Alpine Income Property Trust, Inc.

Q3 2020 Earnings Conference Call

10/22/2020

spk00: Good morning and welcome to the Alpine Income Property Trust Third Quarter Earnings Conference Call. All participants will be in listen-only mode. Should you need assistance, please signal a conference specialist by pressing the star key followed by zero. After today's presentation, there will be an opportunity to ask questions. To ask a question, you may press star then one on your telephone keypad. To withdraw your question, please press star then two. Please note this event is being recorded. I would now like to turn the conference over to John Albright, President and CEO. Please go ahead.
spk04: Thank you, Operator. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us today for the Alpine Income Property Trust Third Quarter 2020 Operating Results Conference Call. I am pleased to have Matt Partridge, our new Chief Financial Officer, joining me this morning. Before we begin, I'll turn it over to Matt to provide the customary disclosures regarding today's call.
spk06: Matt? Thanks, John. I'd like to remind everyone that many of our comments today are considered forward-looking statements under federal securities law. The company's actual future results may differ significantly from the matters discussed in these forward-looking statements, and we undertake no duty to update these statements. Factors and risks that could cause actual results to differ materially from expectations are disclosed from time to time in greater detail in the company's Form 10-K, Form 10-Q, and other SEC filings. You can find our SEC reports and our earnings release, which contain reconciliations of non-GAAP financial measures we use, on our website at alpinerec.com. With that, I will now turn the call back over to John.
spk04: Thanks, Matt. It is an active third quarter for Alpine as we work to achieve a 100% contractual base rent collection rate for each of the three months within the quarter. With the Q2 negotiations largely behind us, we were able to refocus on actively growing the company in the third quarter by executing our targeted acquisition strategy of investing in income-producing properties, exhibiting strong real estate fundamentals leads to high-quality tenants. In the third quarter, we invested in 15 properties in five states for $23.9 million, an average weighted going-in cap rate of approximately 6.8%. Notably, 100% of the acquired annualized base rent is from Dollar General and Advanced Auto Parts, both investment-grade rated tenants, and the weighted average lease term of the third quarter investments was 13 years at the time of acquisition. In addition to our third quarter acquisition activity, we also sold our Outback Steakhouse in Charlottesville, Virginia, for a price of $5.1 million. This represented a 5.75 cap rate on in-place net operating income, which we believe when coupled with the going in cap rate of our acquisitions and their associated investment grade credit is highly accretive to our portfolio on a risk adjusted basis. Year to date, we've acquired 26 properties for approximately $99.3 million at a weighted average going in cap rate of 6.9%. We're particularly excited that our acquisitions this year were comprised primarily of new credits in high-performing sectors. Specifically, through the first nine months of 2020, we selectively invested in five new retail sectors and notably increased our concentration in grocery, convenience store, dollar store, and auto parts sectors, which all provide excellent incremental diversification. These investments have also provided an opportunity to partner with 10 new retail tenants, including sector-leading operators such as Walmart, 7-Eleven and Dollar General, the three of which make up approximately 18% of our annualized base rent, with Walmart and Dollar General now representing two of our top five tenants. Additionally, even though we've more than doubled the number of assets in our portfolio through the first three quarters of the year, We've been able to maintain outsized portfolio level of exposure to top-tier markets, as evidenced by nearly two-thirds of our annualized base rents coming from 10 of the ULI's top 30 markets for 2021. As of the end of the third quarter, our portfolio was 100% occupied and consisted of 45 income properties comprised of nearly 1.5 million square feet of rentable space located in 17 states, with all five of our top tenants serving as leaders in their respective industries. As we look forward into the fourth quarter and beyond, there remains considerable uncertainty regarding the underlying economy and its impact on the operational performance of our existing and prospective tenants. However, I'm very happy to say we have received 100% of the contractual base rents for October and in combination with our previously announced transaction activities and our evolving acquisition pipeline, We have increased our acquisition guidance to $110 million from $105 million, and we've increased the midpoint of our previously provided FFO and AFFO guidance. With that, I'll now turn over the call to Matt to discuss our financial results and balance sheet activities.
