Brixmor Property Group Q2 2024 Earnings Report $24.81 +1.75 (+7.59%) Closing price 04/9/2025 03:59 PM EasternExtended Trading$24.74 -0.07 (-0.30%) As of 04/9/2025 04:20 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 Brixmor Property Group EPS ResultsActual EPS$0.23Consensus EPS $0.52Beat/MissMissed by -$0.29One Year Ago EPS$0.52Brixmor Property Group Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$315.69 millionExpected Revenue$317.75 millionBeat/MissMissed by -$2.06 millionYoY Revenue Growth+1.90%Brixmor Property Group Announcement DetailsQuarterQ2 2024Date7/29/2024TimeAfter Market ClosesConference Call DateTuesday, July 30, 2024Conference Call Time10:00AM ETUpcoming EarningsBrixmor Property Group's Q1 2025 earnings is scheduled for Monday, April 28, 2025, with a conference call scheduled on Tuesday, April 29, 2025 at 10:00 AM ET. Check back for transcripts, audio, and key financial metrics as they become available.Conference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptPress Release (8-K)Quarterly Report (10-Q)Earnings HistoryBRX ProfilePowered by Brixmor Property Group Q2 2024 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrJuly 30, 2024 ShareLink copied to clipboard.There are 18 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Welcome to the Brixmor Property Group Second Quarter 20 24 Earnings Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen only mode. A question and answer session will follow the formal presentation. As a reminder, this conference is being recorded. I would now like to turn the call over to Stacy Slater, SVP of Investor Relations and Capital Markets. Operator00:00:26Thank you. You may begin. Speaker 100:00:27Thank you, operator, and thank you all for joining Brix Moore's Q2 conference call. With me on the call today are Jim Taylor, Chief Executive Officer Brian Finnegan, President and Chief Operating Officer Steve Gallagher, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer. Mark Horgan, Executive Vice President and Chief Investment Officer will also be available for Q and A. Before we begin, let me remind everyone that some of our comments today may contain forward looking statements that are based on certain assumptions and are subject to inherent risks and uncertainties as described in our SEC filings and actual future results may differ materially. We assume no obligation to update any forward looking statements. Speaker 100:01:10Also, we will refer today to certain non GAAP financial measures. Further information regarding our use of these measures and reconciliations of these measures to our GAAP results are available in the earnings release and supplemental disclosure on the Investor Relations portion of our website. Given the number of participants on the call, we kindly ask that you limit your questions to 1 or 2 per person. If you have additional questions regarding the quarter, please re queue. At this time, it's my pleasure to introduce Jim Taylor. Speaker 200:01:40Thanks, Stacey, and good morning, everyone. Before speaking to our results and continued execution, I'd like to begin by congratulating Brian, Steven, Kevin and Helane on their well deserved promotions. Simply put, well done. As a company, our foundational cultural tenant is that great real estate matters, but great people matter even more. At Brixmor, we are blessed with the best team in the industry, a team that continues to deliver outperformance quarter in and quarter out as we execute our balanced value added plan. Speaker 200:02:13Speaking of records, we achieved record occupancy and record new and renewal spreads in the quarter, once again highlighting the flywheel effect of our portfolio transformation and our ability to capitalize on the embedded mark to market opportunity. In fact, we average rents of 23.82 a foot versus our average in place of $17,000,000 in a quarter. Importantly, we also commenced an additional $17,000,000 of ABR in the quarter ahead of expectations, while our signed but not commenced ABR replenished to $65,000,000 again providing excellent visibility on continued top line growth as those leases commence paying rent over the next several quarters. Overall, that top line revenue growth drove most of our same store performance of 5.5% in the quarter as growth in operating margins driven largely by increased occupancy and penetration of fixed CAM delivered the balance of that growth. That same store growth in turn drove bottom line FFO growth of nearly 6% in the quarter when you exclude the prior year gain on debt extinguishment. Speaker 200:03:27Even with expectations of higher levels of bad debt and lower prior year recoveries as Steve will detail on further in a moment, This outperformance led us to raise our FFO guidance to a range of $2.11 to $2.14 an increase of $0.03 at the midpoint. On the reinvestment front, we continue to make excellent progress delivering $37,000,000 at an incremental return of 9%, putting us on track to deliver over $200,000,000 for the full year. We also commenced $100,000,000 of pre leased reinvestment projects, including a second phase at Point Orlando and an exciting restaurant outparcel district called Block 59 in Naperville that Brian will discuss further. These and other projects underway provide us with excellent visibility that we will continue to deliver $150,000,000 to $200,000,000 per our plan in 2025 and 2026 and beyond. On the capital recycling front, we have closed during the quarter on a $17,000,000 acquisition in Long Island that is immediately adjacent to one of our existing centers. Speaker 200:04:39And just barely a month into ownership, we've identified several groceries to backfill an empty box at highly accretive rents. With these and other grocery opportunities that Brian will highlight in a moment, we continue to organically grow our overall gross anchored percentage to over 80% of ABR, importantly in a manner that unlocks huge value through yield and compression and cap rate. Following quarter end, we also closed on the acquisition of Fresh Market Shops in Hilton Head, a value added acquisition that builds on our critical mass in the fast growing Coastal Carolinas market. Further, our forward acquisition pipeline continues to build to over $200,000,000 with opportunities in our core markets to further cluster and leverage our best in class platform. Finally, I'm pleased to report that we continue to demonstrate the strength of our balance sheet and the impact of our balance strategy as we brought debt to EBITDA down to 5.6 times and have over $1,700,000,000 of liquidity to fund our business for the next several years. Speaker 200:05:45In sum, our balanced value added business plan not only continues to deliver on all fronts, but also positions us importantly for continued outperformance. With that, I'll turn the call over to Brian for a more detailed discussion of our operating results. Brian? Thanks, Jim, and good morning, everyone. I'm pleased to report another quarter of outstanding operating results delivered by the Brixmor team as demand to be in our centers from a wide range of high quality operators shows no signs of slowing down. Speaker 200:06:15The well capitalized tenants we are attracting and the rents we are achieving demonstrate not only the continued transformation of our portfolio, but the unmatched strength of the Brixmor platform. Our leasing activity during the quarter allowed us to achieve records once again in overall anchor and small shop occupancy with small shops growing sequentially for the 14th consecutive quarter to 90.8%. Record occupancy levels are also enabling our team to push rental rates higher in both new and renewal leases, which was also evident in our results, as we achieved record renewal growth Speaker 300:06:51of 19% Speaker 200:06:52across 195 renewal leases executed in the quarter to pair with the over 50% growth in our comparable new leases, which Jim highlighted. As encouraging as these results are, what's even more encouraging are the tenants we delivered them with. Tenants like Ulta, HomeGoods, Rally House, Skechers and Boot Barn, along with the company's first new lease with Wayfair in Greensboro, North Carolina, yet another online retailer that is recognizing the importance of having a physical store footprint. We also continued to grow our grocery anchor percentage during the quarter, adding another Sprouts Farmers Market to proactively backfill a Conn's location in Knoxville, Tennessee at close to triple the in place rent, demonstrating once again the opportunity that we have in our below market leases and the speed at which our team can capitalize on them. The Conn's boxes are among the few that are expected to come back to us at a time when box vacancy is at historic lows for the portfolio And our team is well on their way to backfilling these spaces in markets like Raleigh and Houston with better tenants at higher rents. Speaker 200:07:59Briefly on reinvestment to expand on what Jim highlighted, we are very excited to bring on $100,000,000 of accretive pre leased transformative redevelopment projects during the quarter led by the 2nd phase at Port Orlando and Block 59 in Suburban Chicago. Phase 2 of Point Orlando is coming online at the perfect time as we prepare to open Live at the Point in partnership with re anchor component of the shopping center in one of the most desirable suburbs in the Chicago market. Looking forward, we remain encouraged by the depth of retailer demand and the forward and legal pipeline, which continues to grow despite the records we continue to set in occupancy. Our team continues to be laser focused on quickly converting this demand into open rent paying tenants, which as Steve will highlight further gives us great visibility on future growth. Before handing the call over to Steve, I would like to congratulate him, Helane and Kevin on their well deserved promotions and thank Jim and the Board for the opportunity to serve as President as well as the broader Brixmor team for their continued support. Speaker 200:09:10There has never been a better time to be at Brixmor and I'm grateful to work with the best team in the business. Steve? Speaker 400:09:17Thanks, Brian. I'm pleased to report another very strong quarter and improved forward outlook, reflecting the strength of our plan execution and the compelling growth opportunity within the Brooksmart portfolio. NAREIT FFO was $0.54 per share in the 2nd quarter driven by same property NOI growth of 5.5%. Base rent growth contributed 380 basis points to same property NOI growth this quarter, reflecting continued strong leasing spreads, growth in build occupancy and improved retention rates. In addition, net expense reimbursements contributed 140 basis points driven by the growth in build occupancy and a decrease in real estate tax expense primarily due to reduced builds in our Chicago market. Speaker 400:09:59Revenues deemed uncollectible contributed 20 basis points to same property NOI growth due to higher collection rates and lower tenant We are very pleased with the continued execution by the entire Brixmor team as we ended the quarter with a 400 basis point spread between leased and build occupancy And our signed but not commenced pool totaled $65,000,000 which includes $55,000,000 of net new rent. The size of the pool decreased only $3,000,000 despite commencing approximately $17,000,000 of annualized base rent in the quarter. We expect the vast majority of ABR and assignment not commenced pool to commence over the next 18 months. From a balance sheet perspective, we repaid $300,000,000 of our 3.65 percent bonds that matured in June 2024 with the proceeds from our January bond offering. At June 30, we had total liquidity of $1,700,000,000 and our debt to EBITDA on a current quarter annualized basis was 5.6 times, leaving us well positioned to execute on our business plan and with the flexibility to opportunistically access the capital markets. Speaker 400:10:59In terms of our forward outlook, given the continued strength in the portfolio, we have increased our same property NOI growth to a range of 4.25% to 5% comprised of a 425 basis point to 4.75 basis point contribution from base rent as commencements from design but not commenced pool accelerates base rent growth in the second half of the year. Additionally, the improvements to the credit quality of our tenants and strong payment trends continues to drive outperformance Speaker 500:11:27and revenues deemed uncollectible. Speaker 400:11:27We now expect revenues deemed uncollectible to end the year at 50 to 75 basis points of total revenues versus the prior range of 75 to 110 basis points. In conjunction with the increase in our same property NOI expectation, we have raised our guidance 24 NAREIT FFO to a range of $2.11 to $2.14 per share. I would like to thank Jim and the Board for the CFO opportunity as well as the larger Brickmore team who supported me along the way. And with that, I'll turn the call over to the operator for Q and A. Operator00:11:58Thank you. At this time, we'll be conducting a question and answer Our first question has come from the line of Todd Thomas with KeyBanc Capital Markets. Please proceed with your questions. Speaker 600:12:31Hi, thanks. Good morning and congrats to everyone on their promotions. First question, I just wanted to ask about acquisitions. I'm wondering if there's any change in view around acquisitions and the company's position toward capital recycling and or capital raising at all here as we move forward just either given some of the changes in the C suite and or given the improvement in the company's cost of capital more recently? Speaker 200:13:07I think Todd, it's Jim. I think the big change has been honestly the opportunities that we're seeing. So we're always going to be opportunistic and direct our activity to those that we think can create huge value for the company. And we're pleased with what we're seeing out there in the transaction market, particularly in our core markets where we've successfully clustered