Vornado Realty Trust Q2 2022 Earnings Report $5.86 -0.19 (-3.06%) Closing price 04/11/2025 03:50 PM EasternExtended Trading$5.86 0.00 (0.00%) As of 04/11/2025 04:06 PM Eastern Extended trading is trading that happens on electronic markets outside of regular trading hours. This is a fair market value extended hours price provided by Polygon.io. Learn more. Earnings HistoryForecast Borealis Foods EPS ResultsActual EPS$0.19Consensus EPS $0.79Beat/MissMissed by -$0.60One Year Ago EPS$0.69Borealis Foods Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$453.49 millionExpected Revenue$430.43 millionBeat/MissBeat by +$23.06 millionYoY Revenue Growth+19.70%Borealis Foods Announcement DetailsQuarterQ2 2022Date8/1/2022TimeAfter Market ClosesConference Call DateTuesday, August 2, 2022Conference Call Time6:37AM ETUpcoming EarningsBorealis Foods' next earnings date is estimated for Monday, April 21, 2025, based on past reporting schedules. Conference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptSlide DeckQuarterly Report (10-Q)SEC FilingEarnings HistoryBRLS ProfileSlide DeckFull Screen Slide DeckPowered by Borealis Foods Q2 2022 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrAugust 2, 2022 ShareLink copied to clipboard.There are 13 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Good morning, and welcome to the Vornado Realty Trust Second Quarter 2022 Earnings Call. My name is Daryl, and I will be the operator for today's call. This call is being recorded for replay purposes. All lines are in a listen only mode. Our speakers will address your questions at the end of the presentation during the question and answer session. Operator00:00:24I will now turn the call over to Steve Orenstein, Senior Vice President and Corporation Counsel. Please go ahead. Speaker 100:00:32Welcome to Vornado Realty Trust Second Quarter Earnings Call. Yesterday afternoon, we issued our Q2 earnings release and filed our quarterly report on Form 10 Q with the Securities and Exchange Commission. These documents as well as our supplemental financial information packages are available on our website, www.vno.com, under the Investor Relations section. In these documents and during today's call, we will discuss certain non GAAP financial measures. Reconciliations of these measures to the most directly comparable GAAP measures are included in our earnings release, Form 10 Q and financial supplement. Speaker 100:01:08Please be aware that statements made during this call may be deemed forward looking statements, and actual results may differ materially from these statements due to a variety of risks, Please refer to our filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission, including our annual report on Form 10 ks for the year ended On the call today from management for our opening comments are Steven Roth, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer and Michael Franco, President and Chief Financial Officer. Our senior team is also present and available for questions. I will now turn the call over to Steven Roth. Speaker 200:01:56Thank you, Steve, and good morning, everyone. As Michael will cover in a moment, we had another very good quarter with comparable FFO up 20% from last year's Q2. Well, the first half of the year was right on our expectations, our business continued to perform well. We are now projecting the second half to be below what we had Given interest rates and the incremental non cash accounting charge from the PENN1 ground lease. Overall, this year is still expected to be up year over year. Speaker 200:02:26By the way, we reaffirm retail guidance of cash NOI of not less than $175,000,000 for the year. While headline inflation numbers remain very high, it seems like the Fed's efforts are beginning to have their desire to fit. There are signs of a slowdown all around, a rapidly slowing housing market, falling consumer confidence and companies announcing hiring pauses or even layoffs. The inverted yield curve signals market participants expect a recession, and the forward yield curve predicts that rates will come back down within a couple of years. While we are protected by long term leases with about 1500 tenants, we do expect and are prepared for choppy conditions. Speaker 200:03:12Pennsylvania Station is by far the most important piece of transportation infrastructure in our region. In a manner of speaking, I might say that every project in the last 100 years either started at Penn, ended at Penn or has gone through Penn. All of this of course makes the surrounding Penn District critically important And we have a large and unique holdings here. Last week, as many of you may have seen, the Empire State Development Corporation We should approve the general project plan for the Penn District. This is an important piece in Governor Hochul and Mayor Adams' plan Finally fixed Penn Station. Speaker 200:03:48The GPP is essentially a zoning overlay for transit oriented development to create a modern mixed use district That maximizes public benefits, including new station entrances, robust subway improvements and addresses overcrowding and accessibility, Public realm improvements and affordable housing. Out of the 10 sites involved in the GPP, we own 4 and part of a 5th. We have long invested in our properties around Penn Station and in the district, including $2,000,000,000 in Farley, PENN1 and PENN2. We've also led in multiple successful public private partnerships that have delivered meaningful transit and public realm improvements for New Yorkers, Including the Moynihan Trade Hall, which was another ESD led general project plan, 2 new station entrances at 33rd and 34th Street, And a new Long Island Railroad Concourse, which will deliver in the beginning of 2023. And the MTA is now advancing the design work for the reconstruction of the remainder of Penn Station. Speaker 200:04:52In addition to finalizing the GPP, this has been One of been a year of significant accomplishments for us in the Penn District. At Penn 1, we substantially completed the renovation, including the largest And best in class amenity package to overwhelming enthusiasm. Our total renovation and reimagining of our 2 block wide PENN2 is more than half complete. It's exciting for us and the real estate market generally to see the steel structure for the transformative bustle taking shape. PENN1 and PENN2 will be the centerpiece of our current Penn District development. Speaker 200:05:27As Michael will tell you, we are spot on Our leasing underwriting, this 4,400,000 square foot interconnected campus will be completed and income producing in the short term. And by that, I mean, as much as an additional incremental $300,000,000 of NOI through stabilization. Kudos to Michael and Jan and their team for completing $3,200,000,000 of refinancings, which Michael will tell you about shortly. I end with a plug for our new Fasano restaurant at 280 Park Avenue on 49th Street. We imported Fasano from Brazil, and they certainly are living up to their notices as being one of the best new restaurants in town. Speaker 200:06:08Call me if you can't get a reservation. Now to Michael. Speaker 300:06:12Thank you, Steve, and good morning, everyone. As Steve mentioned, we had another strong quarter. 2nd quarter comparable FFO as adjusted was $0.83 per share, Compared to $0.69 for last year's Q2, an increase of $0.14 or 20%. This increase Speaker 400:06:30This was driven primarily Speaker 200:06:31by rent commencement Speaker 300:06:31on new office and retail leases and the continued recovery of our variable businesses, partially offset by the straight line impact of the estimated We have provided a quarter over quarter bridge in our earnings release on Page 3 and our financial supplement on Page 6. On our last earnings call, we said that we expected our comparable FFO per share growth for 2022 to be in the mid to high single digits. It bears repeating that this expected growth, which is driven by strength in our core operating business, primarily from previously signed leases In both office and retail, including meta platforms at Farley, and the continued recovery of our variable businesses factored in the impact of rising rates on high variable However, the pace and magnitude of Fed hikes have been greater than we anticipated. The faster than expected rise in rates will affect 2022 earnings and result in lower FFO growth than we were anticipating. Further, the additional interest expense from rising rates We'll have a greater impact next year as the higher rates impact our variable rate debt costs for a full year. Speaker 300:07:39With respect to our variable businesses, We continue to see a strong recovery in the Q2 and the EBITDA in total is currently around 90% of pre COVID levels now, excluding the closed four development Hotel Penn site. Our signage business, which is the largest in the city with dominant signs in the best location in Times Square We're in the Penn District, had another very strong quarter and forward bookings remain strong. Our trade show business at the mart is continuing to rebound nicely, including our hosting of the commercial furniture design industries, Neocon, which is typically our largest trade show. No trade shows took place during last year's Q2 due to the pandemic. Our BMS business continues to perform near pre pandemic levels and finally our garages are continuing to be on track to fully recover this We still expect to recover most of the income from our variable businesses this year with the full return in 2023. Speaker 300:08:37Company wide same store cash NOI for the Q2 increased by a healthy 8.4% over the prior year Q2. Our overall office business was up 5.4% compared to the prior year's Q2, while our New York office business was up 3.9%. Our retail same store cash NOI was up a very strong 24.8%, primarily due to the rent commencement on important new leases, Several analysts have reported that our New York occupancy is 90.8%, but that's not really the story. That's a blend of office and retail. Our New York office occupancy ended the quarter at 92.1%, which is flat against the Q1 of 2022, But still up 100 basis points from the trough in the Q2 of 2021 and the highest of our industry peers in New York. Speaker 300:09:36Our New York retail occupancy decreased to 76.3% since last quarter due entirely to the retail space at Farley New York, total employment has reached its highest level since March 2020 and office using jobs are near 1,500,000, which is only 6,500 jobs below its February 2020 peak. Tech Sector Leasing has slowed, but the financial sector has picked up the slack, Now accounting for almost half of market wide activity with some large expansion transactions in the works. Leasing velocity and higher quality buildings continues to dominate landscape with many large scale tenants relocating to the most differentiated well located office buildings in both ground up new builds and best in class redevelopments across the city. Overall tenant demand and rental pricing in the top end of the market remains strong, while older commodity product is experiencing higher vacancy rates Unless tenant demand and sublease space availability continues to increase. Our office leasing results since the onset of the pandemic reflect resiliency of our best in class portfolio and how it's benefiting from these trends. Speaker 300:10:50Our team's strong deal making skills have resulted in more than 5,000,000 feet of office leases signed Since the Q1 of 2020, at average rents of $84 per square foot and an average lease term of 12.4 years. During the Q2, we completed 21 transactions comprising a total of 301,000 square feet leased. We continue to outperform the market. Our consistently healthy quarter to quarter leasing metrics reflect the high quality of our portfolio and the immediate impact of our redevelopment program at PENN1. This foreshadows the success we're going to have at PENN2 also. Speaker 300:11:25Our portfolio wide average starting rent this quarter was strong at $85 per Square Foot, including $97 per square foot for 75,000 square feet of deals at our highly amenitized PENN1, which exceeds our underwriting and further validates our program to significantly increase rents in our redeveloped Penn assets. Other transaction highlights this quarter include a 45,000 square foot headquarters expansion relocation lease with a private equity farm at 650 Madison, A new 60,000 square foot transaction with a non profit at 825 7th Avenue and 61,000 square feet of various deals at 150 East 58th Street. Importantly, the average lease term of this quarter's activity was 11.5 years, while our mark to market on these deals was positive 5 point 1% GAAP and 1.7 percent Cash. Overall, our pipeline remains active with more than 700,000 square feet of deals and lease negotiation And an additional 700,000 square feet in lease proposal stages. Now turning to Chicago, where the market is lagging behind New York's recovery. Speaker 300:12:34At the Mark, while our office leasing pipeline is active with more than 800,000 square feet in discussion, Conversions are taking longer and concessions remain elevated. We recently commenced our capital program to add world class fitness, conferencing and other amenities, which will be completed by summer 2023 and is already having a positive impact on our leasing efforts. During the quarter, we leased 59,000 square feet, Majority of which were leasing renewals and expansions within our showroom industries at an average starting around $56 per square foot. In San Francisco, while the market overall is experiencing record level vacancy rates and low return to work numbers, Our 555 California Street campus remains full other than our vacant 78,000 square foot building at 345 Montgomery Street. We are currently in renewal expansion dialogue with more than 200,000 square feet of existing tenants within the Trophy 555 Tower. Speaker 300:13:32And we continue to see market leading triple digit rents at 5.55 with very healthy mark to markets. Retail leasing results were fairly modest for the quarter with the highlight being a new long term deal with Chase For 7,500 Square Feet at PENN2 at a significant positive mark to market. This deal set a new high watermark for retail rents in the Penn District along Seventh Retail leasing activity in the city continues to be concentrated in the highest footfall locations. This is proving true for our newly renovated retail spaces in the Long Island Railroad Concourse, typically Penn Station's busiest thoroughfare. We have leases out For Signature, almost half of the 30 spaces fronting the concourse and our rents exceeding the previous high watermark for retail rents in Penn Station. Speaker 300:14:20These commitments demonstrate retailers' belief in public transportation and specifically in Penn Station. More broadly, the city is bustling With New York City tourism projected to reach 56,000,000 visitors in 2022 and to return to pre pandemic levels in 2023. However, this positive momentum is being offset by retailer concerns about inflation and recession and many retailers are becoming more conscious about making commitments. Turning to the capital markets now. Overall, the increased market volatility and spike in interest rates is impacting the capital markets With the volume of both asset sales and debt financings down significantly from last year. Speaker 300:15:00The CMBS and balance sheet markets are being much more selective, which accrues to the benefit of stronger sponsors and high quality properties. As such, spreads have generally widened out with lower leverage available. As previously announced in June, we completed $3,200,000,000 in refinancings, which consisted of extending one of our $21,250,000,000 unsecured revolving credit facilities and our $800,000,000 unsecured loan to December 2027, as well as refinancing 770 Broadway and 100 West 33rd Street. We're quite pleased