Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for standing by and welcome to the Q1 2022 Acadia Realty Trust earnings conference call. At this time, all participants are on a listen only mode. After the speaker's presentation, there'll be a question and answer session. To ask a question during the session, you need to press star one on your telephone. For assistance, please press star zero. I would now like to turn the call over to your host, Riel Green. You may begin.
Good morning, and thank you for joining us for the first quarter 2022 Acadia Realty Trust earnings conference call. My name is Riel Green and I'm the director of ESG at Acadia. Before we begin, please be aware that statements made during the call that are not historical may be deemed forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, and actual results may differ materially from those indicated by such forward-looking statements. Due to a variety of risks and uncertainties, including those disclosed in the company's most recent Form 10-K and other periodic filings with the SEC, forward-looking statements speak only as of the date of this call, May 3, 2022, and the company undertakes no duty to update them. During this call, management may refer to certain non-GAAP financial measures, including funds from operations and net operating income.
Please see Acadia's earnings press release posted on its website for reconciliations of these non-GAAP financial measures with the most directly comparable GAAP financial measures. Once the call becomes open for questions, we ask that you limit your first round to two questions per caller to give everyone the opportunity to participate. You may ask further questions by reinserting yourself into the queue, and we will answer as time permits. Now, it is my pleasure to turn the call over to Ken Bernstein, President and Chief Executive Officer, who will begin today's management remarks.
Great job, Riel. Thank you. Welcome, everyone. Good morning. We had another solid quarter, both in terms of our internal growth as well as our external investment activities. While over the past quarter, there has been significant volatility in the capital markets and legitimate concerns around inflation and economic growth, when we look at the fundamentals of our business, driven by tenant performance and tenant demand, the momentum that began a few quarters ago continues to exceed our expectations. When we couple this internal growth with external growth, either despite capital markets volatility or more likely as a result of it, our leasing traction plus our investment activity are positioning us for solid long-term growth.
In terms of leasing and tenant performance, as we noted last quarter, the reopening that began in early 2021 resulted in our second half NOI last year increasing by over 5%, and this above average growth is continuing to play out this year as well. Over the last quarter, we saw an improvement in our collections and our leasing activity. Most importantly, tenant demand and market rents continue to exceed our earlier predictions. Now, this is not to suggest that inflation, supply chain or recessionary issues are not relevant. Let's not lose sight of the strength of the job market and the strength of the consumer either.
As we think about which segments of our portfolio are likely to be the most resilient in this current environment, ultimately it's going to come down to where consumer spending will remain strong, which retailers have pricing power to hold onto their top line and their margins, or have wider margins to absorb supply shocks. Most importantly, where can we as landlords capture that growth? From that perspective, while I think most segments of our portfolio should be in good shape, the street portion of our portfolio seems to be particularly well-positioned to absorb the speed bump of inflation. The affluence of the consumers that our retailers serve will likely insulate our retailers in the event of a recession. In terms of inflationary pressures, a few things to keep in mind.
First, our street leases generally have stronger contractual growth and more fair market value rent resets than in our suburban assets. Second, tenant improvements, as well as operating expenses, are a much lower percentage of occupancy cost for our street-based retailers, thus less impactful on net effect of rent growth. Third, rents at many of our streets are at cyclical lows. In retailer sales, they're already rebounding rapidly. This means that many retailers are already doing sales well in excess of their pre-COVID volume, while rents are still in the early stages of recovery. Now, sales performance, both top line and bottom line, is obviously a critical driver of rent. The other key driver, the supply-demand ratio. After several tough years, the supply-demand dynamic is finally turning in our favor. For instance, on Green Street in Soho, a year ago, there were 14 vacancies on this corridor.
Today, there's one. Similarly for M Street in Georgetown, which got hit hard even before COVID. Because we and our partners control enough of the street, it has been rejuvenated in the last year by recent arrivals, including Everlane, Foxtrot, Faherty, and last quarter we added Glossier and GlossLab. Our forecast for a multiyear rebound in our portfolio is playing out nicely. Now, I appreciate that after several years of powerful headwinds hitting our retailers and hitting our portfolio, there remains a understandable fog around the rebound in physical store retail, especially in the urban corridors. Whether it's luxury in SoHo, digitally native on M Street, or advanced contemporary in Melrose Place, the recovery is happening faster and stronger than we expected.
As you have been reading in the papers and hearing from a wide variety of retailers, customer acquisition costs, halo effect, profit margins, they're all converting bricks and mortar skeptics into long-term tenants. Turning to the new investment side. Over the last couple of quarters, we're also seeing nice growth in investment opportunities, both for our core portfolio as well as for our fund. On the core side, our focus has been acquiring assets in high barrier to entry markets where tenant performance and demand are likely to drive market rents materially higher over the next several years. What we're focused on there is picking the right retail corridors where our retailers will want to cluster for a vibrant shopping experience, and then making sure that there are adequate barriers to entry such that the retailers are reluctant to move off the block.