spk06: Thanks, John. As John referenced, the company experienced excellent rent collection results during the third quarter, collecting 100% of contractual base rents in each of the three months. Thanks to proactive portfolio management and the resulting strong rent collection trend, we reported total revenues of $5.1 million during the quarter. I'll remind everyone that the 100% collection rate represents rents that were contractually due in each respective month and include the effects of rent deferrals or abatements agreed to prior to the rent payment date. Comparatively, rent collected during the third quarter was, on average, approximately 5% less per month than what would have been due prior to entering into COVID-19-related amendments. We anticipate 100% repayment of deferred rent by the end of 2021. For the third quarter of 2020, funds from operations were $3 million, or 35 cents per share, and adjusted funds from operations were $2.9 million, or 34 cents per share. As announced during the second quarter, AFFO was previously impacted by $625,000 from the previously mentioned rent deferral agreements. As those rent deferrals are repaid in subsequent periods, we will experience a positive impact to our AFFO in the periods of repayment. For the third quarter of 2020, we received just over $86,000 of scheduled rent deferral repayments, which positively impacted our third quarter AFFO. General and administrative expenses in the third quarter, inclusive of the company's management fee, totaled $1.1 million, which was down 271 basis points as a percentage of revenue from the second quarter of 2020. We believe this trend will continue as we realize more economies of scale through the execution of our investment strategy. As previously announced, the company paid a $0.20 third quarter cash dividend on September 30th to stockholders of record on September 15th. This represented a quarterly payout ratio of 57% of FFO per share and 59% of AFFO per share. Part of our dividend policy, we believe in providing a reliable and consistent dividend to our shareholders. And in consideration of the strategy and the underlying growth of the company, our board of directors has approved and the company has declared a 22 cent dividend to be paid on December 31st, 2020 to stockholders of record to close a business on December 15th, 2020. This fourth quarter cash dividend represents a 10% increase over the company's previous quarterly dividend and an annualized yield of approximately 6.1%. Now turning to the balance sheet, total debt outstanding as of September 30th was $88.3 million, and total cash on hand was $1.9 million. That debt to total enterprise value at quarter end was approximately 39%, while our fixed charge coverage ratio for the quarter was approximately nine times. As we announced just a few days ago, we expanded our revolving credit facility from $100 million to $150 million through the addition of two new banking relationships. And with no debt maturities until 2023, of which there is a one-year extension option that could take that maturity to 2024, and the 50% increase to the revolving credit facility, we're in a very good liquidity position to drive earnings growth as we execute our growth strategy. With that, I'll now turn the call back over to John for a summary of the quarter and his closing remarks.
spk04: Thanks, Matt. In advance of the Q&A, I'd like to summarize some of the highlights, particularly since we've made some meaningful strides operationally in our growth as an organization. As previously noted, we have achieved 100% rent collection rate for the past four months, including this first month of the fourth quarter. We continue to build on the momentum in the transaction market, acquiring only investment-grade tenants during the third quarter, which is going to further strengthen our growing portfolio and create tangible and economies of scale. Consistent execution has allowed us to increase our full year guidance and increase the cash dividend for the fourth quarter by 10% quarter over quarter to a yield of approximately 6.1%. And with the expansion of our credit facility, we have ample liquidity to execute on our discipline investment strategy and drive outside per share earnings growth. In summary, I want to thank our shareholders for their continued support and congratulate our team on their successes within the quarter. At this time, we'll open it up for questions. Operator?
spk00: We will now begin the question and answer session. To ask a question, you may press star then one on your touchtone phone. If you are using a speakerphone, please pick up your handset before pressing the keys. To withdraw your question, please press star then two. At this time, we will pause momentarily to assemble our roster. And our first question comes from Barry Oxford of D.A. Davidson. Please go ahead.
spk01: Great. Thanks, guys. If you could give me and us on the phone a little more color on your acquisition pipeline, maybe as far as dollar amount of how much you've looked at and where you are as far as maybe getting close to letter of intent, to the extent that you can.
spk04: Sure. Thanks, Barry. Look, the acquisition pipeline is pretty strong. We're in some sort of negotiation for an amount that's more than our guidance, thinking that some may not fully come into negotiation or that something might happen within due diligence. So we're very comfortable with what we're seeing in front of us as far as high-quality credits in good locations.
spk01: Would you expect to be able to do roughly somewhat close in 2021 in acquisitions that you did in 2020, you know, considering that 2Q was a little light?
spk04: Of course that, you know, given that, you know, our track record and what we've been able to accomplish so far this year, we're highly confident that, you know, the success this year and obviously given the pandemic can be replicated or even more.
spk01: Right. Perfect. No, I appreciate that. Turning to the balance sheet, you know, you guys are, you know, in stellar position, you know, by any metrics here. But at what point would be the outside range of which you would want to lift debt to? And you can speak to it from any metric that you want, fixed income, debt to EBITDA, or debt to market cap, whatever kind of metric you want to look at.
spk04: Yeah, I'll let Matt kind of discuss that point.
spk01: Great, great. Thanks, Matt.