with these executions as they were completed at attractive spreads, A reflection of lenders' heightened focus on sponsorship and quality properties. We had anticipated the financing markets becoming more challenging and with all but 77,000,000 they would refinance these loans And while the forward curve is historically over predicted rates, we fixed 770 Broadway, improving our fixed to floating ratio to 6040, which is more in line with our historical operations. Speaker 300:16:00Importantly, with these refinancings, we have dealt with all of our significant maturities through mid-twenty 24. We also announced the completion of the sale of our Lyon City office building for $173,000,000 during the quarter, Continuing our efforts to monetize non core assets. Despite the challenging market, we are hard at work on our other non core asset sales as well. Finally, our current liquidity is a strong $3,500,000,000 including $1,600,000,000 of cash, restricted cash and investments in U. S. Speaker 300:16:29Treasury bills And $1,900,000,000 undrawn under our $2,500,000,000 revolving credit facilities. With that, I'll turn it Over to the operator for Q and A. Operator00:16:42Thank you. We will now begin the question and answer session. Question and a follow-up question before we move on to the next caller. And I'm standing by for questions. And our first question It comes from Jamie Feldman. Operator00:17:25Go ahead, Jamie. Speaker 500:17:27Thank you, and good morning. Maybe just starting with You're changing your outlook for earnings for this year and next year. Can you just talk more about the magnitude of the drag from higher rates, Both on 2022 and 2023 and just as we're thinking about how to model it, but where maybe where your assumption was and where it is now? Speaker 300:17:49Good morning, Jamie. It's Michael. Look, it's if you look at where we said last time, we were mid Yes, the high single digits early in the year double digits, now it's still projecting to be up. And so if you just take what we've done in the first two Orders and you model out the rest of the year. You're looking at roughly 100 basis points impact on LIBOR from where we thought it would be. Speaker 300:18:17And with floating rate debt of around 4,250,000,000 You're looking at about $0.20 a share impact from where we thought it could be. Obviously, Rates change every day. We've already seen the forward curve come down. What I've told you on 2023 Speaker 600:18:37would have Speaker 300:18:37been higher 2 weeks ago than I would tell you today. We can't predict. Obviously, that reflects really 2 quarters of impact On our variable rate debt versus where we expected next year, we'll have a full year impact on that. And Could it be another 100 basis points overall? Potentially, again, I don't want to sit here today and give you a number It's driven by what the curve will be. Speaker 300:19:05The relative to the original expectations, it's probably in the ballpark. Speaker 200:19:10Jamie, a little bit more On the floating rate debt, first of all, we did very well fix a little bit more of it to reduce the $4,200,000,000 We may pay some of it down. 2nd, over the last 10 or 12 years, we have benefited enormously From the low interest rates and floating rate debt, every time we fixed or Took a fixed rate loan during that 12 year period, we were wrong, wrong and wrong. So that's all very interesting, but it doesn't matter going The next thing is that many of our assets are in transition. Some of our assets are on the for sale list And floating rate debt of course facilitates that because getting out of fixed rate debt when you have a transitional A digital asset involves the seasons, which in many cases can be extremely expensive. Some of the floating rate debt and fixing activities we got perfectly right, for example, 555 California. Speaker 200:20:23We executed, it was about a year and a half ago, Michael. Speaker 300:20:26Yes. Speaker 200:20:27About a year and a half ago, a very attractive loan At a very attractive spread on a floating rate basis and we fixed our share of it. So that was very good. A very good outcome and a real asset. When we did the 1290 refinancing, which was a similar team. I guess I'll take the blame for it. Speaker 200:20:54We didn't fix it. And that was in retrospect was a mistake. The next thing about floating rate debt to think about is that there is really no protection Against interest rate increases. And by that I mean when rates go up, you get the fairly small benefit of the Protection of a fixed rate piece of debt for as long as it lasts. On expiry, Which is 3, 4, 5 years or whatever it is, you have to go to whatever the market rate is. Speaker 200:21:28And cap rates, of course, reflect the current interest rate environment. So there you have it. We will give some of it back in this year and next We expect rates to come down perhaps quite substantially depending upon what the depth of the business slowdown is. And but there you have it. Operator00:21:56And our next question comes from Michael Bilerman. Speaker 700:22:08Welcome. Thank you. So Steve, you talked a little bit about sort of choppy conditions, given everything that's going on in the marketplace. And how does that sort of forward outlook change your sort of strategic direction? Obviously, you still have the tracker that you've been thinking about, asset sales. Speaker 700:22:31There's so many things going on. Is it affecting Sort of the path forward for Vornado and I recognize you're not happy with where the stock price is today and if it was stupid, stupid cheap, it's now Stupid, stupid, how many stupids you want to put, but how are you going to go about getting to the other side of this? Speaker 200:22:59Good morning. First of all, We've been through this, I don't know, 5 or 6 times, 5 or 6 business cycles over the last 40 years or so. So there is always an end. And our job is to rigorously focus On the important things, for example, protecting our balance sheet, preserving our liquidity, And preserving the safety and sanctity of our balance sheet. Number 2, we have certain missions that we have to do, Which is, for example, keep the buildings leased to the extent that the market submits us to do that. Speaker 200:23:42Specifically with respect to our fairly grand plans in the Penn District for PENN1 and PENN2. And so all We will have a spectacular outcome based upon the increased value of those buildings and the surrounding Penn District. And those basically are New York centric. We continue to have an open to buy In terms of acquisitions, if something comes around that we think hits our skill set and hits our price aspiration. So basically, it's business as usual with a more rigorous focus On the important things and the balance sheet, we have in the beginning of COVID, we cut our G and A And began to get very, very tough on expenditures. Speaker 200:24:41We reduced Nonessential capital expenditures, etcetera. So those are the kinds of things that one has to do going into Business slowdown, and I've said a couple of times, I think it looks to me like we're on the foothills of a recession. We are in a don't bet against the Fed mode, which I think probably everybody is. As I said, we're in the foothills of business correction, and we are hopeful that the Fed will be disciplined, will They're foot to the panel and will accomplish their objectives as quickly as possible. Speaker 700:25:28So does that alter at all sort of the progression of whether it's asset sales or thinking differently about Doing a tracking stock at for the Penn District, like where is your mindset today knowing of where we're headed And trying to you had this Alexander's activist, and obviously, there's that's out there. But I don't get the sense that you're happy Sort of with where the stock market is valuing Vornado. And so I'm just trying to better understand, you've spent the last decade Simplifying and doing so many value creating activities, and even continued this year, I'm just trying to understand What potentially could change into the future, given the environment that we're in? Speaker 200:26:21Let me unpack that a couple of First of all, I still continue to believe that separating the Penn District into a separately tradable Security, whether it be a tracker or some other technique, is absolutely The right strategy for our shareholders. We expect the Penn District to be a grower and we think that our shareholders should have the ability to And that as an isolated pure play investment. So that's one. The timing of that is still up in the air. It's a totally I mean, we're on both sides of that deal, so to speak. Speaker 200:27:00We have no counterparty. We can time it whenever we want to. And we will, subject to lots of different things that could occur in between, I continue to believe in that strategy. Secondly, we have a whole group of Non core assets that we are in the process of selling, where we think we can get pricing, which is not as good as it would have been A year or 2 ago, but good enough to execute. And that's somewhere between, I don't know, dollars 500,000,000,000 to $750,000,000 something We already executed on 1 on the Long Island City asset. Speaker 200:27:45There are other buildings in our portfolio That we would be very happy to sell, although we're more price sensitive to those buildings because Once you get out of the non core basket, the buildings are more important than better quality. Nonetheless, if we can, We get incomings all the time. And if we can execute at a price that we think is reasonable, which We'll create value for our shareholders and improve our balance sheet. We will do so. I think the last part of your statement was with respect to the activist Investor at Alexander's, which I was going to hold that question I was going to hold my answer to that to Alex. Speaker 200:28:32And I think I'll continue to hold for Alex. Operator00:28:38And our next question comes from Steve Sakwa. Go ahead, Steve. Speaker 800:28:44Thanks. Good morning. Steve, I was wondering if you could Spend a little more time on the new Penn Station proposal, the 10 sites, the 4 that are owned by you and maybe just give us a little flavor For sort of how you see those evolving over time and how much of that would be office versus residential? Speaker 200:29:08I've said multiple times over recent years that Penn District was our what do I say? Our Big Kahuna was ground was a bull's eye, etcetera. We have been a Q1ning property in the Penn District for 20 years now. We believe that Penn Station is the most important piece of transportation infrastructure in the region. We believe that the entire district has been benefited By the adjacencies of Hudson Yards and Manhattan West, where there were very successful and very large Projects which really actually sort of put us on the map. Speaker 200:30:00So we're very appreciative of the efforts of Our neighbors. There is an enormous amount of demand for the district. We get incomings all the time. And so basically the GPP is a zoning matter. It's an overlay of the existing city zoning where the state has basically become the dominant party And there are multiple things involved in it. Speaker 200:30:34One is that we will have the option to Increase the square footage that is allocable for each site by buying SARs at fair market value. So we can build you might say we can build larger buildings, okay? So I think in round numbers there's 5,000,000 is that right Barry, 5,000,000 square feet of additional FARS that can be allocated in the district, Which we obviously intend to avail ourselves over. But remember, we're paying fair market value for those FARs. The second thing is that the state and the EDC of the state becomes the Basically our overseer and our regulator with respect to zoning, etcetera. Speaker 200:31:23The third is that The revenues that come off the new bills is allocated first to the city to what the taxes That were payable to the city had been historically. And then basically into a pot that is basically subject to an agreement between the city Where most of that will be allocated towards the reconstruction Of the actual Penn Station, okay. Some of it, a relatively small amount On the scale of what Hudson Yards tax incentive was, we'll be allocated to developer To incentivize and allow the construction to go forward on an economic basis. And what have I forgot, Barry, anything? Speaker 900:32:18About 600 units of the floor. Speaker 200:32:20The zoning Requires about 600 units of apartment. The intention has been For a long time that this will be principally office development, okay? How the mix of will might or might not change, we will determine over time. Now remember, this is a long term product involving a huge and irreplaceable piece of location. But the first part of it is the existing buildings that are there, PENN1, PENN2 at Farley, which we are Ankle deep in or up to our eyeballs in redeveloping. Speaker 200:33:11And as I have said before, we are right on our underwriting. We expect this to be relatively short term, meaning between now and 3, 4, 5 years from now for stabilization and we expect those buildings to generate an incremental $300,000,000 of new additional NOI. Speaker 800:33:32Great. Well, that leads into my follow-up because on that $300,000,000 Steve, I know you've laid out return hurdles and the dollars spent in the supplemental. I guess where we and I think others are maybe Struggling or trying to understand is how much of that income, say in a PENN1 is already flowing into the income statement as you're marking to market some of these leases. And so We want to give you credit, but we want to make sure we're not double counting or overstating. So is there a way you can sort of help us Think about what's contributing from Farley, from One Penn today and then when would 2 Penn start to actually contribute? Speaker 200:34:12I'm going to let my finance team take care of that offline, because whenever I say they're going equivalent and sloppy. Nonetheless, the numbers are approximately like this, maybe $70,000,000 for Farley, which has just begun to come online And we'll come online over the next year or so. PENN1 is 90% occupied, something like that. I don't know the exact number. But at an average rent in the 50s, Hi, Shiftees. Speaker 200:34:47We expect the market rent for that building to be $100 a foot. We have And as Michael said, we signed 71 is it 71,000? Speaker 300:34:5575,000. 