Some of the markets we have successfully done this include Armitage Avenue in Chicago, Melrose Place in Los Angeles, Green Street in SoHo, Greenwich Avenue in Connecticut. Now, the markets I just mentioned were not immune to the headwinds of COVID, but they are rebounding quickly, and many are already performing better than pre-COVID. Our goal for our core investments is to have a combination of accretive going-in yield, but then more importantly, strong embedded long-term growth. This growth will come from contractual growth, a rebound in market rents, as well as value add components. For instance, in January, we closed on a $100 million portfolio in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. The portfolio is on Bedford Avenue, wrapping Third and Fourth Streets. Our portfolio is adjacent to the Apple Store, with our tenants ranging from Sephora to Sweetgreen, but also 23 residential units and a supermarket that's significantly below market.
Thus, we have an accretive yield going in, strong contractual growth, and then long-term value add opportunities as well. We made this investment through a recapitalization from the existing owner borrowers and lenders, all whom we knew well, and this enabled us to complete the transaction before it went to market. We also acquired one of the great corners in SoHo on the corner of Spring and Green with Bang & Olufsen as our tenant. Here, market rents are rebounding quickly, and this key corner has strong contractual growth plus poised for long-term upside. In West Hollywood in Los Angeles, we added to our presence there with an acquisition on Beverly Boulevard. Again, strong contractual growth and long-term upside from potential redevelopment down the road. Finally, in Dallas, we closed on a portfolio on Henderson Avenue, which is part of the Knox-Henderson corridor.
We have been studying the Dallas market in general and Henderson Avenue specifically for many years. The positive demographic shift over the last several years has turned Dallas into a must-have market for many of our retailers. Henderson, given the popularity of Knox-Henderson from a live-work-play perspective, will be an ideal entry point for many of our retailers. As I mentioned before, we're always looking for corridors with tenant demand and tenant performance that's similar to our entry in Armitage Avenue in Chicago or Melrose Place in Los Angeles. Additionally, we look for locations where the barriers to entry from a supply-demand perspective, where the current market rents, and then where the tenant performance enables long-term rental growth potential, and Henderson checks all these boxes.
Because of the significant growth in the residential market in Dallas in general and Henderson market specifically, the retail rejuvenation of this corridor is the next logical step. Henderson has long been an important corridor for great restaurants and a variety of more local tenancy. Then more recently, the digitally native retailers began showing up. Several years ago, it became clear that Henderson was ready to be taken to the next level, and prior ownership was successful in obtaining the zoning approvals for some key redevelopments, a process that took several years and was quite comprehensive. Before the plans could be implemented, COVID hit. We're now in a position to execute on those plans. The shorter-term value add for us includes some re-leasing that's already in the works, then adding some important new retail and parking in the midpoints of the street that will further connect the dots.
Further down the road, the Sprouts Farmers Market parcel will be a great redevelopment opportunity, which can add further densification and further upside. The size of this portfolio gives us a good initial starting point with additional investment opportunities down the road. From a pricing perspective for all of our acquisitions this quarter, while going-in yields will vary deal by deal. We are making sure that our acquisitions are both accretive, but then more importantly, have the kind of long-term growth that complements our existing portfolio. We see contractual growth from these acquisitions being about 3%, then incorporating growth from tenant roll and mark-to-market should take us to about 5% compounded annual growth. With the addition of value add redevelopment components, the growth and accretion is gonna be even higher.
Turning to the fund side, and I'll let Amy discuss this in detail, but last quarter, we closed on $130 million of deals that were previously under contract. Two deals are consistent with our Fund V strategy, and our fund investing remains very complementary to our platform and very profitable. Even with the rise in interest rates, we are still finding plenty of deals that pencil out. In short, our internal growth, driven by strong leasing, and our external growth, driven by our core and fund investments, puts us in a good position to continue to create the growth that we saw last quarter and we see going forward. I wanna thank our entire team for their hard work last quarter, and now I will turn the call to John.
Thanks, Ken, and good morning. We're off to a strong start with our first quarter results and full year 2022 earnings guidance exceeding our expectations. Our quarterly results reflected strong internal growth of nearly 10%, along with the accretion from nearly $380 million of core and fund investments. Our core balance sheet remains in great shape. We have ample liquidity with no meaningful upcoming core maturities. As I'll walk through shortly, substantially all of our core debt is effectively fixed for the next several years, thus mitigating our earnings volatility within our core portfolio should interest rates rise as anticipated. Now I'll dive into the details, starting with our quarterly results. Our first quarter earnings of $0.33 a share came in ahead of our expectations, driven by four key factors.
