NYSE:AKR Acadia Realty Trust Q2 2024 Earnings Report $19.87 +0.57 (+2.95%) As of 02:44 PM Eastern This is a fair market value price provided by Polygon.io. Learn more. Earnings HistoryForecast Acadia Realty Trust EPS ResultsActual EPS$0.01Consensus EPS $0.31Beat/MissMissed by -$0.30One Year Ago EPS$0.36Acadia Realty Trust Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$87.25 millionExpected Revenue$70.16 millionBeat/MissBeat by +$17.09 millionYoY Revenue Growth-3.00%Acadia Realty Trust Announcement DetailsQuarterQ2 2024Date7/30/2024TimeAfter Market ClosesConference Call DateWednesday, July 31, 2024Conference Call Time11:00AM ETUpcoming EarningsAcadia Realty Trust's Q1 2025 earnings is scheduled for Tuesday, April 29, 2025, with a conference call scheduled on Wednesday, April 30, 2025 at 12:00 PM 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 HistoryCompany ProfilePowered by Acadia Realty Trust Q2 2024 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrJuly 31, 2024 ShareLink copied to clipboard.There are 12 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Good day and thank you for standing by. Welcome to the Acadia Realty Trust Second Quarter 2024 Earnings Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen only mode. After the speakers' presentation, there will be a question and answer session. Please note that today's conference may be recorded. Operator00:00:27I will hand the conference over to your speaker host, Ethan Gomez. Please go ahead. Speaker 100:00:32Good morning, and thank you for joining us for the Q2 2024 Acadia Realty Trust earnings conference call. My name is Ethan Gomez, and I'm an intern in our acquisitions department. Before we begin, please be aware that statements made during the call that are not historical may be deemed forward looking statements within the meaning of the Securities and Exchange Act of 1934, and actual results may differ materially from those indicated by such forward looking statements. Due to a variety of risks and uncertainties, including those disclosed in the company's most recent Form 10 ks and other periodic filings with the SEC, forward looking statements speak only as of the date of this call, July 31, 2024, and the company undertakes no duty to update them. During this call, management may refer to certain non GAAP financial measures, including funds from operations and net operating income. Speaker 100:01:24Please see Acadia's earnings press release posted on its website for reconciliations of these non GAAP financial measures with the most directly comparable GAAP financial measures. Once the call becomes open for questions, we ask that you limit your first round to 2 questions per caller to give everyone the opportunity to participate. You may ask further questions by reinserting yourself into the queue and we will answer as time permits. Now, it is my pleasure to turn the call over to Ken Bernstein, President and Chief Executive Officer, who will begin today's management remarks. Speaker 200:01:57Great job, Ethan. Thank you to you and the rest of the summer interns for bringing some great energy here this summer. Welcome, everyone. I'm here with John Godfried and A. J. Speaker 200:02:07Levine. I'll give a few comments before handing remarks over to A. J. Then John will discuss our earnings guidance, our balance sheet metrics and after that, we'll take some questions. As you can see from our earnings release, our strong second quarter performance is reflective of both the operational tailwinds that our sector is experiencing, as well as the successful execution by our team of several important initiatives. Speaker 200:02:38In light of this strong performance, we've increased our full year earnings guidance and increased our quarterly dividend. More importantly, we see this momentum continuing. While there's always multiple drivers of our growth, there are effectively 3 critical areas of focus for our business. The first is driving strong internal growth most significantly coming from our street retail portfolio. The second is maintaining a solid balance sheet. Speaker 200:03:13And then third is the incremental earnings growth beginning to hit the bottom line from our highly differentiated investment activity. So first, with respect to internal growth, our same store NOI growth has averaged over 6% for the last 2 years and we see this multi year growth trajectory continuing. A. J. Will walk through the details of this progress, but all of this activity supports our goal of generating superior top line growth and then having that growth hit the bottom line. Speaker 200:03:51Our second key area of focus comes from maintaining a strong and flexible balance sheet. John will elaborate on our balance sheet metrics further. But in short, we are now positioned with a well hedged balance sheet, strong liquidity to fuel growth, limited maturity exposure and solid access to attractive debt. Our 3rd and increasingly important driver comes from contributions from external growth. This includes both our on balance sheet acquisitions for our core portfolio as well as growth through our investment management platform. Speaker 200:04:33Our focus for on balance sheet investment activity is to grow the street retail segment of our core portfolio. It's our view that this segment will produce the highest risk adjusted returns in the Open Air sector. We are focusing our street retail acquisition efforts on properties in key corridors that are accretive to earnings, accretive to NAV, as well as accretive to our long term internal growth trajectory. We believe that there is still a capital market dislocation with respect to the pricing of street retail investment opportunities and this dislocation is providing going in yields that do not account for the superior growth rate when compared to other Open Air formats. As the capital markets begin to normalize, sellers are beginning to emerge and opportunities are beginning to pencil out. Speaker 200:05:36Along these lines, last quarter, we made progress on several transactions. We are finalizing our diligence for high quality street retail assets in key shopping corridors both in Manhattan and Brooklyn for approximately $75,000,000 And in addition to that, we have funded what positions us to add an additional 11% interest in the Georgetown Renaissance Collection, a portfolio in M Street, Georgetown, where we already own a 20% stake and where we hope to add even further to this position. For those of you less familiar with the recovery we're experiencing in Georgetown, Over the last several years, this iconic corridor has seen a meaningful improvement in merchandising, in tenant demand, in tenant performance. The addition of new tenants including Aritzia, Aloe Yoga, Farity, Veronica Beard and Skims, just to name a few, has triggered strong growth on a street that had previously suffered from outdated merchandising and underperforming tenants. We have seen many of our retailers post sales growth of over 40% since 2019 and tenant sales growth is a great indicator of future rent growth. Speaker 200:06:57Then behind these acquisitions I just mentioned, we have a growing pipeline of properties that also meet our acquisition criteria for our core portfolio. Now deals are not done until they're done and we're going to remain disciplined, but it feels as though the stars are beginning to align. In complementing our on balance sheet investments, we're continuing to see opportunities to grow our investment management platform, where we are generally focused on open air suburban shopping centers, where we are going to leverage our institutional capital relationships. There are a few initiatives in progress here. 1st, as we had previously announced, we formed a strategic partnership for our property, The Shops at Grant, with JPMorgan where we retained a 5% interest in the investment, plus retained the management as well as potential upside. Speaker 200:07:54This transaction is an example of our intention to migrate some of our stable but lower growth assets out of our core portfolio and into the investment management platform. Last quarter, we also completed a new acquisition in Tampa, Florida of an open air community center, the $31,000,000 designated for our investment management platform. Given the strong demographics of the walks at Highwood Preserve and the value add upside, we have strong institutional interest from investors in this asset. But most importantly, as it relates to external growth, keep in mind that for a company of our size, it doesn't take much volume to move the needle. While every transaction is going to differ in terms of long term accretion, we are currently targeting about 1% earnings accretion for every $200,000,000 of gross investment. Speaker 200:08:58And keep in mind, we are historically used to doing multiples of that in volume. So looking ahead, we remain very bullish on our ability to continue to add value by driving internal growth, by maintaining a strong and flexible balance sheet and by adding additional growth through our strategic new investments. And with that, I'd like to thank the team for their hard work last quarter and I'll turn the call over to AJ. Speaker 300:09:31Great. Thank you, Ken. Good morning, everyone. So another highly productive quarter in the books and the trends that we've been seeing play out over the last several years appear to be sticking. We're seeing no signs of a slowdown. Speaker 300:09:44Our leasing pipeline is the largest it's ever been and the team continues to post double digit spreads throughout our high growth streets. So to help understand why we continue to see this high level of productivity, let's touch on 2 of the critical factors that drive market rents, supply demand and rent to sales. So as it relates to supply demand, as you can see from our results, tenant demand continues unabated and there has been no new supply added to our streets. And driving that demand, amongst other factors including strong performance, is a continued focus on DTC and the tenants' desire to better control the interaction with the consumer. And all this has resulted in a historically favorable supply demand dynamic for landlords. Speaker 300:10:32In terms of rent to sales, along with strong and consistent sales growth in markets like M Street and Madison Avenue and SoHo amongst others, tenants remain disciplined and rent to sales ratios sit well within a healthy acceptable range. A lot of that sales growth comes from strong consumer demand, but let's not forget about the impact of inflation on sales and rents. Inflation alone has driven sales over 20% since the start of 2020 and strong retailer performance is driving it even further. And as Ken mentioned in relation to M Street, as well as other areas, where we see strong sales growth, strong rent growth inevitably follows. In the background of all these trends, the team continues to work hard to increase occupancy and drive NOI across the portfolio. Speaker 300:11:22In the Q2, we saw a significant pickup in leasing velocity, signing approximately $2,800,000 of new core ABR at Acadia share, which is a nearly 150% increase over the activity from Q1, so no slowdown here. Year to date, within just our core portfolio, we have signed approximately $4,300,000 of ABR again at Acadia share. And as I mentioned, the pipeline remains robust. In addition to the $8,000,000 of executed leases in our signed but not yet open pipeline as of June 30. We are also in advanced negotiations for an additional $10,000,000 of ABR of core leases, with substantially all of it coming from our street and urban markets, including SoHo, Armitage Avenue, the Gold Coast in Chicago and Henderson Avenue in Dallas, each of which are markets where we will see the highest annual contractual growth at 3% per annum, along with more frequent opportunities to mark to market through resets. Speaker 300:12:27Additionally, we are incredibly excited about the momentum we've seen in Chicago as recently as the last 24 hours, not just on the Gold Coast, but also the surrounding areas, and we expect to share some very positive news in the coming weeks, if not sooner. So stay tuned. Circling back to Armitage Avenue. Last quarter, I told you about the market dynamics that make a street like Armitage right for