75,000. Speaker 200:34:5675,000. Steve, they're slapping me 75,000 square feet of leases, 4 or 5, a handful of leases in PENN1 This quarter at $97 a foot average, which we think justifies and validates our underwriting. We expect the same for PENN2. So what I'm saying is over time as leases turnover, PENN1 will go from Say, pick a number, dollars 60 a foot to $100 a foot, that's $40 a foot times 2,500,000 feet, that's 100,000,000 Okay. That's new fresh coming in as the lease is turnover, but will you pick the period of time. Speaker 200:35:38In PENN2, The building basically has one tenant for 400 odd,000 square feet, which means it has a 1,400,000 seats, which is non income producing today and that will be will come over time And the building will be completed less than 2 years. So with lease up and stabilization and what have you, so the 2 years will turn out to be 4, maybe even 5 years. That's okay with me. So that 1,400,000 feet of now vacant space will produce We think $100 a foot. So there's your math. Speaker 200:36:19You can I hope that will help you to model That's the way I do the math? And as I said, my finance team, which is very, very, very Expert at conversion with us will give you more detail, if you like. Operator00:36:38And our next question comes from Alexander Gold. Speaker 200:36:42I want to go back to Steve Sackler for a minute. Okay, hold on a second. I don't know any other company that has a public company that has a development of this magnitude And this unique prospects out there, okay. And so obviously, I think the stock doesn't reflect I think the stock is selling for way less than what we have now. It doesn't begin to reflect the opportunities we have here. Speaker 200:37:12I'm sorry, go ahead. Operator00:37:15Okay. Our next question comes from Alexander Goldfarb. Go ahead, Alexander. Speaker 400:37:23Good morning, Steve, and thank you for holding off on the Alexander's question. I think we get 2 questions. Is that correct? Speaker 300:37:33Yes. Speaker 400:37:34Great. Okay. Speaker 200:37:36I'm here to serve you. Speaker 400:37:42And I'm just I'm here to serve my wife and kids, So we all serve someone, don't we? Speaker 200:37:50Let's get back to business. Speaker 400:37:51Okay. So the two questions. Our first, going off from Steve's Question on Penn District. So one, it sounds like you guys will only have a few of the buildings Like 4 or 5, not all 10 that are outlined. But second, and I guess more importantly, you guys entered New York with Mendic. Speaker 400:38:11You've been talking about Penn for 25 years. Hard to believe that in the next 5 or even 10 years that you'll get 4 or 5 buildings up online, not because of you, but just how long it takes to build office to stabilize and lease. So as far as the question of earnings, because you guys are earnings, you're paying dividends, you spoke of more asset sales, there's rising rates, We're still waiting for the existing stuff that you've already put under construction to deliver. How is this I understand in a private vehicle where timelines are much longer, but in a public vehicle where investors expect earnings growth And that's something that a lot of us have been waiting for from you guys. How are we to think about this investment versus other things that are more near term tangible because all this stuff seems to be out multiple years, nothing in the near term. Speaker 200:39:12I do real estate. I don't do stock market. You do stock market. I can only tell you that As I model the business and the prospects of the business and the future bad news that we are creating, By the way, I too work for my kids. I believe that the inherent values and the IRRs Even out over a period of time are extraordinary and unique, okay? Speaker 200:39:41So if Investors want to be short minded. That's each investor can make their own decision. I would remind you and you know full well that the Stock market is an all knowing being and the stock market chooses to give companies with no sales and no earnings Multiple 1,000,000,000 and 1,000,000,000 of value because the stock market is saying that the values to be created in future will be We'll justify the investment. I can only tell you that if you're focused on time and you're impatient, I'm focused on time and I'm focused on what the IRRs will be over time as we deliver these buildings. It takes almost no imagination to begin to model what 1penn, 2penn Farley can be worth And put a risk adjustment on that, which is very high certainty. Speaker 200:40:41And once you do that, I think that speaks for itself. Speaker 400:40:47Okay. And then the second question just goes to Alexander's. On Alexander's, Your thoughts around the dividend given it's uncovered and doesn't look to be covered for the next as far as we forecast the next few years. And 2, As Michael said, you do have an activist, although it seems pretty tough given that 2 thirds of the company is basically either interstate or Vornado. So maybe just some thoughts around, is Avino Alexander's tie up something in the offing and your thoughts around the Alexander's dividend? Speaker 200:41:22Let's spend a minute on the activist. So the activist is a small company that has a I think they said in their letter, they have large, very significant shareholders. The way we see it, they have about 10,000 shares, which I wouldn't call very significant. There are some other names on the shareholder list that could be affiliated with them or what have you, but your point is that it's Pretty either courageous or whatever to target a company That has 2 entities that are closely aligned that control that own 2 thirds of the business. So take that for what you will. Speaker 200:42:05We got an incoming and very simply and very quickly we treated it with the highest of respect Notwithstanding the shareholdings of ROTH, I mean, if the letter came from shareholders, I have one share, we would still act in the same way. We invited the folks into it. I think they notified us. We got a letter from them in April. I think we invited them in to present to the full Board of Alexander's at The next meeting, which was in May, they presented, we exchanged views. Speaker 200:42:47We then the Alexander's Board then Very carefully and very seriously deliberated about the pros and cons of their suggestions. We sent them a response letter. We did not step on them. We listened to them very carefully and we treated them with the highest of respect. We sent them a letter basically Saying that the Alexander's Board preferred the status quo. Speaker 200:43:14What they had suggested was that we Internalized management as opposed to externally managed by Verdotio, which would cause a which would raise the expenses of Alexander's by a Huge amount, very significant amount, which we had which we debated over the years, they Suggested that we take the cash, Alexander sits on about $540,000,000 Gary. Alexander's has $540,000,000 which is a big number for a small company, which has 5,000,000 shares. They suggested that we leverage the company up more, pay a special dividend now, basically Traditional activist techniques to recap the company to with an objective of choosing the stock. Basically, because of uncertain times, because of projects that are I have the potential because of lease expiries that are uncertain, all many different reasons, the Alexander's Board Chose to be more conservative and to not pursue that idea. There was one other thing, and I think that was that Alexander's go into the PR, IR business. Speaker 200:44:40I believe in the stock market. I think the stock market knows everything that's going on without having to have a pitchman tell of what's going on. Apparently, they were hang on, let me just finish. Apparently, they were unsatisfied and they made their point of view public, Which is fine. So basically, I'm going to say that this Last minute or 2 or 3, but my remarks will be my formal response to Bayer going public. Speaker 200:45:17I speak now sort of half and half. This is a Vornado call, And I speak on behalf of Vornado and Alexander's. Vornado owns a third of Alexander's Speaker 300:45:34And Speaker 200:45:38externally manages Alexander's, The management teams are overlapping, and so the investment is a very significant investment for Renato. Let me just give you a little bit of math because I was curious, so I looked it up recently. Wernavo's total investment in Alexander's is $73,000,000 which was made about 20 years ago, which is $44 a share. Over time So $73,000,000 was the investment. Over time, Vornado has received $520,000,000 Dividends from Alexander's. Speaker 200:46:21Renato is receiving on an annual basis $18 a share, Which constitutes a 41% return on the purchase price of the Alexander's shares. So, I think it's my friend, Bruce Flatt, who talks about compounding. This is the very definition of compounding. Now you talk about the dividend. So I don't know where you get your math, but Alexander's has the option of doing multiple things, which would cover the dividend or what have you. Speaker 200:46:59So the dividend Is, I guess what you're saying is the dividend may not be covered. I don't know There are some retail vacancies, which is part of the As a result of market conditions, which have caused Alexander's income to decline, now that's not a permanent thing. Tenants come and tenants go. Cycles come and cycles go. And I don't think that The Alexander's Board is very interested in Raising, lowering the dividend as tenants come and go out, trying to get some kind of regularity and smoothness to it. Speaker 200:47:44And the second thing is, Alexander's has, I think, dollars 600,000,000 $700,000,000 of floating rate debt, which is obviously So if you think about it, we sort of arbitraged on that floating rate debt because we have $540,000,000 of Cash. To the extent that we put that $540,000,000 of cash to work earning interest, I think you will find that the dividend is Perfect. And that's I think all that I have to say about this. I just want to reiterate to my friends at Lionbridge, that these remarks will constitute my formal response to their most recent letter. Thanks, Alex. Speaker 400:48:29Thank you, Steve. Thank you, Steve. Operator00:48:32And our next question comes from John Kim. Go ahead, John. Speaker 900:48:38Good morning. Michael, you talked about the impact of interest rates on your outlook of FFO for the rest of the year. But I was wondering if your second quarter NOI Of $289,000,000 GAAP, dollars 2.85 cash, is a good run rate for the remainder of 2022. Speaker 300:49:05Yes, the answer is generally yes. I don't want to give you specificity. I mean like the first half was very strong with some things that In the second half, you see a strong growth in the second half, but I think the answer is generally yes. Speaker 400:49:24Okay. Yes, I just wanted Speaker 900:49:25to clarify there was nothing one time in nature on your variable income. You do have a fair amount of expirations at the March, but the rest of your portfolio It's pretty minimal. Yes. I thought Speaker 500:49:35I'd say, Speaker 1000:49:36I thought I'd Speaker 200:49:37say, yes. Yes. Speaker 300:49:38I thought I'd say, generally, yes. I think as we said in the prepared remarks, the core business is performing well. NOI growth was very good. We expect that there continue to be growth, but when you flow down the FFO with the impact of rising rates, that's where you see That growth being moderated. Speaker 900:50:03Okay. And my second question is on your 2023 expirations. You have a fair amount in office, 11%, retail is 9%. Can you provide any commentary or color on what Percentage you know today are known to vacate versus leases that you have a high confidence in renewing or backfill immediately? Speaker 300:50:28Don, do you want to take office? Sure. Speaker 1100:50:29As it relates to office, John, this is Glenn. In 'twenty three, we have about 1,300,000 feet Expiring of that is 300,000 feet of Penn 1, which as Steve alluded to, as that rolls, we look forward to that lease up program to get The new rents, as it relates to the remaining 1,000,000 feet, we're all over it. We're in paper on a lot of it. We probably expect the fifty-fifty Where the people staying versus leaving, but we're in paper for much of it now in terms of the people who are going to stay or at least the space, which is expiring. Speaker 800:51:09Our 2024 explorations where we are laser focused on And we believe that the rise in tourism to New York City, which is growing rapidly and could reach pre pandemic levels by next year, We timed very well for our exploration and we know that our tenants have a desire to say it will be a matter of what the rents are. Speaker 300:51:31John, in 2023, I'm looking down the retail list. I think we feel pretty good about most of those. But obviously, we announced, I think, I don't know, maybe 3 calls ago that Swatch exercised their termination option at St. Regis. We own about half of that building. Speaker 300:51:48So that's a known move out in 2023. We got a meaningful termination payment along the way when they But that from a 2023 expiry, that's a notable one. The others were in active discussion and we'll see what happens. Speaker 900:52:07And what would be the mark to market on that watch space? Speaker 300:52:11Too early to tell you. Speaker 700:52:15Got it. Speaker 900:52:15Okay. Thank you very much. Operator00:52:17And our next question comes from Ronald Kamden. Go ahead, Ronald. Speaker 1200:52:23Hey, just following up on some of the breadcrumbs for 2023. I think we touched on the interest expense already. But maybe going back to the Penn District, I'm asking the question a different way. Given that's such a big part of the modeling into next year, any sense how we should think about The year over year change in contribution potentially in 2023 versus 2022, Clearly, the $300,000,000 makes sense long term, but just trying to think about the 23 versus 22 difference, That makes sense. Speaker 200:53:02Say that last piece again, Ronald. Speaker 1200:53:05So for the Penn District, the contribution in the delta between 2023 versus 2022 Contribution to SANY, if that makes sense. Speaker 300:53:17Yes. I don't have the numbers at my Fingertips, we can get that to you offline. In 2023 though when you think about it, PENN2 is not going to be contributing yet. PENN1, as we roll over those leases, you'll see contribution there. Although again, That's going to take time to phase in. Speaker 300:53:39So PENN1, every year, right, we're going to roll that space over. We've done an average of 5 years. And Glenn and his team are just going to knock that out quarter by quarter and so you'll see that flow in. PENN2, you're not going to see flow in for a period of time. And then Farley, You're going to start to see that flow in more substantially as the retail comes online. Speaker 300:54:01We'll give you some quantification offline and if I long lines of what Steve asked as well. But there's going to be an improvement in 2023, Again, not significant because of PENN2 really is not going to start contributing until 2024 probably, But realistically, even a year or 2 beyond that. And the others year by year is Lisa's role. Speaker 200:54:28Remember, in Penn, we had the Penn 1 ground lease repricing appraisal process. And so we predicted an accounting number In accordance with the accounting convention, I think it was last quarter of 20 $6,000,000 for the new rent. I get asked about that all the time. The process has not begun, Although it will begin probably in the fall, I think we are in the process of preparing. We think the other side is doing the same. Speaker 200:55:14There's going to be multiple experts involved that It's a fairly significant kind of process. Interestingly, A little bit about it. Interestingly, these are old fashioned ground leases with old fashioned kinds of terms. Most of the old ground leases call for an appraisal process, which is based upon the highest and best use for the land as it's vacant and unimproved. With a willing buyer and a willing seller in a normalized market, no distress, No economic issues. Speaker 200:56:03This particular lease, we believe is oriented towards a real estate broker Kind of a situation, which would require that The renewal price will be based upon what the land could actually be sold at a particular point in time, which we believe is significantly different than the smoothed out appraisal traditional appraisal process. What's more, this is a date certain. And We are now in a situation in the macro economy where rates are rising significantly, debt markets are In turmoil and one of the interesting things is most capital markets, real estate capital markets Players admit that the debt markets are not conducive to Buying and selling assets because they're just not there. And if they are there, they're at much lower amounts and at much higher interest rates. In addition, construction costs are going up aggressively. Speaker 200:57:20In addition, tenant demand is slowing. And in addition, this is an extremely large asset where very few buyers could have the financial wherewithal to do it. So we think that all sort of plays to a constructive kind of a process where the outcome will be something that we can certainly live with. This is a very large, very