First, profitable rent commencements on new leases, driven by the sequential occupancy growth of 100 basis points this quarter in our street and urban portfolio. Second, we are continuing to see strength in tenant credit, with improvements in both our current period reserves as well as cash collections on past due accounts. Core collections exceeded 98% for the quarter, coming in above our expectations. Additionally, and aligned with the assumptions outlined in our initial guidance, we recognize the benefit of approximately $1.3 million or $0.01 per share of FFO from prior period cash collections. We had assumed 3-7 cents of cash recoveries from prior collections within our initial full-year 2022 guidance, and we are on track to land within that range with an expectation that the majority of these amounts will show up in the first half of the year.
Third, we are off to a strong start against our investment goals, closing on approximately $380 million of accretive core and fund deals. Fourth, and finally, profits from our fund business, with a gain of approximately $1.5 million or over a penny a share of FFO from the monetization of a Fund III investment that Amy will provide additional color. In terms of our 2022 earnings guidance, we conservatively increased our full year guidance, which at the midpoint represents year-over-year FFO growth in excess of 13%. I am optimistic that we have further earnings upside should we see this positive momentum continuing. Now moving on to our first quarter same store NOI. We also saw strength in our same store NOI with growth of 9.7%.
The growth over the comparable period was driven by three items. First, improved credit conditions with significant improvements in credit losses and abatements. Second, occupancy increases, including sequential improvements in our street and urban portfolio of 70 basis points this quarter. Third, positive cash spreads on leases that commenced during the quarter, including growth in excess of 15% on street leases that took occupancy during the quarter. Now it's also worth pointing out that our 9.7% same store growth this quarter is inclusive of the headwinds from cash recoveries that were included in our comparable prior results. As reflected in our numbers, we are on track to achieve our occupancy goals, but more importantly, and as Ken mentioned, we are feeling increasingly confident that we should be able to beat our rent expectations.
Thus, we remain optimistic on both our 2022 same store growth, but more importantly, with our continued expectation of 5%-10% internal growth for the next several years. This optimism is being fueled by the continued leasing velocity along with improving rental rates that we are seeing within our core portfolio. In addition to a 50 basis point improvement in our physical occupancy this quarter, we further increased our leased occupancy by an additional 90 basis points to 94.1% at March 31st. At a lease rate of 94.1%, the spread between our signed but not yet open space remains at an all-time high of 360 basis points. This represents approximately $7.5 million of pro rata ABR, or more than 5% of our annualized first quarter base rents.
Over 90% of the signed but not yet open leases are scheduled to commence during 2022, predominantly in the second half of the year. It's also worth pointing out that consistent with what we saw in our same-store growth this quarter, not only are we seeing growth from lease-up, we are also seeing meaningful growth in rental rates, with embedded rental growth in excess of 15% on these signed but not yet open leases as compared to the prior rents on the same spaces. While we are seeing solid growth across our suburban, urban, and street portfolios, it's worth pointing out that our current multi-year model has our street and urban portfolio outperforming our suburban assets by approximately 300 basis points. During the quarter, we recognized GAAP and cash spreads of approximately 11% and 8% respectively on executed new and renewed leases.
As we've said in the past, it's worth a reminder that not all lease spreads are created equal. For example, and with our own portfolio, assuming a 10-year lease term, we need to print a cash spread in excess of 25% on a suburban lease to achieve the equivalent economics of a 10% spread on a street lease. This is driven by the fact that we generally receive 3% contractual growth on a street lease compared to 1.5% growth from suburban. Lastly, I want to touch on a few items on our balance sheet. Starting with our strategy of managing our earnings exposure to interest rate volatility within our core portfolio. It's important to keep in mind that our overall core leverage is pretty modest, with a debt-to-GAV ratio in the low 30% range.
Our strategy is to utilize the interest rate swap market to hedge substantially all of our core long-term variable rate exposure. Thus, our core floating rate exposure, which ranges between 10%-20% of our core debt obligations, is generally limited to the short-term borrowings we use to fund our very profitable structured finance book. Furthermore, in addition to locking in substantially all of our core variable rate exposure through the swap market, we have virtually no upcoming fixed rate maturities within our core portfolio for the next several years. The final point on interest rates is our fund business. Amy will provide a fund debt update, but as you would expect, given the transitional nature of our fund investments and the need for flexibility, we have a higher percentage of variable rate debt.
Given our pro rata ownership of approximately 20% in our funds, the earnings impact is minimal, with forward-looking interest rate expectations already reflected in our guidance. Now moving on to acquisition funding. We have funded substantially all of our acquisitions, issuing approximately $125 million of equity year to date, inclusive of the roughly $95 million that we had announced on our prior call. The equity was sold under our ATM program at a gross issuance price of approximately $22.50. As a reminder, we have various avenues to access capital to fuel external growth, whether it's from the promotes embedded in our fund business, repayments from our structured finance book, monetizing our ownership interest in Albertsons, or retain cash flow.
