Alpine Income Property Trust (PINE) has reported a positive outlook in its second-quarter 2024 earnings call, with notable increases in funds from operations (FFO) and adjusted funds from operations (AFFO). The company's strategic property acquisitions and sales, alongside mortgage investments and participation interest sales, have contributed to a robust portfolio occupancy rate and an improved financial forecast for the year.
Key Takeaways
- Alpine Income Property Trust acquired a property leased to Best Buy (NYSE:BBY) and Golf Galaxy for $14.6 million.
- The company sold two properties leased to Festival Foods and Hobby Lobby for $6.6 million.
- A first mortgage investment was originated at $6.1 million, and a $13.6 million participation interest in a portfolio loan was sold.
- Alpine's portfolio is now 99% occupied, with 137 properties.
- The company aims to increase its weighted average lease term and is reducing exposure to Walgreens.
- FFO and AFFO for the quarter were $0.43 per share, a 16% increase from the previous year.
- Full-year FFO and AFFO guidance increased by $0.07 and $0.06 per share, respectively.
- The company ended the quarter with a net debt to enterprise value of 53% and $185 million in liquidity.
Company Outlook
- CEO John Albright remains optimistic about acquisition opportunities and plans to continue selling Walgreens properties to redeploy capital.
- The public markets are not essential for the company to be a net acquirer.
- CFO Phil Mays cautions about potential non-recurring items and transaction timing affecting second-half earnings.
Bearish Highlights
- The recent recovery in net lease stocks has not significantly altered the company's cost of capital.
- Non-recurring items and transaction timing may impact earnings in the second half of the year.
Bullish Highlights
- Alpine is capitalizing on opportunities in larger box properties and benefiting from low cap rates in smaller properties.
- The company is taking advantage of the current reluctance of banks to lend in the real estate sector.
Misses
- There are potential risks associated with borrowers prepaying their loans, although it is considered unlikely.
Q&A Highlights
- Alpine is interested in purchasing high-quality properties at a lower basis than usual, given market conditions.
- Demand for Walgreens properties is localized, with higher cap rates being offered for desirable locations.
- The company is open to acquiring properties vacated by Walgreens if a new tenant is already secured.
- Albright challenges the assumption that 1031 buyers are not interested in properties with credit issues like dark Walgreens.
Alpine Income Property Trust's second-quarter earnings call paints a picture of a company in a strong position, with strategic acquisitions and sales leading to a healthy increase in FFO and AFFO. Despite some potential risks, the company is actively managing its portfolio and looking to capitalize on the current real estate market dynamics. With a solid occupancy rate and proactive measures to ensure long-term growth, Alpine Income Property Trust is set to navigate the remainder of the year with confidence.
InvestingPro Insights
Alpine Income Property Trust (PINE) continues to demonstrate financial resilience, as evidenced by the recent positive outlook in its Q2 2024 earnings call. Key financial metrics from InvestingPro provide a deeper understanding of the company's current position:
- The company's market capitalization stands at 230.64M USD, reflecting its valuation in the market.
- Alpine Income Property Trust's dividend yield is notably high at 6.56%, showcasing its commitment to returning value to shareholders, which has been consistent for 5 consecutive years.
- The stock is trading near its 52-week high, with a price % of 52-week high at 95.54%, indicating strong investor confidence and a robust share price performance.
InvestingPro Tips highlight strategic financial management moves by the company, such as aggressive share buybacks and consistent dividend increases. However, analysts have tempered expectations with revisions to earnings forecasts and expectations of a net income drop for the year. Additionally, the company is trading at a high EBIT valuation multiple, which investors should consider when evaluating the stock's current price level.
For readers looking to delve deeper into Alpine Income Property Trust's financial health and future prospects, InvestingPro offers additional insights. There are 8 more InvestingPro Tips available that can provide a more comprehensive analysis of PINE. To explore these tips and gain further financial analysis, visit https://www.investing.com/pro/PINE and remember to use the coupon code PRONEWS24 to get up to 10% off a yearly Pro and a yearly or biyearly Pro+ subscription.
