Ken Bernstein
Analyst · KeyBanc Capital Markets
Thank you Theresa. Great job and thanks to all our summer interns for joining us this summer. Good morning, everyone. As you can see from this quarter's results, several of the trends that we have discussed on past calls are now showing up in our earnings performance. So today, I'll spend a few minutes discussing how these trends are positively impacting our business and then we'll delve into the details. First of all, retailer demand continues to accelerate and it continues to broaden. As we've noticed noted on past calls, while leasing activity was initially weighted to the necessity and Suburban portions of our portfolio, we're now seeing a meaningful pivot from lockdown-oriented necessities to more discretionary spending. We're also seeing retailers once again focusing on the key street locations in the major markets that we're active, and while we're seeing solid performance throughout our portfolio, one of the key differentiators of our company is our ownership of street retail in key gateway markets, a differentiator that certainly cause legitimate concern during COVID. Thankfully, the rebound here is both welcomed and worth discussing. So, let me spend a few minutes on the street retail segment of our portfolio. As you know, roughly 40% of our Core Portfolio NOI consists of street retail and about half of that is in the highest density corridors of the major gateway markets. During the early days of COVID, this half of our Street retail was hardest hit. Whether it was Soho in New York, the Gold Coast in Chicago and Street in Georgetown, retailers were facing an existential crisis of unknown duration. And that's understandably, in the early days of the lockdown, it was the other half of our street retail in the lower density markets such as Greenwich Avenue in Connecticut, our Armitage Avenue in Chicago as well as other necessity and Suburban components of our portfolio that had the most retailer activity. And while this lower density component continues to perform well, we are seeing a shift in attention by our retailers that to the higher density corridors, and we're seeing this much sooner than we expected. In the luxury segment for example, many retailers are not only staying in their flat locations, but they are expanding their footprints especially in key must have markets. This is evidenced by our second-quarter lease with wire sales at our Gold Coast location at Rush and Walton in Chicago, where they are expanding their existing store by over 50% and they entered into a new 10-year lease. Across the street from us, yours is expanding their space as well, providing further evidence of this sub-markets rebound from 12-months ago. And this is certainly not just a Gold Coast phenomenon. This trend is playing out and so how as well as other key markets and it's not just luxury retailers. Bridge an aspirational retailers are also beginning to show up as well. For example, in Melrose Place in Los Angeles, after the end of the quarter, we extended a lease with one of our retailers there for another five years at a double-digit lease spread showing the strength of this corridor and retailer confidence in Los Angeles. Now let me clear, retailers are still being selective on which markets they are choosing to expand into, and it is still a tenants market. But what recently felt like a decade's worth of vacancy is quickly being absorbed and while retailers and landlords are climbing out of several years of headwinds, headwinds that predated COVID. Their recovery is encouraging with vacancies being leased up and COVID discounts are heavily structured leases quickly being replaced with real deals that are approaching or in some cases exceeding pre-COVID rents. That along with luxury retailers, we're seeing the digitally native and other up and coming direct to consumer retailers stepping up. Retailers influence seems to go far beyond their physical footprint. Only a few years ago, these retailers debated the need for physical stores. That debate is over. Whether it's Warby Parker or Allbirds, the best in class digital retailers are seeing the significant benefit of physical stores. For instance, on M. Street in Georgetown last quarter, we added digitally native retailer ever linked to our portfolio. And this is encouraging because Georgetown is still in the early stages of reopening and the fact that tenants such as Albertsons, Ball Mason, my family's favorite Levain bakery are arriving on M. Street. All of this is further evident of the support for this corridors. And it's not just retailers hoping to capture a future rebound tenant sales performance, is already confirming the recovery. For several retailers in our portfolio or in our corridors, they are beginning to post sales performance that is already comping positive to pre-COVID sales. And, this is before the return of international tourism and before a full reopening. Even in markets that have been slow to reopen such as San Francisco despite all of the headlines, we're beginning to see positive activity. And as these key streets continue to activate, we are entering into what is setting up to be a nice multi-year rebound. Not only are rent significantly below prior peak, but it appears clear now that retailers are committed to connecting directly with our customer both digitally, but also through these important stores. So whether it's LVMH or Warby Parker, we are seeing the increased recognition of the importance of these locations in an omnichannel world. As John will discuss, even before taking into account, anticipated additional market rent growth. We should be able to drive above trend NOI growth at higher levels for the next several years. For instance in Soho, notwithstanding the huge gut punch over the past 18-months. We forecast our Soho portfolio NOI to nearly double over the next few years. And then, assuming that this rebound continues, the growth could be even better in the street retail component of our portfolio, where we have more opportunities to mark to market our leases than in our suburban portion of our portfolio since fair market value resets are much more common in our street portfolio than in our suburban. Then from a capital markets and investment perspective, while there has been less actionable distress than one might have thought in the early days of the crisis, the interesting and actionable deal flow is increasing. In terms of our Fund V investing as Amy will discuss, we are seeing a nice increase in acquisition opportunities and this is due to the fact that in the private markets, retail real estate still remains somewhat out of favor. Now, we expect that this will shift over time given that in the debt markets borrowing cost and debt proceeds have returned to pre-COVID rates and levels and in the public markets we have seen significant compression and implied cap rates over the past year, but for a variety of reasons. It may take some time for the private markets to catch up and in the interim, we will continue to deploy capital opportunistically. So with respect to Fund V, we're continuing to selectively buy out of favor properties with unleveraged yields of about 8% than lever them two to one with borrowing costs well below 4% and clip a mid-teens current cash flow. That it doesn't ignore the fact that the United States is over-retail. For that, achieving real net effective rental growth is going to take hard work. It's going to take some work. But these acquisitions don't require significant growth, they just require stability and if we see cap rate compression, commensurate with the public markets, which certainly seems likely over the next couple of years, the opportunity that asymmetrical upside feels pretty compelling. Then, with respect to our Core Portfolio investments, our acquisition pipeline is also heating up. As you know, our focus here has been to selectively acquire assets in the highest barrier entry markets where we can achieve superior long-term growth. Obviously, COVID and related issues were a real gut punch for many of the Carter's we're active in. But thankfully, we are seeing encouraging signs of long lasting rebound driven by three important factors. First, rents in many key streets that we're active in are at a cyclical low point. Second, many of the tenants we do business with have now successfully navigated the so-called retail apocalypse and are in a much stronger position to succeed in an omnichannel world. And third and finally, the consumer is in very healthy shape and returning to discretionary spending. Given the amount of disruption, we have seen in the major markets, it's understandable that deal flow initially slowed, but sellers are beginning to return. And given the roller coaster ride, they went through. We are seeing sellers being realistic on rental growth and other assumption. So, while it is still a bit early based on the improving deal flow we are currently involved with, and what we are seeing in the pipeline, we expect to be able to require best-in-class retail properties in the key high barrier to entry corridors where retailers are going to continue to cluster. And while in the second quarter, we began to put some dollars to work accretively. We are confident to that as meaningful buying opportunities arise, we will be in a position to capitalize. And while our strong embedded internal growth, certainly means we can afford to be disciplined and we can afford to be patient. Are relatively small size means that every $100 million of acquisitions as about 1% to our earnings base. So to conclude, we are pleased to see our quarterly results reflect the rebound in leasing and operating trends. It is also encouraging to see retailer stepping up again for the unique must have locations that dominate our portfolio. And then most importantly, it is exciting to think about the potential opportunities in front of us, especially for management teams like ours with access to multiple types of capital and a proven track record of deploying it. So with that, I'd like to thank our team for their hard work and success last quarter and I will turn the call to John.