Office Properties Income Trust (OPITQ)
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Earnings Call: Q2 2023

Jul 27, 2023

Operator

Good morning. Welcome to the Office Properties Income Trust second quarter 2023 earnings conference call. All participants will be in listen-only mode. Should you need assistance, please signal a conference specialist by pressing the star key followed by 0. After today's presentation, there will be an opportunity to ask questions. To ask a question, you may press star then 1 on your touch-tone phone. To withdraw your question, please press star then 2. 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, Office Properties Income Trust

Thank you. 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 second quarter of 2023, 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. 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, July 27th, 2023, 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. We will be discussing non-GAAP numbers during this call, including normalized funds from operations or Normalized FFO, cash available for distribution or CAD, and cash basis net operating income or Cash Basis NOI. A reconciliation of these non-GAAP figures to net income are available in OPI's earnings release presentation that we issued last night, which can be found on our website. Finally, we will be providing guidance on this call, including Normalized FFO and Cash Basis NOI.

We are not providing a 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. I will now turn the call over to Chris.

Christopher Bilotto
President and Chief Operating Officer, Office Properties Income Trust

Thank you, Kevin. Good morning, everyone, thank you for joining us today. On our call today, we will provide an update on the merger with Diversified Healthcare Trust, discuss broader office fundamentals, and we'll provide an update on our operational and financial results. Starting with the merger, we remain on track to complete our merger with Diversified Healthcare Trust during the third quarter. We filed a registration statement with the SEC, we are holding a special meeting of shareholders on August thirtieth to vote on proposals to approve the merger and the issuance of OPI common shares. With shareholder approval, we expect to close the transaction shortly thereafter. This merger represents a tremendous opportunity for our shareholders to create a larger, scalable and more diversified REIT.

It combines two institutional quality portfolios and better positions us to navigate office sector headwinds while providing embedded near and long-term growth and value creation. As a reminder, immediate benefits to OPI includes increased scale and diversity, cash flow stability with the addition of attractive MOB and life science properties as a complement to our established office portfolio. Access to additional capital sources with a more favorable interest rate outlook, including low-cost GSE and agency debt, and access to an institutional quality portfolio of senior living communities benefiting from growth through favorable healthcare sector tailwind and the turnaround strategy currently underway. We expect the transaction to be accretive to OPI's normalized FFO, CAD, and leverage during the second half of 2024, and ultimately maximizing long-term value for our shareholders.

Based on the compelling benefits of the transaction, we support our board in their recommendation that shareholders vote for the merger. As Matt will discuss, during the second quarter, we commenced our financing strategy to close the merger by completing more than $108 million in mortgage financing since May. Given the challenges related to financing office properties in today's capital markets, we believe our progress on this priority serves as a testament to OPI's highly financiable portfolio of properties. In aggregate, the financings reflect an implied capitalization rate based on the aggregate appraised value of 7.5% and include a mix of buildings fully occupied by government and private tenants. Turning to the highlights from the second quarter.

Nationally, performance within the office sector remains in a period of transition, with some recent bright spots related to increased leasing volume, improving office utilization, and a slowing of new sublease space. Conversely, the financing and transaction environment both remain challenging. Tenants continue to rationalize their space needs, resulting in a mix of renewals, downsizing and relocations, and national office vacancy is at a high of nearly 20%. We believe there will be continued improvement in some of these areas as return-to-office mandates continue to unfold, new supply continues to decrease, and monetary policy and interest rates stabilize. OPI's portfolio occupancy for the second quarter was 90.6%, an increase of 120 basis points year-over-year, and up 10 basis points over the third quarter, supported by new leasing activity and the disposition of properties with higher vacancy.

Same property Cash Basis NOI came in better than projected. Normalized FFO per share exceeded both the prior quarter and the high end of our guidance range. Tenant utilization across our portfolio is trending above the office national average, a positive sign with the evolving return-to-office outlook. We also reached an exciting milestone with substantial completion of our 427,000 sq ft mixed-use redevelopment at Twenty Massachusetts Avenue in Washington, D.C., which is currently 54% pre-leased. Turning now to our second quarter leasing results. We completed deals for 713,000 sq ft of new and renewal leasing, comprised mostly of long-term leases, with an average lease term of 10.3 years and a roll-up in rent of 3.7%.