Full transcript - Alpine Income Property Trust Inc (NYSE:PINE) Q2 2024:
Operator: Good day! And welcome to the Alpine Income Property Trust, Second Quarter 2024 Operating Results Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. After the speaker's presentation, there will be a question-and-answer session. [Operator Instructions]. As a reminder, this call is being recorded. I would now like to turn the call over to John Albright, President and CEO. Please go ahead.
John Albright: Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us today for the Alpine Income Property Trust, second quarter 2024 operating results conference call. I am pleased to have Phil Mays, our new Chief Financial Officer, joining me this morning. Before we begin, I will turn it over to Phil to provide customary disclosures regarding today's call. Phil?
Phil Mays: Thanks John. I would like to remind everyone that many of our comments today are considered forward-looking statements under Federal Securities Law. The company's actual future results may differ significantly from the matters discussed in these forward-looking statements, and we undertake no duty to update these statements. Factors and risks that could cause actual results to differ materially from expectations are disclosed from time-to-time in greater detail in the company's Form 10-K, Form 10-Q, and other SEC files. You can find our SEC reports, earnings release, and most recent investor presentation, which contains reconciliations of the non-GAAP financial measures we use on our website at alpinereit.com. With that, I will turn the call back over to John.
John Albright: Thanks Phil. We are pleased that our successful asset recycling and investments and higher-yielding quality loans have delivered a strong quarter and led to an increase in our earnings guidance. On the asset recycling front during the quarter, we acquired a $14.6 million property leased to investment-grade tenants Best Buy and Golf Galaxy, and accretive yield to the disposition of two properties leased to Festival Foods and Hobby Lobby for a disposition volume of $6.6 million and a blended exit cap rate of 7% for the sold properties. Further, we are beginning to see investment opportunities in the market that we plan to take advantage of and continue recycling at accretive yields. On the loan investment front, we originated a $6.1 million first mortgage investment, of which $4.6 million was funded during the quarter. The initial yield on this investment was 11.5%, and it was to provide funding toward the four-pad retail development anchored by Wawa in a growing sub-market of Cincinnati, Ohio. During the quarter we also sold $13.6 million A-1 participation interest in our $23.4 million portfolio loan secured by 39 properties that we originated in November of 2023. As a part of the transaction, the loan was rated by an independent rating agency, whereby it received an A- rating. This sale frees up capital for additional quality, high-yielding loan investments. Including both property and structured investments, year-to-date through June 30, 2024, the company has made total investments of $28.9 million at a weighted average initial investment yield of 9.8%, while our disposition activities totaled $20.2 million at a weighted average exit yield of 7.7%. As of quarter-end, our portfolio was 99% occupied and consisted of 137 properties, totaling 3.8 million square feet, with tenants operating in 23 sectors within 34 states. Our top tenants remain unchanged from our first quarter earnings call in April, with Best Buy making it into our top five tenants after our recent acquisition. Further, we're actively tearing down our Walgreens exposure and currently have two Walgreens in the sales process. All of our top five tenants carry investment-grade credit ratings, and we ended the quarter with 67% of our total annualized base rents coming from tenants with an investment-grade credit rating, an increase of 400 basis points from this time last year. From a valuation perspective, we are currently trading well above an implied 8% cap rate on our real-estate portfolio and at a meaningful discount to our book value of approximately $18 per share. Additionally, we have one of the highest dividend yields in our peer group, along with a healthy free cash flow and strong AFFO per share growth projected for 2024. Simply put, Alpine shares are a great value today. Lastly, given our strong earnings during the first half of the year, we have increased our full FFO and AFFO guidance by $0.07 per share or 4.6% at the low end, and $0.06 a share or 3.8% at the high end. With that, I'll turn the call over to Phil to talk about our second quarter performance, balance sheet, and guidance.