Our core balance sheet is in great shape with no meaningful core debt maturities, along with ample liquidity on our corporate facilities. In summary, we had a very strong start to the year with increased optimism not only on our 2022 earnings, but also on our expectations of multiyear internal and external growth. I will now turn the call over to Amy to discuss our fund business.
Thanks, John. Today, I'd like to provide a brief update on our fund platform, beginning with Fund V. First, we are continuing to selectively add to our high-yield shopping center portfolio, which now totals approximately $1 billion. During the first quarter, and as detailed in our press release, we acquired two properties in Texas for a total of $130 million, both in partnership with DLC Management. Our blended cost basis for these two is approximately $170 per sq ft, which represents a substantial discount to replacement cost. La Frontera Village in the Austin MSA is a 535,000 sq ft open-air shopping center anchored by Kohl's, Burlington, Marshalls, and Old Navy. The population within a five-mile radius exceeds 250,000, making it the second most dense submarket in our Fund V portfolio.
Since acquisition, we have already executed a lease with Boot Barn for 21,000 sq ft, increasing the lease rate from 90% to 94%. Next, Wood Ridge Plaza in The Woodlands is a 210,000 sq ft retail property comprised of three retail centers located along the highly trafficked Interstate 45, which sees nearly 240,000 vehicles per day. The property is currently 88% occupied. Key tenants include Kirkland's and Skechers, with an opportunity for some value add leasing. Including these recent acquisitions, we've now allocated approximately 85% of our $520 million of Fund V capital commitments.
As previously discussed, our Fund VI investor discussions are progressing, and in the meantime, we still have approximately $200 million of gross buying power in Fund V, which we expect to deploy before the end of the fund's investment period in August. While we haven't yet seen a material shift in cap rates due to the bumpiness in the capital markets, we are seeing that certainty of execution matters more to our sellers, and sponsorship not only matters more to our lenders, but also seems to be having a material impact on borrowing spreads. Overall, we like how we're positioned on both fronts. Turning to dispositions. This year, we remain active sellers across our fund platform. For example, in Fund III, as previously discussed, in February, we completed the $66 million sale of Cortlandt Crossing, a supermarket-anchored property in Westchester County, New York.
Additionally, recall that Fund III previously owned a portfolio of 11 self-storage properties under the StoragePost banner. This portfolio was sold in 2012, but Fund III retained its 50% interest in StoragePost's operating company. During the first quarter, this remaining opco interest was monetized for $6 million, of which the REIT's share was $1.5 million. As a result of these recent dispositions, we are now within striking distance of our embedded promote in this fund. Additionally, during the first quarter, we completed the sales of the last two properties in Fund IV's Northeast Grocery portfolio for a total of $45 million. Turning to the balance sheet. As of the first quarter, we have $365 million of fund debt that is expiring in 2022 without extension options. This excludes our two capital commitment-backed subscription facilities.
Of this amount, about 30% or $108 million is spread over four loans and is expected to be refinanced or extended in the normal course of business. The balance or $257 million pertains to City Point, our mixed-use property in downtown Brooklyn, which is anchored by Target, Trader Joe's, and Alamo Drafthouse. The City Point debt matures during the third quarter, and we are well underway on a refinancing. While we have had to navigate this property through a few different challenges, among them the global financial crisis and the COVID-19 pandemic, we believe that City Point is well-positioned to thrive in the years ahead. For example, over the past decade, the population within a 10-minute walk of City Point has grown 52%. At the property level, momentum continues to increase. Since August of last year, we've executed six new leases.
The largest of these is Primark, an exciting addition to our anchor lineup. We continue to position City Point as a must-visit destination for necessities as well as specialty shops, food, and entertainment. In conclusion, our fund platform remains well-positioned with a successful capital allocation strategy and a portfolio of existing investments that continue to march towards stabilization. At this time, we will open the call to your questions.
Ladies and gentlemen, if you have a question or a comment at this time, please press star then the one key on your touchtone telephone. If your question has been answered or you wish to remove yourself from the queue, please press the pound key. Our first question comes from Todd Thomas with KeyBanc Capital Markets.
Hi. Thanks. Good morning. First question around investments. You know, pretty strong start to the year in terms of capital deployment. Sorry if I missed this, but John, is there any change in the updated guidance for core and fund investment activity relative to the $300 million-$500 million range that was included in the initial guidance? Can you comment a little bit more broadly around the investment pipeline and whether you're changing investment hurdles for either the core and/or the funds where you would tend to utilize a little bit more leverage?