outsized growth. Strong tenant performance, healthy rent to sales, barriers to entry, high tenant demand and very low levels of supply, and the prevalence of F and B resets that provide leverage to pry loose space and more frequently mark to market. Speaker 300:13:07And since the end of the Q1, we've signed 2 new leases in the market and have another 2 in active negotiation at very strong double digit spreads. And again, those rents will all grow at the contractual 3% per annum, which is the historical contractual standard for street retail and are all subject to FMB reset at the end of their initial term. I also mentioned that these dynamics were not unique to Armitage. Over the last year, we've seen the same dynamic, similar results play out in SoHo and Williamsburg and Melrose Place, and we expect to see this story play out across most of our high growth streets. Some of the activity will come from organic lease up of vacancy and expiring leases, but We also continue to accelerate positive mark to market spreads through our PRYLOU strategy. Speaker 300:13:55So let's touch on the PRYLOU strategy for a second. In addition to driving NOI, the frequency of FMB resets and the impact that has on our ability to pry lose space allows us to better curate our streets and create the best ecosystem to promote strong sales growth and long term market performance. Striking that balance is just one of the areas where we truly excel. Now all of these factors, all this momentum applies to CityPoint as well, where the wind is firmly at our backs. In terms of that curation, Sephora is now open and exceeding projection, adding a noticeable increase in traffic to Prince Street. Speaker 300:14:36In the Q1, we saw the same effect on the opposite end of Prince Street when Fogo opened its doors. The park is open as well and is packed with young families eager to shop Prince Street and Primark and Trader Joe's and dine at our food hall, which continues to post record sales each month. And Alamo Drafthouse, which was recently acquired by Sony, has completed their expansion into 5 additional theaters. This is all being reflected in strong quarter over quarter and year over year sales growth, which we anticipate will only accelerate as Sephora and these other factors drive additional traffic and the market continues to mature around us. In the meantime, the leasing team at CityPoint is taking advantage of this momentum and unlocking those spaces on Prince Street and fronting the park that we've been strategically waiting to bring to market. Speaker 300:15:24Tenant interest at CityPoint has never been stronger. So in summation, landlord friendly supply demand dynamic, healthy tenants posting consistent sales growth and significant room to run on rents. And with that, I will turn things over to John. Thanks, A. J, and good morning. Speaker 400:15:42We are pleased to report another strong quarter with our operating results and key metrics coming in ahead of our expectations, along with an active and productive few months on the capital markets front. Through our refinancings and interest rate management, we have a core balance sheet with virtually no debt maturities or exposure to base rates for the next several years, which means that the 5 plus percent of internal growth that we are projecting will continue to show up in our bottom line. Additionally, during the quarter, we got our core debt to EBITDA back into the 5s on a non beating the goal that we have set for ourselves. And lastly, we doubled our liquidity through the expansion of our credit facility along with the execution of our inaugural $100,000,000 unsecured private placement bond. So in putting this all together, our balance sheet is now poised with both the liquidity and flexibility to pursue the accretive external growth opportunities that we are seeing. Speaker 400:16:38I will now provide some further color. Starting with our Q2 results. Consistent with the quarterly run rate that we laid out a few calls ago, we reported FFO of $0.31 a share, which on a sequential basis is a penny ahead of the Q1 after adjusting for the $0.03 of one time items that we discussed on the last call. And as we look towards the second half of the year, our base case model has us adding about a $0.01 a quarter as our signed not yet open pipeline continues to come online with a projected range of $0.31 to $0.33 for Q3 and $0.32 to $0.34 for Q4. In terms of our core leasing metrics, we increased both our physical and leased occupancy rates during the quarter. Speaker 400:17:22I want to quickly highlight that our sequential occupancy statistics were impacted by a mix issue given the 2nd quarter sale of Shops at Grand, which was 100,000 square foot fully occupied asset. When adjusting for the sale, our total core occupancy increased 20 basis points during the quarter with our street and urban sequentially increasing 40 basis points. I also want to remind everyone that given our portfolio mix, not all occupancy is created equal. So while our overall occupancy is nearly 95% leased, we still have upside as our street and urban occupancy is only 86.9% occupied and 89.7% leased at June 30, which given the higher rents and lower CapEx load as a percentage of NOI adds further tailwinds to our ongoing growth, particularly in light of the trends that A. J. Speaker 400:18:14And his team are seeing. Additionally, we have further increased our signed but not yet open pipeline to $8,100,000 which represents about 6% of our ABR at our pro rata share. In terms of timing, approximately 1 third of the signed not yet open pipeline is anticipated to commence during each of the third and 4th quarters of 2024 with the balance anticipated in 2025. Keep in mind, the $8,100,000 is at our pro rata share and represents core same store only, meaning it excludes any leases signed in our core redevelopment pipeline as well as within our investment management platform, including CityPoint. Additionally, the entire $8,100,000 is incremental ABR, meaning it excludes any leases that we have executed on space that is currently occupied. Speaker 400:19:08Moving on to our guidance. As outlined in our release, we have also raised our full year earnings guidance. It's worth reminding that consistent with our past practice, we don't include accretion from external growth in our guidance until the transactions close. Thus, our guidance doesn't factor in the accretion from the investments currently under agreement. But as Ken mentioned, we are targeting about 1% FFO accretion for every $200,000,000 of investments. Speaker 400:19:35Now moving on to same store NOI. As outlined in our release, we reported 5.5% of same store growth for the quarter, which was driven by growth of 12% coming from our street portfolio. And we saw this throughout all of our key street markets, reflecting the powerful combination of lease up, fair value resets, mark to market on new leases along with the 3% contractual growth filled into our street leases. And when looking forward into 2025 and beyond, we are seeing a continuation of these trends with our street portfolio continuing to outperform our suburban assets by about 300 to 400 basis points. Additionally, as reported in our release, we have also increased our dividend by 5.6%. Speaker 400:20:18The decision to increase our payout was based upon consideration of our continued growth along with our taxable income projections. And following the increase, we are projecting that we will maintain our conservative AFFO payout ratio in the 65% to 70% range. Now moving on to our balance sheet. We have no meaningful core debt maturities along with a fully hedged balance sheet for the next several years, which means that the internal growth has and will continue dropping to our bottom line. And we have been incredibly active over the past several months with our focus being on reducing our overall leverage on a non dilutive basis, getting our debt metrics, primarily our debt to JV and debt to EBITDA back to our target levels and expanding both our liquidity and availability of capital. Speaker 400:21:06And we have made significant progress on all these important initiatives. In terms of reducing our leverage, we have delevered on a non dilutive basis by approximately $150,000,000 or about 10% of our pro rata debt during 2024. And through the combination of this lower leveraged and increased EBITDA, we have reduced our net debt to EBITDA by nearly a full turn with our core portfolio back into the 5s. This has enabled us to get our leverage metrics about where we want them with even further improvement of our ratios as the internal growth continues to show up in our results. And while debt to EBITDA is certainly an important metric, we are equally, if not more focused on our overall leverage levels, with our core debt as a percentage of gross asset value currently residing in the mid-thirty percent range. Speaker 400:21:55And it's worth reminding that when assessing relative balance sheet strength at comparable leverage levels, a lower cap rate portfolio such as ours can afford to operate at a higher debt to EBITDA ratio as compared to a higher cap rate portfolio. Additionally, it's also worth pointing out that we have financed, refinanced and or extended nearly 80% of our outstanding debt or nearly $1,000,000,000 over the past few quarters and we achieved this volume of capital markets activity without increasing our borrowing costs or diluting our earnings. Lastly, through the expansion of our corporate revolver, capital recycling and strategically sourcing a new avenue of capital, we have achieved one of our important balance sheet initiatives of increasing our liquidity and expanding our access to capital. As outlined in our release, we completed our inaugural unsecured private placement bond. We are very pleased with the execution and pricing of the $100,000,000 bond, which was done with a single top tier investor and is slated to close in mid August. Speaker 400:22:58And upon closing, the $100,000,000 of proceeds will be non diluted, if not slightly accretive. The private placement market is something we have been strategically targeting for a while. Not only does this market provide us with an additional source of liquidity, it enables us to extend debt duration beyond what currently exists in the bank markets, all of which improves our overall cost of capital. Our balance sheet is one of our key drivers of our business and it's ready for the accretive external growth that Ken discussed. And we will accretively fund this growth on a leverage neutral basis, whether it be through the issuance of our equity and or capital recycling within our core and investment management platforms. Speaker 400:23:37Before turning the call over to questions, I want to share a quick housekeeping item related to our Q3 earnings call. Due to a scheduling conflict, we are currently planning on releasing our earnings in the morning and doing the call later that same day. This is a one time event, and we expect to go back to our regular schedule releasing our earnings the night before our call, but just want to give everyone a heads up. And with that, we will now open up the call for questions. Operator00:24:01Thank you. And our first question coming from the line of Jeffrey Spector with Bank of America. Your line is open. Speaker 500:24:28Hi. This is Andrew Reel on for Jeff. Thanks for taking our questions. We've spoken previously about the fact that SOHO rents are, call it, a half to 2 thirds of their peak levels in 2015 or so, whereas sales are well above where they were at the time. Just given where sales are today, is it realistic to believe that SOHO rents can return to these prior peaks? Speaker 500:24:49And if not, where do you think SOHO rents top out relative to the previous highs? Speaker 200:24:54A. J, why don't you take that one? Speaker 300:24:55Yes. Look, I think this somewhat goes back to the idea of the F and B resets, which we talk about, right? And the ability to unlock a lot of those rents that are sub peak and mark to market based on sales performance, right? If we didn't have the ability to do that, then we can take advantage of the strong sales. I do think there is a lot of room to run to continue to approach prior peak, again, just based on the performance