Steve Snyder
Analyst · SunTrust. Please proceed with your question
Thank you, Peter and good morning, everyone. Hope everyone is staying safe and healthy through these crazy times. Just to clarify, although we’ve been trying since last evening, we did file our second quarter 10-Q this morning in spite of some interruptions to the EDGAR system with the SEC. Before I move into the quarter, I just want to touch on some personal things and bear with me this will only be a few minutes. Obviously, my retirement is something that I’ve been thinking about for quite some time, just having reached the age of 60, believe it or not. And about to be a first time grandfather, my wife and I have bought a place in Nashville and we look forward to spending a lot of quality family time in Nashville in the next years to come. So, it has been a fantastic run here at GLPI and previously at Penn. I joined Peter back in the late 1990s, and I’ll be forever grateful to Peter, to the Board here at GLPI, and to the Board at Penn originally for giving me the opportunity to contribute to two transformative companies. I think while we were at Penn, we laid the foundation for Penn to now be the leading regional gaming operator here in the United States. And certainly, over the last seven years at GLPI, we’ve created a new asset class in the triple-net lease space, which others have come to copy, which to me is the highest form of flattery. Finally, the value creation that we’ve been able to achieve at both these companies is a testament to the talented and dedicated team members. I’ve had the privilege to work with over these many years and I’d be stepping away with a very talented group of the next generation of leaders for this company. So, I look forward to it. Moving forward into the quarter, it certainly was, as Peter mentioned, a strong quarter. it exceeded even the most optimistic scenarios that we looked at back in the dark days of March and April, and trying to evaluate what this unknown pandemic would mean to our businesses. Clearly, it’s not over, it seems to be heating up in certain parts of the United States and gaining a little bit less traction in other parts of the United States. What we think the company, and most importantly, our operating partners, our tenants are well positioned to weather and get to the other side of this unprecedented pandemic that we’re currently seeing. Part of the outperformance that we’ve achieved has really been across all variable items in our business. The percentage rents in our Columbus and our Ohio businesses since they were able to reopen in June, exceeded our expectations, the operating performance in our two operating assets in our taxable REIT subsidiary just wildly exceeded any assumptions that we had made when we scenario-planned back in March and April. I give a lot of credit to our VP of Operations, Matt Hisco [ph] down in Perryville, who is also the GM in Perryville, as well as Jeannie Magnafrell [ph], our GM in Baton Rouge, and their teams for very effectively and efficiently, literally shutting down a business, furloughing folks and then bringing those businesses back online with unprecedented performance over the course of the weeks that they have been open. Lastly, on the expense side, we really were able to also outperform from an interest expense standpoint and you’ll see that in the press release in terms of the effective execution that we did achieve and accessing the capital markets to term out some of our variable rate debt. Also during the quarter, as Peter touched on this, we spent a great deal of time, collaborating very closely with all of our tenants, and that’s evidenced in some of the items that are highlighted in the press release. Spent a lot of time with our brethren across the parking lot at Penn coming up with rent credit program that really allowed them and proved to be the catalyst for them to achieve some pretty significant performance with respect to access to the capital markets, and most recently performance with respect to their assets. Also, the new Caesars team, we spent quite a bit of time with him. You saw that as evidenced by the lease amendments that we entered into, which I think really helped them set the stage for getting the final regulatory approval with the accommodations that we worked with them on with respect to the substitution of the assets in Indiana. So, I’m certain that they will perform quite well now that they’ve got their new platform under their belt. And lastly, we also spent quite a bit of time during the quarter with the folks at Boyd as evidenced by the approval of the Ohio Racing Commission to own the real property assets of Belterra Park, which now does stand in a separate lease. So, we have taken that real estate onto the balance sheet and no longer have a loan in place with respect to that asset. Also with respect to our public tenants; in all cases, we spent quite a bit of time providing them the necessary relief from non-payment covenants in all of our leases to give them runways back to normalization. Because these, as I’ve said, are truly unprecedented times, and there’s no point in using these times for a footpath under our existing leases. They need to get through to the other side and are well on a trajectory to do that. Lastly, in terms of the portfolio, we spent quite a bit of time during the quarter with the folks at Casino Queen. they were successful in procuring alone under the Payroll Protection Program plan that the federal government did put in place. We did get, as you’ll see in the earnings release, a partial June rent payment of about $250,000. And we do expect to execute a deferred rent agreement with the new owners of the Casino Queen that will get us paid in full by year-end. We have elected to go to just cash recognition of the rent receipts from Casino Queen, given the situation that we find them in at this point in time. Finally, from liquidity and a balance sheet standpoint, we ended the quarter with an undrawn revolver with a complete capacity of $1.175 billion. We ended the quarter with $74 million of cash on the balance sheet, in terms of any near-term maturities; we’ve got a $224 million term loan A1 that is due in April of next year. but beyond that, there are no other maturities until 2023. So, the company has been a tremendous liquidity position at this point in time to get through what remains of this pandemic. As it relates to leverage, you will note that our leverage did tick up modestly in the quarter relative to our EBITDA, not because the debt increase, in fact the opposite, but because of the modest decline in EBITDA affected by the pandemic. And we did, as it was noted in the press release, their second quarter dividend 80% in stock issuing about 2.7 million shares. And I will note for those on the call that that $0.60 quarterly dividend ended up being the lowest payout ratio that the company has ever paid at about 71% of the $0.84 AFFO that we reported, because you will see from the press release that our performance did exceed any of the consensus estimates that were out there on Wall Street. Finally, as GLPI moves forward, we clearly are still in the fire of this pandemic. But as Peter mentioned, I’m very comfortable that regional gaming assets and our operating partners in particular, will lead the recovery of this asset class. And once normalized, our tenants will achieve the strongest four wall coverage of their lease obligations in the entire asset class. So with that operator, why don’t we turn it over to the participants for any questions they’d like to address to the management team?