important asset. Everybody knows we have spent $409,000,000 in capital improvements to improve this asset. Speaker 200:57:59We're very happy with it. And whatever the outcome might be of this ground lease reappraisal, We will still have enormous equity value in our lease going forward. Speaker 1200:58:13Can I ask my If I could ask the second question just on the retail? Last quarter, you took the guidance up, reiterated this quarter, Chloe has been coming in better than expected. Any other sort of large leases or anything we should think about as we're rolling into next year just on that retail contribution at $175,000,000 Speaker 200:58:33Thanks. No, Speaker 300:58:36I don't think so. I mean, there's Number of leases we talked about that are now contributing. There's other signed leases that will contribute next year, but nothing of a magnitude that's Worth mentioning, it's just a series of leases. Operator00:58:54And our next question comes from Nick Culico. Go ahead, Nick. Speaker 600:59:00Thanks. I was hoping to hear just a little bit more about the Q1 of this year to the Q2. You did have an increase in property revenue on a GAAP basis. I think you said signage, lease commencements were some of the Benefits, I just wanted to see if lease termination fees were also any impact. And I guess just how we should think about The incremental benefit still from the rest of the year from signage upside, commencements, Anything from a GAAP revenue standpoint as you think about the back half of the year versus what you've done in the first half of the year? Speaker 300:59:40Like on the like I'd say overall first half was quite good with the contribution broad based. We've got contribution coming from leases coming online, both office and retail. We've got lower expenses that we've been managing. Our variable business is doing quite well. And then there is a small piece of Maybe a little piece of lease termination, but also this quarter we got about $3,500,000 from bankruptcy recovery Related to New York and Company from 330 West 34. Speaker 301:00:23So but I wouldn't characterize that as very significant. So overall, the bulk of the contribution is from traditional recurring items. And our expectation is that we'll The trajectory of that growth we've seen in the 1st couple of quarters is going to level off in the second half just as Some of the things that started to flow in last year's second half will be in again this year, so you won't get that as much of an uplift year over year. But on a quarter to quarter basis, we'll continue again probably not as significant a growth rate as we've been the last couple of quarters. Speaker 601:01:03Okay, thanks. I guess the second question is just in terms of guidance. I know you are now giving some pieces on a cash basis for retail NOI, etcetera. But I guess I'm wondering if your philosophy if you're willing to revisit your philosophy of We are not providing FFO guidance. And the reason why I ask is that, if you look at estimates for your company for this year on FFO, for next year on There's some of the widest that we see, which really doesn't make that much sense for an office company. Speaker 601:01:36But there's a lot of I think there's a lot of impact that we're all trying to figure out, right? Projects coming online, offline, commencements, Difficult to really understand from a GAAP NOI standpoint as well you have some of the highest floating rate debt exposure, which is going to be an issue over the next year. So just trying to understand if you guys at all are going to revisit This approach on guidance particularly as feels like over the next year the estimates are really all over the place for FFO. Speaker 301:02:11Nick, at this time, we don't have any plans to revisit. I think we've given you more guidance than we've historically given over the last But as you're seeing this quarter, last quarter, particularly in an environment like this, It's hard to do it, right? It's hard to do it given the significant redevelopments we have underway and the impact of when things come online. Obviously, the impact from LIBOR going up, is causing impact in the back half of this year versus the original expectations. So There's a lot of ins and outs. Speaker 301:02:46We don't manage the business quarter to quarter. We do manage it to drive growth, but we feel like It makes sense to wait to lease space a little bit longer because we can extract better terms. We'll do that. It's sort of an artificial view on our mind quarter to quarter. And as I said, I think we gave reasonable guidance at the outset of this year. Speaker 301:03:10Obviously, I Too optimistic given the environment is changing and given the lack of clarity in the current environment across the board, whether it's rates, Leasing, etcetera, I don't think it's something we're going to start right now. Speaker 201:03:23Yes, I would say, I Speaker 601:03:24mean, look, I mean, we sorry, go ahead. Speaker 201:03:27I guess, I'm the heavy in this, and the Board as well. So we have on our Board a group of very Seasoned people, very familiar with public companies. And So my feeling, my personal feeling is that we are not in a quarter to quarter business. We are not in a day to day business. We are in a business which cycles over 5 10 years. Speaker 201:03:59So our objective is to create value over 5 10 year cycles. And we think we've done an awfully good job of that over long periods of time. The emphasis on Short term modeling and getting down to a penny a share and beat a penny, raise a penny, That kind of stuff is not for me. So to the extent that Guidance focuses in my mind and in some members of our Board's mind on short termism, that's not where we're about. However, over time, we have had several different occasions where we had things happen, which Where issues, for example, this could be, I don't know, 15 years ago, we had PTO, the patent trade off has moved out of multiple millions of feet in our Crystal City complex At the time when we continue to own what is now the JBG Smith business. Speaker 201:05:08We chose at that time to In a fairly detailed way with multiple pages of documentation to model out exactly how much space was empty and And our process in releasing that space. Similarly, recently, when the retail business fell off a cliff, We thought it was prudent to give our investors and the analysts our Opinions as to what the retail income would be at least from a downside point of view. And I think there was 1 or 2 others that I can't recollect right now. So that's my thinking about guidance. And basically, it's a very strong disagreement with short termism in our business. Speaker 601:06:05I understand all those points. I would just say that, look, interest rates evolve, so we can all model that. We can decide what We think the interest rate curve is, but GAAP NOI is something that would just be really useful to understand for this year, What is the GAAP NOI number? How should we think about GAAP NOI next year? It would just help and it's not a quarter to quarter number, it's an annual number we're talking about, something Because your stock doesn't just trade on NAV, which is cash NOI and other factors, right? Speaker 601:06:33It does trade on an earnings multiple. And I think your earnings estimates are very wide range versus where they could be if you actually just You gave some level of guidance. So thanks. Speaker 201:06:49Thank you. Operator01:06:51And our next question comes from Vikram Malhotra. Go ahead, Vikram. Speaker 601:06:58Thanks for Speaker 1001:06:58taking the question. So I I have 2. One, just maybe given the news around Meta, any thoughts or updates on 770 Broadway kind of ins and outs and how we should Speaker 1101:07:12So the lease with Verizon expires in the Q1 of 2023. They've renewed for 1 of the 4 floors, so there's 3 floors remaining, which is about 240,000 feet. The space is Unique, terrific in a great location. We're in the market to lease it now. We feel good about the prospects. Speaker 1101:07:33I mean that's the status of that block. Speaker 1001:07:37Okay, great. And then just maybe a bigger picture question. I guess, Steve, you many years ago called out the shift in Office, in Manhattan office to kind of the West Side and South. I'm just wondering, given sort of All the changes we're seeing both cyclically and potentially some structural changes, in your mind sort of As you said, you want to create value over the next 5 years. What is the biggest opportunity in terms of value creation? Speaker 1001:08:09Is it hard assets? Is it in Debt investments, perhaps your own stock in terms of buybacks, I'm just taking a longer term view, What would you do if you were to start looking at external growth? Speaker 201:08:25Well, that's a metaphysical question of the highest order, Vic. So look, We have done debt investments over a 25 year period. We have not Recently, and so I don't think that we're going to get into the debt business For lots of different reasons and with debt, a couple of things. Number 1, The best that you can hope for is that a publicly traded debt business trades for 110 percent of its book value. So basically, it's not a capitalization of earnings, Basically a book value kind of a thing. Speaker 201:09:19So we don't believe that debt gives equity returns. So that's step 1. Although we have done it in the past and we may do it in the future, but not likely. With respect to our stock, we agree that our stock is uniquely, and I think I'll acquiesce to Mr. Billiment stupidly Super cheap. Speaker 201:09:41And without saying anything, we have stayed away from investing in our stock or buying back our stock for Many, many quarters now, but we are starting to get kind of tempted about it. We think it's actually a little crazy. But we have to balance the returns that we could get by buying back our stock With the returns that we can get in the Penn District and other investments, we don't have a hankering for Small potatoes, if we were going to buy back our stock, we would want to do it in a fairly significant way. The rest of it is we are kind of baked in our business. Our assets are our assets. Speaker 201:10:30We may sell some. We certainly would buy assets In our skill set to the extent that they had, we had the opportunity to make the entrepreneurial returns that we think We have traditionally made. I'm not sure I handled all of the alternatives that you mentioned, but At least I've tried to handle some of them. Operator01:10:54And our next question is a follow-up from Michael Bilerman. Go ahead, Michael. Speaker 701:11:00Great. Thank you. So, Steve, just a few follow ups. Just on 770, I know you have 18 months To achieve perhaps greater loan proceeds, what are some of the conditions and how much additional capital can you draw out of that asset Per the terms of your agreement. Speaker 201:11:21The agreement provides for an additional $300,000,000 draw. It's conditioned upon leasing the Verizon space And one other condition, we are planning as if we will not make that draw. Okay. Speaker 701:11:45And then just going back to Alexander's, and I appreciate all the comments you gave to Alexander. I go back maybe 16, 17 years ago when Alexander's was trading at a discount and you Proactively put in the annual letter that you're going to take a deep look at a variety of options. And a year later, the stock market Corrected itself and the stock had gone up and there was nothing to do. How does the current situation compare to back then In relation to Alexander's, but also stepping back as it relates to Vornado, where you have been very active, can you just sort of compare and contrast The environment back then versus the environment now and trying to do something with Alexander's? Speaker 201:12:36Michael, Stocks fluctuate and Alexander's is no different. Alexander's has traded as high as 400 some odd dollars a share and as 8% dividend or at least it was a couple of days ago. So a business With the credit of Alexander's, the assets, the quality of the assets of Alexander's, the balance sheet, which basically has $500,000,000,000 some odd $50,000,000,000 Cash on it should not trade for an 8% dividend. So that's totally mispriced. It would not be stupid For Alexander's to trade at a 4% dividend based upon the money market comparables, etcetera, which would mean that Alexander's Based upon the dividend valuation alone, would be fairly priced if the stock would double. Speaker 201:13:36So the stock market is going to do what the stock market does. From our point of view, we are going to preserve the 500 $1,000,000,000 of cash for lots of different reasons, that may change, but it's not going to change in the short term. We're going to continue to pay out Whatever dividend the Board determines to be appropriate. And we are, as I've said multiple times, It's almost impossible for Vornado and Alexander's to combine. It's impossible To figure out what price would be that would make the Vornado shareholders happy and or the Alexander's shareholders happy at the same time. Speaker 201:14:21So for the moment, Alexander sort of sits where it sits and its shareholders should enjoy the dividend and the future prospects. Okay. Speaker 701:14:30And then just the last one, Steve, in response to my question at the opening On the tracker, you talked about being committed to the tracker or other techniques. And I don't want to pick up too much on that word, but In your mind, is there other avenues in the separation of the Penn District that you're evaluating other than just a tracking stock, which And I know you and I disagree, but that's fine. We can. But is there other ways that you're thinking about Structurally separating the company that way. Speaker 201:15:07Sure. But we're not going to talk about them today. Operator01:15:14Our next question comes from Jamie Feldman. Go ahead, Jamie. Speaker 501:15:19Great, thanks. Just a quick follow-up. Glenn, I think you had said, you're in discussions for 50% of the 23 expirations and you think 50% may move out. A, I want to make sure that's correct. And B, how does that compare to this time in prior years? Speaker 501:15:34And can you talk about some of the larger known move outs? Speaker 1101:15:40The fifty-fifty production is today's target. That moves down, as you know, weekly, quarterly, etcetera. So we'll keep you up But as always, we're way ahead of it, have been ahead of it over the past quarters tackling all those expirations. I don't want to get into specific tenants or specific buildings, Jamie, but you could be assured we're on top of every one of them, particularly A larger variety of exploration. Speaker 501:16:08And is that about where you are typically this time of year? Or do you think next year is going to be a tougher year? Speaker 1101:16:15Every year is different, but I mean year to year, fifty-fifty, 50, 60, 40, I mean it's always in that range. I'd say it's not far off the standard fare. But it's we usually Predicting all this is, as you know, difficult. Things change every day with our tenants in our buildings, always putting the puzzles together the best we can I'm decreeing value, so it's hard to say, yes, exactly that or exactly this. So that's where we are today. Speaker 501:16:43Okay. All right. Thank you. Operator01:16:47And we have no more questions at this time. Speaker 201:16:52So let me say we appreciate everybody joining us this morning. We look forward to seeing you all again soon. Our Q3 earnings call will be on Tuesday, November 1, at 10 o'clock in the morning, and we look forward to your participation again. Take good care. Operator01:17:12Ladies and gentlemen, this concludes today's conference. Thank you for your participation. You may now disconnect.Read moreRemove AdsPowered by Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallBorealis Foods Q2 202200:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2xRemove Ads Earnings DocumentsSlide DeckQuarterly report(10-Q) Borealis Foods Earnings HeadlinesBorealis Foods: Growth Injection Needed As Cash-Burn ContinuesFebruary 11, 2025 | seekingalpha.comBorealis Foods (NASDAQ:BRLS) Stock Quotes, Forecast and News SummaryFebruary 3, 2025 | benzinga.comNew “Trump” currency proposed in DCYou’ve no doubt heard Trump’s rally cry: Make America Great Again. But recently the President made a big change. Make America Wealthy Again (M.A.W.A).April 12, 2025 | Paradigm Press (Ad)Borealis Foods Inc. (BRLS)January 28, 2025 | ca.finance.yahoo.comBorealis Foods Inc. Cl AJanuary 25, 2025 | wsj.comBorealis Foods Inc trading resumesJanuary 4, 2025 | markets.businessinsider.comSee More Borealis Foods Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like Borealis Foods? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on Borealis Foods and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About Borealis FoodsBorealis Foods (NASDAQ:BRLS) operates as a food technology company that develops plant-based ready-to-eat meals. The company also developed ambient ready-to-eat high-protein meals for U.S. and global humanitarian food programs. Its products include Chef Woo, a plant based instant ramen meals that provides with 20 grams of plant-based complete protein; and Ramen Express, a vegetarian ramen noodles. 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There are 13 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Good morning, and welcome to the Vornado Realty Trust Second Quarter 2022 Earnings Call. My name is Daryl, and I will be the operator for today's call. This call is being recorded for replay purposes. All lines are in a listen only mode. Our speakers will address your questions at the end of the presentation during the question and answer session. Operator00:00:24I will now turn the call over to Steve Orenstein, Senior Vice President and Corporation Counsel. Please go ahead. Speaker 100:00:32Welcome to Vornado Realty Trust Second Quarter Earnings Call. Yesterday afternoon, we issued our Q2 earnings release and filed our quarterly report on Form 10 Q with the Securities and Exchange Commission. These documents as well as our supplemental financial information packages are available on our website, www.vno.com, under the Investor Relations section. In these documents and during today's call, we will discuss certain non GAAP financial measures. Reconciliations of these measures to the most directly comparable GAAP measures are included in our earnings release, Form 10 Q and financial supplement. Speaker 100:01:08Please be aware that statements made during this call may be deemed forward looking statements, and actual results may differ materially from these statements due to a variety of risks, Please refer to our filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission, including our annual report on Form 10 ks for the year ended On the call today from management for our opening comments are Steven Roth, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer and Michael Franco, President and Chief Financial Officer. Our senior team is also present and available for questions. I will now turn the call over to Steven Roth. Speaker 200:01:56Thank you, Steve, and good morning, everyone. As Michael will cover in a moment, we had another very good quarter with comparable FFO up 20% from last year's Q2. Well, the first half of the year was right on our expectations, our business continued to perform well. We are now projecting the second half to be below what we had Given interest rates and the incremental non cash accounting charge from the PENN1 ground lease. Overall, this year is still expected to be up year over year. Speaker 200:02:26By the way, we reaffirm retail guidance of cash NOI of not less than $175,000,000 for the year. While headline inflation numbers remain very high, it seems like the Fed's efforts are beginning to have their desire to fit. There are signs of a slowdown all around, a rapidly slowing housing market, falling consumer confidence and companies announcing hiring pauses or even layoffs. The inverted yield curve signals market participants expect a recession, and the forward yield curve predicts that rates will come back down within a couple of years. While we are protected by long term leases with about 1500 tenants, we do expect and are prepared for choppy conditions. Speaker 200:03:12Pennsylvania Station is by far the most important piece of transportation infrastructure in our region. In a manner of speaking, I might say that every project in the last 100 years either started at Penn, ended at Penn or has gone through Penn. All of this of course makes the surrounding Penn District critically important And we have a large and unique holdings here. Last week, as many of you may have seen, the Empire State Development Corporation We should approve the general project plan for the Penn District. This is an important piece in Governor Hochul and Mayor Adams' plan Finally fixed Penn Station. Speaker 200:03:48The GPP is essentially a zoning overlay for transit oriented development to create a modern mixed use district That maximizes public benefits, including new station entrances, robust subway improvements and addresses overcrowding and accessibility, Public realm improvements and affordable housing. Out of the 10 sites involved in the GPP, we own 4 and part of a 5th. We have long invested in our properties around Penn Station and in the district, including $2,000,000,000 in Farley, PENN1 and PENN2. We've also led in multiple successful public private partnerships that have delivered meaningful transit and public realm improvements for New Yorkers, Including the Moynihan Trade Hall, which was another ESD led general project plan, 2 new station entrances at 33rd and 34th Street, And a new Long Island Railroad Concourse, which will deliver in the beginning of 2023. And the MTA is now advancing the design work for the reconstruction of the remainder of Penn Station. Speaker 200:04:52In addition to finalizing the GPP, this has been One of been a year of significant accomplishments for us in the Penn District. At Penn 1, we substantially completed the renovation, including the largest And best in class amenity package to overwhelming enthusiasm. Our total renovation and reimagining of our 2 block wide PENN2 is more than half complete. It's exciting for us and the real estate market generally to see the steel structure for the transformative bustle taking shape. PENN1 and PENN2 will be the centerpiece of our current Penn District development. Speaker 200:05:27As Michael will tell you, we are spot on Our leasing underwriting, this 4,400,000 square foot interconnected campus will be completed and income producing in the short term. And by that, I mean, as much as an additional incremental $300,000,000 of NOI through stabilization. Kudos to Michael and Jan and their team for completing $3,200,000,000 of refinancings, which Michael will tell you about shortly. I end with a plug for our new Fasano restaurant at 280 Park Avenue on 49th Street. We imported Fasano from Brazil, and they certainly are living up to their notices as being one of the best new restaurants in town. Speaker 200:06:08Call me if you can't get a reservation. Now to Michael. Speaker 300:06:12Thank you, Steve, and good morning, everyone. As Steve mentioned, we had another strong quarter. 2nd quarter comparable FFO as adjusted was $0.83 per share, Compared to $0.69 for last year's Q2, an increase of $0.14 or 20%. This increase Speaker 400:06:30This was driven primarily Speaker 200:06:31by rent commencement Speaker 300:06:31on new office and retail leases and the continued recovery of our variable businesses, partially offset by the straight line impact of the estimated We have provided a quarter over quarter bridge in our earnings release on Page 3 and our financial supplement on Page 6. On our last earnings call, we said that we expected our comparable FFO per share growth for 2022 to be in the mid to high single digits. It bears repeating that this expected growth, which is driven by strength in our core operating business, primarily from previously signed leases In both office and retail, including meta platforms at Farley, and the continued recovery of our variable businesses factored in the impact of rising rates on high variable However, the pace and magnitude of Fed hikes have been greater than we anticipated. The faster than expected rise in rates will affect 2022 earnings and result in lower FFO growth than we were anticipating. Further, the additional interest expense from rising rates We'll have a greater impact next year as the higher rates impact our variable rate debt costs for a full year. Speaker 300:07:39With respect to our variable businesses, We continue to see a strong recovery in the Q2 and the EBITDA in total is currently around 90% of pre COVID levels now, excluding the closed four development Hotel Penn site. Our signage business, which is the largest in the city with dominant signs in the best location in Times Square We're in the Penn District, had another very strong quarter and forward bookings remain strong. Our trade show business at the mart is continuing to rebound nicely, including our hosting of the commercial furniture design industries, Neocon, which is typically our largest trade show. No trade shows took place during last year's Q2 due to the pandemic. Our BMS business continues to perform near pre pandemic levels and finally our garages are continuing to be on track to fully recover this We still expect to recover most of the income from our variable businesses this year with the full return in 2023. Speaker 300:08:37Company wide same store cash NOI for the Q2 increased by a healthy 8.4% over the prior year Q2. Our overall office business was up 5.4% compared to the prior year's Q2, while our New York office business was up 3.9%. Our retail same store cash NOI was up a very strong 24.8%, primarily due to the rent commencement on important new leases, Several analysts have reported that our New York occupancy is 90.8%, but that's not really the story. That's a blend of office and retail. Our New York office occupancy ended the quarter at 92.1%, which is flat against the Q1 of 2022, But still up 100 basis points from the trough in the Q2 of 2021 and the highest of our industry peers in New York. Speaker 300:09:36Our New York retail occupancy decreased to 76.3% since last quarter due entirely to the retail space at Farley New York, total employment has reached its highest level since March 2020 and office using jobs are near 1,500,000, which is only 6,500 jobs below its February 2020 peak. Tech Sector Leasing has slowed, but the financial sector has picked up the slack, Now accounting for almost half of market wide activity with some large expansion transactions in the works. Leasing velocity and higher quality buildings continues to dominate landscape with many large scale tenants relocating to the most differentiated well located office buildings in both ground up new builds and best in class redevelopments across the city. Overall tenant demand and rental pricing in the top end of the market remains strong, while older commodity product is experiencing higher vacancy rates Unless tenant demand and sublease space availability continues to increase. Our office leasing results since the onset of the pandemic reflect resiliency of our best in class portfolio and how it's benefiting from these trends. Speaker 300:10:50Our team's strong deal making skills have resulted in more than 5,000,000 feet of office leases signed Since the Q1 of 2020, at average rents of $84 per square foot and an average lease term of 12.4 years. During the Q2, we completed 21 transactions comprising a total of 301,000 square feet leased. We continue to outperform the market. Our consistently healthy quarter to quarter leasing metrics reflect the high quality of our portfolio and the immediate impact of our redevelopment program at PENN1. This foreshadows the success we're going to have at PENN2 also. Speaker 300:11:25Our portfolio wide average starting rent this quarter was strong at $85 per Square Foot, including $97 per square foot for 75,000 square feet of deals at our highly amenitized PENN1, which exceeds our underwriting and further validates our program to significantly increase rents in our redeveloped Penn assets. Other transaction highlights this quarter include a 45,000 square foot headquarters expansion relocation lease with a private equity farm at 650 Madison, A new 60,000 square foot transaction with a non profit at 825 7th Avenue and 61,000 square feet of various deals at 150 East 58th Street. Importantly, the average lease term of this quarter's activity was 11.5 years, while our mark to market on these deals was positive 5 point 1% GAAP and 1.7 percent Cash. Overall, our pipeline remains active with more than 700,000 square feet of deals and lease negotiation And an additional 700,000 square feet in lease proposal stages. Now turning to Chicago, where the market is lagging behind New York's recovery. Speaker 300:12:34At the Mark, while our office leasing pipeline is active with more than 800,000 square feet in discussion, Conversions are taking longer and concessions remain elevated. We recently commenced our capital program to add world class fitness, conferencing and other amenities, which will be completed by summer 2023 and is already having a positive impact on our leasing efforts. During the quarter, we leased 59,000 square feet, Majority of which were leasing renewals and expansions within our showroom industries at an average starting around $56 per square foot. In San Francisco, while the market overall is experiencing record level vacancy rates and low return to work numbers, Our 555 California Street campus remains full other than our vacant 78,000 square foot building at 345 Montgomery Street. We are currently in renewal expansion dialogue with more than 200,000 square feet of existing tenants within the Trophy 555 Tower. Speaker 300:13:32And we continue to see market leading triple digit rents at 5.55 with very healthy mark to markets. Retail leasing results were fairly modest for the quarter with the highlight being a new long term deal with Chase For 7,500 Square Feet at PENN2 at a significant positive mark to market. This deal set a new high watermark for retail rents in the Penn District along Seventh Retail leasing activity in the city continues to be concentrated in the highest footfall locations. This is proving true for our newly renovated retail spaces in the Long Island Railroad Concourse, typically Penn Station's busiest thoroughfare. We have leases out For Signature, almost half of the 30 spaces fronting the concourse and our rents exceeding the previous high watermark for retail rents in Penn Station. Speaker 300:14:20These commitments demonstrate retailers' belief in public transportation and specifically in Penn Station. More broadly, the city is bustling With New York City tourism projected to reach 56,000,000 visitors in 2022 and to return to pre pandemic levels in 2023. However, this positive momentum is being offset by retailer concerns about inflation and recession and many retailers are becoming more conscious about making commitments. Turning to the capital markets now. Overall, the increased market volatility and spike in interest rates is impacting the capital markets With the volume of both asset sales and debt financings down significantly from last year. Speaker 300:15:00The CMBS and balance sheet markets are being much more selective, which accrues to the benefit of stronger sponsors and high quality properties. As such, spreads have generally widened out with lower leverage available. As previously announced in June, we completed $3,200,000,000 in refinancings, which consisted of extending one of our $21,250,000,000 unsecured revolving credit