investments. For example, we mentioned the acquisition of the Fresh Market in Hilton Head, which further grows our presence in that Coastal Carolina market. Speaker 200:13:39So we're pleased with the opportunities that we're seeing and our ability to execute on them. Speaker 600:13:46Do you anticipate being a net acquirer in the second half of the year? And can you talk about sort of the going in yields that you're seeing for acquisitions that you're underwriting today? Speaker 700:14:01Yes. Look, as Jim mentioned, we're always going to be opportunistic with respect to acquisitions and we're certainly seeing a much more active market over the last few months. Frankly, what's most interesting about the transaction the transactions market today is that sellers really appear to be more interested in kind of quiet direct conversations with folks like Brixmor that aren't relying upon external joint venture capital or frankly even the debt market to source deals or finance deals. So this ramp activity that you're seeing us with a couple of acquisitions we've made this year really has leading to a more active pipeline on the acquisition side. So we do expect to be a bit more, acquisitive here in the second half. Speaker 700:14:41But as Jim has mentioned over the years, we will always be balanced and disciplined with respect to capital allocation on acquisitions. With respect to yields, year to date the yields where we bought is in the high 6s. And as we look at our forward opportunities from a going in perspective, they are in the same yield, so that high 6 cap rate range. But also when you think about our cap recycling, what's important to realize is we are a whole IRR type investor. So when we look at assets we sold, we're seeing a pretty big spread between those IRRs of what we're selling and the IRRs for the assets that we're acquiring. Speaker 600:15:14Okay. That's helpful. And Steve, real quick, in terms of the net recoveries related to the lower property taxes in the quarter that you mentioned, how much of that was sort of one time in nature versus what might be more recurring as we think about lower property taxes potentially going forward? Speaker 400:15:34Yes. I think when you think about the total impact of the quarter, about $1,000,000 of it related sort of the way Chicago builds is in arrears related to 2023. So that's sort of the non recurring aspect, but about $500,000 will recur in the year and then recur going forward. And I think the important thing to remember with that is ultimately it's lowering our occupancy cost to our tenants and will allow us to push rent on those renewals in the future. Speaker 600:16:00Okay. That's helpful. $500,000 in the year or $500,000 in the quarter, so $2,000,000 on an annualized basis. $500,000 in the year. Okay. Speaker 400:16:10Yes. Speaker 800:16:10All Speaker 600:16:11right, got it. Thank you. Speaker 200:16:13Yes, Todd. The only other thing I would highlight there is we're benefiting also from higher recovery rates as our occupancy, our build occupancy moves up. So while we did benefit in the quarter from the favorable tax assessments, you should expect us as we continue to drive build occupancy, recover more and generate better margins. Operator00:16:39Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Dorey Kesten with Wells Fargo. Please proceed with your questions. Speaker 900:16:46Thanks. Good morning. And again, congrats on the promotions. Can you give us a sense of any incremental G and A that may come along with those? Speaker 200:16:55On balance, we don't expect incremental G and A as we look for other efficiencies. Speaker 900:17:02Okay. And then on cons and big lots, what kind of retailers have shown interest in those spaces And where may rent spreads pencil out? And just anything irregular to note about potential TI or timing to backfill? Speaker 200:17:17Dore, hey, this is Brian. Just as it relates to Conn's first, it's a pretty low exposure for us about 30 basis points. And as I talked about, these boxes may come back to us in the tightest supply environment that we've seen. And the types of tenants that we're backfilling them with are the types of tenants that continue to expand in the open air space like those in the value apparel segment, sorry, in the specialty grocery segment like the first cons that we proactively took back where we were able to put Sprouts in and triple the rent. As it relates to the Big Lots rents in particular, those rents are $7 just below $8 a foot. Speaker 200:17:55We've been signing those. We've been signing anchor leases around $16 a foot over the past year. And you can expect a similar level of upside, maybe not double, but particularly we got a significant amount as it relates to those big lot spaces. So we feel very encouraged, as again we're not getting a lot of box spaces back and it's the tightest box supply environment that we've seen in terms of our ability to quickly address them to the extent we get a few boxes back this year. Speaker 900:18:27Great. Thank you. Operator00:18:31Thank you. Our next question has come from the line of Craig Mailman with Citi. Please proceed Speaker 800:18:43Jim, just want to go back to your kind of the end of Todd's questioning on NOI margins there. I know you guys ticked up to about 76%, but you guys are getting every quarter it seems like another record on leased occupancy for anchors and small shop. Just as the portfolio continues to grow, you guys push through some fixed camp, you get some better outcomes on tax appeals. Where do you think NOI margins should shake out for your portfolio over the next year or 2 as this snow pipeline commences? Like what's a good normalized level to think about? Speaker 200:19:20Rather than giving you specific guidance on a margin, I think we've got a few 100 basis points of room. And I think you're going to see us continue to realize that as you point out as our build occupancy grows because there is a 400 basis point difference between leased and build. So as that occupancy delivers, obviously, we're going to be recovering a higher and higher percentage, which as you also mentioned is augmented by the increased penetration of fixed cam that we have in the portfolio. So I do expect to see continued growth in margin. I think we have more than a few 100 basis points of room. Speaker 200:19:59I'd rather not give you a specific number for guidance. And Craig, I would just add, our team has been very intentional in terms of improving CAM clauses in our leases, eliminating CAM caps, eliminating carve outs. You mentioned fixed CAM. We've been very intentional with that as well. Where we've been deploying that across the portfolio, we've been we have a good understanding of where the expense trajectory is at those properties. Speaker 200:20:26We've been growing that at 4% across both small shop and anchors. So, in addition to everything we're doing on the base rent front, our teams have been very intentional in terms of improving those CAM clauses, which is really helping with margins Speaker 700:20:40as well. And Craig, the last thing I would add is we look at acquisitions as well. When we think about acquisitions, we do buy from a lot of folks who are not large institutional owners like we are and they don't have the ability to hit some of those margin topics that Brian is hitting on. So we think that's also a piece of the growth in deals that we buy on the acquisition side. Speaker 800:21:00That's helpful. And then maybe sticking on the acquisition side, I don't know Mark or Jim. It sounds like more of the kind of pipeline you guys have gotten recently is off market or softly marketed deals. Is that am I reading into that correctly? You guys are kind of less of the buyer for the fully marketed deals and that's where you're going to get kind of the better opportunities to not compete with maybe some of the high net worth guys or other people who are just all cash buyers and have been paying kind of bigger prices more recently? Speaker 200:21:35We continue to see a mix of deals marketed and off market. I think Mark's point though is that we are a preferred buyer in this markets environment given our liquidity, given our presence in the markets that we're focused on and that gives us an advantage position. And we're also pleased by the just growth in the overall pipeline of opportunities that we're seeing that meet our return hurdles. Speaker 1000:22:03Great. Thank you. Operator00:22:05You bet. Thank you. Our next question has come from the line of Greg McGinniss with Scotiabank. Please proceed with your questions. Speaker 1100:22:13Hey, good morning. So leasing obviously remains quite healthy, Are you still renewing tenants in that category? Or how are you handling those expirations when they Speaker 1200:22:31come up? Speaker 200:22:33Greg, this is Brian. I mean, we look at these on an individual basis. Basis. For instance, our office supply exposure overall has dropped considerably. There still are office supply locations that are doing very well that are 4 wall EBITDA positive in our portfolio. Speaker 200:22:48So some of those do renew, but you think about some of the Staples locations in particular that we've taken back proactively and backfill with the likes of Ross and Grocers and other folks that we've been doing a lot of business with. So it's really going to be center specific. We've got a number of our pet store locations that continue to do very well. And I think in this environment, we're going to continue to be opportunistic where we see weaker tenants really in any category to be able to upgrade those spaces at higher rents. And then particularly on the anchor side where we do have a lot of demand, we also have a very low rent basis in terms of what's expiring over the next few years. Speaker 200:23:31We've got rents on those spaces expiring at close to $9 and we're signing them at $16 So it really depends on the situation. But where we do see weaker tenants in any category, we're going to use the opportunity to upgrade. Speaker 1000:23:45And so for specific boxes, how do Speaker 1100:23:47you go about evaluating kind of their productivity? Do you get sales information from them or place your data? How are you going about kind of deciding if they're a higher risk location Speaker 700:23:58or not that you might need Speaker 1100:23:59to be backfilling or proactively filling? Speaker 200:24:01We get both. I mean, we get sales for the majority of the portfolio and we do get traffic for all our tenants. That has certainly helped us be a lot smarter. The other thing is we've got great relationships across our platform, particularly on the national account side where even where we don't get reported sales, we'll often get a number of those volumes in the conversations with our tenant and that's conversations with our tenants and that's because of the trust our team has built. So we do utilize the tools that you're talking about whether that's Placer, whether that's other tools related to traffic, but we also get sales from the bulk of our tenants. Speaker 200:24:38We're also adding sales reporting when we have renewals coming up in leases where we're not getting that today. And then again, the relationships that we have with these retailers really shows the trust where we're able to get some of those sales volumes as well. Yes. Speaker 500:24:55And we're Speaker 200:24:55Go ahead. Speaker 1300:24:57No, please. Speaker 200:24:58No, we're in a great supply demand environment that allows us to drive the optimal outcome for space as it comes due. And you see it in the spreads, you see it in the renewal spreads as well as the new leasing spreads. So we're not only taking this opportunity to upgrade the portfolio and continue to upgrade tenant quality, we're also using it to drive true organic growth and it's in the numbers. Speaker 1000:25:23Okay. Thanks. And just one final point on that is, Brian, how many of the stores or what percentage of the big box stores are you getting individual Speaker 200:25:39almost all of our grocers and that's 70% across all size ranges. So I don't have the particular anchor number today. But again, that percentage of tenants that are reporting sales has improved as as renewals come up. So we've been very intentional about that and I expect that to continue to grow. And as Brian alluded to, our national accounts team is held accountable to understand productivity where sales reporting isn't required. Speaker 200:26:10So when you supplement that with the Placer AI data in terms of traffic, which is a great proxy for sales productivity, you have a pretty good view, which not only helps you understand the health of the underlying tenant, but also how you best drive the economics upon renewal. Speaker 1000:26:32Thanks, Jim. Thanks, Brian. Speaker 200:26:34Thanks. Operator00:26:36Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Alexander Goldfarb with Piper Sandler. Please proceed with your questions. Speaker 300:26:44Hey, good morning and mazel tov on the promotions all around. Just a few two questions, I guess one question, one follow-up. On the going back to the tenants, clearly McDonald's out with their news on consumer pushback. It's been sort of a common theme for other, especially in the food area. Just an update on what you're seeing across your retail portfolio. Speaker 300:27:14Are retailers really talking and concerned about changes in consumer shopping and purchase patterns? Or is this just people reallocating a little bit within each of the different categories and overall it's really not affecting the business in any way that affects their leasing? Speaker 200:27:33The leasing decision is a long term decision and not certainly driven by quarterly performance as the retailers are looking at their pipelines out into 25, 26 and beyond and they're committed to the stores. As we look at our real time traffic data, we're actually very pleased with how traffic at our centers and our major tenants within those centers continues to improve as we