Total leasing volume for the quarter increased sequentially more than 250%, reflecting a meaningful acceleration from the seasonally lighter first quarter and representing OPI's highest volume in over 3 years. Approximately 80% of this activity was with tenants in the real estate and financial, and the technology and communications industries. Concessions and capital commitments declined both on a sequential quarter basis and year-over-year to $5.53 per sq ft per lease year. We ended the quarter with investment grade-rated tenants, representing approximately 63% of annualized rental income. Turning to highlights from the second quarter leasing transactions. In Duluth, Georgia, just northeast of Atlanta, we executed a full building lease renewal for the tenant's headquarters, representing 344,000 sq ft at a modest roll-up in rent and a lease term of approximately 12.5 years.

We renewed a full building lease for 93,000 sq ft in Austin, Texas, occupied by a global technology solutions company at rates that were largely unchanged and a lease term of approximately 5.6 years. In Santa Clara, California, we renewed a full building lease for 66,000 sq ft with a technology networking tenant for an 11-year term and a rental rate increase of over 9%. We signed a new lease with a healthcare contractor in Lincoln, Nebraska, for over 100,000 sq ft at a modest roll-up in rent and a 10.5 year term. Looking ahead to OPI's upcoming lease expirations, we continue to actively manage through leasing efforts to address lease expirations during the second half of 2023 and beyond.

Subsequent to quarter end, we completed over 300,000 sq ft of leasing activity, including a short-term extension and downsize with our tenant in Washington, D.C., representing 2.1% of annualized revenue, previously communicated as a known vacate in 2023. Our leasing pipeline includes approximately 2.7 million sq ft of potential leasing activity, with nearly 1.5 million sq ft attributable to new leasing and 800,000 sq ft of potential absorption, providing a year-end occupancy outlook of 87%-88%. Turning to our development projects. We reached an important milestone with the substantial completion of Twenty Mass Ave in Washington, D.C., at the end of the quarter. This 427,000 sq ft trophy Class A mixed-use property is 54% leased to Royal Sonesta Hotel, which plans to open to new guests in September.

Tour activity has been encouraging, with close to 100,000 sq ft of active proposals. We have approximately $48 million remaining project costs, a portion of which will be utilized during the back half of 2023 toward construction and the balance in future years to achieve stabilization with leases. Our life science redevelopment in Seattle, known as Unison Elliott Bay, remains on track to deliver during the fourth quarter of this year. The project is 28% pre-leased, with approximately $64 million remaining for completion of construction and for use towards stabilization with leasing. We continue to field multiple prospects for both lab and office users, with close to 45,000 sq ft of active proposals, and anticipate a ramp-up in activity toward the back half of the year as our spec lab suites are completed.

In summary, we had an active quarter for OPI and are pleased with our trending outlook across the portfolio. Despite office headwinds, we ended the quarter with leasing volume representative of the highest levels in three years, are encouraged with the elevated utilization rates across the portfolio, and continue to track on execution of our previously communicated initiatives. I will now turn the call over to Matt to review our financial results.

Matthew Brown
Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer, Office Properties Income Trust

Thanks, Chris. Good morning, everyone. Normalized FFO for the quarter was $53.7 million, or $1.11 per share, coming in $0.03 above consensus and $0.02 above the high end of our guidance range. This compares to Normalized FFO of $52.7 million, or $1.09 per share for the first quarter of 2023. The increase on a sequential quarter basis was primarily driven by higher NOI due to a decrease in seasonal usage of utilities, a termination fee related to a tenant lease renewal and downsize, and lower G&A expense, partially offset by increased interest expense. It should be noted that the termination fee was included in our Q2 Normalized FFO guidance provided on last quarter's call.

G&A expense for the second quarter was $5.8 million, as compared to $5.9 million in the previous quarter. The sequential quarter decline was mainly driven by lower business management fees due to a decrease in our stock price, which emphasizes the alignment between our manager, The RMR Group, and shareholders. We generated CAD of $0.33 per share during the second quarter and $1.76 per share on a rolling four-quarter basis. Earlier this month, we declared our regular quarterly distribution of $0.25 per share, which represents a trailing four-quarter CAD payout ratio of 57% based on our annual dividend rate of $1 per share. Same-property Cash Basis NOI decreased 3.7% compared to the second quarter of 2022, and beat our guidance range of down 5%-7%.

