Top Mega-Markets the Last 10 Years

By Lee Burlett

We didn't begin ranking mega-markets in a separate category until 1999. That's when we agreed to align ourselves with the Southern Economic Development Council, the premier economic development practitioner society of the South (when site searching the South, insist on having an SEDC member assist you). By aligning ourselves with SEDC, we added three states to our coverage area so that all SEDC states would be in the loop of Southern Business & Development reporting. Those states that we added to our coverage in 1999 were Kansas, Maryland and Missouri. Today, SB&D covers 17 Southern states, or, as some of you have informed us, 14 Southern states and three "border" states.

Prior to adding those three states, the only markets with populations over 2 million that we reported on were Dallas/Fort Worth, Houston, Atlanta, Miami/Fort Lauderdale/Palm Beach and Tampa Bay. When we brought in Kansas, Maryland and Missouri, we added two more mega-markets (those over 2 million in population): St. Louis and Baltimore/D.C./Northern Virginia.

The final market mentioned is why we decided to add a mega-market category when ranking metros in our annual SB&D 100. Our reasoning was, it is unfair to compare deal numbers of a market with 7 million people, which is the size of Baltimore/D.C./Northern Virginia with, say, Birmingham, which is right at 1 million persons. Until we formed a mega-markets division, those markets competed with majors (750,000-1,999,999) in our annual ranking of market performance.

As you know, points are earned by markets in our annual SB&D 100 ranking. Ten points are earned for SB&D Job and Investment 100 deals and five points for "just missed deals." Since we only have three years of data on St. Louis and Baltimore/D.C./Northern Virginia, we will rank mega-markets on their point averages per year.

#1 Dallas/Fort Worth: Averaged 181.5 points per year over the last 10 years

The early and mid-1990s saw this market perform better than almost every Southern state in turning deals during that time. That's right. For three straight years 1994-1996, D/FW outperformed all Southern states in landing big corporate job deals other than its own. While that fire has turned to a flicker in comparison the last three or four years, the point total earned by the Metroplex in the mid-1990s is too strong not to name it the No. 1 mega-market in the South the last 10 years. It should be noted that based on points earned, D/FW won "major market of the year" every year between 1993 and 1997.

# 2 Tampa Bay: Averaged 101 points per year over the last 10 years

Tampa Bay began its surge in the late 1990s when it won its first "major market of the year" recognition. Today, it is the second-most-active big deal market in the South. In fact, Tampa Bay won mega-market of the year in 2002, beating out Baltimore/D.C./Northern Virginia and Miami/Fort Lauderdale. Tampa Bay

# 3 Baltimore/D.C./Northern Virginia: Averaged 94 points per year over last 10 years

As mentioned, point averages for the South's largest market are skewed considering Baltimore and D.C. were not part of our coverage area for seven of the 10 years this ranking is based on. But they aren't skewed much, if those seven years were anything like last year. In 2001, this mega-market put up 165 points, good enough for second place in the mega-market division. But of those 165 points, only 30 came from Baltimore and D.C. The other 135 points came from Northern Virginia.

# 4 Atlanta: Averaged 81.5 points per years over the last 10 years

Hot 'Lanta created about 100,000 new jobs in the 1990s. That's slowed since, but the leading market in the Southeast is still a major world market. The Atlanta/Hartsfield International Airport, the world's busiest, has had a tremendous effect on the growth of Atlanta.

# 5 Houston: Averaged 71 points per year the last 10 years

Houston's had it tough competing each year in the SB&D 100 against its neighbor to the north, D/FW. Houston has been cited just once in SB&D 100 history, winning major market of the year in 1998.

# 6 Miami/Fort Lauderdale/Palm Beach: Averaged 69.5 points per year the last 10 years.

Really not much of a player in turning big deals until this year's SB&D 100 when South Florida had its best year ever racking up 155 points. But as you can see, its average is less than half that.

# 7 St. Louis: Averaged 21.7 points per year the last three years.

We've only been able to find 65 points coming out of St. Louis the last three years, the only three years we've covered Missouri's largest market.