that we continue to see. Speaker 300:25:23Yes, the tenant Speaker 200:25:23sales would indicate when we think about healthy rent to sales ratios, would indicate that there are a variety of retailers that will be prepared to approach prior peaks as that space turns as it becomes available. We're also encouraged by the fact that our retailers have been very thoughtful and disciplined. So it doesn't feel like rents are growing in excess of what retailers can afford. Speaker 500:25:53Okay. Thanks. Can you quantify how rent to sales compares today versus where it was at prior peaks in SoHo? Speaker 300:26:02Yes. I mean, like rents in SoHo, I mean, it's a very nuanced market and it's a relatively large market and you're going to see some variation there. I think prior peak rents were, I'd say occupancy costs were pushing well north of 20%. When you look at our portfolio specifically as well as anecdotally from talking with our tenants, those occupancy costs are living in the mid teens range at this point. But again, given the sales growth that we've seen, even if those occupancy costs continue to creep up, we still have a lot of room to run-in terms of rents. Speaker 500:26:44Okay. Thank you. And then just any more color on your expectations for the volume of external opportunities heading into the back half? I heard some chatter that potential sellers might be sitting idle in $75,000,000 you have in advanced negotiation maybe suggests otherwise? Speaker 200:27:02Well, I think that what you saw over the last several months until relatively recently was sellers sitting on the sidelines with some amount of FOMO, fear of missing out because they, Jeez, I've waited this long, maybe I should wait a little bit longer. I think there's much more clarity, perhaps not for bond traders, but clarity over the next 12 months to 24 months of what the landing looks like and when cuts might occur. So we're starting to see sellers say, okay, I do need liquidity. It is time to transact and we're very encouraged by that cadence. How that translates through into specific volume, stay tuned. Speaker 500:27:53Great. Thanks for the time. Operator00:27:56Thank you. And our next question coming from the line of Linda Tsai with Jefferies. Your line is open. Speaker 600:28:05Yes. Hi. Speaker 700:28:08A question for A. J. Just in regards to Ken's comments about post pandemic retailer sales growth of over 40%. Are these mostly digitally native? Or are there any traits that you would highlight that these retailers possess collectively? Speaker 300:28:28Yes. I mean, frankly, I think we're seeing fewer and fewerly digitally native in general as we see the continued shift away from digital exclusive or digitally native more towards the C. But no, it's not unique to digitally native. We're seeing it across the board from some of our more traditional retailers to emerging brands that are exclusively focused on brick and mortar DTC. Speaker 200:28:53To add to that Linda, first of all, almost across the board wherever price inflation has been since 2019, most retailers have been able to pass that through to the consumer. Obviously, at the lower end, that's been a little bit tougher for some of our retailers, but the majority of our assets are attracting a more affluent shopper and there the ability to pass inflation through has been pretty straightforward. On top of that though and what A. J. Was pointing to, whether it's athleisure, advanced contemporary, some luxury and then retailers across the board. Speaker 200:29:42They've been able to do better than just passing inflation through They've been able to capture sales in their stores as you've seen a migration out of wholesale, out of the department stores and into the individual stores. As you've seen the consumer come back to these key corridors and that's where in corridors like M Street, but it's true for the vast, vast majority of our portfolio, we're seeing a broad variety of retailers achieving very strong sales growth. And then our goal and A. J. Touched on this is to make sure as those sales grow that we sooner rather than later are able to capture it in our rental growth. Speaker 700:30:30Thanks. And then just on external growth in terms of the $75,000,000 of Manhattan and Brooklyn portfolios. Is this an opportunity you've been working on for a while or did it come up more of the glue? Just wondering if this is indicative of some of the capitulation you had spoken of earlier? Speaker 200:30:46Yes. And let me be clear, I wouldn't define this as capitulation by sellers. Some of these deals have we've been working on for a while and some are coming up more quickly. What you have is an environment 3, 4, 5 months ago, where buyers wanted sellers to believe that the 10 year treasury was going to 5%, that there was a hard landing in front of us and pricing accordingly. And sellers were like, geez, there was a sub 4% 10 year treasury not too long ago, we want you to price that way. Speaker 200:31:26And there was a pretty meaningful standoff. And where sellers of cash flowing assets or sellers that didn't have a immediate reason to have to liquidate, those sellers went to the sidelines. I think right now, there's much more clarity, much more clarity as to what borrowing spreads are like. And as John indicated, at least for high quality borrowers, spreads are back. Liquidity is back, and fundamentals remain strong. Speaker 200:31:59So this isn't seller capitulation as much as buyers and sellers coming much closer to an understanding of what the next 5 years should look like. And when we look at those choices, we think that the street retail that we're focused on is looking very attractive and sellers need to move on and so they're agreeing with us. Speaker 700:32:24Thanks. And then just last one if I could sneak this in for John. Just from where you're sitting today and without giving guidance, how are you thinking about the level of gains and promotes in 2025 versus 2024? Speaker 400:32:37Yes. So again, and I will repeat your caveat without giving guidance, but I would say, Linda, we are seeing a consistent level of activity in 2025 as we're seeing in 2024. And we reaffirm that with a balance sheet that's fully hedged, the 5 plus percent of internal growth, we see that continuing for our bottom line into 25%. Speaker 700:32:58Thanks. Operator00:33:02Thank you. And our next question coming from the line of Todd Thomas with KeyBanc. Your line is open. Speaker 800:33:10Hi, thanks. Good morning. First question, John, just as it pertains to the guidance, can you just talk about the guidance increase a little bit more at the low end? It sounds like there's no pending or future investments embedded in the guidance that have not closed. So just curious if you could shed a little bit more light on what drove the increase? Speaker 500:33:31Yes. So I Speaker 400:33:32think Todd for near term, we're going to have any further guidance adjustments are going to be based off of the closing of the external growth that Ken mentioned. Internally, what so what drove the guidance increase this quarter was we are seeing rents coming in or leases commencing quicker than we anticipated. We have a large sign that yet open pipeline. That's a piece of it and tenant helps. So we think we have a we're continuing to see strength of our retailers as consistent with what A. Speaker 400:34:01J. Is saying on his side is that our reserves that we had set up, we are not needing the reserves that we had embedded in our guidance. So really improving both internally, getting our stores opened. And the we did have a handful of acquisitions that did close that helped feed it. So combination of those is what brought our guidance up, the penny at the midpoint. Speaker 800:34:24Okay. That's helpful. How much more reserves are embedded in the guidance for the balance of the year? Yes. Speaker 400:34:32So we had in our full year guidance side, we had about $0.03 is the way to think about it. So we had about $0.03 when we put our guidance out in February. And I would say that for the balance of the year, call it another $0.01 or so of our reserves is what we are projecting. But continuing to see very positive trends on the tenant side. Speaker 800:34:57And then just shifting over to investments and the investment management platform, it sounds like you're certainly seeing an increase in transaction activity. With regard to the strategic relationship with JPMorgan with their Real Estate Income Trust, It sounds like there are additional asset contributions being contemplated from the Acadia core portfolio. Can you just talk about how much volume you're eyeing for contributions and whether assets have been identified already from the core portfolio and maybe the timeline to complete additional contribution transactions? And then are you also looking at 3rd party deals as well? Speaker 200:35:36Yes. In fact, I would emphasize the 3rd party deals more so. We may migrate some more of our suburban assets over from the core portfolio, But we don't feel the urgency. We like that portfolio fine. Some of this was a move towards non dilutive deleveraging. Speaker 200:35:59And as John walked through from a balance sheet perspective, we're getting where we want to from that perspective. If we think we can migrate core assets, accretively, we'll do it. But we're also very confident in our ability to identify as we have done for $1,500,000,000 of transactions in Fund 5, a variety of third party transactions, as we did recently down in Tampa and as we'll continue to do with a good core competency of ours, it's a good way to add incremental accretion. But the final point of all of this, Todd, is expect the majority of our external growth to come from the additions of street retail. That's the area that we're most excited about and we think we have the most differentiation and the ability to move the needle in ways different than perhaps the more traditional Open Air retail. Speaker 800:37:06Okay, got it. And with JPMorgan though, any future deals, whether they're contributions from your portfolio or 3rd party deals, are they all likely to be structured in a similar format, 95.5% and with similar terms? Or will each deal be different within that structure? Speaker 200:37:31They might be different, but and I guess I would say I'll let JPMorgan speak for JPMorgan. For the non traded REIT that we transacted with, they'll probably look very similar. But they would point out that they have multiple different buckets of capital. Neither of us are on any form of exclusive relationship, but it's a good relationship and we are constantly comparing notes about different opportunities. I would say both sides are relatively agnostic as to whether it's a new transaction or an existing asset. Speaker 200:38:09Glad we got the relationship kicked off with an existing asset, but look forward to do many more with them, irrespective based on the investment opportunities we see. And we're encouraged kind of by deal flow we're seeing. So hopefully that works out great. Speaker 800:38:32Okay, great. Thank you. Operator00:38:36Thank you. And our next question coming from the line of Craig Nolan with Citi. Your line is open. Speaker 900:38:44Hey, good morning. Ken, just want to go back to pricing on street retail. We've seen a couple more trades. You guys are getting more active. We saw one of your other public peers get more active in Williamsburg. Speaker 200:39:00Where can you kind of Speaker 900:39:01give us a range of where street retail pricing is in Manhattan versus Brooklyn versus maybe kind of what you're contemplating on M Street, if you can collapse that structure a little bit more, just to give us a sense of return expectations in your different markets? Speaker 200:39:19Yes. And I apologize upfront of being perhaps broad and vague, but going in yield is just one component. And then what do you see as the total growth? There are still leases out there from prior peak and we touched on this before is related to a question in SoHo. Prior peak, we're still not back to. Speaker 200:39:47So there are leases that are above market. Those are going to trade at a very different cap rate going in yield than leases that were done, let's say, during COVID that perhaps are at half of market. What we're seeing now to try to