The decrease was mainly driven by elevated free rent levels in the current year period, higher operating expenses as we continue to face inflationary pressure, and expenses previously paid by tenants now being paid by OPI as a result of tenant downsizes and changes in certain lease structures. Turning to our outlook for normalized FFO and same-property Cash Basis NOI expectations in the third quarter. We expect normalized FFO to be between $0.99 and $1.01 per share. This guidance includes a range of $5.7 million-$5.9 million of G&A expense.

The decrease from Q2 is made up of several items, most notably, seasonal increases in operating expenses, lower amounts of capitalized interest with the substantial completion of the Twenty Mass Ave project, and certain tenant vacancies and downsizes, partially offset by the commencement of the Sonesta lease at Twenty Mass Ave. We expect same-property Cash Basis NOI to be down 8%-10% as compared to the third quarter of 2022, mainly driven by free rent in the current year period and certain tenant vacancies and downsizes. Turning to the balance sheet. As Chris mentioned, during the second quarter, we commenced our financing strategy for our merger with Diversified Healthcare Trust. As a reminder, in connection with the merger, OPI secured a commitment for a $368 million bridge loan facility to ensure we can close the transaction.

To avoid use of this facility, we are entering mortgage loans secured by certain of the bridge loan collateral properties on more attractive terms than the bridge loan facility. To date, we have closed more than $108 million in interest-only mortgage financings, with a weighted average term of 6.8 years and a combined total loan-to-value ratio of over 52%. In connection with these financings, the bridge loan commitment has been reduced to $260 million. This execution in these challenging market conditions highlights the benefit of our largely unencumbered balance sheet, combined with our high-quality assets. We are in active discussions to complete similar financings of other OPI bridge loan collateral properties in the coming weeks.

At quarter end, our outstanding debt had a weighted average interest rate of 4.3% and a weighted average maturity of 4.7 years. Over 90% of our debt is fixed rate and approximately 96% is unsecured. In June, we exercised our second and final option to extend our credit facility to January 31st, 2024. We ended the quarter with $535 million of total liquidity, including $510 million of availability under our credit facility. Turning to our investing activities. Since the beginning of the year, we have sold five properties containing 296,000 sq ft for $13.1 million, and are currently under agreement to sell one property containing 80,000 sq ft for $10.5 million.

Given the current investment sales market, we continue to expect our disposition activity to be somewhat muted until market conditions improve. We spent $33.6 million in recurring capital and $40.4 million in redevelopment capital during the second quarter. We continue to expect 2023 recurring capital of $100 million-$110 million. We are updating our redevelopment capital outlook to be approximately $125 million-$135 million. With Twenty Mass Ave substantially complete, we have approximately $114 million of estimated remaining project costs to fund the development and lease-related capital to achieve stabilized occupancy of Twenty Mass Ave in unison. That concludes our prepared remarks. Operator, we are ready to open the call up for questions.

Operator

We will now begin the question and answer session. To ask a question, you may press star one on your touchtone phone. If you're using a speakerphone, please pick up your handset before pressing the keys. To withdraw your question, please press star then two. At this time, we will pause momentarily to assemble our roster. Our first question will come from Bryan Maher with B. Riley FBR. You may now go ahead.

Bryan Maher
Analyst, B. Riley FBR

Good morning, Chris and Matt. Just a couple from me this morning. Kind of sticking with the sale of assets and the proceeds, and thus utilizing the bridge loan less, assuming the deal with DHC is closed. How long up until the deal closes and you need to tap that bridge loan, can you be selling assets? Aside from the $10 million asset that you just talked about, are there any more that you suspect close between now and then? What is the delta, roughly, in the cost between the proceeds you're getting, you know, and, and, you know, the new debt versus the bridge loan debt? What is the delta in the cost there?

Matthew Brown
Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer, Office Properties Income Trust

I think just starting with the asset sales, Bryan, I think, you know, we've talked about, you know, maybe getting, you know, 30.

Christopher Bilotto
President and Chief Operating Officer, Office Properties Income Trust

...$40 million is probably an accurate number based on where we think we might land with transaction, and that includes the $10 million and a few other opportunities that are out there. I would say that that's on the high end of the range as far as at least where we stand today, what we might close are. There may be some outliers, but I think that's a good guide.