execute our strategy. And in terms of are we hearing it from tenants, really quite to the contrary. The tenants still are in a posture where they're trying to get their store opening plans filled and they're being very aggressive to do that. Speaker 300:28:14Okay. And then just a follow-up is looking at your leasing the sign but not yet commenced, the wider gap is with the small shop, the under 10,000 square feet And presumably, that's the more lucrative economics for you guys. Steve, can you just give a sort of how we should think about the impact to earnings from 100 basis point increase in occupancy from small shop versus 100 basis point increase in over 10,000 square feet. Just trying to get a sense of the impact to FFO because you have to believe that it's much more advantageous to boost from the smaller shops and the bigger shops as your occupancy increases. Speaker 400:28:56Yes. I mean, I don't know that I can quantify the exact input, but I think your general thesis is correct, right? Those smaller shop tenants are going to pay a higher rent and have a higher contribution to recoveries than you would on the anchor side. Speaker 200:29:09And that follows through when you look at the average rents we're achieving both on the anchors and the small shop, your point is correct that there is a greater multiplier that's part of that $65,000,000 of signed but not commenced rent. Speaker 300:29:24Okay. Thank you. Thank you. Speaker 200:29:26You bet. Operator00:29:29Thank you. Our next questions come from the line of Caitlin Burrows with Goldman Sachs. Please proceed with your questions. Speaker 1400:29:40Hi, Maybe just another pickup on the impact of occupancy improvements. You had a good pickup in build occupancy in the quarter and talked about how the snow pipeline is still quite large. So what's your near to medium term expectations for build occupancy? Can this sort of pace of openings and rent commencements continue or maybe even accelerate from what we saw in the quarter? Speaker 200:30:04Caitlin, hey, this is Brian. You normally would expect build occupancy to continue to trend higher in the back half of the year as we have kind of the bulk of those openings happening in the late third, Q4, particularly with anchors. Now depending on if we get a few store closures back, you may see a dip in that, but that would be the normal course build occupancy trajectory as we head into the end of the year. And again, we just talked about the spread between leased and build, particularly on the small shops. We'd start to have a number of those shops coming online at year end and even as the balance as we get into next year. Speaker 200:30:39And the pipeline continues to be very strong. We're very encouraged just with the depth of demand and the size of the in legal pipeline despite the fact that we're raising occupancy to these levels. So but overall, the trajectory you should expect to see that to rise as we go through the balance of the year. Speaker 1400:30:57Got it. Okay. And then just another one on pricing. So, I mean your new lease spreads have been very strong for a very long time and this quarter was a record level. The renewal pricing is also really strong. Speaker 1400:31:08I guess on the option side, is there anything you can do to limit kind of the drag from the impact of options? And is that anything you can do near term? Or is it more related to leases you signed today and the eventual options they may or may not have in the future? Speaker 200:31:23Since we began, our focus has been on giving fewer options. And we've been very successful, Brian and team, we've been executing the plan to do that. And so not only not giving options, but giving fewer options in situations where they're otherwise required. And that's really how you impact that. It's something that occurs over time as you execute fewer and fewer options across the portfolio. Speaker 200:31:50And Caitlin, I would just add too that we're making incremental progress even when we have to give an option, right? Like in this environment where maybe those option increases in the past with anchor tenants were 10% and our team is pushing them to 12.5% or 15%. To Jim's point, maybe you're eliminating anchor number of anchor options from say 4% to 2%. The other thing that we've done is we've introduced the fair market value concept that was pretty much a California phenomenon into other parts of the country where we've had to give those primarily with national tenants. We're giving almost no options with local tenants. Speaker 200:32:27And to Jim's point, it's something our team is very focused on. If you were to sit in committee on a Friday and hear our Head of Leasing, David Gerstenhaver, he's asking that question as deals come into committee, do you have to give that option? Can you reduce those options? So it's something we're going to continue to remain focused on, but something we've been doing for a while. Speaker 1400:32:46Great. Thanks. Operator00:32:50Thank you. Our next question has come from the line of Juan Sanabria with BMO Capital Markets. Please proceed with your questions. Speaker 1500:32:57Hi. Thanks for the time. Just a question with regards to the same store NOI guidance. Obviously, there's a slowdown implied in the second half. Can you just give us some color or details around what's driving the slower assumed second half and what are the key variables within the guidance range? Speaker 400:33:22I think the first thing you got to think about when you think about the same property NOI is just the growth in base rent, right? Because ultimately the growth in same property NOI is going to be largely dependent on that growth. And for the first half of the year, it was 380 basis point contribution to same property NOI. And you'll see implied in our base rent guidance of 4 25 basis point to 4 75 basis point contribution. You really see that starting to ramp up sort of what Brian was talking about within the Simon not commenced pool. Speaker 400:33:49Obviously, in the first half of the year, bad debt as a percentage of total revenues was 20 basis points. We talked on the last quarter call that that did benefit from just the timing of real estate tax collections and we expect that to be a headwind to the back half of the year as we get back to that what we're expecting to be a total run rate of 50 to 75 basis points. So I think that deceleration in the bad debt is sort of offsetting a lot of acceleration that you're seeing in the base rent line. Speaker 1500:34:20Okay, great. Thanks. And then just on the acquisitions pipeline, I think you mentioned $200,000,000 in the prepared comments. Just curious on the types of assets. Are there larger assets or smaller kind of more traditional neighborhood grocery anchored centers? Speaker 1500:34:38Just curious on where you're seeing the opportunity set with regards to kind of what's in the pipeline today? Speaker 700:34:46Yes. That pipeline is larger the assets are larger than what we bought in the first half of the year in part because what we bought in the first half of the year was smaller. So it's really assets that look a lot like the meat of our portfolio. And importantly, they're assets where we see the ability to drive strong growth. They sit within our footprint and we have been targeting a bunch of those for acquisitions for quite some time. Speaker 700:35:09So we're excited about the opportunity we're seeing in the existing pipeline. And frankly, beyond the existing pipelines, we continue to try to dig out deals across the country. Speaker 1500:35:21And maybe just one more, if I could be a little greedy here. You talked about foot traffic being solid and having increased amount of data points on retailer sales. But given the comments Alex made about the more cautious comments by both luxury and low end retailers, are you seeing any slowdown in retail sales from your retailer base across the portfolio? Speaker 200:35:45We're not. Operator00:35:49Okay. Thanks. Thank you. Our next question is come from the line of Floris Van Dijk from Compass Point. Please proceed with your questions. Speaker 500:36:00Hey, good morning guys and congrats on the new titles. So following up on that acquisition pipeline, maybe if you can talk a little bit about what you're seeing in terms of pricing? And maybe to switch the question a little bit more, are you targeting value add acquisitions or is it mostly complementary or infill acquisitions just like what you've done in Hilton Head next to existing centers? Speaker 200:36:34I'll let Mark handle the broader pipeline for us. But we really are looking at core plus value added type opportunities where we can bring our better platform to bear to drive better outcomes in rent and NOI growth, additional asset densification, etcetera. So you're not seeing us playing on the core side, but we're with the encouraging thing is that we're finding really attractive opportunities within our core markets to further cluster infill type investments where we understand where the market rents are. We understand what the tenant demand is to be in that particular center and we believe we can generate above average growth. Speaker 700:37:19Yes. I think it's well said Jim. And when we look at acquisitions, we're also thinking about those dispositions. I think it's important. I said it earlier, when we're selling assets, we're selling assets where we've really maximized value and maximize that IRR going forward. Speaker 700:37:33And when we're looking at that pipeline, we're just seeing much better IRR buying versus what we're selling, which we hope will contribute to the long term growth here. Speaker 500:37:43Great. And presumably those the acquisitions and dispositions, are they going to be similar type comp rates? Speaker 700:37:51Yes, it's interesting. When we look at our what we've done year to date as we talked about last quarter, our blended cap rate for what we sold year to date is into the 4s we're buying today into the high 6s. I think that will even out over time. Speaker 500:38:08Great. And then maybe my follow-up question on I noticed obviously great new leasing spreads, but you're spending a lot of money to achieve some of those spreads. I think I calculate $205 a square foot in lease costs this past quarter. Maybe talk I suspect it has to do with some of the Conn's boxes or some of the other boxes that you're transitioning to Sprouts or other grocers. But if you could talk a little bit about how long will those elevated leasing costs persist in your view? Speaker 500:38:48Or do you think that that's going to slow down at some point and have or go even lower? Speaker 200:38:56This is Brian. I'm not tying to the $206 a foot, but I would just point to the fact that net effective rents were a record for the portfolio this quarter. We show you the net effective rents, so you can ultimately see the impact of costs there. They're coming off a record from last year. What you're seeing in terms of the leasing CapEx, it was somewhat elevated last year versus historicals and it will remain at that level this year in terms of the TIs. Speaker 200:39:23That's just because of the fact that our team has leased so much of the space that we took back last year and leased it very quickly. I'd say on average, the box backfills that we've done, we've talked about in the past, we average around $50 a foot for the Bed Bath spaces. That's consistent with what you're seeing. Where we are spending a bit more like the Sprouts example that you gave, we're getting it back in rent certainly. I'd say just for CapEx overall though, we have been very prudent in terms of where we've been spending. Speaker 200:39:55You see our maintenance CapEx now it was down last year versus 2022. It's trending down again and will be down by year end really reflective of the changes that we've made and the improvements that we've made across the portfolio and that leveling off. Our reinvestment spend, we talked about that being $150,000,000 to $200,000,000 a year. We're going to be at the high end of that range this year as we bring on some of these really strong projects like those that Jim and I both highlighted. But to your point, as occupancy increases and there continues to be demand, our team is leveraging that demand to have tenants take more existing conditions. Speaker 200:40:31Tenants are getting much more flexible in terms of the age of the roof, the age of the HVAC. So you'd expect that to moderate. But I think on the whole, why you're seeing some of the leasing costs somewhat elevated is just because our team has addressed so much of that space so quickly. Speaker 500:40:48Great. Thanks guys. Operator00:40:49You bet. Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Haendel St. Juste with Mizuho. Please proceed with your questions. Speaker 500:41:04Hey, thank you for taking my question. I wanted to go back to Big Lots for a moment. You have more exposure there than cons. I think it's 27 boxes, 70 bps of APR. I'm curious what you've heard on how many of those stores they might be looking to close in your portfolio. Speaker 500:41:19And we're hearing that they may be look at subleasing some of their own space directly to 3rd parties. Speaker 1600:41:24So I'm Speaker 500:41:24curious if you're seeing any of that and if you expect that to perhaps limit your opportunity to get back some Operator00:41:29of those boxes and benefits in the re leasing yourself? Thanks. Speaker 200:41:32Haendel, this is Brian. So just as it relates to Big Lots, we reduced our exposure again by 30% since prior to the pandemic. We signed leases with the likes of Aldi and Sprouts and Ross here recently on recently recaptured Big Lots spaces. We did have 4 stores that were on the initial closure list. 2 of those are already leased, 1 with a great fitness use, 1 with a great off price operator. Speaker 200:41:59So as we look and we don't have any additional color in terms of the number of stores that we will get back or the timing as it relates to anything announcing additional store closures. What I could say though is we have Big Lots boxes in markets like Philadelphia and Dallas and we're we'd be taking some of this space back in the tightest box supply environment that we've ever seen. So, we feel really good about the demand we're seeing for that space. We were very opportunistic early in the Bed Bath discussions too about taking space and we'll look at that as well, because we want to ensure that we control our own destiny, but we'll be prudent with those decisions as we assess them center by center. Speaker 500:42:43And are you hearing anything on the Operator00:42:45re leasing of the boxes themselves to third parties? Speaker 200:42:49Yes. I think look they probably see the same value that we do. And again, we're going to we showed up at the auction. We were for Bed Bath. We were able to get control of one of our boxes that we've already leased in New England. Speaker 200:43:05So, we'll assess that as they come along. And I would say, look, our team has already been very proactive. Again, there were 4 stores on the closure list that just came out, 2 of them are already leased. So we've been getting ahead of a number of these names, particularly when we hear of potential store closures or potential weakness and feel really confident in our ability to capitalize on them and we'll be opportunistic as it relates to proactively recapturing that space. Speaker 500:43:35Got it. Thank you. And then just a follow-up, you mentioned Bed Bath. The new anchor lease spreads were very high in the quarter. I'm curious if any of that included any of the Bed Bath backfills? Speaker 500:43:44And remind us again of Operator00:43:45the timing of the cash flow impact that you expect from the bath backfills? Speaker 200:43:51Well, just starting on the cash flow, that's already started to come online. We do expect the bulk of that to come online next year. We're effectively finished with those boxes. Interestingly, it didn't really include the pet baths because we had already leased all those boxes in the quarters prior to this. And I think what this shows you is the low rent basis that we have and the opportunity that we have across the portfolio, not just with 1 tenant or one part of the country. Speaker 200:44:16It was fairly broad based where we saw that this quarter. But ultimately, we're thrilled with how quickly our team is really addressing any space that we've been getting back in this environment, and expect us to continue to do that. Speaker 500:44:30All right. Thank you and congrats on the promotion. Speaker 200:44:33Thanks again, guys. Operator00:44:36Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Jeff Spector with Bank of America. Please proceed with your questions. Speaker 1000:44:43Hi, this is Andrew Reel on for Jeff. Thanks for taking our questions. Westcenter is about 99% leased. What's the least rate at Fresh Market Shops? And can you just talk more about the opportunity set at the 2 assets, if there are any larger expirations in the near term and what mark to market opportunities look like? Speaker 700:45:02Sure. So at West Center that if you've looked at that on the site plan, it's really an adjacent to the center we own behind it called 3 Villages. And that's really unlocking the opportunity to figure out what the overall plan is for 3 villages when you include that outparcel. So that vacant box Jim mentioned is the one at West Village I'm sorry, at Village Center behind West Center, which is early, but really exciting steps here in the 1st couple of months of ownership. With respect to Hilton Head, it's 100% occupied and what we see there is an asset that's been under managed and under rented and we're very excited about the opportunity to drive low risk, high growth there. Speaker 1000:45:43Okay, thanks. You also spoke to adding a few more repositioning and redevelopment projects to the pipeline this quarter. Just curious if it's becoming any easier to find these types of opportunities. Any color on your opportunity set to retouch assets and how that's trending would be helpful. Thanks. Speaker 200:46:00Yes. It's really the advantage our platform brings. As a team, we look at acquisition opportunities and we really are viewing them through the lens of a value added investor where we have the opportunity to raise rents, but also reposition, densify and add necessary uses to the acquisition. So the nice part about our strategy is that we've successfully harvested significant amount of opportunity in our existing portfolio. Importantly, a significant amount of opportunity remains several $100,000,000 that we expect to execute over the next couple of years. Speaker 200:46:38And then we continually add that as we've demonstrated in South Florida, as I think we'll demonstrate in some of these more recent acquisitions, the opportunity to add value through incremental reinvestment. Speaker 1000:46:53Thank you. Operator00:46:54You bet. Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Samir Khanal with Evercore ISI. Please proceed with your questions. Speaker 1200:47:05Hey, Brian, good morning. I guess, I mean, you talked about the cons boxes, the big lots boxes. I mean, just as we think about the setup into next year, what does that tenant exposure sort of that watch list look like, I guess for the next 6 to 12 months? Thanks. Speaker 200:47:20I'd just start by saying the credit base of this portfolio is as strong as it's ever been. We put in a rigorous underwriting process coming out of the pandemic with our financial asset management team and that has really paid off. And you can see it pay it off in record low move outs for the portfolio. You can see it paying off in terms of the renewal growth that we've been able to drive because we've got better tenants in there that are driving more traffic. Again, as it relates to those 2 specific situations, we have a very low exposure with Conn's at 30 basis points. Speaker 200:47:57We've already leased one of the boxes. The other boxes are in places like Raleigh and Houston and Atlanta, which are great markets. And ultimately as it relates to Big Lots, we have consistently been lowering our exposure there and backfilling them with better tenants at higher rents. So I think it's encouraging that we've already got leases on some of the stores that they've announced. And as we think about it ultimately into next year, we are looking to see how we can use this as an opportunity to continue to position ourselves to upgrade these spaces. Speaker 1200:48:31Okay, got it. And I guess, Jim, just shifting over to you, you clearly have occupancy that continues to go up, spreads are strong. Looks like acquisitions maybe even picking up here Speaker 500:48:42at Speaker 1200:48:42least as we saw in the quarter. I mean, I guess what's the biggest risk to the portfolio or the sector at this time you Operator00:48:48think? Thanks. Speaker 200:48:51I think we're really well positioned even for a slowdown given where our rent basis is. And it's a point I've made many times that in a strong environment such as the one that we're in, we're positioned to outperform largely because of that rent basis. Should you see a slowdown in retailer demand, which we're not seeing any signs of, again, retailers are doing business out to 25 26. But were we to, we think we're particularly well positioned given the transformation of the portfolio, given our rent basis and given our overall execution. So, I don't see any major risks as we look out ahead beyond general economic trends and cycles. Speaker 200:49:35But even given that, I believe we're really well positioned. I'm also very proud of how we've handled our balance sheet, how we continue to drive improvements in overall debt to EBITDA, how we continue to capitalize in this environment on demand for our fixed income paper to continue to term out our balance sheet and put us in a position where we have $1,700,000,000 of liquidity and no need for external capital to fund our business plan for the next several years. So when you think about again rent basis, conservative capital structure upside, the reposition of the portfolio. I think it's an all weather plan. I think it's one that positions us particularly well whatever the economic climate is. Operator00:50:26Thank you, Jim. Speaker 400:50:28You bet. Operator00:50:30Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Linda Tsai with Jefferies. Please proceed with your questions. Hi, Linda, can you check if you're self muted, please? Speaker 200:50:52Operator, we can put her back in the queue. Speaker 1600:50:54Oh, sorry. There you are. Speaker 200:50:56Hey, Linda. Yes. Sorry about that. Speaker 1600:51:01Just with closures taking a touch higher in the second half reverting you to the historical bad debt run rate, from where you sit today, could bad debt range 75 bps to 110 bps for 2025? Speaker 200:51:15I think it certainly could. I think what we've been pleased by is the overall improvement in credit quality within the portfolio and how that's coming through in terms of the bad debt performance. We do expect a greater amount of revenues deemed uncollectible in the second half of the year as Steve alluded to. And I don't want to give guidance yet on 25%, but I would frame it against the overall improvement in the portfolio. Operator00:51:48And then would you expect Speaker 1600:51:49that just given the strength in your overall portfolio, what's kind of like the longer term same store run rate in your portfolio over the next few years? Speaker 200:52:01I think we're well positioned to achieve that same store growth in the 4 plus percent range over the next several years. Speaker 1600:52:11Thanks. Operator00:52:13Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Mike Mueller with JPMorgan. Please proceed with your questions. Thanks. Hi. Operator00:52:21Just a quick one here. We know the redevelopment pipeline is sizable, but are you evaluating any new ground up development opportunities as well? Speaker 200:52:31We've been approached by developers. We've been approached by certain tenants regarding ground up development opportunities and to date they haven't penciled. You've got a higher risk, a lower return and it just doesn't compare favorably to the opportunities we have to reinvest in our existing assets. So, I do think it's going to take a while to see new ground up development of any meaningful amount, not only because of the higher risk and lower returns, but also because it's just a difficult environment in which to finance that type of activity. So we've seen some, but I don't expect a material increase in the next couple of years. Operator00:53:14Got it. Okay. Thank you. Speaker 200:53:16You bet. Operator00:53:18Thank you. Our next question has come from the line of Ki Bin Kim with Truist Securities. Please proceed with your question. Speaker 1700:53:25Thanks. Good morning. Just a couple of follow ups. Speaker 200:53:29You added Speaker 1700:53:29a couple of new projects to your redevelopment pipeline. Can you just remind us how you define the yields, the 9% yields that you're getting and if that includes landlord work? And second, if you look at the trend on rents and construction costs, does the next batch of potential redevelopment projects, is that yield potential, has increased over the past year or has Speaker 700:53:52it or relatively stable? Speaker 200:53:55Yes. That return is the incremental rent over the project level costs and the total project level cost. As we look out in the pipeline, because of the strong demand environment we're seeing, we're actually seeing positive upward pressure in some of those returns. As you saw in terms of the overall portfolio of reinvestment growing from an average of 8 to 9. So we're encouraged by what we're seeing looking forward. Speaker 600:54:25Okay. Thank you. Speaker 1700:54:25Thank you. Speaker 400:54:26You bet. Operator00:54:28Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Omidyak Oksania with Deutsche Bank. Please proceed with your questions. Speaker 1300:54:35Hi, yes. Good morning. Let me add my own congratulations to the whole team. Quick question on Kroger Albertsons and kind of the latest developments with, again, the court case getting accelerated to September. Just curious what you guys are hearing whether it's kind of changes how you guys think are thinking about your exposure to those 2 grosses? Speaker 200:54:58Tayo, this is Brian. We don't have much more to report outside of what's been in the news. We were encouraged by the fact that none of our stores were on the initial divestiture list. We feel good about our fleets in really either scenario. We've got great stores that have been reinvested in for both Kroger and Albertsons. Speaker 200:55:23The markets where we do have some overlap are in a very tight supply environment, some of the tightest supply that we have in markets like Dallas and Southern California and Denver. So we have said and continue to believe that a merger would be good for both companies and have been watching this very closely, but feel really good about our fleet. I mean these stores produce higher sales volumes and the over $700 a foot that we're getting from grocers across the portfolio. So and we're really encouraged by the fact that they have been invested in here over the last few years. Speaker 1300:55:59Thank you. Speaker 200:56:00Thanks. Operator00:56:02Thank you. We have reached the end of our question and answer session. Would like to turn the floor back over to Stacy Slater for closing remarks. Speaker 100:56:10Thanks everyone for joining us today. Enjoy the rest of your summers. Operator00:56:16Thank you. This does conclude today's teleconference. We appreciate your participation. You may disconnect your lines at this time. Enjoy the rest of your day.Read moreRemove AdsPowered by Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallBrixmor Property Group Q2 202400:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2xRemove Ads Earnings DocumentsPress Release(8-K)Quarterly report(10-Q) Brixmor Property Group Earnings HeadlinesBrixmor Property Group Inc. (NYSE:BRX) Receives $30.48 Consensus Target Price from AnalystsApril 7 at 2:55 AM | americanbankingnews.comBrixmor removed from US Conviction List at Goldman SachsApril 2, 2025 | markets.businessinsider.comNew “Trump” currency proposed in DCAccording to one of the most connected men in Washington… A surprising new bill was just introduced in Washington. Its purpose: to put Donald Trump’s face on the $100 note. All to celebrate a new “golden age” for America. April 10, 2025 | Paradigm Press (Ad)Beyond The Numbers: 7 Analysts Discuss Brixmor Property Group StockMarch 29, 2025 | nasdaq.comBrixmor price target lowered to $26 from $27 at Wells FargoMarch 27, 2025 | markets.businessinsider.comIf You Invested $10K In Brixmor Property Stock 10 Years Ago, How Much Would You Have Now?March 27, 2025 | finance.yahoo.comSee More Brixmor Property Group Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like Brixmor Property Group? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on Brixmor Property Group and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About Brixmor Property GroupBrixmor Property Group (NYSE:BRX), Inc. operates as a real estate investment trust, which engages in owning and operating a portfolio of grocery anchored community and neighborhood shopping centers. 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There are 18 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Welcome to the Brixmor Property Group Second Quarter 20 24 Earnings Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen only mode. A question and answer session will follow the formal presentation. As a reminder, this conference is being recorded. I would now like to turn the call over to Stacy Slater, SVP of Investor Relations and Capital Markets. Operator00:00:26Thank you. You may begin. Speaker 100:00:27Thank you, operator, and thank you all for joining Brix Moore's Q2 conference call. With me on the call today are Jim Taylor, Chief Executive Officer Brian Finnegan, President and Chief Operating Officer Steve Gallagher, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer. Mark Horgan, Executive Vice President and Chief Investment Officer will also be available for Q and A. Before we begin, let me remind everyone that some of our comments today may contain forward looking statements that are based on certain assumptions and are subject to inherent risks and uncertainties as described in our SEC filings and actual future results may differ materially. We assume no obligation to update any forward looking statements. Speaker 100:01:10Also, we will refer today to certain non GAAP financial measures. Further information regarding our use of these measures and reconciliations of these measures to our GAAP results are available in the earnings release and supplemental disclosure on the Investor Relations portion of our website. Given the number of participants on the call, we kindly ask that you limit your questions to 1 or 2 per person. If you have additional questions regarding the quarter, please re queue. At this time, it's my pleasure to introduce Jim Taylor. Speaker 200:01:40Thanks, Stacey, and good morning, everyone. Before speaking to our results and continued execution, I'd like to begin by congratulating Brian, Steven, Kevin and Helane on their well deserved promotions. Simply put, well done. As a company, our foundational cultural tenant is that great real estate matters, but great people matter even more. At Brixmor, we are blessed with the best team in the industry, a team that continues to deliver outperformance quarter in and quarter out as we execute our balanced value added plan. Speaker 200:02:13Speaking of records, we achieved record occupancy and record new and renewal spreads in the quarter, once again highlighting the flywheel effect of our portfolio transformation and our ability to capitalize on the embedded mark to market opportunity. In fact, we average rents of 23.82 a foot versus our average in place of $17,000,000 in a quarter. Importantly, we also commenced an additional $17,000,000 of ABR in the quarter ahead of expectations, while our signed but not commenced ABR replenished to $65,000,000 again providing excellent visibility on continued top line growth as those leases commence paying rent over the next several quarters. Overall, that top line revenue growth drove most of our same store performance of 5.5% in the quarter as growth in operating margins driven largely by increased occupancy and penetration of fixed CAM delivered the balance of that growth. That same store growth in turn drove bottom line FFO growth of nearly 6% in the quarter when you exclude the prior year gain on debt extinguishment. Speaker 200:03:27Even with expectations of higher levels of bad debt and lower prior year recoveries as Steve will detail on further in a moment, This outperformance led us to raise our FFO guidance to a range of $2.11 to $2.14 an increase of $0.03 at the midpoint. On the reinvestment front, we continue to make excellent progress delivering $37,000,000 at an incremental return of 9%, putting us on track to deliver over $200,000,000 for the full year. We also commenced $100,000,000 of pre leased reinvestment projects, including a second phase at Point Orlando and an exciting restaurant outparcel district called Block 59 in Naperville that Brian will discuss further. These and other projects underway provide us with excellent visibility that we will continue to deliver $150,000,000 to $200,000,000 per our plan in 2025 and 2026 and beyond. On the capital recycling front, we have closed during the quarter on a $17,000,000 acquisition in Long Island that is immediately adjacent to one of our existing centers. Speaker 200:04:39And just barely a month into ownership, we've identified several groceries to backfill an empty box at highly accretive rents. With these and other grocery opportunities that Brian will highlight in a moment, we continue to organically grow our overall gross anchored percentage to over 80% of ABR, importantly in a manner that unlocks huge value through yield and compression and cap rate. Following quarter end, we also closed on the acquisition of Fresh Market Shops in Hilton Head, a value added acquisition that builds on our critical mass in the fast growing Coastal Carolinas market. Further, our forward acquisition pipeline continues to build to over $200,000,000 with opportunities in our core markets to further cluster and leverage our best in class platform. Finally, I'm pleased to report that we continue to demonstrate the strength of our balance sheet and the impact of our balance strategy as we brought debt to EBITDA down to 5.6 times and have over $1,700,000,000 of liquidity to fund our business for the next several years. Speaker 200:05:45In sum, our balanced value added business plan not only continues to deliver on all fronts, but also positions us importantly for continued outperformance. With that, I'll turn the call over to Brian for a more detailed discussion of our operating results. Brian? Thanks, Jim, and good morning, everyone. I'm pleased to report another quarter of outstanding operating results delivered by the Brixmor team as demand to be in our centers from a wide range of high quality operators shows no signs of slowing down. Speaker 200:06:15The well capitalized tenants we are attracting and the rents we are achieving demonstrate not only the continued transformation of our portfolio, but the unmatched strength of the Brixmor platform. Our leasing activity during the quarter allowed us to achieve records once again in overall anchor and small shop occupancy with small shops growing sequentially for the 14th consecutive quarter to 90.8%. Record occupancy levels are also enabling our team to push rental rates higher in both new and renewal leases, which was also evident in our results, as we achieved record renewal growth Speaker 300:06:51of 19% Speaker 200:06:52across 195 renewal leases executed in the quarter to pair with the over 50% growth in our comparable new leases, which Jim highlighted. As encouraging as these results are, what's even more encouraging are the tenants we delivered them with. Tenants like Ulta, HomeGoods, Rally House, Skechers and Boot Barn, along with the company's first new lease with Wayfair in Greensboro, North Carolina, yet another online retailer that is recognizing the importance of having a physical store footprint. We also continued to grow our grocery anchor percentage during the quarter, adding another Sprouts Farmers Market to proactively backfill a Conn's location in Knoxville, Tennessee at close to triple the in place rent, demonstrating once again the opportunity that we have in our below market leases and the speed at which our team can capitalize on them. The Conn's boxes are among the few that are expected to come back to us at a time when box vacancy is at historic lows for the portfolio And our team is well on their way to backfilling these spaces in markets like Raleigh and Houston with better tenants at higher rents. Speaker 200:07:59Briefly on reinvestment to expand on what Jim highlighted, we are very excited to bring on $100,000,000 of accretive pre leased transformative redevelopment projects during the quarter led by the 2nd phase at Port Orlando and Block 59 in Suburban Chicago. Phase 2 of Point Orlando is coming online at the perfect time as we prepare to open Live at the Point in partnership with re anchor component of the shopping center in one of the most desirable suburbs in the Chicago market. Looking forward, we remain encouraged by the depth of retailer demand and the forward and legal pipeline, which continues to grow despite the records we continue to set in occupancy. Our team continues to be laser focused on quickly converting this demand into open rent paying tenants, which as Steve will highlight further gives us great visibility on future growth. Before handing the call over to Steve, I would like to congratulate him, Helane and Kevin on their well deserved promotions and thank Jim and the Board for the opportunity to serve as President as well as the broader Brixmor team for their continued support. Speaker 200:09:10There has never been a better time to be at Brixmor and I'm grateful to work with the best team in the business. Steve? Speaker 400:09:17Thanks, Brian. I'm pleased to report another very strong quarter and improved forward outlook, reflecting the strength of our plan execution and the compelling growth opportunity within the Brooksmart portfolio. NAREIT FFO was $0.54 per share in the 2nd quarter driven by same property NOI growth of 5.5%. Base rent growth contributed 380 basis points to same property NOI growth this quarter, reflecting continued strong leasing spreads, growth in build occupancy and improved retention rates. In addition, net expense reimbursements contributed 140 basis points driven by the growth in build occupancy and a decrease in real estate tax expense primarily due to reduced builds in our Chicago market. Speaker 400:09:59Revenues deemed uncollectible contributed 20 basis points to same property NOI growth due to higher collection rates and lower tenant We are very pleased with the continued execution by the entire Brixmor team as we ended the quarter with a 400 basis point spread between leased and build occupancy And our signed but not commenced pool totaled $65,000,000 which includes $55,000,000 of net new rent. The size of the pool decreased only $3,000,000 despite commencing approximately $17,000,000 of annualized base rent in the quarter. We expect the vast majority of ABR and assignment not commenced pool to commence over the next 18 months. From a balance sheet perspective, we repaid $300,000,000 of our 3.65 percent bonds that matured in June 2024 with the proceeds from our January bond offering. At June 30, we had total liquidity of $1,700,000,000 and our debt to EBITDA on a current quarter annualized basis was 5.6 times, leaving us well positioned to execute on our business plan and with the flexibility to opportunistically access the capital markets. Speaker 400:10:59In terms of our forward outlook, given the continued strength in the portfolio, we have increased our same property NOI growth to a range of 4.25% to 5% comprised of a 425 basis point to 4.75 basis point contribution from base rent as commencements from design but not commenced pool accelerates base rent growth in the second half of the year. Additionally, the improvements to the credit quality of our tenants and strong payment trends continues to drive outperformance Speaker 500:11:27and revenues deemed uncollectible. Speaker 400:11:27We now expect revenues deemed uncollectible to end the year at 50 to 75 basis points of total revenues versus the prior range of 75 to 110 basis points. In conjunction with the increase in our same property NOI expectation, we have raised our guidance 24 NAREIT FFO to a range of $2.11 to $2.14 per share. I would like to thank Jim and the Board for the CFO opportunity as well as the larger Brickmore team who supported me along the way. And with that, I'll turn the call over to the operator for Q and A. Operator00:11:58Thank you. At this time, we'll be conducting a question and answer Our first question has come from the line of Todd Thomas with KeyBanc Capital Markets. Please proceed with your questions. Speaker 600:12:31Hi, thanks. Good morning and congrats to everyone on their promotions. First question, I just wanted to ask about acquisitions. I'm wondering if there's any change in view around acquisitions and the company's position toward capital recycling and or capital raising at all here as we move forward just either given some of the changes in the C suite and or given the improvement in the company's cost of capital more recently? Speaker 200:13:07I think Todd, it's Jim. I think the big change has been honestly the opportunities that we're seeing. So we're always going to be opportunistic and direct our activity