simplify this a bit, leases that were relatively recently signed have 3% contractual growth and to the extent that they have fair market value resets that A. J. Was talking about, those feel pretty darn compelling in the and I'm going to use a broad going in yield, but in the 5% to 7% range. Speaker 200:40:31And I'd say the way we're thinking about this is if we can start in the 6s and have conviction that we're getting into the upper 6s or unlevered 7s in relatively due course, that feels pretty compelling to us given the long term trajectory. How do we get there in the thinking of that? Well, in Open Air Retail in general, the best supermarket anchored shopping centers are probably trading in that range with a growth rate of about 2%. And the street retail that we're talking about has a growth rate that should be double that. And the way we get there is 3% contractual growth plus upside. Speaker 200:41:20That feels pretty compelling if our going in yields are the same. Now I appreciate that supermarket anchored retail is more defensive. Certainly, its necessity profile did great during COVID. But based on the sales growth we're seeing, based on the tenant demand, based on the shift out of wholesale and into these corridors, both tenant performance and tenant demand make us very bullish on this opportunity set as long as what I said in my prepared remarks, as long as we can acquire accretive to earnings, accretive to NAV and accretive to our long term growth. We're starting to see those opportunities. Speaker 200:42:06This is a specialized skill set. So while there is competition, there's a lot less competition in this arena than in other components of Open Air. So we're pretty excited about it. I realize very vague answer, it could be a 10 cap, could be a 4 cap, but what we're seeing trades occasionally in the low 5s, not us, and occasionally in the high 6s, those probably have some hair on them and everything else has fallen in between. Speaker 900:42:40So from an unlevered IR perspective, I think you said what around a 7% plus is kind of the target. Is that a better way to say that than cap rate? Speaker 200:42:49I think it will be higher than that. That's just the yield that it grows to. So if you buy a deal at a 6 and over the 5 years through contractual growth and fair market value reset, the unlevered yield grows to a 7%. That probably equates more to a 8% or 9% unlevered and then obviously higher on a levered Speaker 900:43:15IRR. Got you. That's helpful. Speaker 200:43:21And I guess the other kind of Speaker 900:43:23question I had just kind of long term as you're underwriting rents, right, for Street, you've clearly seen the ability to raise rents. Part of that is the 20% cumulative inflation. If that kind of normalizes here, what do you think is better long term market rent growth figure beyond the 3% annual bumps? Like what do you think is a blended kind of market rent growth over a couple of year period for Street and a normalized period of time versus the post COVID environment? Speaker 200:44:03Yes. So and let's make a distinction between market rent growth and our internal growth, because as hard as A. J. And his team will try, they're not going to successfully mark all of our assets to market in 12 months to 24 months. Retailers enjoy below market leases for a long time. Speaker 200:44:24Albeit in street retail, for a much shorter time period, we have more fair market value resets, more mark to market opportunities than we do in our suburban, but there's a distinction between fair market value rents and existing portfolio. With that caveat, if we approach what we'll define as normalized rents and normalized rent to sales, and that could happen in the next few years, then I guess what I would tell you is our expectation within a range is that market rents should only grow consistent with tenant sales growth. Because if tenants want if we were to pick the advanced contemporary And if they want to be at less than 20% rent to sales, then market rents should at that point going forward grow only consistent with sales. But take a step back for a second and don't lose sight of the 2010 to 2020 period, which I defined as a decade of deflation. It was probably more disinflation, but for that time period, a variety of our retailers were in price wars, were in migration to e commerce and so sales declined. Speaker 200:45:56During that period, certainly the 2015 to 2020 period, it was hard to see rents go up at all. So we are now in a point where it feels like inflation will be a tailwind for us, tenant performance will be a tailwind for us and the ability to see retailer sales grow not every quarter, but over time makes us bullish that it will be 3% plus for the foreseeable future. Stay tuned if we change that tune. Speaker 900:46:33Great. Thank you. Operator00:46:36Thank you. And our next question coming from the line of Michael Mueller with JPMorgan. Your line is open. Speaker 1000:46:46Yes, hi. Two questions. First, for the Manhattan Brooklyn portfolio acquisition, just curious if you can share what's prompting the seller to sell today? And for the second question, you talked about the upside in the street urban portfolio. So if you look at the snow NOI coming online by year end, where would that push your street occupancy to by year end, which I think is 80 fourseven if I'm not mistaken? Speaker 200:47:16John, why don't you take the snow piece of this first? Speaker 400:47:19Yes. So Mike, in terms of dollars, let's start there because that's probably the more impactful of our sign not yet open. There's within the street piece is about 5,500,000 dollars of the 8. So it's a significant portion of our yet to open is coming from there. So I think we're still that's why I think more in terms of dollars percentages, but I think we are we will get fairly close to the 90% mark by the end of the year is our guess in terms of overall occupancy percentage. Speaker 400:47:50But still room to run on that given we're getting to 90% and we have our street, we think we get to 95% plus, given just the activity that A. J. And his team are seeing. But I would say within by the end of the year and projected openings, I think probably the 90% range is a good target. Speaker 700:48:09Great. Speaker 200:48:09And then just in terms of seller motivation, realize there's a lot of finite life funds, there's a lot of debt coming due, there's a lot of CapEx needed to restabilize assets. So every seller has different motivations, but compared to 2, 3, 4 months ago, sellers are saying, you know what, I've waited this long, I need to do some transacting and we're starting to see that and be encouraged by it. Speaker 1000:48:38Okay. Thank you. Operator00:48:43Thank you. And our next question coming from the line of Ki Bin Kim with Drew. Your line is open. Speaker 1100:48:52Thank you. Just a couple of follow ups here. On the New York City pending acquisition, can you just talk about some of the longer term upside? Is this something that you have to kind of remerchandise over time to get to those higher yields? Speaker 200:49:08It's going to be a combination. And I certainly don't want to get to the point where when we close these deals we're all bored by what we're talking about. But I would say that A. J. And his team look forward to re tenanting wherever there's a tenant that's either underperforming or a chance to bring in that roster of tenants that you see us work with, whether it's on Armitage Avenue or Melrose Place or elsewhere. Speaker 200:49:37So it will be a combination of attractive going in yields in some cases, lease up in others, we'll try to find that right blend. Speaker 1100:49:49And going back to your comments about street retail sales being up 40%, I wasn't sure if you meant if that was referring to your whole portfolio or the M Street portfolio. But my question is, in your M Street portfolio, when I look back at 2019 or 2020, the ABR hasn't really changed over that timeframe. Certainly, your tenants have. So I'm just trying to better gauge where that mark to market opportunity is. And just given that rents haven't really changed, maybe you can help me better understand how much more dynamic that market might be today versus 4 or 5 years ago? Speaker 200:50:26Yes. And so the answer is much more dynamic. I wish that every time a retailer called me and said, wow, my sales are up 40%, I was able to say, great, pay us 40% more. But leases are leases. So I think what you are seeing is a delay, a lag between sales growth and rent growth and that will play out again the 40% I was mentioning was related to M Street although we again, we don't get great sales data across the board, but we're seeing that in many of our dynamic markets. Speaker 200:51:06And it can take somewhere between 2 5 years for us to catch up even with aggressive priluus and fair market value resets. Speaker 100:51:17Okay. Thank you. Speaker 400:51:18Sure. Operator00:51:21Thank you. And our next question coming from the line of Paulina Rahasmith with Green Street. Your line is open. Speaker 600:51:32Good morning. And I see Walgreens is an important tenant for you. I know they are evaluating potential store closures. Have you talked to them at all about how they are thinking about the stores in your portfolio? Speaker 400:51:47Yes, Polly, what was the retailer again for store closures? Was it Walgreens? Walgreens. Speaker 300:51:51Got it, sorry. Speaker 400:51:53H. A. J. A. Speaker 300:51:54Yes, we have no indication at this point that Walgreens closing any of their stores within our portfolio. Several of them and we don't have a ton in terms of just total number of Walgreens have recently extended leases. So yes, I mean, so the simple answer to the question is, they seem to be well performing locations and there's no indication that they'll be closing any of them. Speaker 600:52:23Thank you. And then if I remember well, you're mostly on variable camp, right? I think that's the case, but correct me if I'm wrong. And my question is, I have seen other REITs benefit in this cycle from 6 come. And so my question is, is that where the case, if you were mostly variable, do you think differently about the mix because of your street retail exposure perhaps? Speaker 400:52:59Yes. So Pauline, I would say the vast majority of our leases are there, but we pass through the actual expenses to the tenant. I think there's pros and cons of each. I mean, operationally that certainly reduces disputes if it's a fixed CAM. But I think for just operationally and aligning interest, I think our preference is to do on a is on variable. Speaker 400:53:22But we evaluate that all the time. Tenants have different views of it. But at this point, our preference is to stay with a variable and particularly at times of inflation, certainly is something we would like to keep as variable. Speaker 600:53:40Okay. And the last one, can you remind me how frequent are percentage rents in your portfolio? Speaker 400:53:48It's a relatively small amount, so not a big piece of what we did. I think during COVID on a couple of leases that to get spaces activated, We saw a slight tick up in it, but not a Speaker 300:54:00big piece of what we do. It's well under 1%. I mean, much more common, of course, in the street portfolio than in shopping centers. And just to be clear, that's in addition to a market based rent. So it's upside. Speaker 300:54:14It's not sort of in exchange for a market rent. Speaker 600:54:21Thank you very much. Operator00:54:26Thank you. And I see we have no further questions in the queue at this time. I will now turn the call back over to Mr. Bernstein for any closing remarks. Speaker 200:54:41Great. Thank you all for joining us. We look forward to speaking to you next quarter. Enjoy the rest of the summer. Operator00:54:52Ladies and gentlemen, that does conclude our conference for today. Thank you for your participation. You may now disconnect.Read moreRemove AdsPowered by Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallAcadia Realty Trust Q2 202400:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2xRemove Ads Earnings DocumentsPress Release(8-K)Quarterly report(10-Q) Acadia Realty Trust Earnings HeadlinesAnalysts Are Bullish on These Real Estate Stocks: Sun Communities (SUI), Acadia Realty (AKR)April 15 at 6:28 AM | markets.businessinsider.comAcadia Realty Trust (NYSE:AKR) Upgraded at Truist FinancialApril 13, 2025 | americanbankingnews.comWarning: “DOGE Collapse” imminentElon Strikes Back You may already sense that the tide is turning against Elon Musk and DOGE. Just this week, President Trump promised to buy a Tesla to help support Musk in the face of a boycott against his company. But according to one research group, with connections to the Pentagon and the U.S. government, Elon's preparing to strike back in a much bigger way in the days ahead.April 17, 2025 | Altimetry (Ad)Acadia Realty Trust upgraded to Buy from Hold at TruistApril 10, 2025 | markets.businessinsider.comTruist Securities Upgrades Acadia Realty Trust (AKR)April 10, 2025 | msn.comAcadia Realty Trust is OversoldApril 5, 2025 | nasdaq.comSee More Acadia Realty Trust Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like Acadia Realty Trust? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on Acadia Realty Trust and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About Acadia Realty TrustAcadia Realty Trust (NYSE:AKR) is an equity real estate investment trust focused on delivering long-term, profitable growth via its dual Core Portfolio and Fund operating platforms and its disciplined, location-driven investment strategy. 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There are 12 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Good day and thank you for standing by. Welcome to the Acadia Realty Trust Second Quarter 2024 Earnings Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen only mode. After the speakers' presentation, there will be a question and answer session. Please note that today's conference may be recorded. Operator00:00:27I will hand the conference over to your speaker host, Ethan Gomez. Please go ahead. Speaker 100:00:32Good morning, and thank you for joining us for the Q2 2024 Acadia Realty Trust earnings conference call. My name is Ethan Gomez, and I'm an intern in our acquisitions department. Before we begin, please be aware that statements made during the call that are not historical may be deemed forward looking statements within the meaning of the Securities and Exchange Act of 1934, and actual results may differ materially from those indicated by such forward looking statements. Due to a variety of risks and uncertainties, including those disclosed in the company's most recent Form 10 ks and other periodic filings with the SEC, forward looking statements speak only as of the date of this call, July 31, 2024, and the company undertakes no duty to update them. During this call, management may refer to certain non GAAP financial measures, including funds from operations and net operating income. Speaker 100:01:24Please see Acadia's earnings press release posted on its website for reconciliations of these non GAAP financial measures with the most directly comparable GAAP financial measures. Once the call becomes open for questions, we ask that you limit your first round to 2 questions per caller to give everyone the opportunity to participate. You may ask further questions by reinserting yourself into the queue and we will answer as time permits. Now, it is my pleasure to turn the call over to Ken Bernstein, President and Chief Executive Officer, who will begin today's management remarks. Speaker 200:01:57Great job, Ethan. Thank you to you and the rest of the summer interns for bringing some great energy here this summer. Welcome, everyone. I'm here with John Godfried and A. J. Speaker 200:02:07Levine. I'll give a few comments before handing remarks over to A. J. Then John will discuss our earnings guidance, our balance sheet metrics and after that, we'll take some questions. As you can see from our earnings release, our strong second quarter performance is reflective of both the operational tailwinds that our sector is experiencing, as well as the successful execution by our team of several important initiatives. Speaker 200:02:38In light of this strong performance, we've increased our full year earnings guidance and increased our quarterly dividend. More importantly, we see this momentum continuing. While there's always multiple drivers of our growth, there are effectively 3 critical areas of focus for our business. The first is driving strong internal growth most significantly coming from our street retail portfolio. The second is maintaining a solid balance sheet. Speaker 200:03:13And then third is the incremental earnings growth beginning to hit the bottom line from our highly differentiated investment activity. So first, with respect to internal growth, our same store NOI growth has averaged over 6% for the last 2 years and we see this multi year growth trajectory continuing. A. J. Will walk through the details of this progress, but all of this activity supports our goal of generating superior top line growth and then having that growth hit the bottom line. Speaker 200:03:51Our second key area of focus comes from maintaining a strong and flexible balance sheet. John will elaborate on our balance sheet metrics further. But in short, we are now positioned with a well hedged balance sheet, strong liquidity to fuel growth, limited maturity exposure and solid access to attractive debt. Our 3rd and increasingly important driver comes from contributions from external growth. This includes both our on balance sheet acquisitions for our core portfolio as well as growth through our investment management platform. Speaker 200:04:33Our focus for on balance sheet investment activity is to grow the street retail segment of our core portfolio. It's our view that this segment will produce the highest risk adjusted returns in the Open Air sector. We are focusing our street retail acquisition efforts on properties in key corridors that are accretive to earnings, accretive to NAV, as well as accretive to our long term internal growth trajectory. We believe that there is still a capital market dislocation with respect to the pricing of street retail investment opportunities and this dislocation is providing going in yields that do not account for the superior growth rate when compared to other Open Air formats. As the capital markets begin to normalize, sellers are beginning to emerge and opportunities are beginning to pencil out. Speaker 200:05:36Along these lines, last quarter, we made progress on several transactions. We are finalizing our diligence for high quality street retail assets in key shopping corridors both in Manhattan and Brooklyn for approximately $75,000,000 And in addition to that, we have funded what positions us to add an additional 11% interest in the Georgetown Renaissance Collection, a portfolio in M Street, Georgetown, where we already own a 20% stake and where we hope to add even further to this position. For those of you less familiar with the recovery we're experiencing in Georgetown, Over the last several years, this iconic corridor has seen a meaningful improvement in merchandising, in tenant demand, in tenant performance. The addition of new tenants including Aritzia, Aloe Yoga, Farity, Veronica Beard and Skims, just to name a few, has triggered strong growth on a street that had previously suffered from outdated merchandising and underperforming tenants. We have seen many of our retailers post sales growth of over 40% since 2019 and tenant sales growth is a great indicator of future rent growth. Speaker 200:06:57Then behind these acquisitions I just mentioned, we have a growing pipeline of properties that also meet our acquisition criteria for our core portfolio. Now deals are not done until they're done and we're going to remain disciplined, but it feels as though the stars are beginning to align. In complementing our on balance sheet investments, we're continuing to see opportunities to grow our investment management platform, where we are generally focused on open air suburban shopping centers, where we are going to leverage our institutional capital relationships. There are a few initiatives in progress here. 1st, as we had previously announced, we formed a strategic partnership for our property, The Shops at Grant, with JPMorgan where we retained a 5% interest in the investment, plus retained the management as well as potential upside. Speaker 200:07:54This transaction is an example of our intention to migrate some of our stable but lower growth assets out of our core portfolio and into the investment management platform. Last quarter, we also completed a new acquisition in Tampa, Florida of an open air community center, the $31,000,000 designated for our investment management platform. Given the strong demographics of the walks at Highwood Preserve and the value add upside, we have strong institutional interest from investors in this asset. But most importantly, as it relates to external growth, keep in mind that for a company of our size, it doesn't take much volume to move the needle. While every transaction is going to differ in terms of long term accretion, we are currently targeting about 1% earnings accretion for every $200,000,000 of gross investment. Speaker 200:08:58And keep in mind, we are historically used to doing multiples of that in volume. So looking ahead, we remain very bullish on our ability to continue to add value by driving internal growth, by maintaining a strong and flexible balance sheet and by adding additional growth through our strategic new investments. And with that, I'd like to thank the team for their hard work last quarter and I'll turn the call over to AJ. Speaker 300:09:31Great. Thank you, Ken. Good morning, everyone. So another highly productive quarter in the books and the trends that we've been seeing play out over the last several years appear to be sticking. We're seeing no signs of a slowdown. Speaker 300:09:44Our leasing pipeline is the largest it's ever been and the team continues to post double digit spreads throughout our high growth streets. So to help understand why we continue to see this high level of productivity, let's touch on 2 of the critical factors that drive market rents, supply demand and rent to sales. So as it relates to supply demand, as you can see from our results, tenant demand continues unabated and there has been no new supply added to our streets. And driving that demand, amongst other factors including strong performance, is a continued focus on DTC and the tenants' desire to better control the interaction with the consumer. And all this has resulted in a historically favorable supply demand dynamic for landlords. Speaker 300:10:32In terms of rent to sales, along with strong and consistent sales growth in markets like M Street and Madison Avenue and SoHo amongst others, tenants remain disciplined and rent to sales ratios sit well within a healthy acceptable range. A lot of that sales growth comes from strong consumer demand, but let's not forget about the impact of inflation on sales and rents. Inflation alone has driven sales over 20% since the start of 2020 and strong retailer performance is driving it even further. And as Ken mentioned in relation to M Street, as well as other areas, where we see strong sales growth, strong rent growth inevitably follows. In the background of all these trends, the team continues to work hard to increase occupancy and drive NOI across the portfolio. Speaker 300:11:22In the Q2, we saw a significant pickup in leasing velocity, signing approximately $2,800,000 of new core ABR at Acadia share, which is a nearly 150% increase over the activity from Q1, so no slowdown here. Year to date, within just our core portfolio, we have signed approximately $4,300,000 of ABR again at Acadia share. And as I mentioned, the pipeline remains robust. In addition to the $8,000,000 of executed leases in our signed but not yet open pipeline as of June 30. We are also in advanced negotiations for an additional $10,000,000 of ABR of core leases, with substantially all of it coming from our street and urban markets, including SoHo, Armitage Avenue, the Gold Coast in Chicago and Henderson Avenue in Dallas, each of which are markets where we will see the highest annual contractual growth at 3% per annum, along with more frequent opportunities to mark to market through resets. Speaker 300:12:27Additionally, we are incredibly excited about the