Matthew Brown
Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer, Office Properties Income Trust

On the financing success and the impact to the bridge loan, you know, our goal from when we signed the merger back in April, was to not draw on the bridge. It's more expensive than just traditional secured financings. We're very pleased with the progress we've made today, having closed $108 million in proceeds. I will say between the OPI and DHC properties that are part of the collateral pool, we have executed term sheets with various lenders, totaling $450 million in potential loan proceeds, which is far and above the total bridge loan commitment. If they're OPI assets, we can continue to close prior to the merger. If they are DHC assets, we have to wait and be in a position to close simultaneously or shortly thereafter.

We're very pleased with where we've positioned ourselves in very challenging financing environment. With where we are, we also will leave some of the bridge loan collateral properties unencumbered. We're gonna get a lot more in proceeds than we would on the bridge, and still leave certain properties unencumbered, which will help our debt covenants, et cetera. Lastly, as we think about pricing, you know, the weighted average interest rate on the four loans we closed was about 7.9%. The bridge loan cost is north of 10%. You get a 200+ basis point premium or benefit to the cost.

Bryan Maher
Analyst, B. Riley FBR

I guess what I'm hearing is, is with all the stuff that you're doing, there's a very high likelihood that you won't need to tap the bridge loan, you know, kind of hard stop, period. Can you tell us how the extension of the credit facility to January impacts any of the financing kind of towards the deal?

Matthew Brown
Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer, Office Properties Income Trust

On the bridge, like I said, it remains our goal to not draw on it. We have it in place as a backstop. Until we actually close mortgages in this environment, you never know. It's there if we need it. If we do need it, we expect it to be for a very short period of time. Like I said, we're positioning to not need it. As it relates to the revolver, yes, we did extend the OPI standalone maturity to January 31st of 2024. A condition of closing the merger is that the combined company will have a recast or amended revolver. We've been progressing on that. Nothing really to report publicly, but we have executed term sheets with our admin agent.

We've fielded a lot of diligence-type questions from the bank group, et cetera, and we're tracking nicely on that effort as well.

Bryan Maher
Analyst, B. Riley FBR

Okay, maybe last for me, you know, fundamentally, I think in your prepared comments, you talked about year-end occupancy in kind of that 87%-88% range. You know, assuming that Twenty Mass Ave and Seattle kind of ramp according to your expectations, can you maybe look out a little bit further, I mean, we're fast approaching year-end, to what, you know, occupancy might look like a year from now, say, mid-2024, with those two properties coming online?

Christopher Bilotto
President and Chief Operating Officer, Office Properties Income Trust

It's hard to tell, Bryan. I mean, the, you know, the occupancy, or the, the kind of the new building square footage, for Twenty Mass Ave is, is kind of in our square footage, and so, you know, current occupancy is representative of that building coming online. There's really no change in square footage, for the Seattle property. I mean, I think where we stand today, we're seeing, some positive momentum with absorption and new leasing, with what we've seen to date. You know, we've talked about the retention levels across the portfolio and what we anticipate those to be, at the run rate for 2024.

It's difficult to sit here today and kind of peg an occupancy numbers because in addition to just, you know, development and leasing activity, there's also, you know, the disposition, and capital recycling plan that we'll likely continue with, and that kind of has a much more uncertain approach, just given kind of the environment and where we ultimately conclude we'll transact in the year. I mean, I think at this stage, you know, the best guidance we have is at 87%-88%.

Bryan Maher
Analyst, B. Riley FBR

Okay. Thank you.

Operator

Our next question will come from Ronald Kamdem with Morgan Stanley. You may now go ahead.

Tamim Sarwary
Analyst, Morgan Stanley

Hey, good morning, guys. This is Tamim Sarwary for Ronald. Yeah, just sticking to the occupancy again. Yeah, 87% to 88%, I think, is the guidance for year-end, you know, a little bit lower than, you know, where it was previously. One, you know, the occupancy looks like it's trending just in 2Q a little bit higher than 1Q. You know, is the... Your guidance reduction, is that primarily driven just by, you know, lower leasing expectations for the development pipeline? Yeah, just give us a sense for, you know, what, you know, occupancy would look like year-end just for the same store portfolio.

Christopher Bilotto
President and Chief Operating Officer, Office Properties Income Trust

Yeah, a couple things. I think that, you know, we had some tenants that were known vacates in Q2 carry over. We would anticipate that, you know, the impact to occupancy upon them vacating, absent of any lease being signed, would come in Q3 or Q4, depending on the circumstances. With respect to year-end occupancy, there's a couple drivers. One is going to be contingent on, again, disposition activity. The reason why I say that is because some of the buildings being contemplated have higher vacancy, that in itself would have somewhat of a favorable impact on occupancy. We did have a tenant, the GSA, who was an expiration in early 2024, provide early notice of a vacate.

