Good day and welcome to the Farmland Partners Inc. Second Quarter 2020 Earnings Conference Call. All participants will be in 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 Paul Pittman, Chairman and CEO. Please, go ahead, sir..
Good morning and welcome to the farmland partners second quarter 2020 earnings conference call and webcast.
We truly appreciate you taking the time to join us for these calls, because we see them as a very important opportunity to share with you, our thinking and our strategy in a format less formal and more interactive than public filings and press releases. With me this morning is Luca Fabbri, the company's Chief Financial Officer.
I will now turn over the call to Luca for some customary preliminary remarks.
Luca?.
Thank you, Paul, and thank you all who are listening to this webcast live or recorded. The press release announcing our second quarter earnings was distributed earlier this morning. A replay of this call will be available shortly after the conclusion of the call through August 24, 2020.
The phone numbers to access the replay are provided in the earnings press release. For those who listen to the rebroadcast of this presentation, we remind you that the remarks made herein are as of today August 10, 2020, and have not been updated subsequent to this initial earnings call.
During this call we will make forward-looking statements, including statements related to the future performance of our portfolio, our identified and potential acquisitions and dispositions, impact of acquisitions, dispositions and financing activities, as well as comments on our outlook for our business, rents and the broader agricultural markets.
We will also discuss certain non-GAAP financial measures, including net operating income, FFO, adjusted FFO, EBITDAre and adjusted EBITDAre.
Definitions of these non-GAAP measures, as well as reconciliations to the most comparable GAAP measures, are included in the company's press release announcing second quarter earnings, which is available on our website www.farmlandpartners.com and is furnished as an exhibit to our current report on Form 8-K dated as of this morning.
Listeners are cautioned that these statements are subject to certain risks and uncertainties, many of which are difficult to predict and generally beyond our control. These risks and uncertainties can cause actual results to differ materially from our current expectations.
And we advise listeners to review the risk factors discussed in our press release this morning before market opened and in documents we have filed with or furnished to the SEC. I would now like to turn the call back to our Chairman and CEO, Paul Pittman.
Paul?.
Sabrepoint Management LP; and George Baxter and Donald Marchiony, who are employees of Sabrepoint. We continue to believe their conduct was illegal and we will continue to pursue those responsible for a full recovery for the company and its shareholders. Mr.
Mathews is not some sort of market visionary on a quest to uncover improper behavior at companies. Rather, he is a low-budget hired gun tasked with writing a defamatory article to assist in a short and distort scheme. Based on the e-mail discovery that we have received, our complaint alleges that Sabrepoint brought the idea to Mr.
Mathews and assisted Mathews, regarding the drafting of the posting. While Mr. Mathews has attempted to remain anonymous for nearly two years of pending litigation, the court after denying Mathews' motion to dismiss said, he can no longer remain behind the First Amendment right to anonymity.
There is a well-known playbook for short and distort schemes and we believe Mathews and his co-conspirators played it to a T. They have done this before to other companies and they will do it again unless we or some other victim holds them accountable.
This pattern of behavior should upset all legitimate market participants whether on the long side or the short side and should eventually attract the attention of law enforcement entities. With that, I will turn it back over to you Luca for some additional comments..
Thank you, Paul. Just -- I will run as usual through some quick financial highlights related to the quarter. In the second quarter this year, we recorded total revenues of $10.5 million versus $10.9 million in the same period last year.
We recorded also total operating income of $3.7 million versus $4 million last year and the basic net loss to common stockholders of $0.10 per share versus a net income to common stockholders of $0.09 per share in the last -- in the same quarter last year.
This difference specifically was driven largely by net gains on dispositions that we did in the second quarter of last year. And we also recorded that in this quarter AFFO per share of negative $0.04 versus negative $0.05 in the same period last year.
As usual I just want to give a quick reminder about the high seasonality in GAAP results in our business.
A large portion of operating revenues gets recorded in the fourth quarter in relation to variable leases, variable rent leases, and therefore, the individual quarters are never really indicative of the expected performance for the company for the full year.
As Paul mentioned we -- last Thursday, we also issued a press release with the kind of annual results of the USDA Land Value Survey is applied to our Series B preferred stock. The small increase in the value of our portfolio pushed the Farmland value appreciation amount for our Series B preferred to $0.80 per share.
I remind you that this is a cumulative amount for the whole life of the preferred, bringing the notional face value of the preferred stock as of today to $25.80. Of course please refer to the prospectus of the Series B preferred for all the fine print.