Phil Mays: Thanks John. First, it's a privilege to join the team here at Alpine. I've only been here a few weeks, but it is clear that management and the board do not sit still and are constantly working to increase shareholder value. As the new CFO, I will endeavor to do the same. Today, I will briefly highlight our earnings, balance sheet and guidance, and then open the call to questions. Beginning with financial results, FFO and AFFO were both $0.43 per share for the quarter. This represents an increase of $0.06 per share or 16%, over the second quarter of 2023. The growth in our earnings was driven by interest income from our loan portfolio, along with the previous asset recycling. Additionally, other revenue for this quarter includes $100,000 of non-recurring leasing commissions related to the 39 properties securing our $23.4 million portfolio loan. Our G&A for the quarter was $1.6 million. This is consistent with G&A for both the prior quarter and the second quarter of last year. As a reminder, G&A primarily consists of our external management fee, which was $1 million for the quarter. During the quarter, the company paid a cash dividend of $0.275 per share. Our dividend is well covered and this represents an AFFO payout ratio of 64%. We do aim to pay out 100% of our taxable income each year, and consistent with past practice, we will announce towards the end of August our quarterly dividend amount for the third quarter. Moving to the balance sheet, we ended the quarter with net debt to enterprise value of 53%, net debt to EBITDA of 7.4x, and a fixed charge coverage ratio of 30.4x. Additionally, we ended the quarter with $185 million in liquidity, and we have no debt maturities until 2026. One final balance sheet note, as John discussed, we sold a $13.6 million A-1 participation interest in our $23.4 million portfolio loan. As required by GAAP, we will continue to report the full amount of this loan receivable on our balance sheet with a separate liability line item for the $13.6 million participation in it. Further, interest income will continue to be recorded on the full loan amount with interest expense, including an offsetting amount for the participation interest sold. With regards to guidance, we are increasing our full year 2024 outlook to the new FFO guidance range of $1.58 to $1.62 per share, and a new AFFO guidance range of $1.60 to $1.64 per share. This represents a 4.2% increase at the midpoint of these ranges. The acquisition and disposition assumption underlying our guidance remains unchanged at a range of $50 million to $80 million for each. Lastly, a couple of quick modeling notes. We begin the third quarter with in-place annualized straight-line base rent of $39.8 million and $39.5 million of in-place annualized cash base rent. Our annualized interest income currently has a run rate of $4.3 million, which as previously discussed is now offset by approximately $1.1 million of additional interest expense associated with the loan participation sale. With that, operator, please open the line for questions.
Operator: Thank you. [Operator Instructions]. Our first question comes from Gaurav Mehta with Alliance Global Partners (NYSE:GLP). Your line is open.
Gaurav Mehta: Thank you. Good morning. I wanted to ask you some color on what you are seeing in the transaction market for net-lease properties.
John Albright: Yeah. So, we're seeing still some very good buyer interest for smaller net-lease property, kind of $5 million and below. It's still a very active market and not a lot of dislocations. Larger properties aren't moving as much. There's a little bit more activity than last quarter for sure. We are seeing our opportunities where people need capital, want to sell properties or need some financing, but it's a much better environment now than it was last quarter.
Gaurav Mehta: Okay. I also wanted to ask you on the acquisition that was completed in the second quarter, the lease term on the acquisition was lower than your weighted average lease term. I wanted to get some color on the lease term. Is that something you plan to pursue going forward?
John Albright: Yeah. We mentioned in our investor presentation that we are going to look to increase our weighted average lease term as we move from here. That property that we bought in investment grade, credit tenants, lease rates at or below market in a location where there's no supply. So, the tenants aren't doing well. They don't have opportunity to move and find another available site, and the disruption might make no sense. So, we have a very high confidence that they are going to renew and discussions with them as the stores do well and the right size. So definitely as you know, that's been our strategy as to pick up high quality property, that higher yields with a strong conviction that they are going to renew. But knowing that in the context of the public markets, we will work on increasing our weighted average lease length.
Gaurav Mehta: Okay. Thank you. That's all I have.
John Albright: Thanks.
Operator: Thank you. Our next question comes from RJ Milligan with Raymond James. Your line is open.
RJ Milligan: Hey, good morning guys. John, you mentioned that you are looking to, I think you have two Walgreens under contract to dispose. Just curious what the lease expiration schedule looks for your Walgreens exposure? If there's any short term, releasing risk.
John Albright: Yeah. So, our average weighted average lease length of the Walgreens is about eight years. So we have a longer duration there with the Walgreens and that obviously gives us a better opportunity to sell the properties at reasonable cap rates. So, obviously mentioning that we have two in the sales process and we'll start working through some others that are really good locations and look to actively bring down Walgreens from the number one position. So, I feel like we'll definitely make some good headway for the rest of the year on doing that.