That had a slight negative impact on occupancy, at least for year-end. It would have been something that would have been impacted in, you know, the first part of 2024.

Tamim Sarwary
Analyst, Morgan Stanley

Got it. You guys talked about 80% financial and real estate tenants making up the leasing activity during the quarter. Just as we go forward, do you see, you know, for OPI as a standalone basis, just less government exposure overall, for the portfolio because of, you know, current leasing trends, or how should we think about that?

Christopher Bilotto
President and Chief Operating Officer, Office Properties Income Trust

Yeah, I mean, I think just generally speaking, you know, we've seen a slight pullback in the overall government piece, and that's just been, you know, through a variety of circumstances. I mean, the Twenty Mass Ave development is a good example where we've gone from what was kind of a GSA strategy with an older Class B property into a private sector strategy with a kind of a neutral B Class A mixed-use development. In some circumstances where, you know, the GSA, no different than the private sector, is rationalizing their space needs outside of those mission-critical facilities. I think just generally, you know, we're generally seeing that kind of There's not a lot of GSA deals tracking out there to kind of drive absorption.

To the extent that we see space come back to us, that is GSA leased, you know, the likely path there is to focus on private sector leasing. That would have a negative effect on our overall GSA exposure. You know, there will be some, some changes in that. You know, I don't know that it'll be material kind of in the near term, but over time, you know, it'll continue to have an impact.

Tamim Sarwary
Analyst, Morgan Stanley

Got it. Then, you know, you guys talked about the second half 2024 accretion with the merger. Just wanted to confirm if that includes, you know, you guys contemplating the, you know, the non-cash mark-to-market from assuming DHC's debt, if that's included within the guidance, and if you guys can just give us a sense for what that number might look like and if, if that will be included at all, you know, as we think about covenants and whatnot?

Christopher Bilotto
President and Chief Operating Officer, Office Properties Income Trust

It is included in the guidance forecast on the combined company basis for second half of 2024. I think the best proxy to look at is probably DHC's 10-Q from Q1. In their fair value footnote, it shows the carrying value as compared to the fair value. I believe it's about a $600 million delta as of March 31st. That's not going to impact our covenants negatively.

Tamim Sarwary
Analyst, Morgan Stanley

Got it. Thank you, guys. That's all I have.

Operator

Again, if you have a question, please press Star, then one. Our next question will come from Aditi Balachandran with RBC Capital Markets. You may now go ahead.

Aditi Balachandran
Director in US REIT Equity Research, RBC Capital Markets

Thank you. Good morning. Can we just get some more details on the Tyson termination that you guys spoke about and that came out earlier this month? What's the plan for the building, and when will the $8 million termination fee be recognized?

Christopher Bilotto
President and Chief Operating Officer, Office Properties Income Trust

On the termination notice, you know, I don't think it was unexpected. You know, Tyson had been public about consolidation, for, you know, for us, we had been planning, assuming that a termination would in fact be exercised. You know, with that in mind, I mean, look, this building was completely redeveloped in 2013. I think as we step back and kind of look at, you know, just the quality and the footprint, or the landscape of, you know, the Greater Chicago area, you know, we're getting a building back that is kind of checks all the boxes with respect to, you know, where tenants are focused today. I mean, it's a LEED-certified building that has numerous other awards tied to it. It's got…

You know, it's within a short walking distance to three different modes of rail transportation. It's in the West Loop, which is one of the stronger submarkets behind the Fulton submarket, which is the strongest, where we own another property. It shows extremely well. You know, we have a team teed up that's in the market, and I think we're generally optimistic that we'll be able to, you know, release this building to an office user in short order. On the termination fee, that's gonna be amortized over the remaining term of January 31st, 2025.

Aditi Balachandran
Director in US REIT Equity Research, RBC Capital Markets

Great. Thank you.

Operator

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

Christopher Bilotto
President and Chief Operating Officer, Office Properties Income Trust

Thank you for joining us today and for your interest in OPI.

Operator

The conference is now concluded. Thank you for attending today's presentation. You may now disconnect.

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