In the second quarter we also repurchased about 270,000 shares of common stock and approximately 92,000 shares of Series B preferred. The investment in all-stock repurchases was approximately $3.9 million in the quarter. And finally the current fully diluted share count as of today is 31,499,735 shares.
This concludes my remarks on our operating performance for the second quarter of 2020. Thank you for your time this morning and your interest in Farmland Partners. Operator, we would like to begin the question-and-answer session..
Thank you. [Operator Instructions] Today's first question comes from Rob Stevenson with Janney. Please go ahead. .
Good morning guys. Paul, can you talk about what drove the acquisition disposition trades during the quarter? And how did you evaluate, I know it wasn't a ton of money but buying farms versus buying back more of your stock or preferred at this point..
So thank you Rob, and good morning. So the general strategy that the company is following and obviously there's exceptions to this.
But the general way we are looking at things is on the acquisition front, we are making add-on acquisitions at this point, meaning that a property we acquire needs to be very close to a farm we already own in some cases literally adjoining that farm.
Or if we had a very good tenant who brought us a great idea, we would view that as an add-on because it's the same tenant that we want to expand with. But beyond that unless there was an incredibly good deal, we're not likely to be strong acquirers at this point in time because the stock price remains depressed.
And so that's really how we evaluate things. So unless we have an add-on acquisition ready to go we will end up devoting the resources we get from asset, sales to the repurchases of either the common or the Series B preferred. I think that will be our strategy for the foreseeable future, although things could always change.
As I said in my prepared remarks, generally speaking until we see stock price get back up closer to NAV, we are likely to be weighted toward repurchasing our securities..
Okay.
And then Luca can you talk about what you've spent over the last few years dealing with Rota Fortunae stuff? And what do you expect to spend here over the remainder of 2020?.
We don't really have this detail fully articulated out in the -- in our public filings. But Paul perhaps you want to kind of address it at a higher level..
Yes. Do we -- I don't remember in the P&L specifically if we have a legal and accounting line. If we do Rob, that's the best place to look for it. I don't want to go beyond what we've already put in the public demand on this call unless we -- we're not all in the same room in this COVID environment.
So, I would want us to talk about it before we release that number. As far as going forward, we will continue to spend on this as long as we believe financial recovery is possible. We're not doing this for recreational purposes. We do -- we did believe there were well-heeled investors behind this and we've now discovered at least one of them.
We think there are probably more. And we are going to run this to ground and try to get some of our losses back for the company and the shareholders. This was an incredibly damaging event to this company. I would argue that we might be double our size or triple our size at this point had this not occurred.
That would have had very positive benefits for shareholders in terms of economies of scale and all sort of the rest of efficiencies that would have come with that size.
These losses are very real and they were in our view driven by someone engaging in an illegal short and distort scheme ready to frankly pick the pockets of the legitimate shareholders for their short-term gain using inappropriate illegal means. So, we're going to stay after it and not likely to let up at all..
Okay. And then last one for me.
Can you talk about what percentage of your leases today have the participating rents are the overages were later in the year it might wind up giving you outsized earnings as a result?.
Yes. So, in a general, sense in the portfolio we are around 80% cash and 20% some form of crop share. There's occasionally leases that are 100% crop share and then some of the cash leases will have a small portion of crop share. But in broad brush think of it as 80/20.
But importantly there is a -- as you recall we did that large, large Olam transaction a couple of years back. That is a 100% crop share lease and that is a very substantial lease payment that comes in in the fourth quarter. That was as you may or may not recall a $110 million acquisition price. It's all specialty crops and it's a pretty strong return.
It's a six-cap kind of seven-cap bracket sort of deal in terms of its return, and so it's a good -- very, very good transaction for us and that all comes in the fourth quarter..
Okay. Thanks guys. Appreciate it..
And actually just quick add at this point we are closer to 75% fixed 25% variable..
Okay, that's helpful guys. Thank you..
[Operator Instructions] And ladies and gentlemen, this concludes the question-and-answer session. I'd like to turn the conference back over to the management team for any final remarks..
I don't have any further remarks. I want to thank you for all participating in our earnings call today. If you have any further questions or inquiries, feel free to reach out to the company or directly to Luca or I. Thank you very much..
And thank you sir. This concludes today's conference call. We thank you all for attending today's presentation. You may now disconnect your lines and have a wonderful day..