spk06: You know, I... I don't want to put a ceiling on it, but during the roadshow, the company told investors that they wanted to run a long-term average somewhere around six times net debt to EBITDA. You know, we're approaching that level, but obviously we may be comfortable going above and certainly operating below that. That's intended to be a longer-term average. So I think for us, it's going to depend on the opportunities in front of us.
spk01: Right. Great, great. Thanks, guys. That's all from me. Thank you. Thanks.
spk00: Our next question will come from Rob Stevenson of Janney. Please go ahead.
spk05: Good morning, guys. John, beyond the Outback, what is the level of assets in the portfolio today that you may want to sell over the next few years? And, you know, are some of those, you think, more attractive to 1031 buyers who might be even more motivated to – pay more in closed deals by year end to provide you with better pricing?
spk04: Yeah, I mean, thanks for the question. I mean, look, we intentionally, you know, took that property out to market because I think there's a disconnect between and, you know, there still is a disconnect on our stock price relative to implied cap rate and the asset base we have. So I think shareholders probably didn't appreciate that, you know, you look at casual dining and certainly We've been challenged during this pandemic, but we knew on the ground that, you know, there's still a very strong investor appetite for those type of assets. So we almost took that asset out to demonstrate the strength of the portfolio and the strength of the investor universe. And so that was highly accretive to sell a casual dining facility. you know, sector credit and basically be able to redeploy that into a higher credit, longer lease sort of investment. So in a roundabout way, we could certainly do a lot more of that if we wanted to. We don't have plans to at this point.
spk05: Okay. Then sort of feeding into that and, you know, piggybacking off of Barry's question. So the guidance implies about $10 million of acquisitions in the fourth quarter. You guys just increased the capacity on the line to give you additional room there. But when you think about the leverage levels that Matt was talking about, how are you thinking about financing the next 50 million of acquisitions, especially with the stock at 14 and change? Do you look at preferred? Do you target more asset sales? Can you give us a glimpse into the conversations you and the board are having regarding funding the company's growth over the next few quarters?
spk04: Yeah, certainly there's different opportunities, if you will, but we're certainly not going to lever this thing up or don't have plans to lever this thing up with the capacity we have. It's just nice to have the capacity. If we did seize a unique investment opportunity, we certainly could take it down and then do what we just did with the casual dining, sell some very low cap rate investments and keep working the portfolio if the stock was not performing. So there's different opportunities for us or different flexible options. But, you know, we don't have the intention of just, you know, doing all the leverage and just sitting back. So we'll look at, you know, kind of different opportunities as that time comes about.
spk05: Okay. Thanks, guys. Appreciate it.
spk04: Thank you.
spk00: Our next question comes from Craig Cucera of B. Riley Securities. Please go ahead.
spk02: Hey, good morning, guys. And, Matt, welcome aboard. Thanks, Craig. First off, I want to talk about the dollar generals you acquired this quarter. Can you tell us what was so compelling about going so significantly into that tenant here in the third quarter?
spk04: I mean, look, that credit is, you know, very strong credit, very successful operator. You know, that's a growing business done very well during the pandemic. And, you know, it turns into, you know, it's a very necessity-driven credit that we like a lot. So if we see more, you know, good opportunities with a good lease length, you We don't mind having more of that credit into the company. I wouldn't expect a whole lot more of them, but certainly a great company, and we're very excited to have it on board.
spk02: Okay, great. And can you give us some color on the leases with Dollar General that were executed this quarter? Is there any sort of guarantee or support at the corporate level?
spk04: Well, certainly it's a corporate credit, so we're getting it to the mothership. So we certainly wouldn't be buying it if we didn't get the full credit.
spk02: Okay, great. And, John, I feel like earlier in the pandemic, given the performance of the office assets versus retail, you had mentioned that you might even look to add to office because it had performed so well. But kind of what are your current thoughts today? Are you still thinking that way? Are you more tilted in your pipeline and thoughts towards retail?
spk04: Yeah, the pipeline's 100% retail at the moment. We do keep looking or open to office acquisitions if something really made sense. The high-quality single-tenant office that we've looked at are still being priced below our acquisition kind of guidance. So So we're still open to it, and it's got to be a special situation for us. But right now, the pipeline is retail.
spk02: Got it. I want to circle back to the dividend. I'm sure investors appreciated the 10% increase, which I think based on this quarter's AFFO was about a 65% payout of AFFO. How is the board thinking about payout ratios going forward? Was this sort of an initial step? in the direction of raising the dividend to maybe a higher level of recurring cash flow, or is 65% sort of how investors should think about the dividend going forward?