momentum we've seen in Chicago as recently as the last 24 hours, not just on the Gold Coast, but also the surrounding areas, and we expect to share some very positive news in the coming weeks, if not sooner. So stay tuned. Circling back to Armitage Avenue. Last quarter, I told you about the market dynamics that make a street like Armitage right for outsized growth. Strong tenant performance, healthy rent to sales, barriers to entry, high tenant demand and very low levels of supply, and the prevalence of F and B resets that provide leverage to pry loose space and more frequently mark to market. Speaker 300:13:07And since the end of the Q1, we've signed 2 new leases in the market and have another 2 in active negotiation at very strong double digit spreads. And again, those rents will all grow at the contractual 3% per annum, which is the historical contractual standard for street retail and are all subject to FMB reset at the end of their initial term. I also mentioned that these dynamics were not unique to Armitage. Over the last year, we've seen the same dynamic, similar results play out in SoHo and Williamsburg and Melrose Place, and we expect to see this story play out across most of our high growth streets. Some of the activity will come from organic lease up of vacancy and expiring leases, but We also continue to accelerate positive mark to market spreads through our PRYLOU strategy. Speaker 300:13:55So let's touch on the PRYLOU strategy for a second. In addition to driving NOI, the frequency of FMB resets and the impact that has on our ability to pry lose space allows us to better curate our streets and create the best ecosystem to promote strong sales growth and long term market performance. Striking that balance is just one of the areas where we truly excel. Now all of these factors, all this momentum applies to CityPoint as well, where the wind is firmly at our backs. In terms of that curation, Sephora is now open and exceeding projection, adding a noticeable increase in traffic to Prince Street. Speaker 300:14:36In the Q1, we saw the same effect on the opposite end of Prince Street when Fogo opened its doors. The park is open as well and is packed with young families eager to shop Prince Street and Primark and Trader Joe's and dine at our food hall, which continues to post record sales each month. And Alamo Drafthouse, which was recently acquired by Sony, has completed their expansion into 5 additional theaters. This is all being reflected in strong quarter over quarter and year over year sales growth, which we anticipate will only accelerate as Sephora and these other factors drive additional traffic and the market continues to mature around us. In the meantime, the leasing team at CityPoint is taking advantage of this momentum and unlocking those spaces on Prince Street and fronting the park that we've been strategically waiting to bring to market. Speaker 300:15:24Tenant interest at CityPoint has never been stronger. So in summation, landlord friendly supply demand dynamic, healthy tenants posting consistent sales growth and significant room to run on rents. And with that, I will turn things over to John. Thanks, A. J, and good morning. Speaker 400:15:42We are pleased to report another strong quarter with our operating results and key metrics coming in ahead of our expectations, along with an active and productive few months on the capital markets front. Through our refinancings and interest rate management, we have a core balance sheet with virtually no debt maturities or exposure to base rates for the next several years, which means that the 5 plus percent of internal growth that we are projecting will continue to show up in our bottom line. Additionally, during the quarter, we got our core debt to EBITDA back into the 5s on a non beating the goal that we have set for ourselves. And lastly, we doubled our liquidity through the expansion of our credit facility along with the execution of our inaugural $100,000,000 unsecured private placement bond. So in putting this all together, our balance sheet is now poised with both the liquidity and flexibility to pursue the accretive external growth opportunities that we are seeing. Speaker 400:16:38I will now provide some further color. Starting with our Q2 results. Consistent with the quarterly run rate that we laid out a few calls ago, we reported FFO of $0.31 a share, which on a sequential basis is a penny ahead of the Q1 after adjusting for the $0.03 of one time items that we discussed on the last call. And as we look towards the second half of the year, our base case model has us adding about a $0.01 a quarter as our signed not yet open pipeline continues to come online with a projected range of $0.31 to $0.33 for Q3 and $0.32 to $0.34 for Q4. In terms of our core leasing metrics, we increased both our physical and leased occupancy rates during the quarter. Speaker 400:17:22I want to quickly highlight that our sequential occupancy statistics were impacted by a mix issue given the 2nd quarter sale of Shops at Grand, which was 100,000 square foot fully occupied asset. When adjusting for the sale, our total core occupancy increased 20 basis points during the quarter with our street and urban sequentially increasing 40 basis points. I also want to remind everyone that given our portfolio mix, not all occupancy is created equal. So while our overall occupancy is nearly 95% leased, we still have upside as our street and urban occupancy is only 86.9% occupied and 89.7% leased at June 30, which given the higher rents and lower CapEx load as a percentage of NOI adds further tailwinds to our ongoing growth, particularly in light of the trends that A. J. Speaker 400:18:14And his team are seeing. Additionally, we have further increased our signed but not yet open pipeline to $8,100,000 which represents about 6% of our ABR at our pro rata share. In terms of timing, approximately 1 third of the signed not yet open pipeline is anticipated to commence during each of the third and 4th quarters of 2024 with the balance anticipated in 2025. Keep in mind, the $8,100,000 is at our pro rata share and represents core same store only, meaning it excludes any leases signed in our core redevelopment pipeline as well as within our investment management platform, including CityPoint. Additionally, the entire $8,100,000 is incremental ABR, meaning it excludes any leases that we have executed on space that is currently occupied. Speaker 400:19:08Moving on to our guidance. As outlined in our release, we have also raised our full year earnings guidance. It's worth reminding that consistent with our past practice, we don't include accretion from external growth in our guidance until the transactions close. Thus, our guidance doesn't factor in the accretion from the investments currently under agreement. But as Ken mentioned, we are targeting about 1% FFO accretion for every $200,000,000 of investments. Speaker 400:19:35Now moving on to same store NOI. As outlined in our release, we reported 5.5% of same store growth for the quarter, which was driven by growth of 12% coming from our street portfolio. And we saw this throughout all of our key street markets, reflecting the powerful combination of lease up, fair value resets, mark to market on new leases along with the 3% contractual growth filled into our street leases. And when looking forward into 2025 and beyond, we are seeing a continuation of these trends with our street portfolio continuing to outperform our suburban assets by about 300 to 400 basis points. Additionally, as reported in our release, we have also increased our dividend by 5.6%. Speaker 400:20:18The decision to increase our payout was based upon consideration of our continued growth along with our taxable income projections. And following the increase, we are projecting that we will maintain our conservative AFFO payout ratio in the 65% to 70% range. Now moving on to our balance sheet. We have no meaningful core debt maturities along with a fully hedged balance sheet for the next several years, which means that the internal growth has and will continue dropping to our bottom line. And we have been incredibly active over the past several months with our focus being on reducing our overall leverage on a non dilutive basis, getting our debt metrics, primarily our debt to JV and debt to EBITDA back to our target levels and expanding both our liquidity and availability of capital. Speaker 400:21:06And we have made significant progress on all these important initiatives. In terms of reducing our leverage, we have delevered on a non dilutive basis by approximately $150,000,000 or about 10% of our pro rata debt during 2024. And through the combination of this lower leveraged and increased EBITDA, we have reduced our net debt to EBITDA by nearly a full turn with our core portfolio back into the 5s. This has enabled us to get our leverage metrics about where we want them with even further improvement of our ratios as the internal growth continues to show up in our results. And while debt to EBITDA is certainly an important metric, we are equally, if not more focused on our overall leverage levels, with our core debt as a percentage of gross asset value currently residing in the mid-thirty percent range. Speaker 400:21:55And it's worth reminding that when assessing relative balance sheet strength at comparable leverage levels, a lower cap rate portfolio such as ours can afford to operate at a higher debt to EBITDA ratio as compared to a higher cap rate portfolio. Additionally, it's also worth pointing out that we have financed, refinanced and or extended nearly 80% of our outstanding debt or nearly $1,000,000,000 over the past few quarters and we achieved this volume of capital markets activity without increasing our borrowing costs or diluting our earnings. Lastly, through the expansion of our corporate revolver, capital recycling and strategically sourcing a new avenue of capital, we have achieved one of our important balance sheet initiatives of increasing our liquidity and expanding our access to capital. As outlined in our release, we completed our inaugural unsecured private placement bond. We are very pleased with the execution and pricing of the $100,000,000 bond, which was done with a single top tier investor and is slated to close in mid August. Speaker 400:22:58And upon closing, the $100,000,000 of proceeds will be non diluted, if not slightly accretive. The private placement market is something we have been strategically targeting for a while. Not only does this market provide us with an additional source of liquidity, it enables us to extend debt duration beyond what currently exists in the bank markets, all of which improves our overall cost of capital. Our balance sheet is one of our key drivers of our business and it's ready for the accretive external growth that Ken discussed. And we will accretively fund this growth on a leverage neutral basis, whether it be through the issuance of our equity and or capital recycling within our core and investment management platforms. Speaker 400:23:37Before turning the call over to questions, I want to share a quick housekeeping item related to our Q3 earnings call. Due to a scheduling conflict, we are currently planning on releasing our earnings in the morning and doing the call later that same day. This is a one time event, and we expect to go back to our regular schedule releasing our earnings the night before our call, but just want to give everyone a heads up. And with that, we will now open up the call for questions. Operator00:24:01Thank you. And our first question coming from the line of Jeffrey Spector with Bank of America. Your line is open. Speaker 500:24:28Hi. This is Andrew Reel on for Jeff. Thanks for taking our questions. We've spoken previously about the fact that SOHO rents are, call it, a half to 2 thirds of their peak levels in 2015 or so, whereas sales are well above where they were at the time. Just given where sales are today, is it realistic to believe that SOHO rents can return to these prior peaks? Speaker 500:24:49And if not, where do you think SOHO rents top out relative to the previous highs? Speaker 200:24:54A. J, why don't you take that one? Speaker 300:24:55Yes. Look, I think this somewhat goes back to the idea of the F and B