Greetings and welcome to Easterly Government Properties second quarter 2022 earnings conference call. At this time, all participants are on a listen-only mode. A question and answer session will follow the formal presentation. If anyone should require operator assistance during the conference, please press star zero on your telephone keypad. As a reminder, this conference is being recorded. It is now my pleasure to introduce your host, Lindsay Winterhalter, Vice President of Investor Relations. Thank you. You may begin.
Good morning. Before the call begins, please note the use of forward-looking statements by the company on this conference call. Statements made on this call may include statements which are not historical facts and are considered forward-looking. The company intends these forward-looking statements to be covered by the Safe Harbor Provisions for Forward-Looking Statements contained in the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 and is making this statement for the purpose of complying with those Safe Harbor Provisions. Although the company believes that its plans, intentions, expectations, strategies, and prospects as reflected in or suggested by those forward-looking statements are reasonable, it can give no assurance that these plans, intentions, expectations, or strategies will be attained or achieved.
Furthermore, actual results may differ materially from those described in the forward-looking statements and will be affected by a variety of risks and factors that are beyond the company's control, including, without limitation, those contained in Item 1A, Risk Factors of its annual report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31st, 2021, which was filed with the SEC on February 28th, 2022, in its quarterly report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended June 30th, 2022, to be filed with the SEC on August 2nd, 2022, and in its other SEC filings, and risks and uncertainties related to the adverse impact of COVID-19 on the U.S. regional and global economies, and the potential adverse impact on the financial condition and results of operation of the company.
The company assumes no obligations to update publicly any forward-looking statements, whether as a result of new information, future events, or otherwise. Additionally, on this conference call, the company may refer to certain non-GAAP financial measures such as funds from operations, funds from operations as adjusted, and cash available for distribution. You can find a tabular reconciliation of these non-GAAP financial measures to the most comparable current GAAP numbers in the company's earnings release and separate supplemental information package on the investor relations page of the company's website at ir.easterlyreit.com. I would now like to turn the conference call over to Darrell Crate, Chairman of Easterly Government Properties.
Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us for this second quarter conference call. Today, in addition to Lindsay, I'm also joined by Bill Trimble, the company's CEO, and Meghan Baivier, the company's CFO and COO. We had another strong quarter at Easterly Government Properties. We continue to add high quality, mission-critical assets to grow and diversify our portfolio. Like others, we are seeing a shift in the market. It seems we are entering a period of price discovery for our assets. We are optimistic about the effect this market dynamic will have on our business, particularly in the medium and long term. We're seeing marginal buyers exit the market, and we believe that there are developers in our space that have bid on projects with the expectation that cap rates would continue to decline. They may find themselves overextended as these projects approach completion.
We expect both of these dynamics will have a positive effect on our ability to gain bull's-eye assets over the next 24 months. Further, during times of uncertainty, we believe our strategy delivers predictable results to investors. We concentrate on mission-critical assets that serve enduring missions. During challenging times, our assets become more relevant and valuable. The gun toters can't work from home, critical response functions can't be executed from home offices, and if a recession is near, the crime business will be up. These agencies that we serve will be called to action. Our facilities will be serving their occupants effectively. While the asset side of our balance sheet is well curated, our liability structure also provides investors with confidence. Meghan's done a great job terming out our debt. Additionally, we have limited rollovers in the next several years.
We do hear questions about the effects of inflation on the value of our assets. As many of you know, our leases have provisions that protect our investors from accelerating operating costs. Inflation also improves the value creation related to renewal activity. Meghan will further describe some of the positive effects that inflation has on our portfolio. We're pleased with how the company is positioned as we look forward, and we'll continue to execute our business strategy with the intent to deliver safety and stability to our investors. The goal is to deliver an attractive risk-adjusted return to our shareholders that is backed by tenants that represent the full faith and credit of the United States government. With that, I'll turn the call over to Bill to give you insights into the second quarter results.
Thanks, Darrell, and good morning. Thank you for joining us for our second quarter earnings call. Starting with acquisitions during the second quarter, Easterly through our joint venture acquired the fifth and sixth brand new VA facilities located in Birmingham, Alabama and Marietta, Georgia. They are part of our previously announced 10-building portfolio.
