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Real Estate - REIT - Office - NASDAQ - US
$ 11.04
3.74 %
$ 73.1 M
Market Cap
None
P/E
EARNINGS CALL TRANSCRIPT
EARNINGS CALL TRANSCRIPT 2021 - Q4
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Operator

Good morning, and welcome to the Office Properties Income Trust Fourth Quarter 2021 Earnings Conference Call. All participants will be in a listen-only mode. [Operator Instructions] After today’s presentation, there will be an opportunity to ask questions. [Operator Instructions] Please note this event is being recorded.

I would now like to turn the conference over to Kevin Barry, Director of Investor Relations. Please go ahead..

Kevin Barry Director of Investor Relations

Thank you, and good morning, everyone. Thanks for joining us today. With me on the call are OPI’s President and Chief Operating Officer, Chris Bilotto; and Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer, Matt Brown.

In just a moment, they will provide details about our business and our performance for the fourth quarter of 2021, followed by a question-and-answer session with sell-side analysts. First, I would like to note that the recording and retransmission of today’s conference call is prohibited without the prior written consent of the company.

Also note that today’s conference call contains forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 and other securities laws.

These forward-looking statements are based on OPI’s beliefs and expectations as of today, Thursday, February 17, 2022, and actual results may differ materially from those that we project. The company undertakes no obligation to revise or publicly release the results of any revision to the forward-looking statements made in today’s conference call.

Additional information concerning factors that could cause those differences is contained in our filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission, or SEC, which can be accessed from our website, opireit.com or the SEC’s website. Investors are cautioned not to place undue reliance upon any forward-looking statements.

In addition, we will be discussing non-GAAP numbers during this call, including normalized funds from operations or normalized FFO, cash available for distribution or CAD, adjusted EBITDA and cash basis net operating income, or cash basis NOI.

A reconciliation of these non-GAAP figures to net income are available in our supplemental operating and financial data package, which also can be found on our website. In addition, we will be providing guidance on this call, including normalized FFO and cash basis NOI.

We are not providing reconciliation of these non-GAAP measures as part of our guidance because certain information required for such reconciliation is not available without unreasonable efforts or at all, such as gains and losses or impairment charges related to the disposition of real estate. With that, I will now turn the call over to Chris..

Chris Bilotto

F5 representing 2.2% of annualized revenue will vacate our property in Seattle, Washington in February 2022. Plans for redevelopment are underway, and we anticipate delivery of a Class A life science and office campus in early 2023. We have had good activity for the different uses and look forward to providing updates in upcoming quarters.

Our tenant located in Centennial, Colorado, representing 168,000 square feet and 90 basis points of annualized revenue will vacate on September 2022 following its expiration. We currently have a signed term sheet for 28,000 square feet and are in discussions with a variety of tenants looking to lease portions of the building.

In Plantation, Florida, we’ve previously disclosed the GSA will vacate, which is currently estimated for mid-2022. We are pleased to report that subsequent to quarter end, we signed a lease for the remaining 64,000 square feet, bringing occupancy to 100% for a 14-year term.

Despite these vacancies, we have more than 561,000 square feet in advanced stages of negotiation and an additional 446,000 square feet that has been executed since year-end. Combined, this reflects over 430,000 square feet of new leasing in advanced stages across the portfolio. Turning to development.

In addition to the update provided for our Seattle project, we are on track with our plans to redevelop 20 Mass Ave in Washington, D.C. and delivering Q1 2023. Newer Class A properties in the Greater D.C.

market experienced roughly 1.3 million square feet of net occupancy gains for the year with tenants focused on selected quality, but with increased concessions across all classes.

As we have discussed on prior calls, the development is currently 54% pre-leased, and we continue to field interest from a variety of prospective tenants across the range of industries, including technology, consulting, services, legal and related uses.

Finally, we are dedicated to enhancing OPI’s corporate sustainability program and continue to advance initiatives that will position the company to thrive over the long-term. In 2021, we continue to make progress on our initiatives and garnered industry honors, including ENERGY STAR Partner of the Year for the fourth consecutive year.

We ended the year with more than 6 million square feet of ENERGY STAR certified, 6 million square feet of LEED certified and 5 million square feet of BOMA certified properties in our portfolio. In the year ahead, we plan to increase coverage for all three recognition programs and expand on our sustainability efforts.

In summary, 2021 was an active year for leasing and property management as we work to reshape OPI’s portfolio and drive sustainable growth in our operating performance and financial results. We look forward to updating you on our progress and milestones as we continue to execute on our strategy during the year ahead.

I will now turn the call over to Matt Brown to provide details on our financial results.

Matt?.

Matt Brown

a net $0.04 increase related to our property in Seattle, including a $0.07 increase from F5’s termination fee partially offset by a $0.03 decrease related to their February expiration.

$0.02 related to a termination fee at a property in California, where we have subsequently re-leased the property to a full building user and $0.02 of lower operating expenses forecasted in Q1.

This guidance takes into account our planned disposition activity and includes a range of $27 million to $28 million of interest expense and $6.5 million to $6.6 million of G&A expense during the first quarter. We expect same-property cash basis NOI to be flat plus or minus 100 basis points as compared to the first quarter of 2021.