resets, which we talk about, right? And the ability to unlock a lot of those rents that are sub peak and mark to market based on sales performance, right? If we didn't have the ability to do that, then we can take advantage of the strong sales. I do think there is a lot of room to run to continue to approach prior peak, again, just based on the performance that we continue to see. Speaker 300:25:23Yes, the tenant Speaker 200:25:23sales would indicate when we think about healthy rent to sales ratios, would indicate that there are a variety of retailers that will be prepared to approach prior peaks as that space turns as it becomes available. We're also encouraged by the fact that our retailers have been very thoughtful and disciplined. So it doesn't feel like rents are growing in excess of what retailers can afford. Speaker 500:25:53Okay. Thanks. Can you quantify how rent to sales compares today versus where it was at prior peaks in SoHo? Speaker 300:26:02Yes. I mean, like rents in SoHo, I mean, it's a very nuanced market and it's a relatively large market and you're going to see some variation there. I think prior peak rents were, I'd say occupancy costs were pushing well north of 20%. When you look at our portfolio specifically as well as anecdotally from talking with our tenants, those occupancy costs are living in the mid teens range at this point. But again, given the sales growth that we've seen, even if those occupancy costs continue to creep up, we still have a lot of room to run-in terms of rents. Speaker 500:26:44Okay. Thank you. And then just any more color on your expectations for the volume of external opportunities heading into the back half? I heard some chatter that potential sellers might be sitting idle in $75,000,000 you have in advanced negotiation maybe suggests otherwise? Speaker 200:27:02Well, I think that what you saw over the last several months until relatively recently was sellers sitting on the sidelines with some amount of FOMO, fear of missing out because they, Jeez, I've waited this long, maybe I should wait a little bit longer. I think there's much more clarity, perhaps not for bond traders, but clarity over the next 12 months to 24 months of what the landing looks like and when cuts might occur. So we're starting to see sellers say, okay, I do need liquidity. It is time to transact and we're very encouraged by that cadence. How that translates through into specific volume, stay tuned. Speaker 500:27:53Great. Thanks for the time. Operator00:27:56Thank you. And our next question coming from the line of Linda Tsai with Jefferies. Your line is open. Speaker 600:28:05Yes. Hi. Speaker 700:28:08A question for A. J. Just in regards to Ken's comments about post pandemic retailer sales growth of over 40%. Are these mostly digitally native? Or are there any traits that you would highlight that these retailers possess collectively? Speaker 300:28:28Yes. I mean, frankly, I think we're seeing fewer and fewerly digitally native in general as we see the continued shift away from digital exclusive or digitally native more towards the C. But no, it's not unique to digitally native. We're seeing it across the board from some of our more traditional retailers to emerging brands that are exclusively focused on brick and mortar DTC. Speaker 200:28:53To add to that Linda, first of all, almost across the board wherever price inflation has been since 2019, most retailers have been able to pass that through to the consumer. Obviously, at the lower end, that's been a little bit tougher for some of our retailers, but the majority of our assets are attracting a more affluent shopper and there the ability to pass inflation through has been pretty straightforward. On top of that though and what A. J. Was pointing to, whether it's athleisure, advanced contemporary, some luxury and then retailers across the board. Speaker 200:29:42They've been able to do better than just passing inflation through They've been able to capture sales in their stores as you've seen a migration out of wholesale, out of the department stores and into the individual stores. As you've seen the consumer come back to these key corridors and that's where in corridors like M Street, but it's true for the vast, vast majority of our portfolio, we're seeing a broad variety of retailers achieving very strong sales growth. And then our goal and A. J. Touched on this is to make sure as those sales grow that we sooner rather than later are able to capture it in our rental growth. Speaker 700:30:30Thanks. And then just on external growth in terms of the $75,000,000 of Manhattan and Brooklyn portfolios. Is this an opportunity you've been working on for a while or did it come up more of the glue? Just wondering if this is indicative of some of the capitulation you had spoken of earlier? Speaker 200:30:46Yes. And let me be clear, I wouldn't define this as capitulation by sellers. Some of these deals have we've been working on for a while and some are coming up more quickly. What you have is an environment 3, 4, 5 months ago, where buyers wanted sellers to believe that the 10 year treasury was going to 5%, that there was a hard landing in front of us and pricing accordingly. And sellers were like, geez, there was a sub 4% 10 year treasury not too long ago, we want you to price that way. Speaker 200:31:26And there was a pretty meaningful standoff. And where sellers of cash flowing assets or sellers that didn't have a immediate reason to have to liquidate, those sellers went to the sidelines. I think right now, there's much more clarity, much more clarity as to what borrowing spreads are like. And as John indicated, at least for high quality borrowers, spreads are back. Liquidity is back, and fundamentals remain strong. Speaker 200:31:59So this isn't seller capitulation as much as buyers and sellers coming much closer to an understanding of what the next 5 years should look like. And when we look at those choices, we think that the street retail that we're focused on is looking very attractive and sellers need to move on and so they're agreeing with us. Speaker 700:32:24Thanks. And then just last one if I could sneak this in for John. Just from where you're sitting today and without giving guidance, how are you thinking about the level of gains and promotes in 2025 versus 2024? Speaker 400:32:37Yes. So again, and I will repeat your caveat without giving guidance, but I would say, Linda, we are seeing a consistent level of activity in 2025 as we're seeing in 2024. And we reaffirm that with a balance sheet that's fully hedged, the 5 plus percent of internal growth, we see that continuing for our bottom line into 25%. Speaker 700:32:58Thanks. Operator00:33:02Thank you. And our next question coming from the line of Todd Thomas with KeyBanc. Your line is open. Speaker 800:33:10Hi, thanks. Good morning. First question, John, just as it pertains to the guidance, can you just talk about the guidance increase a little bit more at the low end? It sounds like there's no pending or future investments embedded in the guidance that have not closed. So just curious if you could shed a little bit more light on what drove the increase? Speaker 500:33:31Yes. So I Speaker 400:33:32think Todd for near term, we're going to have any further guidance adjustments are going to be based off of the closing of the external growth that Ken mentioned. Internally, what so what drove the guidance increase this quarter was we are seeing rents coming in or leases commencing quicker than we anticipated. We have a large sign that yet open pipeline. That's a piece of it and tenant helps. So we think we have a we're continuing to see strength of our retailers as consistent with what A. Speaker 400:34:01J. Is saying on his side is that our reserves that we had set up, we are not needing the reserves that we had embedded in our guidance. So really improving both internally, getting our stores opened. And the we did have a handful of acquisitions that did close that helped feed it. So combination of those is what brought our guidance up, the penny at the midpoint. Speaker 800:34:24Okay. That's helpful. How much more reserves are embedded in the guidance for the balance of the year? Yes. Speaker 400:34:32So we had in our full year guidance side, we had about $0.03 is the way to think about it. So we had about $0.03 when we put our guidance out in February. And I would say that for the balance of the year, call it another $0.01 or so of our reserves is what we are projecting. But continuing to see very positive trends on the tenant side. Speaker 800:34:57And then just shifting over to investments and the investment management platform, it sounds like you're certainly seeing an increase in transaction activity. With regard to the strategic relationship with JPMorgan with their Real Estate Income Trust, It sounds like there are additional asset contributions being contemplated from the Acadia core portfolio. Can you just talk about how much volume you're eyeing for contributions and whether assets have been identified already from the core portfolio and maybe the timeline to complete additional contribution transactions? And then are you also looking at 3rd party deals as well? Speaker 200:35:36Yes. In fact, I would emphasize the 3rd party deals more so. We may migrate some more of our suburban assets over from the core portfolio, But we don't feel the urgency. We like that portfolio fine. Some of this was a move towards non dilutive deleveraging. Speaker 200:35:59And as John walked through from a balance sheet perspective, we're getting where we want to from that perspective. If we think we can migrate core assets, accretively, we'll do it. But we're also very confident in our ability to identify as we have done for $1,500,000,000 of transactions in Fund 5, a variety of third party transactions, as we did recently down in Tampa and as we'll continue to do with a good core competency of ours, it's a good way to add incremental accretion. But the final point of all of this, Todd, is expect the majority of our external growth to come from the additions of street retail. That's the area that we're most excited about and we think we have the most differentiation and the ability to move the needle in ways different than perhaps the more traditional Open Air retail. Speaker 800:37:06Okay, got it. And with JPMorgan though, any future deals, whether they're contributions from your portfolio or 3rd party deals, are they all likely to be structured in a similar format, 95.5% and with similar terms? Or will each deal be different within that structure? Speaker 200:37:31They might be different, but and I guess I would say I'll let JPMorgan speak for JPMorgan. For the non traded REIT that we transacted with, they'll probably look very similar. But they would point out that they have multiple different buckets of capital. Neither of us are on any form of exclusive relationship, but it's a good relationship and we are constantly comparing notes about different opportunities. I would say both sides are relatively agnostic as to whether it's a new transaction or an existing asset. Speaker 200:38:09Glad we got the relationship kicked off with an existing asset, but look forward to do many more with them, irrespective based on the investment opportunities we see. And we're encouraged kind of by deal flow we're seeing. So hopefully that works out great. Speaker 800:38:32Okay, great. Thank you. Operator00:38:36Thank you. And our next question coming from the line of Craig Nolan with Citi. Your line is open. Speaker 900:38:44Hey, good morning. Ken, just want to go back to pricing on street retail. We've seen a couple more trades. You guys are getting more active. We saw one of your other public peers get more active in Williamsburg. Speaker 200:39:00Where can you kind of Speaker 900:39:01give us a range of where street retail pricing is in Manhattan versus Brooklyn versus maybe kind of what you're contemplating on M Street, if you can collapse that structure a little bit more, just to give us a sense of return expectations in your different markets? Speaker 200:39:19Yes. And I apologize upfront of being perhaps broad and vague, but going in yield is just one component. And then what do you see as the total growth? There are still leases out there from prior peak