Yeah. Todd, on the first point, so we did not update any of the individual detailed assumptions that we put out at year-end. I'll turn over to Ken to provide an update on pipeline and how we're thinking about that.
Yeah. Todd, I think it's fair to assume that our acquisition team is not going on vacation. Especially because our fund business is not dependent on the public capital markets, we have much more latitude on that side. You should expect to see us revise that or certainly update it on a quarterly basis. We've always struggled with two months ago, putting out our annual guidance and then having to update each component of it. Since we have met our yearly goals already, I think it would be a fair assumption to expect us to be busy.
As it relates to pricing in the capital markets, I do think, especially for the Fund V suburban shopping center acquisition, I do think we will be able to be somewhat more opportunistic because the selling community, while trying to digest the movement in rates and perhaps moving on pricing, perhaps not, and I've read enough debate about it that I'm not going to predict. What I will tell you already is that certainty of execution, having buyers, sponsors who have a proven track record of closing, have the capital, everything that our fund business stands for, that proven track record and certainty of execution is of increasing importance already. We're also seeing that on the borrowing side, where the spread for first-tier borrowers versus the general population of buyers has shifted. That also should work to our benefit.
Final piece is, I'm not sure exactly what it means around specific going-in yields, but I believe we can continue to buy high-quality fund assets at a discount to replacement cost, where our going-in yield represents the majority of the growth, but tenant interest remains stronger than we expected three months ago, six months ago, 12 months ago. There may be more value add upside in some of the deals that counterbalance some of the concerns around interest rates. Now, on the core side, I do think, again, because of certain corridors that are ready to be activated where we can see long-term growth, dependent on our capital recycling opportunities, dependent on our cost of capital in the public markets, there it's less about interest rates.
We don't use a lot of debt and all those other moving pieces, but I do think there are gonna be continued interesting, accretive buying opportunities once we get through the current speed bumps that we're all trying to wrap our heads around.
Okay. That's helpful. If we could just shift to the investment in Dallas in the quarter along the Knox-Henderson corridor there. Can you talk about what kind of development and sort of redevelopment spend you're contemplating as you look ahead and what the expected timeframe and yield expectation on any incremental spend might look like?
Sure. We're only going to be investing incremental dollars where the yield makes sense. To the extent that it's more like a redevelopment than just a retenanting of space, there you're gonna wanna see unlevered yields in the 7%-8% and beyond. Based on what we see right now, we think there's enough tenant demand that all that plays out. We don't have to do it unless it is meaningfully accretive, and so far so good. As I mentioned in my prepared remarks, prior ownership did a very good job of a surprisingly long and dynamic approval process. They got stalled with COVID. The pieces are in place for us to take this corridor and continue the vision that the prior team.
I'm hoping some of the prior team very well may stay involved 'cause they believe in it. One way or another, taking this from a more heavily food and beverage focus, still accretive for us, and into more of a 24/7 live-work-play variety of retailers, is that our tenants say they're ready to come here, the population is ready for it, and that's where you're gonna see this growth. Now in terms of timing, I think it's over the next 24 months to five years, Todd. We could put our initial $85 million. We're gonna be in for $100 million no matter what, but then that could double or triple on Henderson Avenue if the stars align.
That's the kind of position we wanna be in because if we're gonna take the time and effort to see this turnaround, we wanna see that it could be a meaningful avenue for capital deployment profitably in a market that is geographically different than SoHo, let's say, but is very complementary to a lot of the projects you visited, Todd, with us, whether it's Armitage Avenue in Chicago, M Street, or Melrose Place in L.A., and the list goes on and on. It's very complementary to what we do. It's very complementary to some of the movement demographically and otherwise, and it helps reinforce our position as a dominant player in this kind of street retail.
Okay. That's helpful. Just to be clear, you're saying the investment along that corridor could double or triple over that timeframe. That's so, you know, $200 million or $300 million total investment opportunity in and around that corridor.
Yeah.
in total.
Let me explain that. What we've learned over the years is while we may wanna take a small investment in a marketplace and see if we can grow it, what always works best for us is where we can make a meaningful enough investment day one, but then also through additional acquisitions, additional redevelopment, really dominate that given marketplace. This has all of those attributes for us, including having a spine where retailers are gonna wanna congregate and not move down the road because supply and demand, barriers to entry for our retailers matters.
Okay, great. Thank you.
Our next question comes from Linda Tsai with Jefferies.
Yes. Hi. Morning. What is competition like for buyers of street retail assets? I think previously you said you were seeing less competition, and if this is still the case, who's dropped out?