RJ Milligan: Thanks. That's helpful. And just given the recent recovery in some of the net lease stocks, I'm curious how that changes your cost of capital equation and the outlook for the rest of the year in terms of, right now, I think you're set to be per guidance, sort of a net neutral in terms of acquisitions and dispositions. And I'm curious if – where do we need to see Alpine Stock go to, to get to a net acquirer position?
John Albright: Yeah. I mean look, we're finding as I mentioned, good opportunities and we still – given that we do want to sell Walgreens down, you know that's a good source of capital to redeploy, and so we don't necessarily need the public markets to grow. Obviously, we'd love the public markets to be supportive for growth, but we're going to be patient and see whether that basically happens for us. And so, we'll keep on trying to put points on the board here and obviously stream some good successes here, and we feel like as much as the broad markets are supportive, that will come for us. But we don't need to depend on it to be somewhat of a net acquirer and so that's kind of where we are right now.
RJ Milligan: Great. That's it for me. Thanks for the color.
John Albright: Thank you.
Operator: Thank you. Our next question comes from Rob Stevenson with Janney Montgomery Scott, LLC.
Rob Stevenson: Hi. Good morning. John, just to follow-up on the Walgreens, given the issues of the fact that a lot of people want to reduce their Walgreens exposure, who are the prospective buyers of these properties these days? Are these just local guys that want the eight to 10 years of investment grade tenant? Are these guys looking to do something else if Walgreens doesn't renew? How would you characterize the potential buyer pool of Walgreens assets today?
John Albright: Yeah Rob, you basically answered it. It’s all the above. We have – again, looking at our demographics of our total portfolio, you can basically summarize that we have really good locations. And so, you have 1031 buyers who are basically saying, okay, I got Walgreens, good credit for a good lease length in a market that's dynamic, growing. No one's building anything, and you are buying it below replacement costs. And then we've had situations where tenants want the Walgreens box and will basically say, I can probably negotiate maybe an early termination with Walgreens, even though we don't have any indications they are closing the store, but there's a little bit of that situation where tenants want to get a hold of a big corner. So, it's all the above.
Rob Stevenson: Okay. And then to your comments on extending Wal, there's four – a little over four and a half years left on the Best Buy and Golf Galaxy Dick's lease. Any sense where these properties rank within the overall profitability scale of these retailers? And have you guys already had conversations with them about extension?
John Albright: Yeah. I mean look, we talked to them when we bought the property, and they basically decided the properties are doing – on those locations are doing very good for them. And so, certainly we can go in there and negotiate some sort of early extension, but it's a little early for them and for us and so at the appropriate time we'll definitely discuss that with them. Usually we'd like to wait for them to want to refresh the store and maybe provide some capital to basically get a longer lease term and a return on that capital. But so, there's no – yes, we don't feel like there's a rush to do anything. Where they are located is very strong demographics and so market should even be better in the next couple of years.
Rob Stevenson: Okay. And then these assets are obviously big boxes. How are you thinking about the overall portfolio mix going forward in terms of smaller boxes versus bigger boxes, or is it just all opportunity-driven at this point for you guys?
John Albright: It is opportunity-driven, but we're seeing more opportunity as I might have mentioned before, on the larger boxes, given that you’re not really talking about the smaller 1031 buyers, so the arbitrage is much greater. In the smaller properties we're seeing cap rates with, even though the interest rate is coming down, you know cap rates being extremely supportive of selling the properties. And so we'll take advantage of that cost of capital selling at very low cap rates and buying where there's value opportunity, so we kind of like that. But I mean, we'll be in general opportunistic, but we're seeing more opportunities on the larger ticket items.
Rob Stevenson: Okay. And then last one for me, how should we be thinking about the second half earnings? Is there anything that's non-recurring this quarter to next or any drags that you expect in the back half of the year? If I look at either the $0.84 of FFO that you guys have done year-to-date or the $0.43 in the second quarter, both of those run rates are well above where the $1.59 to $1.62 guidance range is. What's the drag or what's the non-reoccurring that needs to come out of these numbers when we're thinking about the back half of the year?