Subsequent to quarter end, we were pleased to add the seventh facility to the portfolio, VA Columbus, a brand new VA facility located in Columbus, Georgia. Currently, the remainder of the assets in the VA portfolio continue to deliver as planned, and we expect the JV to close on approximately $145 million of this portfolio throughout 2022. In addition to the VA properties, Easterly had two wholly owned acquisitions during the second quarter. The first was the National Archives and Records Administration Warehouse in Broomfield, Colorado. NARA Broomfield is a build-to-suit warehouse constructed in 2012 and is 100% leased to the General Services Administration on behalf of NARA pursuant to a 20-year lease, which does not expire until May 2032.
NARA Broomfield is one of 18 facilities strategically located throughout the country that holds permanent and temporary records created by federal agencies and courts across seven states. To ensure the preservation of these important documents, the facility was specifically constructed to the exact needs of the National Archives, providing for optimal environmental controls and to maintain certain set points for both temperature and humidity. Aside from its important building attributes, it is also worth noting that our acquisitions team funded part of this acquisition through the issuance of operating partnership units at an accretive price of approximately $21 per unit. Once again, demonstrating the strength of an operating structure. Our second wholly owned acquisition in the quarter was an FBI field office located in Tampa, Florida. Remaining true to our original thesis of owning Class A mission-critical facilities, FBI Tampa defined this investment criteria.
With an in-place lease that does not expire until November 2040, this 138,000 sq ft trophy asset is enhanced by a number of important security features, including, but not limited to perimeter fencing, controlled access, blast protection, security setbacks, vehicle barriers, magnetometers, and skid space. With this acquisition, Easterly now owns 13 or just under a quarter of the 56 FBI field offices located throughout the country. We continue to monitor the acquisition pipeline as we believe we are now seeing cap rates backing up from the bottom as the market's cost of capital has shifted. We continue to see potential cap rate accretive NAV enhancing transactions and will remain focused on only the best opportunities within our niche market.
As discussed last quarter, private equity understands the unique nature of the GSA lease structure that protects us as landlords from inflation-induced operating cost increases and have gotten more active in the space. We believe this heightened interest drives value in the Easterly portfolio and introduces the potential to recycle capital in the back half of 2022. Turning to leasing updates, our asset management team continues to secure renewals that lengthen the duration of our government backed cash flows and enhance the portfolio's NAV. In the second quarter, we renewed the ICE facility located in Louisville, Kentucky, for a new 15-year non-cancelable lease term. This renewal, coupled with the FBI Birmingham and EPA Kansas City executions from the first quarter, represents three successful re-leasing exercises in the first half of 2022.
The remaining renewals for 2022 include the DEA laboratory in Dallas and the FBI field office in Little Rock, both of which we are considering strong bull's-eye assets in the Easterly portfolio. As of quarter end, negotiations on both leases are well underway, and we look forward to providing updates in future quarters. Finally, our FDA laboratory is now in the final stages of design drawings, which should lead to a restart in the near term. We estimate this facility will be delivered in the second quarter of 2025. In closing, we had a strong first half of the year and expect the trajectory to continue into the second half of 2022. The Easterly team will continue to execute on its disciplined strategy of acquiring the most important assets leased to the federal government.
We will work with the GSA and underlying tenant agencies on upcoming renewals and look to non-speculative development opportunities that can provide attractive returns. With that, I thank you for your time this morning, and I'll turn the call over to Meghan to discuss the quarterly financial results and capital markets executions.
Thank you, Bill. Good morning, everyone. It was another strong quarter for Easterly, and we are pleased to share our results and how we view the company's positioning in the current market environment. As of June 30th, we owned 93 operating properties comprising approximately 9 million leased sq ft, either wholly owned or through our joint venture, with one additional development project in design totaling approximately 162,000 sq ft. Through the acquisition of newer facilities, the weighted average age of our portfolio remains young at 13.9 years. Successful long-term renewals at existing properties have also allowed us to sustain a lengthy weighted average remaining lease term of 9.9 years. As previously mentioned, maintaining a young portfolio age and a long weighted average remaining lease term is reflective of our strategy of owning relatively new build-to-suit assets with enduring missions.
We believe this strategy provides us with distinctive future cash flow visibility, which in turn allows us to prudently manage the company's balance sheet and support our accretive acquisition and development project pipeline. Turning to our second quarter results, all on a fully diluted basis, net income per share was $0.08, FFO per share was $0.33, and FFO as adjusted per share was $0.33. Our cash available for distribution was $29.5 million. Turning to the balance sheet. At quarter end, the company had total indebtedness of approximately $1.3 billion, with approximately $307 million available on our line of credit for future acquisitions and development-related expenses. As of June 30th, Easterly's net debt to total enterprise value was 40.5%, and our adjusted net debt to annualized quarterly pro forma EBITDA ratio was 7.2x.