spk06: Yeah, Craig, it's Matt. In conversations with the board, I think the long-term target is somewhere between 75% and 85% of AFFO. Obviously, we have intentions to grow the portfolio, and so retaining cash flow for that is certainly top of mind, but The increase for Q4 was a step towards that longer-term payout ratio, and as we continue to grow, we'll continue to evaluate where the dividend is.
spk02: Okay, great. I want to circle up on Hilton Grand Vacations. I think last week they announced that they've been laying a healthy amount of people off. Have there been any discussions with them regarding downsizing space from you, or any color there would be great?
spk04: Yeah, thanks for the question. So Hilton Grand Vacations obviously has announced corporate layoffs at their properties, their timeshare properties. We feel like we're in very good position with regards to the two buildings that we have with them in that they have expanded outside of our buildings next door in more expensive office space and shorter lease duration. So we've already been, you know, we've had discussions and heard that, you know, the plan is that they'll consolidate some of those operations into our buildings. So out of their office space in Orlando, we're the cheapest cost to them and probably the most efficient. We're a single-story office buildings where they're the only tenant. And so if you think about this kind of COVID world, they don't have to get an elevator with other tenants and that sort of thing. And there are other spaces that they have in other buildings or multi-story buildings with other tenants. So this gives them the security and the efficiency of being in our building. So we're very confident kind of where we are with them. And also, you know, the rent that they're paying us is less than their other occupancies.
spk02: Got it. And just one more for me. You know, as we stand here in October, you've got about 2% of rent that's being abated or deferred. Can you give us any color on, you know, the categories that are still, you're still having a little bit of trouble getting rent worked out here and sort of your outlook in heading into 2021? Yeah, Craig. So,
spk06: We're collecting 100% of existing obligations, but obviously that's post-deferral agreements. The areas where we've received deferral agreements or entered into them is the entertainment space, specifically with the theaters in Alpine. With those deferrals, though, we've been able to enhance the length of the lease and also gotten some income participation rights as part of those agreements. we feel like at this point we're in a pretty good place, especially with all October rents being paid.
spk02: Okay. Thanks. I appreciate it.
spk06: Thanks.
spk00: Our next question comes from RJ Milligan of Raymond James. Please go ahead.
spk03: Hey, good morning. So, Matt, I just wanted to touch back on the 5% that sort of from pre-COVID levels That's either in deferrals or abatements. Just curious, as we look into 2021, what's the expectation to recover or how much do you expect to recover as we move into 2021 of that bucket?
spk06: Yeah, so the way the deferral agreements were laid out, there was some slight repayment in Q3, which I talked about on the prepared remarks of $86,000. It's generally in that same range for Q4, and then it really ramps up in Q1 and Q2 of 2021. And so we expect all of the deferrals to be repaid through the balance of 2021.
spk03: Okay, and what's the mix between deferral and abatement in that 500 basis point bucket?
spk06: Yeah, so the abatement piece is, depending on the month, it's between 2% and 1%. The abatement was only through the end of this year, and then that lease is through with the abatements, but otherwise everything else is deferrals.
spk03: Okay, that makes sense. And then, you know, obviously 100% of the rents billed and collected for third quarter. Just curious, John, if you have any thoughts on, you know, the longer-term risk of potential fallout. for those that have already paid rent but might be concerned in going forward or what categories might be concerning going forward?
spk04: Yeah, so, I mean, look, the ones that really watch, I think, is really the feeders. And we feel like we're in a good spot with them because, obviously, if, for instance, if AMC, which we obviously only own one as a small deal, But let's say AMC goes bankrupt. Obviously, they're going to go through a process and look at rejecting and accepting certain leases. We feel like we're in a good spot with them because we just had come out of the COVID negotiations with them, and they extended the lease, and we got part percentage rent and so forth in addition to our base rent. And so you look at AMC, and they're paying us a very cheap rent, and their operations pre-COVID were very strong, and it's in a market with very little competition. So we feel very strong that those type of properties are going to basically be accepted through bankruptcy if that happens. And so we feel like our exposure is not – not concerning versus, you know, if we had some sort of more urban theater, let's say, with high labor costs, very expensive rent, very expensive pass-throughs, I think that's where you're going to see some real pain. So we feel very comfortable with that. We'd stay on top of it. But, you know, that's kind of how we look at it right now.
spk03: Okay. Thanks, guys. That's all I have.
spk04: Thank you.
spk00: This concludes our question and answer session. I would like to turn the conference back over to John Albright for any closing remarks.
spk04: Thank you for joining the call and I look forward to talking to you throughout the quarter.
spk00: The conference is now concluded. Thank you for attending today's presentation and you may now
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