Phil Mays: Yeah Rob, it's Phil. I think anytime you are talking about earnings per share, you got to keep in context that just the 150,000 represents $0.01 of FFO, so a small amount or just tiny can move the needle here. With that said, the current quarter did have, as I mentioned in my remarks, 200,000 non-recurring leasing commissions. And PINE received the management and leasing commissions for managing the 39 properties that underlies the portfolio loan, and there was an unusual large amount of leasing commissions from that this quarter. So there was about 200,000 non-recurring in the current quarter. And then I think you got to keep in mind just transaction timing, which falls into a couple of buckets, right, one with our properties and one with our loan portfolios. With properties, acquisitions and dispositions, dispositions could very well lead the acquisitions, and that would be diluted. And look, we've got the line of credits largely swapped out, so if that were to happen, we may not – we can't really pay down the line all the way, because we've got $50 million on the swap, so there could be a temporary time, just temporary where we're sitting on some cash, right, before we redeploy it. And with the loan portfolio in particular, the portfolio loan right, that buyer, that borrower is selling those properties or wants to sell those properties and repay the loan, so you could have some time in there. So I think between the one-time item this quarter and then just largely transaction timing, and you have a relatively small amount that can quickly move the needle.
Rob Stevenson: Okay, that's helpful. Thanks guys and have a great weekend.
John Albright: You too. Thanks.
Operator: Thank you. Our next question comes from Wesley Golladay with Baird. Your line is open.
Wesley Golladay: Hey, good morning to everyone. When you look to make a future loan investment, are you looking to sell parts of it like you did with the A-1 deal?
John Albright: No. Selling the A-1 deal just freed up some capital because we are restricted from how much we can do in the loan investments. And so that allowed us to do another loan in the quarter, and we still have opportunity now to do roughly 20 million additional loan investments and so we're being patient and picky. But that was really – I don't see us doing that, unless we had some sort of larger loan opportunity, but I don't expect that.
Wesley Golladay: Okay, how are you thinking about your exposure to Family Dollar? What happens to the dual branded stores if the brand is sold? And were your stores originally Family Dollar for the dual branded ones?
John Albright: I'll let Steven Greathouse join us, our Chief Investment Officer, and let him speak to that.
Steven Greathouse: Hey Wes. Yeah, I mean, most of what we bought are new, so we have plenty of lease term on them, and really when we're looking at these in underwriting, it's more of a credit play, so right now our portfolio is sitting fine, and then we'll look to potentially reduce exposure, but that way you won't be buying any more of them. So we kind of like where we're sitting right now in the portfolio.
Wesley Golladay: Okay, thanks everyone.
John Albright: Thank you.
Operator: Thank you. Our next question comes from Matthew Erdner with Jones Trading. Your line is open.
Matthew Erdner: Hey, good morning guys. Phil, welcome to the team. So what kind of drives the acquisition activity towards the higher end of your guidance? Because right now you are a little over half, but what kind of takes those numbers towards that higher range?
John Albright: We're seeing some, as I mentioned, it’s a good opportunity to you know, obviously are things that they seem to be diligence in execution, so we feel very comfortable that we'll definitely meet expectations there. We obviously have a second half of the year to work, so we have plenty of opportunities. So we're happy with what we see and I think we'll be able to execute it and deliver.
Matthew Erdner: Yeah, that's good to know. And then I guess how comfortable are you taking the credit facility up? Are you guys comfortable where it is and kind of want to start taking it down?
John Albright: No, we're comfortable with where it is. As far as on the leverage side, that will – again, we have a nice, strong free cash flow and given it's a small company, it doesn't take much to bring it down and so we're comfortable with where it is. But as I mentioned, we have some very, in the money swaps, so you wouldn't want to take it down beyond kind of where we have certain level of swaps.
Matthew Erdner: Yeah, that's helpful. Thanks guys.
John Albright: Thank you.
Operator: Thank you. And our last question comes from John Massocca with B. Riley Securities. Your line is open.
John Massocca: Good morning.
John Albright: Morning.
John Massocca: So with regards to the loan investment, what is the long-term outlook for that portion of the portfolio? Is the thought to replace exposure here as loans are repaid or should that kind of wind down over time, especially if we're in a more kind of normalized interest rate environment?