Let's be clear. In our world, everything's retail, so we think, oh my gosh, there's competition everywhere. Retail, even open air retail, is still in institutional disfavor, so it's just a smaller group overall. Most of the capital, as we all know, that has reentered, has been around the COVID-friendly, supermarket anchored, and a variety of those type investments. The street retail investors of prior cycle, it's not that they necessarily dropped out, but if you think about even within the public markets, there were two or three primarily office REITs that have or had strong retail presence. They're not active. There was GGP, which had a very active presence, and I preferred not to compete with them on given deals. They have obviously moved on through their privatization and focus elsewhere. In the private markets, there are good competition.
There's one or two funds out there that are very smart, very good. We got to work hard to stay one step ahead of them. There are two or three other institutions, but compared, Linda, to prior cycles, where we're seeing the kind of rental recovery, not only in SoHo, not only in Williamsburg, but in a variety of other markets. In other cycles, there has been much more competition, and thankfully, that's not there right now. It's still a tough business, made that much more difficult by the volatility in the marketplace, but there's just less today, thank goodness.
Thanks. It seems like there are bears on their urban recovery thesis. What are your street retail tenants telling you as it relates to traffic and sales in terms of how they're trending relative to expectations?
Yeah. The first thing, this caught us off guard climbing out of COVID. We thought in a live work play environment that work was gonna be the critical piece, and thus return to office. Office activation was gonna be the critical leading indicator. Turned out we were wrong. Return to the apartment was the leading indicator. For any of you trying to rent an apartment in Manhattan, good luck. For those of you who rented a year ago and think you're gonna renew up a few percentage point, good luck because that market has bounced back, and then what we saw is with the residential rebound, our retailer sales rebounded commensurately. It's not been a return to work, which was the old urban narrative. It's really about a different dynamic. Now, that's not true everywhere. Some markets are still lagging.
Certainly, those markets that really are 18-hour urban office markets or Midtown Manhattan, if you own a salad bar, yeah, you're gonna feel it. Thankfully, that's not our business. While there are some areas that we look forward to their rebound, for the vast majority of what I've been talking about, our retailers are telling us they are not only comping positive to the dark days, they're comping positive in their sales prior to their pre-COVID sales. That's because while we can be negative about a whole bunch of different issues in the economy, we can't lose sight of the fact that physical retail real estate has been re-embraced by so many tenants because it's being re-embraced by the shopper. They wanna get out, and thus, those sales are showing up already.
That's helpful. Thank you. Just last one. When you look at the core acquisitions year-to-date, how do you compare the different growth profiles between the Williamsburg collection, the Henderson assets, West Hollywood, and Spring Street?
A lot of it depends on what are gonna be the key drivers of above contractual growth. If it is simply top line and then bottom line sales growth, then some of them just through rollover and Green Street might be really strong. My hunch is that while we will see above contractual growth across the board for everything you mentioned, my hunch is that some of the more significant value-add redevelopment densifications that can occur to almost all of the deals we talked about because in most of them, we own the ground level street retail and above, that the redevelopments over time will then provide that next layer of significant profit, as it should, because there we're going to have to roll up our sleeves and add more value. We'll see over the next several years.
What I like, though, day one, if you have 3% contractual growth, and almost without exception, we do. If day one, it looks like tenant sales and thus tenant demand and thus our rents are gonna grow in excess of that 3%, we feel like we're in a pretty good position to complement our existing strong internal growth. Then down the road as some of these other events occur, it can be that much more accretive.
Thank you.
Our next question comes from [uncertain] Mailman with Citi.
Hey, it's Michael. Ken, I was wondering just in terms of the pipeline, and your acquisition pipeline has been growing, you know, obviously throughout last year, and obviously you started looking at opportunities even prior to that in the throes of COVID. The environment, obviously, you talked a little bit about interest rates, but, you know, the environment overall has changed pretty meaningfully over the last 30-60 days. I'm just curious how you're sort of underwriting your pipeline, how are your discussions with your partners going in terms of opportunities, and really the discussions with the retailers, and whether the last 30-60 days, whether it's the inflationary environment, whether it's interest rates, whether it's the war, is there's so many elements that are putting pressure on the environment. I'm just wondering if it's changing at all, the way you're underwriting and the way you're approaching transactions.
Michael, the challenge with you is I'm always trying to find a song to make.
Yeah
... answer this, and I'm struggling, but I may have to chime in later when I can think of it. Let's touch on a few different pieces. Just 'cause there is just no doubt that there has been so much change over the last 30, 60, 90 days, and for us to stick our heads in the sand would be inconsistent with who we are as a company. Let's start on the retailer side. I spoke to a friend of mine who's the CEO of a major retailer this morning just to double-check, are you seeing any signs of the consumer tapping out in your different businesses? The answer was not really. Now, let's just all keep in mind what this means.