facilities and our $800,000,000 unsecured loan to December 2027, as well as refinancing 770 Broadway and 100 West 33rd Street. We're quite pleased with these executions as they were completed at attractive spreads, A reflection of lenders' heightened focus on sponsorship and quality properties. We had anticipated the financing markets becoming more challenging and with all but 77,000,000 they would refinance these loans And while the forward curve is historically over predicted rates, we fixed 770 Broadway, improving our fixed to floating ratio to 6040, which is more in line with our historical operations. Speaker 300:16:00Importantly, with these refinancings, we have dealt with all of our significant maturities through mid-twenty 24. We also announced the completion of the sale of our Lyon City office building for $173,000,000 during the quarter, Continuing our efforts to monetize non core assets. Despite the challenging market, we are hard at work on our other non core asset sales as well. Finally, our current liquidity is a strong $3,500,000,000 including $1,600,000,000 of cash, restricted cash and investments in U. S. Speaker 300:16:29Treasury bills And $1,900,000,000 undrawn under our $2,500,000,000 revolving credit facilities. With that, I'll turn it Over to the operator for Q and A. Operator00:16:42Thank you. We will now begin the question and answer session. Question and a follow-up question before we move on to the next caller. And I'm standing by for questions. And our first question It comes from Jamie Feldman. Operator00:17:25Go ahead, Jamie. Speaker 500:17:27Thank you, and good morning. Maybe just starting with You're changing your outlook for earnings for this year and next year. Can you just talk more about the magnitude of the drag from higher rates, Both on 2022 and 2023 and just as we're thinking about how to model it, but where maybe where your assumption was and where it is now? Speaker 300:17:49Good morning, Jamie. It's Michael. Look, it's if you look at where we said last time, we were mid Yes, the high single digits early in the year double digits, now it's still projecting to be up. And so if you just take what we've done in the first two Orders and you model out the rest of the year. You're looking at roughly 100 basis points impact on LIBOR from where we thought it would be. Speaker 300:18:17And with floating rate debt of around 4,250,000,000 You're looking at about $0.20 a share impact from where we thought it could be. Obviously, Rates change every day. We've already seen the forward curve come down. What I've told you on 2023 Speaker 600:18:37would have Speaker 300:18:37been higher 2 weeks ago than I would tell you today. We can't predict. Obviously, that reflects really 2 quarters of impact On our variable rate debt versus where we expected next year, we'll have a full year impact on that. And Could it be another 100 basis points overall? Potentially, again, I don't want to sit here today and give you a number It's driven by what the curve will be. Speaker 300:19:05The relative to the original expectations, it's probably in the ballpark. Speaker 200:19:10Jamie, a little bit more On the floating rate debt, first of all, we did very well fix a little bit more of it to reduce the $4,200,000,000 We may pay some of it down. 2nd, over the last 10 or 12 years, we have benefited enormously From the low interest rates and floating rate debt, every time we fixed or Took a fixed rate loan during that 12 year period, we were wrong, wrong and wrong. So that's all very interesting, but it doesn't matter going The next thing is that many of our assets are in transition. Some of our assets are on the for sale list And floating rate debt of course facilitates that because getting out of fixed rate debt when you have a transitional A digital asset involves the seasons, which in many cases can be extremely expensive. Some of the floating rate debt and fixing activities we got perfectly right, for example, 555 California. Speaker 200:20:23We executed, it was about a year and a half ago, Michael. Speaker 300:20:26Yes. Speaker 200:20:27About a year and a half ago, a very attractive loan At a very attractive spread on a floating rate basis and we fixed our share of it. So that was very good. A very good outcome and a real asset. When we did the 1290 refinancing, which was a similar team. I guess I'll take the blame for it. Speaker 200:20:54We didn't fix it. And that was in retrospect was a mistake. The next thing about floating rate debt to think about is that there is really no protection Against interest rate increases. And by that I mean when rates go up, you get the fairly small benefit of the Protection of a fixed rate piece of debt for as long as it lasts. On expiry, Which is 3, 4, 5 years or whatever it is, you have to go to whatever the market rate is. Speaker 200:21:28And cap rates, of course, reflect the current interest rate environment. So there you have it. We will give some of it back in this year and next We expect rates to come down perhaps quite substantially depending upon what the depth of the business slowdown is. And but there you have it. Operator00:21:56And our next question comes from Michael Bilerman. Speaker 700:22:08Welcome. Thank you. So Steve, you talked a little bit about sort of choppy conditions, given everything that's going on in the marketplace. And how does that sort of forward outlook change your sort of strategic direction? Obviously, you still have the tracker that you've been thinking about, asset sales. Speaker 700:22:31There's so many things going on. Is it affecting Sort of the path forward for Vornado and I recognize you're not happy with where the stock price is today and if it was stupid, stupid cheap, it's now Stupid, stupid, how many stupids you want to put, but how are you going to go about getting to the other side of this? Speaker 200:22:59Good morning. First of all, We've been through this, I don't know, 5 or 6 times, 5 or 6 business cycles over the last 40 years or so. So there is always an end. And our job is to rigorously focus On the important things, for example, protecting our balance sheet, preserving our liquidity, And preserving the safety and sanctity of our balance sheet. Number 2, we have certain missions that we have to do, Which is, for example, keep the buildings leased to the extent that the market submits us to do that. Speaker 200:23:42Specifically with respect to our fairly grand plans in the Penn District for PENN1 and PENN2. And so all We will have a spectacular outcome based upon the increased value of those buildings and the surrounding Penn District. And those basically are New York centric. We continue to have an open to buy In terms of acquisitions, if something comes around that we think hits our skill set and hits our price aspiration. So basically, it's business as usual with a more rigorous focus On the important things and the balance sheet, we have in the beginning of COVID, we cut our G and A And began to get very, very tough on expenditures. Speaker 200:24:41We reduced Nonessential capital expenditures, etcetera. So those are the kinds of things that one has to do going into Business slowdown, and I've said a couple of times, I think it looks to me like we're on the foothills of a recession. We are in a don't bet against the Fed mode, which I think probably everybody is. As I said, we're in the foothills of business correction, and we are hopeful that the Fed will be disciplined, will They're foot to the panel and will accomplish their objectives as quickly as possible. Speaker 700:25:28So does that alter at all sort of the progression of whether it's asset sales or thinking differently about Doing a tracking stock at for the Penn District, like where is your mindset today knowing of where we're headed And trying to you had this Alexander's activist, and obviously, there's that's out there. But I don't get the sense that you're happy Sort of with where the stock market is valuing Vornado. And so I'm just trying to better understand, you've spent the last decade Simplifying and doing so many value creating activities, and even continued this year, I'm just trying to understand What potentially could change into the future, given the environment that we're in? Speaker 200:26:21Let me unpack that a couple of First of all, I still continue to believe that separating the Penn District into a separately tradable Security, whether it be a tracker or some other technique, is absolutely The right strategy for our shareholders. We expect the Penn District to be a grower and we think that our shareholders should have the ability to And that as an isolated pure play investment. So that's one. The timing of that is still up in the air. It's a totally I mean, we're on both sides of that deal, so to speak. Speaker 200:27:00We have no counterparty. We can time it whenever we want to. And we will, subject to lots of different things that could occur in between, I continue to believe in that strategy. Secondly, we have a whole group of Non core assets that we are in the process of selling, where we think we can get pricing, which is not as good as it would have been A year or 2 ago, but good enough to execute. And that's somewhere between, I don't know, dollars 500,000,000,000 to $750,000,000 something We already executed on 1 on the Long Island City asset. Speaker 200:27:45There are other buildings in our portfolio That we would be very happy to sell, although we're more price sensitive to those buildings because Once you get out of the non core basket, the buildings are more important than better quality. Nonetheless, if we can, We get incomings all the time. And if we can execute at a price that we think is reasonable, which We'll create value for our shareholders and improve our balance sheet. We will do so. I think the last part of your statement was with respect to the activist Investor at Alexander's, which I was going to hold that question I was going to hold my answer to that to Alex. Speaker 200:28:32And I think I'll continue to hold for Alex. Operator00:28:38And our next question comes from Steve Sakwa. Go ahead, Steve. Speaker 800:28:44Thanks. Good morning. Steve, I was wondering if you could Spend a little more time on the new Penn Station proposal, the 10 sites, the 4 that are owned by you and maybe just give us a little flavor For sort of how you see those evolving over time and how much of that would be office versus residential? Speaker 200:29:08I've said multiple times over recent years that Penn District was our what do I say? Our Big Kahuna was ground was a bull's eye, etcetera. We have been a Q1ning property in the Penn District for 20 years now. We believe that Penn Station is the most important piece of transportation infrastructure in the region. We believe that the entire district has been benefited By the adjacencies of Hudson Yards and Manhattan West, where there were very successful and very large Projects which really actually sort of put us on the map. Speaker 200:30:00So we're very appreciative of the efforts of Our neighbors. There is an enormous amount of demand for the district. We get incomings all the time. And so basically the GPP is a zoning matter. It's an overlay of the existing city zoning where the state has basically become the dominant party And there are multiple things involved in it. Speaker 200:30:34One is that we will have the option to Increase the square footage that is allocable for each site by buying SARs at fair market value. So we can build you might say we can build larger buildings, okay? So I think in round numbers there's 5,000,000 is that right Barry, 5,000,000 square feet of additional FARS that can be allocated in the district, Which we obviously intend to avail ourselves over. But remember, we're paying fair market value for those FARs. The second thing is that the state and the EDC of the state becomes the Basically our overseer and our regulator with respect to zoning, etcetera. Speaker 200:31:23The third is that The revenues that come off the new bills is allocated first to the city to what the taxes That were payable to the city had been historically. And then basically into a pot that is basically subject to an agreement between the city Where most of that will be allocated towards the reconstruction Of the actual Penn Station, okay. Some of it, a relatively small amount On the scale of what Hudson Yards tax incentive was, we'll be allocated to developer To incentivize and allow the construction to go forward on an economic basis. And what have I forgot, Barry, anything? Speaker 900:32:18About 600 units of the floor. Speaker 200:32:20The zoning Requires about 600 units of apartment. The intention has been For a long time that this will be principally office development, okay? How the mix of will might or might not change, we will determine over time. Now remember, this is a long term product involving a huge and irreplaceable piece of location. But the first part of it is the existing buildings that are there, PENN1, PENN2 at Farley, which we are Ankle deep in or up to our eyeballs in redeveloping. Speaker 200:33:11And as I have said before, we are right on our underwriting. We expect this to be relatively short term, meaning between now and 3, 4, 5 years from now for stabilization and we expect those buildings to generate an incremental $300,000,000 of new additional NOI. Speaker 800:33:32Great. Well, that leads into my follow-up because on that $300,000,000 Steve, I know you've laid out return hurdles and the dollars spent in the supplemental. I guess where we and I think others are maybe Struggling or trying to understand is how much of that income, say in a PENN1 is already flowing into the income statement as you're marking to market some of these leases. And so We want to give you credit, but we want to make sure we're not double counting or overstating. So is there a way you can sort of help us Think about what's contributing from Farley, from One Penn today and then when would 2 Penn start to actually contribute? Speaker 200:34:12I'm going to let my finance team take care of that offline, because whenever I say they're going equivalent and sloppy. Nonetheless, the numbers are approximately like this, maybe $70,000,000 for Farley, which has just begun to come online And we'll come online over the next year or so. PENN1 is 90% occupied, something like that. I don't know the exact number. But at an average rent in the 50s, Hi, Shiftees. Speaker 200:34:47We expect the market rent for that building to be $100 a foot. We have And as Michael said, we signed 71 is it 71,000? Speaker 300:34:5575,000. 