and we touched on this before is related to a question in SoHo. Prior peak, we're still not back to. Speaker 200:39:47So there are leases that are above market. Those are going to trade at a very different cap rate going in yield than leases that were done, let's say, during COVID that perhaps are at half of market. What we're seeing now to try to simplify this a bit, leases that were relatively recently signed have 3% contractual growth and to the extent that they have fair market value resets that A. J. Was talking about, those feel pretty darn compelling in the and I'm going to use a broad going in yield, but in the 5% to 7% range. Speaker 200:40:31And I'd say the way we're thinking about this is if we can start in the 6s and have conviction that we're getting into the upper 6s or unlevered 7s in relatively due course, that feels pretty compelling to us given the long term trajectory. How do we get there in the thinking of that? Well, in Open Air Retail in general, the best supermarket anchored shopping centers are probably trading in that range with a growth rate of about 2%. And the street retail that we're talking about has a growth rate that should be double that. And the way we get there is 3% contractual growth plus upside. Speaker 200:41:20That feels pretty compelling if our going in yields are the same. Now I appreciate that supermarket anchored retail is more defensive. Certainly, its necessity profile did great during COVID. But based on the sales growth we're seeing, based on the tenant demand, based on the shift out of wholesale and into these corridors, both tenant performance and tenant demand make us very bullish on this opportunity set as long as what I said in my prepared remarks, as long as we can acquire accretive to earnings, accretive to NAV and accretive to our long term growth. We're starting to see those opportunities. Speaker 200:42:06This is a specialized skill set. So while there is competition, there's a lot less competition in this arena than in other components of Open Air. So we're pretty excited about it. I realize very vague answer, it could be a 10 cap, could be a 4 cap, but what we're seeing trades occasionally in the low 5s, not us, and occasionally in the high 6s, those probably have some hair on them and everything else has fallen in between. Speaker 900:42:40So from an unlevered IR perspective, I think you said what around a 7% plus is kind of the target. Is that a better way to say that than cap rate? Speaker 200:42:49I think it will be higher than that. That's just the yield that it grows to. So if you buy a deal at a 6 and over the 5 years through contractual growth and fair market value reset, the unlevered yield grows to a 7%. That probably equates more to a 8% or 9% unlevered and then obviously higher on a levered Speaker 900:43:15IRR. Got you. That's helpful. Speaker 200:43:21And I guess the other kind of Speaker 900:43:23question I had just kind of long term as you're underwriting rents, right, for Street, you've clearly seen the ability to raise rents. Part of that is the 20% cumulative inflation. If that kind of normalizes here, what do you think is better long term market rent growth figure beyond the 3% annual bumps? Like what do you think is a blended kind of market rent growth over a couple of year period for Street and a normalized period of time versus the post COVID environment? Speaker 200:44:03Yes. So and let's make a distinction between market rent growth and our internal growth, because as hard as A. J. And his team will try, they're not going to successfully mark all of our assets to market in 12 months to 24 months. Retailers enjoy below market leases for a long time. Speaker 200:44:24Albeit in street retail, for a much shorter time period, we have more fair market value resets, more mark to market opportunities than we do in our suburban, but there's a distinction between fair market value rents and existing portfolio. With that caveat, if we approach what we'll define as normalized rents and normalized rent to sales, and that could happen in the next few years, then I guess what I would tell you is our expectation within a range is that market rents should only grow consistent with tenant sales growth. Because if tenants want if we were to pick the advanced contemporary And if they want to be at less than 20% rent to sales, then market rents should at that point going forward grow only consistent with sales. But take a step back for a second and don't lose sight of the 2010 to 2020 period, which I defined as a decade of deflation. It was probably more disinflation, but for that time period, a variety of our retailers were in price wars, were in migration to e commerce and so sales declined. Speaker 200:45:56During that period, certainly the 2015 to 2020 period, it was hard to see rents go up at all. So we are now in a point where it feels like inflation will be a tailwind for us, tenant performance will be a tailwind for us and the ability to see retailer sales grow not every quarter, but over time makes us bullish that it will be 3% plus for the foreseeable future. Stay tuned if we change that tune. Speaker 900:46:33Great. Thank you. Operator00:46:36Thank you. And our next question coming from the line of Michael Mueller with JPMorgan. Your line is open. Speaker 1000:46:46Yes, hi. Two questions. First, for the Manhattan Brooklyn portfolio acquisition, just curious if you can share what's prompting the seller to sell today? And for the second question, you talked about the upside in the street urban portfolio. So if you look at the snow NOI coming online by year end, where would that push your street occupancy to by year end, which I think is 80 fourseven if I'm not mistaken? Speaker 200:47:16John, why don't you take the snow piece of this first? Speaker 400:47:19Yes. So Mike, in terms of dollars, let's start there because that's probably the more impactful of our sign not yet open. There's within the street piece is about 5,500,000 dollars of the 8. So it's a significant portion of our yet to open is coming from there. So I think we're still that's why I think more in terms of dollars percentages, but I think we are we will get fairly close to the 90% mark by the end of the year is our guess in terms of overall occupancy percentage. Speaker 400:47:50But still room to run on that given we're getting to 90% and we have our street, we think we get to 95% plus, given just the activity that A. J. And his team are seeing. But I would say within by the end of the year and projected openings, I think probably the 90% range is a good target. Speaker 700:48:09Great. Speaker 200:48:09And then just in terms of seller motivation, realize there's a lot of finite life funds, there's a lot of debt coming due, there's a lot of CapEx needed to restabilize assets. So every seller has different motivations, but compared to 2, 3, 4 months ago, sellers are saying, you know what, I've waited this long, I need to do some transacting and we're starting to see that and be encouraged by it. Speaker 1000:48:38Okay. Thank you. Operator00:48:43Thank you. And our next question coming from the line of Ki Bin Kim with Drew. Your line is open. Speaker 1100:48:52Thank you. Just a couple of follow ups here. On the New York City pending acquisition, can you just talk about some of the longer term upside? Is this something that you have to kind of remerchandise over time to get to those higher yields? Speaker 200:49:08It's going to be a combination. And I certainly don't want to get to the point where when we close these deals we're all bored by what we're talking about. But I would say that A. J. And his team look forward to re tenanting wherever there's a tenant that's either underperforming or a chance to bring in that roster of tenants that you see us work with, whether it's on Armitage Avenue or Melrose Place or elsewhere. Speaker 200:49:37So it will be a combination of attractive going in yields in some cases, lease up in others, we'll try to find that right blend. Speaker 1100:49:49And going back to your comments about street retail sales being up 40%, I wasn't sure if you meant if that was referring to your whole portfolio or the M Street portfolio. But my question is, in your M Street portfolio, when I look back at 2019 or 2020, the ABR hasn't really changed over that timeframe. Certainly, your tenants have. So I'm just trying to better gauge where that mark to market opportunity is. And just given that rents haven't really changed, maybe you can help me better understand how much more dynamic that market might be today versus 4 or 5 years ago? Speaker 200:50:26Yes. And so the answer is much more dynamic. I wish that every time a retailer called me and said, wow, my sales are up 40%, I was able to say, great, pay us 40% more. But leases are leases. So I think what you are seeing is a delay, a lag between sales growth and rent growth and that will play out again the 40% I was mentioning was related to M Street although we again, we don't get great sales data across the board, but we're seeing that in many of our dynamic markets. Speaker 200:51:06And it can take somewhere between 2 5 years for us to catch up even with aggressive priluus and fair market value resets. Speaker 100:51:17Okay. Thank you. Speaker 400:51:18Sure. Operator00:51:21Thank you. And our next question coming from the line of Paulina Rahasmith with Green Street. Your line is open. Speaker 600:51:32Good morning. And I see Walgreens is an important tenant for you. I know they are evaluating potential store closures. Have you talked to them at all about how they are thinking about the stores in your portfolio? Speaker 400:51:47Yes, Polly, what was the retailer again for store closures? Was it Walgreens? Walgreens. Speaker 300:51:51Got it, sorry. Speaker 400:51:53H. A. J. A. Speaker 300:51:54Yes, we have no indication at this point that Walgreens closing any of their stores within our portfolio. Several of them and we don't have a ton in terms of just total number of Walgreens have recently extended leases. So yes, I mean, so the simple answer to the question is, they seem to be well performing locations and there's no indication that they'll be closing any of them. Speaker 600:52:23Thank you. And then if I remember well, you're mostly on variable camp, right? I think that's the case, but correct me if I'm wrong. And my question is, I have seen other REITs benefit in this cycle from 6 come. And so my question is, is that where the case, if you were mostly variable, do you think differently about the mix because of your street retail exposure perhaps? Speaker 400:52:59Yes. So Pauline, I would say the vast majority of our leases are there, but we pass through the actual expenses to the tenant. I think there's pros and cons of each. I mean, operationally that certainly reduces disputes if it's a fixed CAM. But I think for just operationally and aligning interest, I think our preference is to do on a is on variable. Speaker 400:53:22But we evaluate that all the time. Tenants have different views of it. But at this point, our preference is to stay with a variable and particularly at times of inflation, certainly is something we would like to keep as variable. Speaker 600:53:40Okay. And the last one, can you remind me how frequent are percentage rents in your portfolio? Speaker 400:53:48It's a relatively small amount, so not a big piece of what we did. I think during COVID on a couple of leases that to get spaces activated, We saw a slight tick up in it, but not a Speaker 300:54:00big piece of what we do. It's well under 1%. I mean, much more common, of course, in the street portfolio than in shopping centers. And just to be clear, that's in addition to a market based rent. So it's upside. Speaker 300:54:14It's not sort of in exchange for a market rent. Speaker 600:54:21Thank you very much. Operator00:54:26Thank you. And I see we have no further questions in the queue at this time. I will now turn the call back over to Mr. Bernstein for any closing remarks. Speaker 200:54:41Great. Thank you all for joining us. We look forward to speaking to you next quarter. Enjoy the rest of the summer. Operator00:54:52Ladies and gentlemen, that does conclude our conference for today. Thank you for your participation. You may now disconnect.Read moreRemove AdsPowered by