to those that we think can create huge value for the company. And we're pleased with what we're seeing out there in the transaction market, particularly in our core markets where we've successfully clustered investments. For example, we mentioned the acquisition of the Fresh Market in Hilton Head, which further grows our presence in that Coastal Carolina market. Speaker 200:13:39So we're pleased with the opportunities that we're seeing and our ability to execute on them. Speaker 600:13:46Do you anticipate being a net acquirer in the second half of the year? And can you talk about sort of the going in yields that you're seeing for acquisitions that you're underwriting today? Speaker 700:14:01Yes. Look, as Jim mentioned, we're always going to be opportunistic with respect to acquisitions and we're certainly seeing a much more active market over the last few months. Frankly, what's most interesting about the transaction the transactions market today is that sellers really appear to be more interested in kind of quiet direct conversations with folks like Brixmor that aren't relying upon external joint venture capital or frankly even the debt market to source deals or finance deals. So this ramp activity that you're seeing us with a couple of acquisitions we've made this year really has leading to a more active pipeline on the acquisition side. So we do expect to be a bit more, acquisitive here in the second half. Speaker 700:14:41But as Jim has mentioned over the years, we will always be balanced and disciplined with respect to capital allocation on acquisitions. With respect to yields, year to date the yields where we bought is in the high 6s. And as we look at our forward opportunities from a going in perspective, they are in the same yield, so that high 6 cap rate range. But also when you think about our cap recycling, what's important to realize is we are a whole IRR type investor. So when we look at assets we sold, we're seeing a pretty big spread between those IRRs of what we're selling and the IRRs for the assets that we're acquiring. Speaker 600:15:14Okay. That's helpful. And Steve, real quick, in terms of the net recoveries related to the lower property taxes in the quarter that you mentioned, how much of that was sort of one time in nature versus what might be more recurring as we think about lower property taxes potentially going forward? Speaker 400:15:34Yes. I think when you think about the total impact of the quarter, about $1,000,000 of it related sort of the way Chicago builds is in arrears related to 2023. So that's sort of the non recurring aspect, but about $500,000 will recur in the year and then recur going forward. And I think the important thing to remember with that is ultimately it's lowering our occupancy cost to our tenants and will allow us to push rent on those renewals in the future. Speaker 600:16:00Okay. That's helpful. $500,000 in the year or $500,000 in the quarter, so $2,000,000 on an annualized basis. $500,000 in the year. Okay. Speaker 400:16:10Yes. Speaker 800:16:10All Speaker 600:16:11right, got it. Thank you. Speaker 200:16:13Yes, Todd. The only other thing I would highlight there is we're benefiting also from higher recovery rates as our occupancy, our build occupancy moves up. So while we did benefit in the quarter from the favorable tax assessments, you should expect us as we continue to drive build occupancy, recover more and generate better margins. Operator00:16:39Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Dorey Kesten with Wells Fargo. Please proceed with your questions. Speaker 900:16:46Thanks. Good morning. And again, congrats on the promotions. Can you give us a sense of any incremental G and A that may come along with those? Speaker 200:16:55On balance, we don't expect incremental G and A as we look for other efficiencies. Speaker 900:17:02Okay. And then on cons and big lots, what kind of retailers have shown interest in those spaces And where may rent spreads pencil out? And just anything irregular to note about potential TI or timing to backfill? Speaker 200:17:17Dore, hey, this is Brian. Just as it relates to Conn's first, it's a pretty low exposure for us about 30 basis points. And as I talked about, these boxes may come back to us in the tightest supply environment that we've seen. And the types of tenants that we're backfilling them with are the types of tenants that continue to expand in the open air space like those in the value apparel segment, sorry, in the specialty grocery segment like the first cons that we proactively took back where we were able to put Sprouts in and triple the rent. As it relates to the Big Lots rents in particular, those rents are $7 just below $8 a foot. Speaker 200:17:55We've been signing those. We've been signing anchor leases around $16 a foot over the past year. And you can expect a similar level of upside, maybe not double, but particularly we got a significant amount as it relates to those big lot spaces. So we feel very encouraged, as again we're not getting a lot of box spaces back and it's the tightest box supply environment that we've seen in terms of our ability to quickly address them to the extent we get a few boxes back this year. Speaker 900:18:27Great. Thank you. Operator00:18:31Thank you. Our next question has come from the line of Craig Mailman with Citi. Please proceed Speaker 800:18:43Jim, just want to go back to your kind of the end of Todd's questioning on NOI margins there. I know you guys ticked up to about 76%, but you guys are getting every quarter it seems like another record on leased occupancy for anchors and small shop. Just as the portfolio continues to grow, you guys push through some fixed camp, you get some better outcomes on tax appeals. Where do you think NOI margins should shake out for your portfolio over the next year or 2 as this snow pipeline commences? Like what's a good normalized level to think about? Speaker 200:19:20Rather than giving you specific guidance on a margin, I think we've got a few 100 basis points of room. And I think you're going to see us continue to realize that as you point out as our build occupancy grows because there is a 400 basis point difference between leased and build. So as that occupancy delivers, obviously, we're going to be recovering a higher and higher percentage, which as you also mentioned is augmented by the increased penetration of fixed cam that we have in the portfolio. So I do expect to see continued growth in margin. I think we have more than a few 100 basis points of room. Speaker 200:19:59I'd rather not give you a specific number for guidance. And Craig, I would just add, our team has been very intentional in terms of improving CAM clauses in our leases, eliminating CAM caps, eliminating carve outs. You mentioned fixed CAM. We've been very intentional with that as well. Where we've been deploying that across the portfolio, we've been we have a good understanding of where the expense trajectory is at those properties. Speaker 200:20:26We've been growing that at 4% across both small shop and anchors. So, in addition to everything we're doing on the base rent front, our teams have been very intentional in terms of improving those CAM clauses, which is really helping with margins Speaker 700:20:40as well. And Craig, the last thing I would add is we look at acquisitions as well. When we think about acquisitions, we do buy from a lot of folks who are not large institutional owners like we are and they don't have the ability to hit some of those margin topics that Brian is hitting on. So we think that's also a piece of the growth in deals that we buy on the acquisition side. Speaker 800:21:00That's helpful. And then maybe sticking on the acquisition side, I don't know Mark or Jim. It sounds like more of the kind of pipeline you guys have gotten recently is off market or softly marketed deals. Is that am I reading into that correctly? You guys are kind of less of the buyer for the fully marketed deals and that's where you're going to get kind of the better opportunities to not compete with maybe some of the high net worth guys or other people who are just all cash buyers and have been paying kind of bigger prices more recently? Speaker 200:21:35We continue to see a mix of deals marketed and off market. I think Mark's point though is that we are a preferred buyer in this markets environment given our liquidity, given our presence in the markets that we're focused on and that gives us an advantage position. And we're also pleased by the just growth in the overall pipeline of opportunities that we're seeing that meet our return hurdles. Speaker 1000:22:03Great. Thank you. Operator00:22:05You bet. Thank you. Our next question has come from the line of Greg McGinniss with Scotiabank. Please proceed with your questions. Speaker 1100:22:13Hey, good morning. So leasing obviously remains quite healthy, Are you still renewing tenants in that category? Or how are you handling those expirations when they Speaker 1200:22:31come up? Speaker 200:22:33Greg, this is Brian. I mean, we look at these on an individual basis. Basis. For instance, our office supply exposure overall has dropped considerably. There still are office supply locations that are doing very well that are 4 wall EBITDA positive in our portfolio. Speaker 200:22:48So some of those do renew, but you think about some of the Staples locations in particular that we've taken back proactively and backfill with the likes of Ross and Grocers and other folks that we've been doing a lot of business with. So it's really going to be center specific. We've got a number of our pet store locations that continue to do very well. And I think in this environment, we're going to continue to be opportunistic where we see weaker tenants really in any category to be able to upgrade those spaces at higher rents. And then particularly on the anchor side where we do have a lot of demand, we also have a very low rent basis in terms of what's expiring over the next few years. Speaker 200:23:31We've got rents on those spaces expiring at close to $9 and we're signing them at $16 So it really depends on the situation. But where we do see weaker tenants in any category, we're going to use the opportunity to upgrade. Speaker 1000:23:45And so for specific boxes, how do Speaker 1100:23:47you go about evaluating kind of their productivity? Do you get sales information from them or place your data? How are you going about kind of deciding if they're a higher risk location Speaker 700:23:58or not that you might need Speaker 1100:23:59to be backfilling or proactively filling? Speaker 200:24:01We get both. I mean, we get sales for the majority of the portfolio and we do get traffic for all our tenants. That has certainly helped us be a lot smarter. The other thing is we've got great relationships across our platform, particularly on the national account side where even where we don't get reported sales, we'll often get a number of those volumes in the conversations with our tenant and that's conversations with our tenants and that's because of the trust our team has built. So we do utilize the tools that you're talking about whether that's Placer, whether that's other tools related to traffic, but we also get sales from the bulk of our tenants. Speaker 200:24:38We're also adding sales reporting when we have renewals coming up in leases where we're not getting that today. And then again, the relationships that we have with these retailers really shows the trust where we're able to get some of those sales volumes as well. Yes. Speaker 500:24:55And we're Speaker 200:24:55Go ahead. Speaker 1300:24:57No, please. Speaker 200:24:58No, we're in a great supply demand environment that allows us to drive the optimal outcome for space as it comes due. And you see it in the spreads, you see it in the renewal spreads as well as the new leasing spreads. So we're not only taking this opportunity to upgrade the portfolio and continue to upgrade tenant quality, we're also using it to drive true organic growth and it's in the numbers. Speaker 1000:25:23Okay. Thanks. And just one final point on that is, Brian, how many of the stores or what percentage of the big box stores are you getting individual Speaker 200:25:39almost all of our grocers and that's 70% across all size ranges. So I don't have the particular anchor number today. But again, that percentage of tenants that are reporting sales has improved as as renewals come up. So we've been very intentional about that and I expect that to continue to grow. And as Brian alluded to, our national accounts team is held accountable to understand productivity where sales reporting isn't required. Speaker 200:26:10So when you supplement that with the Placer AI data in terms of traffic, which is a great proxy for sales productivity, you have a pretty good view, which not only helps you understand the health of the underlying tenant, but also how you best drive the economics upon renewal. Speaker 1000:26:32Thanks, Jim. Thanks, Brian. Speaker 200:26:34Thanks. Operator00:26:36Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Alexander Goldfarb with Piper Sandler. Please proceed with your questions. Speaker 300:26:44Hey, good morning and mazel tov on the promotions all around. Just a few two questions, I guess one question, one follow-up. On the going back to the tenants, clearly McDonald's out with their news on consumer pushback. It's been sort of a common theme for other, especially in the food area. Just an update on what you're seeing across your retail portfolio. Speaker 300:27:14Are retailers really talking and concerned about changes in consumer shopping and purchase patterns? Or is this just people reallocating a little bit within each of the different categories and overall it's really not affecting the business in any way that affects their leasing? Speaker 200:27:33The leasing decision is a long term decision and not certainly driven by quarterly performance as the retailers are looking at their pipelines out into 25, 26 and beyond and