Andy Blocher
Analyst · Todd Thomas with KeyBanc. Please proceed with your question
Thanks Mark. And thank you everyone for joining us on our call today. I'm incredibly happy to be joining you as CFO of NetSTREIT. As Mark noted earlier, and we discuss frequently during our IPO process, we're committed to building and maintaining a conservative capital structure and providing transparency with respect to our business. We believe that these initiatives and coupled with successfully executing our business strategy will build shareholder confidence and overtime support a competitive cost to capital. Let me begin with our results for the quarter. Yesterday in our press release, we recorded net loss of $0.11, core FFO of $0.15, and AFFO of $0.21 per share. As of September 30, 2020, the next three portfolios contributed 38.9 million annualized base rent or ADR after giving effect to acquisitions and dispositions completed in the quarter. From a cautions perspective, we're pleased to report that prior to giving any consideration to deferral or abatement arrangements granted as a result to COVID-19, we caught at 100% of September rent payments, bringing total third quarter rent collections to 98.1%. This is a slight increase from our previous disclosures, as our only tenant being recognized on a cash basis paid their September rent shortly following our publish update bringing them current through the third quarter. On a related note, based on the payment history of our tenants, we currently have zero bad debt reserves and recognize zero bad debt in the quarter or year-to-date. Finally, as Mark mentioned for the month of October, we also received 100% in cash funds. With respect to deferrals and abatements is $108,000 of abatements granted in the third quarter the general conditions on these extensions which averaged approximately one to quarterly years of additional terms for each month of bet abated rent. Year-to-date, we granted under 750,000 of renovations, generally conditioned on lease extensions, which averaged approximately 1.4 years of additional term for each month of abated rent. With respect to deferrals, we defer a 261,000 of rent year-to-date coverage 75,000 has been repaid, leading a net rent deferral balance of 186,000 at quarter end. The remaining deferred balance will be repaid over the lifetime of the leases and therefore we expect the quarterly impact on our business as we collected deferrals could to be very small, it was $4,000 in the third quarter. As demonstrated by our 100% rent collections in September and October, we provided no deferrals or abatements after August. We currently have eight assets classified as held for sale, and took $363,000 in impairments in the third quarter to bring our GAAP net book value from two of those eight assets, including our single asset being recognized on a cash basis, in line with the anticipated net proceeds from those sales. A couple of items resulting from our successful IPO impacted our financial statements in the third quarter. We had $0.9 million of expenses in the third quarter and $2.2 million year-to-date, related to 144A and IPO related transaction costs. These costs largely reflect consulting services as we staffed up pre-IPO to put appropriate public company processes and reporting in place. In addition, we recognize $1.8 million of noncash compensation expense from two sources in the quarter. The first is $1.7 million resulting from a cash out related to $4.8 million of performance based equity awards at the time of the 144A, with a shelf registration performance criteria. The nature of that performance criteria didn't allow us to recognize any expense until the product performance criteria was met, and as a result of significant catch up was recognized in the quarter. An additional $74,000 was recognized from the $3.1 million time based awards granted to employees and board members at the time of the IPO. These awards will be recognized on a straight line basis over their three to five year life. The transaction expenses in the noncash equity compensation catch up resulted in the largest non-recurring adjustments or key financial measures in the third quarter. Turning to our capital markets activity. On August 13 2020, we completed our IPO and including the overallotment option in September issued just under 14 million common shares of $18 per share, generating net proceeds of approximately $227.3 million after deducting the underwriting discount on offering expenses. In connection with the IPO, we repaid the $50 million outstanding balance under the company's revolving line of credit, and retired the outstanding Series A Preferred shares with remaining proceeds utilize different feature acquisition then for general corporate purposes. In September, the company completed a $175 million LIBOR swap to hedge floating rate exposure on the entire balance of the company's term loan at an effective rate of 21 basis points to the maturity of the term loan in December 2024. As of September 30, we had $137 million of cash remain fully on drawn on our $250 million revolving line of credit. We have no debt maturities until the maturity of our revolver in December 2023, which is subject to a one year extension option. In addition, our net debt to analyze adjusted EBITDA ratio is 1.4 times well below our 4.5 time to 5.5 time long-term target. With respect to dividend in August, we declared an inaugural cash dividend on our common stock of $0.10 per share for the IPO sub period in the third quarter of 2020. The dividend amount was prorated to reflect the period of time from the IPO at quarter end. Yesterday with our earnings release, the Board declared a $0.20 rent your cash dividends will be payable in December, reflecting an annualized dividend rate of $0.80 per share. Before I turn it back over to Mark, let me just take a few minutes to discuss our outlook on a couple of fourth quarter items and provide some forward-looking perspective. First, as Mark mentioned, consistent with our average expected post IPO acquisition volumes of $80 million per quarter, and after giving consideration to the $15 million in the fourth quarter acquisitions that we accelerated to September 30, because we expect to complete at least an additional $65 million of acquisitions in the fourth quarter, bringing our total 2020 acquisition volumes to approximately $400 million. With the LIBOR hedge in place and with current cash balances exceeding our fourth quarter acquisition expectations, we'd expect no incremental borrowings under our revolver, and resulting fourth quarter interest expense, including $300,000 of quarterly deferred financing fee amortization and undrawn fees to be approximately a million bucks. We expect our fourth quarter cash G&A to better approximate our forward looking run rate of $11 million to $12 million annually combined with an additional $3 million of non-cash compensation expenses annually. As discussed during our IPO process, we believe this amount reflects the appropriate staffing to execute our business strategy and to effectively run as a public company. As a result, we would expect increases to G&A overtime to be marginal as we grow approximately 10 basis points on incremental acquisition volumes should be a pretty good estimate. Finally, consistent with the Board's dividend declaration, we're targeting an 80% annualized dividend rate for the near-term, with dividend growth expected once we stabilize at 65% to 75%, AFFO path. Now, I'll turn the call back over to Mark.