With a weighted average debt maturity of six years and over 88% of all outstanding debt fixed at attractive levels, I am pleased with our company's positioning as we navigate a rising rate environment. With a focus on leverage, I would like to touch on how we view our balance sheet positioning as we enter the second half of 2022. As Bill noted, we believe now is a good time to actively look at recycling capital. There is strong embedded value in the portfolio that we believe is being recognized by private players in our market. We ended the quarter with leverage of 7.2x, a level that was a deliberate decision by the company as we have approximately $92.5 million in proceeds of unsettled forward equity available to us.
Consistent with standard practice, we will inform the market if and when deals are completed. We like how the balance sheet is positioned and we are watching the market evolve. We believe Easterly is armed with the right set of tools to navigate the second half of the year and beyond. This quarter, our board approved an inaugural stock repurchase plan of up to 5% or approximately 4.5 million shares of the company's outstanding shares. The stock repurchase plan, the previously mentioned unsettled forward equity, and our strong banking relationships will ensure we remain aligned with our consistent commitment to allocating capital in a way that drives the greatest value for shareholders. The company and its shareholders view Easterly as a Steady Eddy REIT, and we intend to continue being the consistent and dependable segment of the real estate sector we have always been.
Finally, as Darrell and Bill mentioned, an inflationary environment serves as a real strategic benefit for Easterly compared to other REITs. Due to the build to suit nature of our assets, the cost of constructing another facility upon lease expiration is increasingly less desirable for the government, and our existing asset is further distinguished as the natural, cost-effective renewal option for the GSA and the underlying tenant agency. Further, the unique nature of our leases allows for NOI protection. While shell rent in most of our leases is flat, GSA leases generally contain an operating expense base, which grows uncapped with increases in urban CPI, thus protecting us against NOI degradation in an inflationary environment. To be clear, the relevant urban CPI index as of June 30th, 2022, was 9.8% higher than one year ago.
Turning to our earnings guidance, the company is maintaining its FFO guidance per share on a fully diluted basis in a range of $1.34-$1.36. This guidance is predicated upon $200 million-$250 million of wholly owned acquisitions, the closing of properties in the VA portfolio totaling approximately $145 million at the company's pro rata share, and up to $10 million in growth development related investment during 2022. At its midpoint, Easterly remains on track to continue our record of steady FFO growth year-over-year. With that, we thank you for your commitment to our thesis and appreciate your partnership. I will now turn the call back to Doug.
Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, at this time, we will be conducting a question and answer session. If you'd like to ask a question, you may press star one on your telephone keypad. A confirmation tone will indicate your line is in the question queue. You may press star two if you would like to remove your question from the queue. For participants using speaker equipment, it may be necessary to pick up your handset before pressing the star key. Our first question comes from the line of Michael Griffin with Citi. Please proceed with your question.
Hey, thanks. Darrell and Bill, you talked a little bit in your prepared remarks kind of about cap rates and kind of how you're seeing them maybe expand a little bit. Could you expand on that a bit? Sort of have you seen any asset trades sort of quantifying where you're seeing cap rates and maybe where you expect it to trend sort of in the near term?
Well, I think we've certainly seen 25 basis points of movement. I think, Michael, the thing is, it's sort of an uncertain time. Things are moving right now. We did see the FBI Baltimore transaction fall apart earlier this year. I think what we really are trying to do is figure out when we get a real balance and can figure out what the actual pricing should be. I think as Darrell mentioned, we see a lot of opportunities out there. Our acquisitions team's doing all of their work. I think until things settle down, I think we want to make sure that we are not the elephant in the swimming pool making a lot of splashing out there.
I think the bid ask has probably a bigger range than we've seen in a very long time.
Great. That's helpful. Just maybe a quick question on office utilization. I know y'all mentioned that, you know, it's maybe not affecting you as much relative to other traditional office peers, but I feel that, you know, you may see some headlines around, you know, the federal government trying to bring people back in the office and, you know, this might be starting going in fits and starts. Kind of curious, can you maybe quantify the percentage of your portfolio that might kind of be impacted in sort of that delayed return to the office area?