they're committed to the stores. As we look at our real time traffic data, we're actually very pleased with how traffic at our centers and our major tenants within those centers continues to improve as we execute our strategy. And in terms of are we hearing it from tenants, really quite to the contrary. The tenants still are in a posture where they're trying to get their store opening plans filled and they're being very aggressive to do that. Speaker 300:28:14Okay. And then just a follow-up is looking at your leasing the sign but not yet commenced, the wider gap is with the small shop, the under 10,000 square feet And presumably, that's the more lucrative economics for you guys. Steve, can you just give a sort of how we should think about the impact to earnings from 100 basis point increase in occupancy from small shop versus 100 basis point increase in over 10,000 square feet. Just trying to get a sense of the impact to FFO because you have to believe that it's much more advantageous to boost from the smaller shops and the bigger shops as your occupancy increases. Speaker 400:28:56Yes. I mean, I don't know that I can quantify the exact input, but I think your general thesis is correct, right? Those smaller shop tenants are going to pay a higher rent and have a higher contribution to recoveries than you would on the anchor side. Speaker 200:29:09And that follows through when you look at the average rents we're achieving both on the anchors and the small shop, your point is correct that there is a greater multiplier that's part of that $65,000,000 of signed but not commenced rent. Speaker 300:29:24Okay. Thank you. Thank you. Speaker 200:29:26You bet. Operator00:29:29Thank you. Our next questions come from the line of Caitlin Burrows with Goldman Sachs. Please proceed with your questions. Speaker 1400:29:40Hi, Maybe just another pickup on the impact of occupancy improvements. You had a good pickup in build occupancy in the quarter and talked about how the snow pipeline is still quite large. So what's your near to medium term expectations for build occupancy? Can this sort of pace of openings and rent commencements continue or maybe even accelerate from what we saw in the quarter? Speaker 200:30:04Caitlin, hey, this is Brian. You normally would expect build occupancy to continue to trend higher in the back half of the year as we have kind of the bulk of those openings happening in the late third, Q4, particularly with anchors. Now depending on if we get a few store closures back, you may see a dip in that, but that would be the normal course build occupancy trajectory as we head into the end of the year. And again, we just talked about the spread between leased and build, particularly on the small shops. We'd start to have a number of those shops coming online at year end and even as the balance as we get into next year. Speaker 200:30:39And the pipeline continues to be very strong. We're very encouraged just with the depth of demand and the size of the in legal pipeline despite the fact that we're raising occupancy to these levels. So but overall, the trajectory you should expect to see that to rise as we go through the balance of the year. Speaker 1400:30:57Got it. Okay. And then just another one on pricing. So, I mean your new lease spreads have been very strong for a very long time and this quarter was a record level. The renewal pricing is also really strong. Speaker 1400:31:08I guess on the option side, is there anything you can do to limit kind of the drag from the impact of options? And is that anything you can do near term? Or is it more related to leases you signed today and the eventual options they may or may not have in the future? Speaker 200:31:23Since we began, our focus has been on giving fewer options. And we've been very successful, Brian and team, we've been executing the plan to do that. And so not only not giving options, but giving fewer options in situations where they're otherwise required. And that's really how you impact that. It's something that occurs over time as you execute fewer and fewer options across the portfolio. Speaker 200:31:50And Caitlin, I would just add too that we're making incremental progress even when we have to give an option, right? Like in this environment where maybe those option increases in the past with anchor tenants were 10% and our team is pushing them to 12.5% or 15%. To Jim's point, maybe you're eliminating anchor number of anchor options from say 4% to 2%. The other thing that we've done is we've introduced the fair market value concept that was pretty much a California phenomenon into other parts of the country where we've had to give those primarily with national tenants. We're giving almost no options with local tenants. Speaker 200:32:27And to Jim's point, it's something our team is very focused on. If you were to sit in committee on a Friday and hear our Head of Leasing, David Gerstenhaver, he's asking that question as deals come into committee, do you have to give that option? Can you reduce those options? So it's something we're going to continue to remain focused on, but something we've been doing for a while. Speaker 1400:32:46Great. Thanks. Operator00:32:50Thank you. Our next question has come from the line of Juan Sanabria with BMO Capital Markets. Please proceed with your questions. Speaker 1500:32:57Hi. Thanks for the time. Just a question with regards to the same store NOI guidance. Obviously, there's a slowdown implied in the second half. Can you just give us some color or details around what's driving the slower assumed second half and what are the key variables within the guidance range? Speaker 400:33:22I think the first thing you got to think about when you think about the same property NOI is just the growth in base rent, right? Because ultimately the growth in same property NOI is going to be largely dependent on that growth. And for the first half of the year, it was 380 basis point contribution to same property NOI. And you'll see implied in our base rent guidance of 4 25 basis point to 4 75 basis point contribution. You really see that starting to ramp up sort of what Brian was talking about within the Simon not commenced pool. Speaker 400:33:49Obviously, in the first half of the year, bad debt as a percentage of total revenues was 20 basis points. We talked on the last quarter call that that did benefit from just the timing of real estate tax collections and we expect that to be a headwind to the back half of the year as we get back to that what we're expecting to be a total run rate of 50 to 75 basis points. So I think that deceleration in the bad debt is sort of offsetting a lot of acceleration that you're seeing in the base rent line. Speaker 1500:34:20Okay, great. Thanks. And then just on the acquisitions pipeline, I think you mentioned $200,000,000 in the prepared comments. Just curious on the types of assets. Are there larger assets or smaller kind of more traditional neighborhood grocery anchored centers? Speaker 1500:34:38Just curious on where you're seeing the opportunity set with regards to kind of what's in the pipeline today? Speaker 700:34:46Yes. That pipeline is larger the assets are larger than what we bought in the first half of the year in part because what we bought in the first half of the year was smaller. So it's really assets that look a lot like the meat of our portfolio. And importantly, they're assets where we see the ability to drive strong growth. They sit within our footprint and we have been targeting a bunch of those for acquisitions for quite some time. Speaker 700:35:09So we're excited about the opportunity we're seeing in the existing pipeline. And frankly, beyond the existing pipelines, we continue to try to dig out deals across the country. Speaker 1500:35:21And maybe just one more, if I could be a little greedy here. You talked about foot traffic being solid and having increased amount of data points on retailer sales. But given the comments Alex made about the more cautious comments by both luxury and low end retailers, are you seeing any slowdown in retail sales from your retailer base across the portfolio? Speaker 200:35:45We're not. Operator00:35:49Okay. Thanks. Thank you. Our next question is come from the line of Floris Van Dijk from Compass Point. Please proceed with your questions. Speaker 500:36:00Hey, good morning guys and congrats on the new titles. So following up on that acquisition pipeline, maybe if you can talk a little bit about what you're seeing in terms of pricing? And maybe to switch the question a little bit more, are you targeting value add acquisitions or is it mostly complementary or infill acquisitions just like what you've done in Hilton Head next to existing centers? Speaker 200:36:34I'll let Mark handle the broader pipeline for us. But we really are looking at core plus value added type opportunities where we can bring our better platform to bear to drive better outcomes in rent and NOI growth, additional asset densification, etcetera. So you're not seeing us playing on the core side, but we're with the encouraging thing is that we're finding really attractive opportunities within our core markets to further cluster infill type investments where we understand where the market rents are. We understand what the tenant demand is to be in that particular center and we believe we can generate above average growth. Speaker 700:37:19Yes. I think it's well said Jim. And when we look at acquisitions, we're also thinking about those dispositions. I think it's important. I said it earlier, when we're selling assets, we're selling assets where we've really maximized value and maximize that IRR going forward. Speaker 700:37:33And when we're looking at that pipeline, we're just seeing much better IRR buying versus what we're selling, which we hope will contribute to the long term growth here. Speaker 500:37:43Great. And presumably those the acquisitions and dispositions, are they going to be similar type comp rates? Speaker 700:37:51Yes, it's interesting. When we look at our what we've done year to date as we talked about last quarter, our blended cap rate for what we sold year to date is into the 4s we're buying today into the high 6s. I think that will even out over time. Speaker 500:38:08Great. And then maybe my follow-up question on I noticed obviously great new leasing spreads, but you're spending a lot of money to achieve some of those spreads. I think I calculate $205 a square foot in lease costs this past quarter. Maybe talk I suspect it has to do with some of the Conn's boxes or some of the other boxes that you're transitioning to Sprouts or other grocers. But if you could talk a little bit about how long will those elevated leasing costs persist in your view? Speaker 500:38:48Or do you think that that's going to slow down at some point and have or go even lower? Speaker 200:38:56This is Brian. I'm not tying to the $206 a foot, but I would just point to the fact that net effective rents were a record for the portfolio this quarter. We show you the net effective rents, so you can ultimately see the impact of costs there. They're coming off a record from last year. What you're seeing in terms of the leasing CapEx, it was somewhat elevated last year versus historicals and it will remain at that level this year in terms of the TIs. Speaker 200:39:23That's just because of the fact that our team has leased so much of the space that we took back last year and leased it very quickly. I'd say on average, the box backfills that we've done, we've talked about in the past, we average around $50 a foot for the Bed Bath spaces. That's consistent with what you're seeing. Where we are spending a bit more like the Sprouts example that you gave, we're getting it back in rent certainly. I'd say just for CapEx overall though, we have been very prudent in terms of where we've been spending. Speaker 200:39:55You see our maintenance CapEx now it was down last year versus 2022. It's trending down again and will be down by year end really reflective of the changes that we've made and the improvements that we've made across the portfolio and that leveling off. Our reinvestment spend, we talked about that being $150,000,000 to $200,000,000 a year. We're going to be at the high end of that range this year as we bring on some of these really strong projects like those that Jim and I both highlighted. But to your point, as occupancy increases and there continues to be demand, our team is leveraging that demand to have tenants take more existing conditions. Speaker 200:40:31Tenants are getting much more flexible in terms of the age of the roof, the age of the HVAC. So you'd expect that to moderate. But I think on the whole, why you're seeing some of the leasing costs somewhat elevated is just because our team has addressed so much of that space so quickly. Speaker 500:40:48Great. Thanks guys. Operator00:40:49You bet. Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Haendel St. Juste with Mizuho. Please proceed with your questions. Speaker 500:41:04Hey, thank you for taking my question. I wanted to go back to Big Lots for a moment. You have more exposure there than cons. I think it's 27 boxes, 70 bps of APR. I'm curious what you've heard on how many of those stores they might be looking to close in your portfolio. Speaker 500:41:19And we're hearing that they may be look at subleasing some of their own space directly to 3rd parties. Speaker 1600:41:24So I'm Speaker 500:41:24curious if you're seeing any of that and if you expect that to perhaps limit your opportunity to get back some Operator00:41:29of those boxes and benefits in the re leasing yourself? Thanks. Speaker 200:41:32Haendel, this is Brian. So just as it relates to Big Lots, we reduced our exposure again by 30% since prior to the pandemic. We signed leases with the likes of Aldi and Sprouts and Ross here recently on recently recaptured Big Lots spaces. We did have 4 stores that were on the initial closure list. 2 of those are already leased, 1 with a great fitness use, 1 with a great off price operator. Speaker 200:41:59So as we look and we don't have any additional color in terms of the number of stores that we will get back or the timing as it relates to anything announcing additional store closures. What I could say though is we have Big Lots boxes in markets like Philadelphia and Dallas and we're we'd be taking some of this space back in the tightest box supply environment that we've ever seen. So, we feel really good about the demand we're seeing for that space. We were very opportunistic early in the Bed Bath discussions too about taking space and we'll look at that as well, because we want to ensure that we control our own destiny, but we'll be prudent with those decisions as we assess them center by center. Speaker 500:42:43And are you hearing anything on the Operator00:42:45re leasing of the boxes themselves to third parties? Speaker 200:42:49Yes. I think look they probably see the same value that we do. And again, we're going to we showed up at the auction. We were for Bed Bath. We were able to get control of one of our boxes that we've already leased in New England. Speaker 200:43:05So, we'll assess that as they come along. And I would say, look, our team has already been very proactive. Again, there were 4 stores on the closure list that just came out, 2 of them are already leased. So we've been getting ahead of a number of these names, particularly when we hear of potential store closures or potential weakness and feel really confident in our ability to capitalize on them and we'll be opportunistic as it relates to proactively recapturing that space. Speaker 500:43:35Got it. Thank you. And then just a follow-up, you mentioned Bed Bath. The new anchor lease spreads were very high in the quarter. I'm curious if any of that included any of the Bed Bath backfills? Speaker 500:43:44And remind us again of Operator00:43:45the timing of the cash flow impact that you expect from the bath backfills? Speaker 200:43:51Well, just starting on the cash flow, that's already started to come online. We do expect the bulk of that to come online next year. We're effectively finished with those boxes. Interestingly, it didn't really include the pet baths because we had already leased all those boxes in the quarters prior to this. And I think what this shows you is the low rent basis that we have and the opportunity that we have across the portfolio, not just with 1 tenant or one part of the country. Speaker 200:44:16It was fairly broad based where we saw that this quarter. But ultimately, we're thrilled with how quickly our team is really addressing any space that we've been getting back in this environment, and expect us to continue to do that. Speaker 500:44:30All right. Thank you and congrats on the promotion. Speaker 200:44:33Thanks again, guys. Operator00:44:36Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Jeff Spector with Bank of America. Please proceed with your questions. Speaker 1000:44:43Hi, this is Andrew Reel on for Jeff. Thanks for taking our questions. Westcenter is about 99% leased. What's the least rate at Fresh Market Shops? And can you just talk more about the opportunity set at the 2 assets, if there are any larger expirations in the near term and what mark to market opportunities look like? Speaker 700:45:02Sure. So at West Center that if you've looked at that on the site plan, it's really an adjacent to the center we own behind it called 3 Villages. And that's really unlocking the opportunity to figure out what the overall plan is for 3 villages when you include that outparcel. So that vacant box Jim mentioned is the one at West Village I'm sorry, at Village Center behind West Center, which is early, but really exciting steps here in the 1st couple of months of ownership. With respect to Hilton Head, it's 100% occupied and what we see there is an asset that's been under managed and under rented and we're very excited about the opportunity to drive low risk, high growth there. Speaker 1000:45:43Okay, thanks. You also spoke to adding a few more repositioning and redevelopment projects to the pipeline this quarter. Just curious if it's becoming any easier to find these types of opportunities. Any color on your opportunity set to retouch assets and how that's trending would be helpful. Thanks. Speaker 200:46:00Yes. It's really the advantage our platform brings. As a team, we look at acquisition opportunities and we really are viewing them through the lens of a value added investor where we have the opportunity to raise rents, but also reposition, densify and add necessary uses to the acquisition. So the nice part about our strategy is that we've successfully harvested significant amount of opportunity in our existing portfolio. Importantly, a significant amount of opportunity remains several $100,000,000 that we expect to execute over the next couple of years. Speaker 200:46:38And then we continually add that as we've demonstrated in South Florida, as I think we'll demonstrate in some of these more recent acquisitions, the opportunity to add value through incremental reinvestment. Speaker 1000:46:53Thank you. Operator00:46:54You bet. Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Samir Khanal with Evercore ISI. Please proceed with your questions. Speaker 1200:47:05Hey, Brian, good morning. I guess, I mean, you talked about the cons boxes, the big lots boxes. I mean, just as we think about the setup into next year, what does that tenant exposure sort of that watch list look like, I guess for the next 6 to 12 months? Thanks. Speaker 200:47:20I'd just start by saying the credit base of this portfolio is as strong as it's ever been. We put in a rigorous underwriting process coming out of the pandemic with our financial asset management team and that has really paid off. And you can see it pay it off in record low move outs for the portfolio. You can see it paying off in terms of the renewal growth that we've been able to drive because we've got better tenants in there that are driving more traffic. Again, as it relates to those 2 specific situations, we have a very low exposure with Conn's at 30 basis points. Speaker 200:47:57We've already leased one of the boxes. The other boxes are in places like Raleigh and Houston and Atlanta, which are great markets. And ultimately as it relates to Big Lots, we have consistently been lowering our exposure there and backfilling them with better tenants at higher rents. So I think it's encouraging that we've already got leases on some of the stores that they've announced. And as we think about it ultimately into next year, we are looking to see how we can use this as an opportunity to continue to position ourselves to upgrade these spaces. Speaker 1200:48:31Okay, got it. And I guess, Jim, just shifting over to you, you clearly have occupancy that continues to go up, spreads are strong. Looks like acquisitions maybe even picking up here Speaker 500:48:42at Speaker 1200:48:42least as we saw in the quarter. I mean, I guess what's the biggest risk to the portfolio or the sector at this time you Operator00:48:48think? Thanks. Speaker 200:48:51I think we're really well positioned even for a slowdown given where our rent basis is. And it's a point I've made many times that in a strong environment such as the one that we're in, we're positioned to outperform largely because of that rent basis. Should you see a slowdown in retailer demand, which we're not seeing any signs of, again, retailers are doing business out to 25 26. But were we to, we think we're particularly well positioned given the transformation of the portfolio, given our rent basis and given our overall execution. So, I don't see any major risks as we look out ahead beyond general economic trends and cycles. Speaker 200:49:35But even given that, I believe we're really well positioned. I'm also very proud of how we've handled our balance sheet, how we continue to drive improvements in overall debt to EBITDA, how we continue to capitalize in this environment on demand for our fixed income paper to continue to term out our balance sheet and put us in a position where we have $1,700,000,000 of liquidity and no need for external capital to fund our business plan for the next several years. So when you think about again rent basis, conservative capital structure upside, the reposition of the portfolio. I think it's an all weather plan. I think it's one that positions us particularly well whatever the economic climate is. Operator00:50:26Thank you, Jim. Speaker 400:50:28You bet. Operator00:50:30Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Linda Tsai with Jefferies. Please proceed with your questions. Hi, Linda, can you check if you're self muted, please? Speaker 200:50:52Operator, we can put her back in the queue. Speaker 1600:50:54Oh, sorry. There you are. Speaker 200:50:56Hey, Linda. Yes. Sorry about that. Speaker 1600:51:01Just with closures taking a touch higher in the second half reverting you to the historical bad debt run rate, from where you sit today, could bad debt range 75 bps to 110 bps for 2025? Speaker 200:51:15I think it certainly could. I think what we've been pleased by is the overall improvement in credit quality within the portfolio and how that's coming through in terms of the bad debt performance. We do expect a greater amount of revenues deemed uncollectible in the second half of the year as Steve alluded to. And I don't want to give guidance yet on 25%, but I would frame it against the overall improvement in the portfolio. Operator00:51:48And then would you expect Speaker 1600:51:49that just given the strength in your overall portfolio, what's kind of like the longer term same store run rate in your portfolio over the next few years? Speaker 200:52:01I think we're well positioned to achieve that same store growth in the 4 plus percent range over the next several years. Speaker 1600:52:11Thanks. Operator00:52:13Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Mike Mueller with JPMorgan. Please proceed with your questions. Thanks. Hi. Operator00:52:21Just a quick one here. We know the redevelopment pipeline is sizable, but are you evaluating any new ground up development opportunities as well? Speaker 200:52:31We've been approached by developers. We've been approached by certain tenants regarding ground up development opportunities and to date they haven't penciled. You've got a higher risk, a lower return and it just doesn't compare favorably to the opportunities we have to reinvest in our existing assets. So, I do think it's going to take a while to see new ground up development of any meaningful amount, not only because of the higher risk and lower returns, but also because it's just a difficult environment in which to finance that type of activity. So we've seen some, but I don't expect a material increase in the next couple of years. Operator00:53:14Got it. Okay. Thank you. Speaker 200:53:16You bet. Operator00:53:18Thank you. Our next question has come from the line of Ki Bin Kim with Truist Securities. Please proceed with your question. Speaker 1700:53:25Thanks. Good morning. Just a couple of follow ups. Speaker 200:53:29You added Speaker 1700:53:29a couple of new projects to your redevelopment pipeline. Can you just remind us how you define the yields, the 9% yields that you're getting and if that includes landlord work? And second, if you look at the trend on rents and construction costs, does the next batch of potential redevelopment projects, is that yield potential, has increased over the past year or has Speaker 700:53:52it or relatively stable? Speaker 200:53:55Yes. That return is the incremental rent over the project level costs and the total project level cost. As we look out in the pipeline, because of the strong demand environment we're seeing, we're actually seeing positive upward pressure in some of those returns. As you saw in terms of the overall portfolio of reinvestment growing from an average of 8 to 9. So we're encouraged by what we're seeing looking forward. Speaker 600:54:25Okay. Thank you. Speaker 1700:54:25Thank you. Speaker 400:54:26You bet. Operator00:54:28Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Omidyak Oksania with Deutsche Bank. Please proceed with your questions. Speaker 1300:54:35Hi, yes. Good morning. Let me add my own congratulations to the whole team. Quick question on Kroger Albertsons and kind of the latest developments with, again, the court case getting accelerated to September. Just curious what you guys are hearing whether it's kind of changes how you guys think are thinking about your exposure to those 2 grosses? Speaker 200:54:58Tayo, this is Brian. We don't have much more to report outside of what's been in the news. We were encouraged by the fact that none of our stores were on the initial divestiture list. We feel good about our fleets in really either scenario. We've got great stores that have been reinvested in for both Kroger and Albertsons. Speaker 200:55:23The markets where we do have some overlap are in a very tight supply environment, some of the tightest supply that we have in markets like Dallas and Southern California and Denver. So we have said and continue to believe that a merger would be good for both companies and have been watching this very closely, but feel really good about our fleet. I mean these stores produce higher sales volumes and the over $700 a foot that we're getting from grocers across the portfolio. So and we're really encouraged by the fact that they have been invested in here over the last few years. Speaker 1300:55:59Thank you. Speaker 200:56:00Thanks. Operator00:56:02Thank you. We have reached the end of our question and answer session. Would like to turn the floor back over to Stacy Slater for closing remarks. Speaker 100:56:10Thanks everyone for joining us today. Enjoy the rest of your summers. Operator00:56:16Thank you. This does conclude today's teleconference. We appreciate your participation. You may disconnect your lines at this time. Enjoy the rest of your day.Read moreRemove AdsPowered by