% with $35.0B long-term debt is within normal REIT leverage ranges. The company mitigates FX risk by 'borrowing in the functional currency of our subsidiaries and utilizing derivative financial instruments.' Interest rate sensitivity remains the primary balance sheet risk.
Capital allocation scores 75/100 — Prologis' develop-contribute-recycle model is an elegant capital allocation framework that creates value at each stage. The co-investment venture structure provides capital scale and fee income. The 46.1% debt ratio is manageable for a REIT but creates interest rate sensitivity.
Key Risks
With $35.0B long-term debt, Prologis is sensitive to interest rate changes affecting both refinancing costs and property valuations. Higher rates compress cap rates and increase debt service costs, potentially reducing property values and development returns.
The 10-K acknowledges 'economic uncertainty related to trade tensions and shifting policies' but notes 'proprietary metrics and customer dialogue indicate that customers are engaged and moving forward with real estate decisions.' Trade disruptions could actually increase demand for warehousing as companies buffer inventory.
New warehouse construction in high-barrier markets is limited by land availability, zoning restrictions, and rising construction costs. Prologis' focus on 'high-barrier, high-growth markets' provides natural supply constraint protection that commodity logistics properties in secondary markets lack.
Key risks score 40/100 (lower = less concern) — Prologis faces moderate risks from interest rates and trade policy uncertainty, but the structural demand drivers for logistics real estate and the focus on high-barrier markets provide resilience. The zero goodwill balance sheet and tangible asset base limit downside scenarios.
Management
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This analysis is for educational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.