75,000. Speaker 200:34:5675,000. Steve, they're slapping me 75,000 square feet of leases, 4 or 5, a handful of leases in PENN1 This quarter at $97 a foot average, which we think justifies and validates our underwriting. We expect the same for PENN2. So what I'm saying is over time as leases turnover, PENN1 will go from Say, pick a number, dollars 60 a foot to $100 a foot, that's $40 a foot times 2,500,000 feet, that's 100,000,000 Okay. That's new fresh coming in as the lease is turnover, but will you pick the period of time. Speaker 200:35:38In PENN2, The building basically has one tenant for 400 odd,000 square feet, which means it has a 1,400,000 seats, which is non income producing today and that will be will come over time And the building will be completed less than 2 years. So with lease up and stabilization and what have you, so the 2 years will turn out to be 4, maybe even 5 years. That's okay with me. So that 1,400,000 feet of now vacant space will produce We think $100 a foot. So there's your math. Speaker 200:36:19You can I hope that will help you to model That's the way I do the math? And as I said, my finance team, which is very, very, very Expert at conversion with us will give you more detail, if you like. Operator00:36:38And our next question comes from Alexander Gold. Speaker 200:36:42I want to go back to Steve Sackler for a minute. Okay, hold on a second. I don't know any other company that has a public company that has a development of this magnitude And this unique prospects out there, okay. And so obviously, I think the stock doesn't reflect I think the stock is selling for way less than what we have now. It doesn't begin to reflect the opportunities we have here. Speaker 200:37:12I'm sorry, go ahead. Operator00:37:15Okay. Our next question comes from Alexander Goldfarb. Go ahead, Alexander. Speaker 400:37:23Good morning, Steve, and thank you for holding off on the Alexander's question. I think we get 2 questions. Is that correct? Speaker 300:37:33Yes. Speaker 400:37:34Great. Okay. Speaker 200:37:36I'm here to serve you. Speaker 400:37:42And I'm just I'm here to serve my wife and kids, So we all serve someone, don't we? Speaker 200:37:50Let's get back to business. Speaker 400:37:51Okay. So the two questions. Our first, going off from Steve's Question on Penn District. So one, it sounds like you guys will only have a few of the buildings Like 4 or 5, not all 10 that are outlined. But second, and I guess more importantly, you guys entered New York with Mendic. Speaker 400:38:11You've been talking about Penn for 25 years. Hard to believe that in the next 5 or even 10 years that you'll get 4 or 5 buildings up online, not because of you, but just how long it takes to build office to stabilize and lease. So as far as the question of earnings, because you guys are earnings, you're paying dividends, you spoke of more asset sales, there's rising rates, We're still waiting for the existing stuff that you've already put under construction to deliver. How is this I understand in a private vehicle where timelines are much longer, but in a public vehicle where investors expect earnings growth And that's something that a lot of us have been waiting for from you guys. How are we to think about this investment versus other things that are more near term tangible because all this stuff seems to be out multiple years, nothing in the near term. Speaker 200:39:12I do real estate. I don't do stock market. You do stock market. I can only tell you that As I model the business and the prospects of the business and the future bad news that we are creating, By the way, I too work for my kids. I believe that the inherent values and the IRRs Even out over a period of time are extraordinary and unique, okay? Speaker 200:39:41So if Investors want to be short minded. That's each investor can make their own decision. I would remind you and you know full well that the Stock market is an all knowing being and the stock market chooses to give companies with no sales and no earnings Multiple 1,000,000,000 and 1,000,000,000 of value because the stock market is saying that the values to be created in future will be We'll justify the investment. I can only tell you that if you're focused on time and you're impatient, I'm focused on time and I'm focused on what the IRRs will be over time as we deliver these buildings. It takes almost no imagination to begin to model what 1penn, 2penn Farley can be worth And put a risk adjustment on that, which is very high certainty. Speaker 200:40:41And once you do that, I think that speaks for itself. Speaker 400:40:47Okay. And then the second question just goes to Alexander's. On Alexander's, Your thoughts around the dividend given it's uncovered and doesn't look to be covered for the next as far as we forecast the next few years. And 2, As Michael said, you do have an activist, although it seems pretty tough given that 2 thirds of the company is basically either interstate or Vornado. So maybe just some thoughts around, is Avino Alexander's tie up something in the offing and your thoughts around the Alexander's dividend? Speaker 200:41:22Let's spend a minute on the activist. So the activist is a small company that has a I think they said in their letter, they have large, very significant shareholders. The way we see it, they have about 10,000 shares, which I wouldn't call very significant. There are some other names on the shareholder list that could be affiliated with them or what have you, but your point is that it's Pretty either courageous or whatever to target a company That has 2 entities that are closely aligned that control that own 2 thirds of the business. So take that for what you will. Speaker 200:42:05We got an incoming and very simply and very quickly we treated it with the highest of respect Notwithstanding the shareholdings of ROTH, I mean, if the letter came from shareholders, I have one share, we would still act in the same way. We invited the folks into it. I think they notified us. We got a letter from them in April. I think we invited them in to present to the full Board of Alexander's at The next meeting, which was in May, they presented, we exchanged views. Speaker 200:42:47We then the Alexander's Board then Very carefully and very seriously deliberated about the pros and cons of their suggestions. We sent them a response letter. We did not step on them. We listened to them very carefully and we treated them with the highest of respect. We sent them a letter basically Saying that the Alexander's Board preferred the status quo. Speaker 200:43:14What they had suggested was that we Internalized management as opposed to externally managed by Verdotio, which would cause a which would raise the expenses of Alexander's by a Huge amount, very significant amount, which we had which we debated over the years, they Suggested that we take the cash, Alexander sits on about $540,000,000 Gary. Alexander's has $540,000,000 which is a big number for a small company, which has 5,000,000 shares. They suggested that we leverage the company up more, pay a special dividend now, basically Traditional activist techniques to recap the company to with an objective of choosing the stock. Basically, because of uncertain times, because of projects that are I have the potential because of lease expiries that are uncertain, all many different reasons, the Alexander's Board Chose to be more conservative and to not pursue that idea. There was one other thing, and I think that was that Alexander's go into the PR, IR business. Speaker 200:44:40I believe in the stock market. I think the stock market knows everything that's going on without having to have a pitchman tell of what's going on. Apparently, they were hang on, let me just finish. Apparently, they were unsatisfied and they made their point of view public, Which is fine. So basically, I'm going to say that this Last minute or 2 or 3, but my remarks will be my formal response to Bayer going public. Speaker 200:45:17I speak now sort of half and half. This is a Vornado call, And I speak on behalf of Vornado and Alexander's. Vornado owns a third of Alexander's Speaker 300:45:34And Speaker 200:45:38externally manages Alexander's, The management teams are overlapping, and so the investment is a very significant investment for Renato. Let me just give you a little bit of math because I was curious, so I looked it up recently. Wernavo's total investment in Alexander's is $73,000,000 which was made about 20 years ago, which is $44 a share. Over time So $73,000,000 was the investment. Over time, Vornado has received $520,000,000 Dividends from Alexander's. Speaker 200:46:21Renato is receiving on an annual basis $18 a share, Which constitutes a 41% return on the purchase price of the Alexander's shares. So, I think it's my friend, Bruce Flatt, who talks about compounding. This is the very definition of compounding. Now you talk about the dividend. So I don't know where you get your math, but Alexander's has the option of doing multiple things, which would cover the dividend or what have you. Speaker 200:46:59So the dividend Is, I guess what you're saying is the dividend may not be covered. I don't know There are some retail vacancies, which is part of the As a result of market conditions, which have caused Alexander's income to decline, now that's not a permanent thing. Tenants come and tenants go. Cycles come and cycles go. And I don't think that The Alexander's Board is very interested in Raising, lowering the dividend as tenants come and go out, trying to get some kind of regularity and smoothness to it. Speaker 200:47:44And the second thing is, Alexander's has, I think, dollars 600,000,000 $700,000,000 of floating rate debt, which is obviously So if you think about it, we sort of arbitraged on that floating rate debt because we have $540,000,000 of Cash. To the extent that we put that $540,000,000 of cash to work earning interest, I think you will find that the dividend is Perfect. And that's I think all that I have to say about this. I just want to reiterate to my friends at Lionbridge, that these remarks will constitute my formal response to their most recent letter. Thanks, Alex. Speaker 400:48:29Thank you, Steve. Thank you, Steve. Operator00:48:32And our next question comes from John Kim. Go ahead, John. Speaker 900:48:38Good morning. Michael, you talked about the impact of interest rates on your outlook of FFO for the rest of the year. But I was wondering if your second quarter NOI Of $289,000,000 GAAP, dollars 2.85 cash, is a good run rate for the remainder of 2022. Speaker 300:49:05Yes, the answer is generally yes. I don't want to give you specificity. I mean like the first half was very strong with some things that In the second half, you see a strong growth in the second half, but I think the answer is generally yes. Speaker 400:49:24Okay. Yes, I just wanted Speaker 900:49:25to clarify there was nothing one time in nature on your variable income. You do have a fair amount of expirations at the March, but the rest of your portfolio It's pretty minimal. Yes. I thought Speaker 500:49:35I'd say, Speaker 1000:49:36I thought I'd Speaker 200:49:37say, yes. Yes. Speaker 300:49:38I thought I'd say, generally, yes. I think as we said in the prepared remarks, the core business is performing well. NOI growth was very good. We expect that there continue to be growth, but when you flow down the FFO with the impact of rising rates, that's where you see That growth being moderated. Speaker 900:50:03Okay. And my second question is on your 2023 expirations. You have a fair amount in office, 11%, retail is 9%. Can you provide any commentary or color on what Percentage you know today are known to vacate versus leases that you have a high confidence in renewing or backfill immediately? Speaker 300:50:28Don, do you want to take office? Sure. Speaker 1100:50:29As it relates to office, John, this is Glenn. In 'twenty three, we have about 1,300,000 feet Expiring of that is 300,000 feet of Penn 1, which as Steve alluded to, as that rolls, we look forward to that lease up program to get The new rents, as it relates to the remaining 1,000,000 feet, we're all over it. We're in paper on a lot of it. We probably expect the fifty-fifty Where the people staying versus leaving, but we're in paper for much of it now in terms of the people who are going to stay or at least the space, which is expiring. Speaker 800:51:09Our 2024 explorations where we are laser focused on And we believe that the rise in tourism to New York City, which is growing rapidly and could reach pre pandemic levels by next year, We timed very well for our exploration and we know that our tenants have a desire to say it will be a matter of what the rents are. Speaker 300:51:31John, in 2023, I'm looking down the retail list. I think we feel pretty good about most of those. But obviously, we announced, I think, I don't know, maybe 3 calls ago that Swatch exercised their termination option at St. Regis. We own about half of that building. Speaker 300:51:48So that's a known move out in 2023. We got a meaningful termination payment along the way when they But that from a 2023 expiry, that's a notable one. The others were in active discussion and we'll see what happens. Speaker 900:52:07And what would be the mark to market on that watch space? Speaker 300:52:11Too early to tell you. Speaker 700:52:15Got it. Speaker 900:52:15Okay. Thank you very much. Operator00:52:17And our next question comes from Ronald Kamden. Go ahead, Ronald. Speaker 1200:52:23Hey, just following up on some of the breadcrumbs for 2023. I think we touched on the interest expense already. But maybe going back to the Penn District, I'm asking the question a different way. Given that's such a big part of the modeling into next year, any sense how we should think about The year over year change in contribution potentially in 2023 versus 2022, Clearly, the $300,000,000 makes sense long term, but just trying to think about the 23 versus 22 difference, That makes sense. Speaker 200:53:02Say that last piece again, Ronald. Speaker 1200:53:05So for the Penn District, the contribution in the delta between 2023 versus 2022 Contribution to SANY, if that makes sense. Speaker 300:53:17Yes. I don't have the numbers at my Fingertips, we can get that to you offline. In 2023 though when you think about it, PENN2 is not going to be contributing yet. PENN1, as we roll over those leases, you'll see contribution there. Although again, That's going to take time to phase in. Speaker 300:53:39So PENN1, every year, right, we're going to roll that space over. We've done an average of 5 years. And Glenn and his team are just going to knock that out quarter by quarter and so you'll see that flow in. PENN2, you're not going to see flow in for a period of time. And then Farley, You're going to start to see that flow in more substantially as the retail comes online. Speaker 300:54:01We'll give you some quantification offline and if I long lines of what Steve asked as well. But there's going to be an improvement in 2023, Again, not significant because of PENN2 really is not going to start contributing until 2024 probably, But realistically, even a year or 2 beyond that. And the others year by year is Lisa's role. Speaker 200:54:28Remember, in Penn, we had the Penn 1 ground lease repricing appraisal process. And so we predicted an accounting number In accordance with the accounting convention, I think it was last quarter of 20 $6,000,000 for the new rent. I get asked about that all the time. The process has not begun, Although it will begin probably in the fall, I think we are in the process of preparing. We think the other side is doing the same. Speaker 200:55:14There's going to be multiple experts involved that It's a fairly significant kind of process. Interestingly, A little bit about it. Interestingly, these are old fashioned ground leases with old fashioned kinds of terms. Most of the old ground leases call for an appraisal process, which is based upon the highest and best use for the land as it's vacant and unimproved. With a willing buyer and a willing seller in a normalized market, no distress, No economic issues. Speaker 200:56:03This particular lease, we believe is oriented towards a real estate broker Kind of a situation, which would require that The renewal price will be based upon what the land could actually be sold at a particular point in time, which we believe is significantly different than the smoothed out appraisal traditional appraisal process. What's more, this is a date certain. And We are now in a situation in the macro economy where rates are rising significantly, debt markets are In turmoil and one of the interesting things is most capital markets, real estate capital markets Players admit that the debt markets are not conducive to Buying and selling assets because they're just not there. And if they are there, they're at much lower amounts and at much higher interest rates. In addition, construction costs are going up aggressively. Speaker 200:57:20In addition, tenant demand is slowing. And in addition, this is an extremely large asset where very few buyers could have the financial wherewithal to do it. So we think that all