John Albright: Yeah, I mean, if we get into more of a normalized, I would call it rather than interest rate environment, a normalized banking market, that's really what's causing the opportunity. And if you don't, the banks are tapped out. They are not willing to lend further in the real estate as they work their books down. They are stuck with a lot of loans that aren't paying off in the department sector and industrial. Those are really, really hard to refinance now given where they were and so that's where the real opportunity is. But we expect that at some point to burn down and be with more of a, obviously fully a net lease kind of ownership interest, but we're taking advantage of the market as we see it right now. We don't see it getting better on the credit availability side. And so again, finding really high quality properties that we would not be able to purchase, because the cap rates would be way inside of where we have an interest in basically being able to loan money at double digits on levered first mortgage positions at lower basis than we'd be able to buy the properties is just fantastic, and so we'll keep being selective and investing there. But eventually things will level out, but we don't see it anytime soon.
John Massocca: Okay. And I know most of those loans are kind of shorter duration in nature. But as interest rates shift here, are there any kind of prepayment options for those counterparties?
John Albright: They can prepay, but they would make holes. So we didn't do all this effort to just get a loan prepaid in six months. On average duration, this is roughly 18 months. And so yeah, they can pay early, but we would have a make-all provision. Most likely these borrowers aren't going to go through the efforts of refinancing just to save a certain amount for such a short duration. They just have bigger fish to fry if you will.
John Massocca: And then, you talked a bit about the Walgreens and where the demand for potential sales is coming. I mean, how is that translating maybe broad strokes for the whole Walgreens transaction market into cap rate? I mean, where are kind of the cap rate ranges for those types of assets?
John Albright: Yeah, I mean, I'm not kind of going to give you cap rates. I mean, once we start closing on some of the HLC, but I will say that what we're seeing is really, it's more localized about the location, not as much about the credit. And so it's not someone just saying, I don't need to go see the property, because I'm buying the property for this duration of the Walgreens spread and so here's my cap rate. It's more, I will never be able to basically be able to buy this corner for this basis and they are willing to pay perhaps a higher cap rate than you might imagine. Now, there'll be certain situations where it will lean on the Walgreens credit and cap rate will be higher. So it's a little bit of a barbell effect where you get really good, strong locations where there's a lot of tenants who want to be at that location, and that cap rate will be lower and it would basically be based on the strength of the location.
John Massocca: Okay. That's very helpful and that's it for me. Thank you very much.
John Albright: Great. Thank you.
Operator: Thank you. We have a question from Barry Oxford with Colliers International. Your line is open.
Barry Oxford: Great. Hey John, how are you doing?
John Albright: Excellent.
Barry Oxford: Good. My question revolves around the Walgreens and if they are getting out of a lease early, but who are the tenants that are kind of growing and that are kind of the natural tenants to replace a Walgreens? Because if people are more concerned about the location than they are kind of about the duration, that's telling me that they want to have some certainty that if Walgreens walks away and there’s a lease termination that they've got somebody that can backfill.
John Albright: Yeah. I mean you have medical, it’s a good bond for urgent cares. You have restaurants that would scrape that, small back [inaudible] which as you know are growing like crazy, raising pain to the world, that God knows how they are going to find the locations that you need to find to grow, even if you went to the school, the dollar stores and that sort of thing. So, there's really quite a bit of that sort of demand, because if you think about the Walgreens, it's on the corner, it's out front, mostly drive-thru, so there's a fair amount of interest there.
Barry Oxford: John, would you be a buyer of an asset where Walgreens is leaving just because you might have a tenant or two that you know would love that spot? And you could get a good deal on it because they are moving out.
John Albright: Yeah, we're opportunistic in comparing locations and real estate focused. So we absolutely would buy a dark Walgreens if we knew we had a tenant in hand and we were going to pay handsomely for that sort of transaction. We haven't been really searching for that, but yeah, I mean, we're all about location. I mean, you could see us perhaps even hoping someone breached that capital for that transaction, so it could be on that side of the equation as well.
Barry Oxford: Because it seems to me like the 1031 buyers would not be interested in that kind of deal.
John Albright: No, I wouldn't come to that conclusion.
Barry Oxford: Yeah. Okay, that's all I have for today. Thanks guys.
John Albright: All right. Thanks Barry.
Operator: Thank you. This concludes the question-and-answer session. Thank you for your participation. You may now disconnect. Everyone, have a great day!
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