Turning to capital expenditures in the balance sheet. We spent $16 million on recurring capital during the fourth quarter, bringing total 2021 recurring capital expenditures to $72.9 million, which was less than our forecasted levels.

We also spent $25.3 million on redevelopment capital during the fourth quarter and $56.2 million for the year, mainly driven by our 20 Mass Ave project. For the full year 2022, we expect our recurring capital level to be elevated as compared to 2021 as a result of strong leasing activity that will create long-term value for OPI.

We also expect to see increased redevelopment capital expenditures as our projects at 20 Mass Ave and Seattle continue to progress. As Chris mentioned, 2021 was a busy year on the refinancing front.

In total, we raised over $1 billion of senior notes and used the proceeds to refinance higher rate debt and repay all amounts outstanding on our revolving credit facility.

This activity helped finance our strategic acquisitions during 2021, strengthened our balance sheet, increased the weighted average remaining term of our debt and reduced our weighted average cost of fixed rate debt. We ended the quarter with more than $830 million of total liquidity.

Looking ahead to 2022, as Chris mentioned, we will continue to bring non-core properties to market to further enhance our portfolio composition and strengthen our balance sheet. We expect to dispose of non-core properties under our capital recycling program to repay debt and manage our leverage levels.

We plan to utilize proceeds from this capital recycling program and our current liquidity to repay $25 million of mortgage debt and the $300 million of senior notes that mature in July. Beyond our July notes, we have no senior notes maturing until May 2024. Operator, that concludes our prepared remarks. We’re ready to open the call up for questions..

Operator

Thank you. We will now begin the question-and-answer session. [Operator Instructions] The first question comes from Bryan Maher with B. Riley. Please go ahead..

Bryan Maher

Good morning, guys. A couple of questions. The Brookhaven properties that were scheduled to be sold down in Georgia, I think it was for $56 million. Apparently, that transaction was terminated.

Can you share why? And is that going to be part of the acquisitions that you – dispositions in 2022, I think you said maybe $400 million to $500 million?.

Chris Bilotto

Yes. Sure, Bryan. This is Chris. I think, first and foremost, with Brookhaven, that – those properties or that campus was not originally contemplated as our capital recycling program. We got an offer – and a direct offer off market for the portfolio, which we felt like was a good offer under the circumstances.

And kind of went down the path of evaluating that for disposition. And I think at the end, as they started to kind of work through their business plan, at least what their focus was for the asset, they ultimately determined that they wanted to pivot and going in another direction.

And so I think for us, it’s a win either way in the sense that, that campus is 100% occupied to the government now. And I think, overall, we like Atlanta and kind of look forward to seeing that what we can do long-term with that asset..

Bryan Maher

Okay.

And when we think about the $400 million to $500 million in asset sales potentially for 2022, can you give us some general characteristics of what those properties are kind of who occupies them? And maybe some of the locations, big picture?.

Chris Bilotto

Yes. I mean I would first kind of caveat it by – it’s really asset specific as far as kind of the program. This isn’t necessarily a focus on certain geography. While there may be clusters. It’s solely based on kind of our view on the asset and kind of where we are in the life cycle of owning that asset.

And so I think to kind of touch on your questions, I mean, we have a handful of properties within kind of the D.C. MSA, kind of more notably within kind of Virginia or Maryland.

And then from there, it really kind of branches out into just various markets, including a couple of assets being evaluated in the Greater Phoenix area, and then kind of some other locations that are just kind of more one-offs where we have assets, and we think we’ve maximized value or kind of want to transition in another direction. So….

Bryan Maher

Okay. And you touched upon – I think Matt gave us some numbers on CapEx, but really didn’t lay out in specificity, 2022, maybe scope and how it flows through the quarters, especially with D.C. and Seattle.

Can you give us any more color on how to think about that for modeling purposes this year?.

Matt Brown

Sure. So on the recurring capital side, where we sit today, we probably think recurring capital is around $100 million, plus or minus $10 million. What I will say to add to that, when we gave CapEx guidance for 2021 at the beginning of the year, we thought we were going to be at $85 million, and we ended up at $73 million.

So a lot of that is dependent on the timing and leases materializing, but that’s kind of where we are today and we’ll provide updates on recurring capital as we go throughout the year. On the redevelopment side, 20 Mass Ave will continue to progress, and we really start seeing capital spend on our Seattle project starting in March.

So we’re probably looking at about $200 million in total in 2022 for those two projects combined..

Bryan Maher

Okay. Great. And just last for me. You have a lot of liquidity, over $800 million even factoring in the notes, the $300 million and the $25 million mortgage, I think you’re going to pay off this year. And it leaves $500 million plus you’re going to be selling some assets.

What are you seeing on the acquisition front? I mean, is there stuff out there that is attractive at decent cap rates that you’re actually putting in offers on? And how should we be thinking about that component of the business?.

Chris Bilotto

I would say that – I mean, we’re looking at all activity that’s out there, and I think there’s kind of varying levels of interest with product types.