First of all, the shift from the COVID spend, the pull forward for that kind of retail versus what you're seeing now, that shift is still playing out. Secondly, the consumer is in strong shape. They feel very good about their jobs, and especially, again, for the type of retailers, Michael, that we are primarily doing business with. We do business with dollar stores, and we do business with a variety of other retailers, ranging from Target to supermarkets. On the discretionary side, that's the one that I'd say we need to watch the most closely, given all these uncertainties. The consumer is showing up in the stores because they wanna get out, and because they have dollars in their pocket, and because they feel good about their jobs, and if they've owned a house for the last couple years, they feel good about that.
The retailers climbed out of this feeling very good about bricks and mortar as part of omni-channel. In terms of demand, so far it's holding up. We're being more cautious in terms of watching it more carefully, thinking about their balance sheets, thinking about the structure of leases, certainly thinking about inflation. In terms of the capital markets, the negative is borrowing costs are up. The positive around this is there were many sellers, and you and I discussed this during the dark days of COVID. If you own high-quality retail real estate, you froze. For the most part, we didn't see a lot of good trades around that stuff. They started coming back. They started saying, "You know what? We'll sell to the highest bidder 'cause there's so much capital." Now they're saying, "I need certainty of execution.
I need to know this is getting done," and that inures to our benefit. I can't tell you what this means in terms of pricing, what it means in terms of opportunities, but it's not all bad. Although a lot of the headaches that our economy has to go through are unfortunate, they're also probably inevitable, and we get through those.
I guess, are you adjusting pricing at all on the deals to account for the environment? Or, you know, and I recognize you also have a lot of loans coming due this year, predominantly fund-oriented, and so you likely have a pretty good sense of where you can finance some of these deals at, but I'm just trying to get a sense of whether, t here's been any change at all on your cost of capital and what you're willing to spend?
Right. We are not immune to rising base rates. Thankfully, we have a strong lending pool, so we get good execution. Our underwriting has taken this into account, and so you shouldn't expect. Assuming that everyone's kind of base to bearish case about interest rates, you should assume that's in our numbers in terms of refinancing of existing assets or otherwise. John walked through we're very well hedged on the core side. Now, in terms of pricing for new deals, absolutely that has to come into play. Counterbalancing it is maybe deals that we previously weren't winning the bid on, maybe we win now. Let's not lose sight of strong tenant demand. I would tell you, I am incrementally bullish on retailer demand based on everything we're seeing. I am obviously concerned about interest rates.
We think about when we buy something, well, what is the total return over the next five years? We will take the new interest rate environment into place, but also the growth that comes with it.
Just lastly on new markets, you talked a little bit about the Texas acquisition. Is there anything in pipeline where you have other new markets that you're looking at that we should expect you to close on?
Expect us to close on? Maybe, maybe not. Michael, you know, because way back when, we all toured our assets in Miami, thankfully we sold those at the right time. Florida is certainly an additional market that's gotten a nice lift, and we've played well in that. There are other markets as well. I'm not gonna predict the specific markets, but you should assume every year, every multiple years, we're saying where within our core competencies do our tenants wanna be, would they prefer to be with us than the next folks, and can we make those investments accretively? Another way of saying that is I do believe our relatively small platform remains very scalable within our core competencies in forever markets, and the definition of forever markets has evolved, and there's no reason we can't evolve with it.
Thank you.
I didn't come up with the song. Sorry, Mike.
It's okay.
Our next question comes from Craig Schmidt with Bank of America.
Great. Thank you. It appears that your small shop occupancy has improved over the pre-COVID levels, but your total occupancy still falls below. I'm wondering, A, what drove the huge gain in small shop occupancy this last quarter, and then when the overall occupancy may return to pre-COVID levels?
John, you wanna start with that, and I have some observations as well.
Yeah. Craig, what I will always give the caveat is that our occupancy, given just the range of rents in it, is usually not the best proxy, just given the difference between a street rent and a suburban rent. I always start with that every basis point of occupancy is not created equal. I think we're, you know, on the street and small shop space, we did see, and as we talked through COVID and we walked through our pipeline, we did see a lot of activity in our street and urban spaces, which tend to fall into that category. There was an outsized growth in lease up in that effort.
In terms of timing, I would say we're at 94% leased today. As we've talked about, that velocity is continuing. I would say we get to what we view as full economic occupancy next 12-18 months. I think is still our target.
Let me add to that, Craig. These are observations that I think we all know, but we kind of forget. Dating back to the global financial crisis, our mom-and-pop tenants, our satellite tenants, they got crushed because they lost all their financing. Really, 2010 to 2014 or so, they were just getting back on their feet. From 2014 until COVID hit, we saw consistent strength there. Now, COVID took some of them out, but thanks to PPP, thanks to a variety of other interventions, our shop space remained very much more healthy going through this last COVID recession than the global financial crisis. You're seeing that continue to run up.