sort of plays to a constructive kind of a process where the outcome will be something that we can certainly live with. This is a very large, very important asset. Everybody knows we have spent $409,000,000 in capital improvements to improve this asset. Speaker 200:57:59We're very happy with it. And whatever the outcome might be of this ground lease reappraisal, We will still have enormous equity value in our lease going forward. Speaker 1200:58:13Can I ask my If I could ask the second question just on the retail? Last quarter, you took the guidance up, reiterated this quarter, Chloe has been coming in better than expected. Any other sort of large leases or anything we should think about as we're rolling into next year just on that retail contribution at $175,000,000 Speaker 200:58:33Thanks. No, Speaker 300:58:36I don't think so. I mean, there's Number of leases we talked about that are now contributing. There's other signed leases that will contribute next year, but nothing of a magnitude that's Worth mentioning, it's just a series of leases. Operator00:58:54And our next question comes from Nick Culico. Go ahead, Nick. Speaker 600:59:00Thanks. I was hoping to hear just a little bit more about the Q1 of this year to the Q2. You did have an increase in property revenue on a GAAP basis. I think you said signage, lease commencements were some of the Benefits, I just wanted to see if lease termination fees were also any impact. And I guess just how we should think about The incremental benefit still from the rest of the year from signage upside, commencements, Anything from a GAAP revenue standpoint as you think about the back half of the year versus what you've done in the first half of the year? Speaker 300:59:40Like on the like I'd say overall first half was quite good with the contribution broad based. We've got contribution coming from leases coming online, both office and retail. We've got lower expenses that we've been managing. Our variable business is doing quite well. And then there is a small piece of Maybe a little piece of lease termination, but also this quarter we got about $3,500,000 from bankruptcy recovery Related to New York and Company from 330 West 34. Speaker 301:00:23So but I wouldn't characterize that as very significant. So overall, the bulk of the contribution is from traditional recurring items. And our expectation is that we'll The trajectory of that growth we've seen in the 1st couple of quarters is going to level off in the second half just as Some of the things that started to flow in last year's second half will be in again this year, so you won't get that as much of an uplift year over year. But on a quarter to quarter basis, we'll continue again probably not as significant a growth rate as we've been the last couple of quarters. Speaker 601:01:03Okay, thanks. I guess the second question is just in terms of guidance. I know you are now giving some pieces on a cash basis for retail NOI, etcetera. But I guess I'm wondering if your philosophy if you're willing to revisit your philosophy of We are not providing FFO guidance. And the reason why I ask is that, if you look at estimates for your company for this year on FFO, for next year on There's some of the widest that we see, which really doesn't make that much sense for an office company. Speaker 601:01:36But there's a lot of I think there's a lot of impact that we're all trying to figure out, right? Projects coming online, offline, commencements, Difficult to really understand from a GAAP NOI standpoint as well you have some of the highest floating rate debt exposure, which is going to be an issue over the next year. So just trying to understand if you guys at all are going to revisit This approach on guidance particularly as feels like over the next year the estimates are really all over the place for FFO. Speaker 301:02:11Nick, at this time, we don't have any plans to revisit. I think we've given you more guidance than we've historically given over the last But as you're seeing this quarter, last quarter, particularly in an environment like this, It's hard to do it, right? It's hard to do it given the significant redevelopments we have underway and the impact of when things come online. Obviously, the impact from LIBOR going up, is causing impact in the back half of this year versus the original expectations. So There's a lot of ins and outs. Speaker 301:02:46We don't manage the business quarter to quarter. We do manage it to drive growth, but we feel like It makes sense to wait to lease space a little bit longer because we can extract better terms. We'll do that. It's sort of an artificial view on our mind quarter to quarter. And as I said, I think we gave reasonable guidance at the outset of this year. Speaker 301:03:10Obviously, I Too optimistic given the environment is changing and given the lack of clarity in the current environment across the board, whether it's rates, Leasing, etcetera, I don't think it's something we're going to start right now. Speaker 201:03:23Yes, I would say, I Speaker 601:03:24mean, look, I mean, we sorry, go ahead. Speaker 201:03:27I guess, I'm the heavy in this, and the Board as well. So we have on our Board a group of very Seasoned people, very familiar with public companies. And So my feeling, my personal feeling is that we are not in a quarter to quarter business. We are not in a day to day business. We are in a business which cycles over 5 10 years. Speaker 201:03:59So our objective is to create value over 5 10 year cycles. And we think we've done an awfully good job of that over long periods of time. The emphasis on Short term modeling and getting down to a penny a share and beat a penny, raise a penny, That kind of stuff is not for me. So to the extent that Guidance focuses in my mind and in some members of our Board's mind on short termism, that's not where we're about. However, over time, we have had several different occasions where we had things happen, which Where issues, for example, this could be, I don't know, 15 years ago, we had PTO, the patent trade off has moved out of multiple millions of feet in our Crystal City complex At the time when we continue to own what is now the JBG Smith business. Speaker 201:05:08We chose at that time to In a fairly detailed way with multiple pages of documentation to model out exactly how much space was empty and And our process in releasing that space. Similarly, recently, when the retail business fell off a cliff, We thought it was prudent to give our investors and the analysts our Opinions as to what the retail income would be at least from a downside point of view. And I think there was 1 or 2 others that I can't recollect right now. So that's my thinking about guidance. And basically, it's a very strong disagreement with short termism in our business. Speaker 601:06:05I understand all those points. I would just say that, look, interest rates evolve, so we can all model that. We can decide what We think the interest rate curve is, but GAAP NOI is something that would just be really useful to understand for this year, What is the GAAP NOI number? How should we think about GAAP NOI next year? It would just help and it's not a quarter to quarter number, it's an annual number we're talking about, something Because your stock doesn't just trade on NAV, which is cash NOI and other factors, right? Speaker 601:06:33It does trade on an earnings multiple. And I think your earnings estimates are very wide range versus where they could be if you actually just You gave some level of guidance. So thanks. Speaker 201:06:49Thank you. Operator01:06:51And our next question comes from Vikram Malhotra. Go ahead, Vikram. Speaker 601:06:58Thanks for Speaker 1001:06:58taking the question. So I I have 2. One, just maybe given the news around Meta, any thoughts or updates on 770 Broadway kind of ins and outs and how we should Speaker 1101:07:12So the lease with Verizon expires in the Q1 of 2023. They've renewed for 1 of the 4 floors, so there's 3 floors remaining, which is about 240,000 feet. The space is Unique, terrific in a great location. We're in the market to lease it now. We feel good about the prospects. Speaker 1101:07:33I mean that's the status of that block. Speaker 1001:07:37Okay, great. And then just maybe a bigger picture question. I guess, Steve, you many years ago called out the shift in Office, in Manhattan office to kind of the West Side and South. I'm just wondering, given sort of All the changes we're seeing both cyclically and potentially some structural changes, in your mind sort of As you said, you want to create value over the next 5 years. What is the biggest opportunity in terms of value creation? Speaker 1001:08:09Is it hard assets? Is it in Debt investments, perhaps your own stock in terms of buybacks, I'm just taking a longer term view, What would you do if you were to start looking at external growth? Speaker 201:08:25Well, that's a metaphysical question of the highest order, Vic. So look, We have done debt investments over a 25 year period. We have not Recently, and so I don't think that we're going to get into the debt business For lots of different reasons and with debt, a couple of things. Number 1, The best that you can hope for is that a publicly traded debt business trades for 110 percent of its book value. So basically, it's not a capitalization of earnings, Basically a book value kind of a thing. Speaker 201:09:19So we don't believe that debt gives equity returns. So that's step 1. Although we have done it in the past and we may do it in the future, but not likely. With respect to our stock, we agree that our stock is uniquely, and I think I'll acquiesce to Mr. Billiment stupidly Super cheap. Speaker 201:09:41And without saying anything, we have stayed away from investing in our stock or buying back our stock for Many, many quarters now, but we are starting to get kind of tempted about it. We think it's actually a little crazy. But we have to balance the returns that we could get by buying back our stock With the returns that we can get in the Penn District and other investments, we don't have a hankering for Small potatoes, if we were going to buy back our stock, we would want to do it in a fairly significant way. The rest of it is we are kind of baked in our business. Our assets are our assets. Speaker 201:10:30We may sell some. We certainly would buy assets In our skill set to the extent that they had, we had the opportunity to make the entrepreneurial returns that we think We have traditionally made. I'm not sure I handled all of the alternatives that you mentioned, but At least I've tried to handle some of them. Operator01:10:54And our next question is a follow-up from Michael Bilerman. Go ahead, Michael. Speaker 701:11:00Great. Thank you. So, Steve, just a few follow ups. Just on 770, I know you have 18 months To achieve perhaps greater loan proceeds, what are some of the conditions and how much additional capital can you draw out of that asset Per the terms of your agreement. Speaker 201:11:21The agreement provides for an additional $300,000,000 draw. It's conditioned upon leasing the Verizon space And one other condition, we are planning as if we will not make that draw. Okay. Speaker 701:11:45And then just going back to Alexander's, and I appreciate all the comments you gave to Alexander. I go back maybe 16, 17 years ago when Alexander's was trading at a discount and you Proactively put in the annual letter that you're going to take a deep look at a variety of options. And a year later, the stock market Corrected itself and the stock had gone up and there was nothing to do. How does the current situation compare to back then In relation to Alexander's, but also stepping back as it relates to Vornado, where you have been very active, can you just sort of compare and contrast The environment back then versus the environment now and trying to do something with Alexander's? Speaker 201:12:36Michael, Stocks fluctuate and Alexander's is no different. Alexander's has traded as high as 400 some odd dollars a share and as 8% dividend or at least it was a couple of days ago. So a business With the credit of Alexander's, the assets, the quality of the assets of Alexander's, the balance sheet, which basically has $500,000,000,000 some odd $50,000,000,000 Cash on it should not trade for an 8% dividend. So that's totally mispriced. It would not be stupid For Alexander's to trade at a 4% dividend based upon the money market comparables, etcetera, which would mean that Alexander's Based upon the dividend valuation alone, would be fairly priced if the stock would double. Speaker 201:13:36So the stock market is going to do what the stock market does. From our point of view, we are going to preserve the 500 $1,000,000,000 of cash for lots of different reasons, that may change, but it's not going to change in the short term. We're going to continue to pay out Whatever dividend the Board determines to be appropriate. And we are, as I've said multiple times, It's almost impossible for Vornado and Alexander's to combine. It's impossible To figure out what price would be that would make the Vornado shareholders happy and or the Alexander's shareholders happy at the same time. Speaker 201:14:21So for the moment, Alexander sort of sits where it sits and its shareholders should enjoy the dividend and the future prospects. Okay. Speaker 701:14:30And then just the last one, Steve, in response to my question at the opening On the tracker, you talked about being committed to the tracker or other techniques. And I don't want to pick up too much on that word, but In your mind, is there other avenues in the separation of the Penn District that you're evaluating other than just a tracking stock, which And I know you and I disagree, but that's fine. We can. But is there other ways that you're thinking about Structurally separating the company that way. Speaker 201:15:07Sure. But we're not going to talk about them today. Operator01:15:14Our next question comes from Jamie Feldman. Go ahead, Jamie. Speaker 501:15:19Great, thanks. Just a quick follow-up. Glenn, I think you had said, you're in discussions for 50% of the 23 expirations and you think 50% may move out. A, I want to make sure that's correct. And B, how does that compare to this time in prior years? Speaker 501:15:34And can you talk about some of the larger known move outs? Speaker 1101:15:40The fifty-fifty production is today's target. That moves down, as you know, weekly, quarterly, etcetera. So we'll keep you up But as always, we're way ahead of it, have been ahead of it over the past quarters tackling all those expirations. I don't want to get into specific tenants or specific buildings, Jamie, but you could be assured we're on top of every one of them, particularly A larger variety of exploration. Speaker 501:16:08And is that about where you are typically this time of year? Or do you think next year is going to be a tougher year? Speaker 1101:16:15Every year is different, but I mean year to year, fifty-fifty, 50, 60, 40, I mean it's always in that range. I'd say it's not far off the standard fare. But it's we usually Predicting all this is, as you know, difficult. Things change every day with our tenants in our buildings, always putting the puzzles together the best we can I'm decreeing value, so it's hard to say, yes, exactly that or exactly this. So that's where we are today. Speaker 501:16:43Okay. All right. Thank you. Operator01:16:47And we have no more questions at this time. Speaker 201:16:52So let me say we appreciate everybody joining us this morning. We look forward to seeing you all again soon. Our Q3 earnings call will be on Tuesday, November 1, at 10 o'clock in the morning, and we look forward to your participation again. Take good care. Operator01:17:12Ladies and gentlemen, this concludes today's conference. Thank you for your participation. You may now disconnect.Read moreRemove AdsPowered by