I think just kind of given what our focus has been in 2022, coming off the acquisition of Chicago and Atlanta last year, I think we’re going to find ourselves being net sellers for the course of 2022 and potentially with some acquisitions as part of that.

And so our focus this year is going to be largely around the disposition plan as part of deleveraging. It’s going to be focused on leasing. And I think we’ve talked about and highlighted kind of some of the results and the positive momentum there. And then certainly around these redevelopments and bringing them online in Q1 2023..

Bryan Maher

Great. Thank you. That’s all for me..

Operator

[Operator Instructions] The next question comes from Ronald Kamdem with Morgan Stanley. Please go ahead..

Ronald Kamdem

Hey. Just going back to sort of the opening comments about the 40% sort of utilization from – on the office side.

Maybe can you talk about, number one, what you’re hearing from tenants? What are they saying? What are their timelines? What are the constraints, if any, to getting that up higher? And then the second question was, when we think about expenses, how do we think about how those trends as you get that utilization up to 40, 60, 70, 80, should we expect expenses to tick up as well? Or how should we think about that? Thanks..

Chris Bilotto

So I’ll touch on the utilization. I think that 40% is kind of consistent with what we talked about last quarter. And I would say the driver of that is kind of given the fact that we were into the holidays, and with the current variant and kind of the unknowns around that, I think it really kind of tempered expectations for reentry.

I think kind of our view is that we’ve kind of thought that reentry would continue to kind of tick up into the summer and then kind of be more elevated towards the end of the year. And I would say that, that’s probably a likely scenario today. I think tenants are amenable to reentry. I think in many ways, they have the office open.

It was a little bit more of flexibility around a requirement for employees to be in the office. And then there’s other variables such as mass mandates and others that we’re seeing lifted that might kind of be another catalyst for reentry.

And so I would say there’s a few variables driving that in addition to kind of a tight labor market and I think where people are trying to kind of balance certain expectations on both sides. But nonetheless, I think it’s reasonable to assume we’ll see some movement with reentry in the upcoming quarters..

Matt Brown

Yes. And on the expense side, we are forecasting an increase in expenses in 2022, and there’s really three major drivers associated with that. One is utilization, as Chris was just talking about. Second is the impact on inflation where we will see some pressure there.

And then third, on a previous quarter call, we talked about a lease restructure at a property in Utah that was a triple net lease previously. And now we’ve taken on management of that. So we’re going to see expenses increase for that. However, we will get some recovery of those expenses for that third piece..

Ronald Kamdem

Great. That’s all my questions. Thank you..

Operator

The next question comes from Jason Idoine with RBC Capital Markets. Please go ahead..

Jason Idoine

Yes. I wanted to get back to the capital spend. So you said recurring CapEx will be about $100 million in 2022. I’m trying to tie that together with the lease expiration schedule. So could you just touch on maybe why that’s increasing versus 2020? It looks like there’s a higher percentage of leases expiring in 2020.

So kind of tie those two things together.

And then also, how should we think about it going forward just because in 2023 and 2024, the expiration schedule really ticks up?.

Matt Brown

Yes. I think the level of about $100 million in 2022 is driven by the 8.5% of leases expiring this year as well as certain conversations we’re having with tenants for early renewals that could push us into 2022. So that’s really what’s driving the increase in 2022 levels.

And then additionally, as we look to 2023 and 2024, it’s really early to predict that. But I would say, using $100 million for now for those future years is probably reasonable given we continue to see the vacancies or the expirations in 2023 and 2024..

Jason Idoine

Okay. And then the leasing pipeline ticked slightly lower now. Understand that you guys did sign a higher number of leases during the quarter. So that obviously could be part of it.

But also just looking at potentially some of these leases in 2022 and 2023 with the expiration schedule ticking higher, how should we think about that pipeline falling? Is that more from just the leases that were in that pipeline being signed or just not enough demand to back up leases when they are signed?.

Chris Bilotto

No. I think it’s really just conversion, right? And I think when we’re talking about that pipeline, it wasn’t a material drop from Q3 to Q4. I think it’s kind of a bit of ebb and flow.

But I would think that as we continue to kind of convert these leases and more specifically, we have about 900,000 square feet of potential new absorption of that pipeline.

And so as a portion of that is to materialize and we – our occupancy across the portfolio continues to tick up, I would imagine in some ways that pipeline kind of dip a little bit more specifically around new leasing.

But given as we progress in the year, it kind of start to kind of get into 2023 with the role we have there, it might be a little bit more elevated on the renewal side. So – but we’ve been kind of north of 3 million square feet for six quarters now, and it’s kind of been a little bit of ebb and flow as we transacted.

And I think that, that really kind of coalesce with the results that you’re seeing, where the conversion is starting to kind of come into play..

Jason Idoine

Yes. Okay. Thanks, Chris..

Operator

This concludes our question-and-answer session. I would like to turn the conference back over to Chris Bilotto, Chief Operating Officer, for any closing remarks..

Chris Bilotto

Thank you for joining us today, and we look forward to speaking with you again soon..

Operator

The conference has now concluded. Thank you for attending today’s presentation. You may now disconnect..

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