Of all the areas that I'm concerned about is we will see with inflation and supply chain and potential recession is, are those tenants well-positioned to deal with shifts in the consumer and otherwise? So far, that looks good. So far, rents are at peaks, at least decade long, and so we feel good about that. Our goal there is to maintain it, make sure we have those right satellite tenants who can withstand whatever bumps are in front of us. Conversely, street retail, as you know, got hit two, three years hard before COVID, got hit during COVID, and that recovery is right in front of us off of rather than decade highs, significant lows, and that's why I think you'll see significant gains on that side.
Great. Just one other. Did your due diligence on the Henderson Avenue portfolio include checking with your retailers if they have an appetite for this location?
Craig, they're our first call.
Obviously, they're
We don't pretend to know what they want. We just simply listen when they tell us what they want.
Great. Okay. Thank you.
Our next question comes from Mike Mueller with J.P. Morgan.
Yeah. Hi. Maybe sticking with Henderson for a second. Ken, you talked about the potential to double or triple that investment. How much of that is tied to visible development or redevelopment as opposed to incremental acquisitions?
Half and half, very roughly, Michael, and I guarantee you I'm wrong on that estimate, 'cause we'll see. There are additional parcels we could buy over time, but the stars have to align for that. What I hate is creating a lot of value and then letting other folks just ride the coattails, but we've got 15 parcels now, and our acquisition team is busy in conversations. So we'll see based on the amount of retailer demand, timing, and everything else out there. I did mention, at one end of the avenue, we have a freestanding Sprouts supermarket with a very large parking in front of it, and that is ripe for redevelopment someday.
Someday because there's a thriving retailer there who would like to be part of a densification and redevelopment, but they have a seat at the table that we have to be respectful of, and that's why I couldn't predict when, let's say, that redevelopment occurs. Then there's other land parcels that we can activate much sooner and put dollars to work over the next couple of years. I can't predict exactly which component hits when. What I can tell you is, assuming things play out the way I think they will, and the way we've seen in other markets we've been involved with. I think the right combination of densification, redevelopment, and acquisition. If I had to guess today, I'll stick to half and half of the triple.
I promise you, we will update you periodically, maybe not every quarter, but periodically as that capital gets deployed.
Got it. I may have missed this, I apologize, but when you were talking about cap rates, you started heading down the path without talking about cap rates for one to two acquisitions. What was the cap rate on the year to date, including Henderson core acquisitions and the year-to-date fund investments?
On the fund side, and give or take, and I'll bracket it with about 100 basis points more or less in either case, 'cause it really depends on what year two or year three NOI looks like. We don't buy just going in, but Fund V, Amy, I'd say it's been between 7% or hovering in the 7s, give or take 50 basis points.
That's right.
Going in with a lot of moving pieces. Remember, it was a complicated recapitalization in Williamsburg and a whole host of other things that I've mentioned, probably about a five with some of these assets stabilized trading in the low 4s, and we just need to get them to stabilization, and then others probably hovering into the 5s.
Got it. That was it. Thank you.
Sure.
Our next question comes from Paulina Rojas with Green Street.
Good morning. My apologies if I missed this, but are you confirming your prior same property NOI growth items of between 4% and 6%? I didn't see any explicit mention to it.
Yeah. Hi, Paulina. We did not update any of our individual assumptions within our guidance, but I think in my prepared remarks sort of indicated we are feeling pretty good about the year given the strong start. Haven't updated it, but feeling very optimistic based upon our lease pipeline and what happened in the first quarter.
Should I read that that you're probably expecting to be closer to the high end of your prior guidance? Or what, I'm not sure how to read that comment.
That would be an appropriate way to think about it. You know, not giving specific guidance, but that would be the way we're thinking about it, particularly as the first quarter came in, our pipeline and leasing velocity is playing out. That's certainly how we're trending.
Okay. Regarding bad debt, it seems that in the quarter, reserves for the current period were much really better than expected. I wonder if that is changing your perspective for the entire year or if there is any nuance there?
No, I think that was one of the things we highlighted that it did come in stronger than we expected. Some of the, you know, the remaining few tenants that weren't paying us were in the office-dependent location, so a pretty nominal amount. We're seeing return to office come back and those tenants up and functioning. You know, Paulina, fingers crossed. We, you know, think that's trending also in a positive direction.
Okay. Thank you.
I'm not showing any further questions at this time. I'd like to turn the call to Ken Bernstein for any closing remarks.
Great. Well, thank you everybody for joining us. We'll speak to you next quarter and keep you updated on all of the progress that we continue to make.
Ladies and gentlemen, this concludes today's presentation. You may now disconnect and have a great day.