Well, I think the great news is our folks have always been working throughout the pandemic, so not really a factor for us. I will say, you know, about 85% of our buildings are those build to suit facilities that had very heavy usage, like the FBIs that Darrell alluded to, the DEA laboratories, that have really necessitated the folks being in there the whole time.
You know, as you know, more of our plain vanilla missions are about 15% of the overall portfolio, and they are occupied as well. I think though that, as you heard President Biden mention in the State of the Union address last winter, that the efficiency of the federal government may be compromised by working from home, and that there has been a huge backlog over the last years of COVID, and that the government does do a better job in their office space, which I think is probably not a great surprise to all of us. We are not particularly impacted. Luckily, those buildings that we'd say are more plain vanilla in our portfolio, vast majority have been renewed for substantial 15-year terms just in the last several years.
We're pretty happy to be where we are right now, and those build-to-suit facilities are humming along all the time as they have been throughout the entire pandemic.
Okay. That's it for me. Thanks for the time.
Thank you.
Our next question comes from the line of Michael Carroll with RBC Capital Markets. Please proceed with your question.
Yeah, thanks. Bill, with your comments that cap rates are kind of up about 25 basis points and you're still trying to figure out the right valuations, I mean, should we expect that investment activity for DEA is gonna slow at least in the third quarter? Is that fair? Will it pick back up in the fourth quarter to hit your guidance?
Well, I think, you know, I think that the question is when things. We don't know yet. I mean, I don't know if we aren't gonna see something in a couple of weeks. I don't necessarily know if we're gonna see something in a month. I do see a lot of activity out there, and it's gonna be these sellers realizing that now is a better time to sell than probably later. I think you can rest assured that we're gonna be very careful and not do anything that isn't, you know, at least FFO neutral or positive or cap rate accretive. And we, you know, from that standpoint, we're gonna maintain our course.
There are plenty of opportunities out there, but I think we really do need to see some sort of certainty and clarification of the market before we're gonna jump in wholesale. More to come.
Okay. Is there, I guess, risk to the investment guidance? I know I think you have about another $110 million to that. I mean, is that something that you're willing to take into 2023 if the market valuations don't kind of settle out by then?
Well, I can't comment now what's gonna happen next year except for the fact that I think we're seeing plenty of opportunities. So far, it's steady as you go from our standpoint.
Yeah.
There's a lot of uncertain factors out there, and I think that we're probably the most certain of the rates that you're following right now into what we're seeing.
Yeah. It is, Darrell. I mean, something I'd add is, this is really where market position, you know, favors, you know, the folks, you know, who sort of occupy a dominant position, and that's us. I mean, you do have these developers who I mean, you know, they all have Excel spreadsheets, and so folks are beginning to look at interest rates, understand, you know, where the water gets kind of above their head. You know, we've had, you know, more calls with folks, you know, offering us an opportunity or a partnership to be, you know, involved in their projects.
As we've seen in the past, you know, that ultimately translates into, you know, people, you know, needing help in ways that can be very accretive to our shareholders. None of that's gonna abate soon, so I think we really could see some activity as, again, you know, our acquisitions, you can't predict by week or month. You know, they're few in numbers, so they're lumpy. But that said, you know, the conversations that are happening are productive, and I think we're. As I said, you know, we're very confident in the medium to long term about, you know, the change in these dynamics and what it means for shareholders.
Okay, great. Can I go back to, I guess, the transaction market? I know Bill and Meghan both mentioned that you're looking to potentially recycle capital now. What type of assets are you looking to sell, and what are the valuations on those specific properties? I'm assuming that you've already having discussions on those, given that you implied that something could happen in the back half of the year.
Well, I think, you know, in the market environment we're in, that and we've mentioned before, that's another tool in our toolbox, and that's something that we could do. I think that it would not be surprising to folks that as we acquire wonderful portfolios and buildings over the years, there are buildings in those portfolios that are not as central to our bull's-eye or mission as others. They would be terrific properties for other owners in the government space, but maybe not adhering to all the discipline points that we have. I think that's just a natural opportunity for us, and we would avail ourselves of it if the correct pricing and market conditions warrants it.
Without saying anything, I think, you know, that would be on our radar screen, and we'll be sure to talk about it when there would be any certainty to that. Obviously, those properties would probably not be if we were looking to sell something in, you know, the FBI zone, but maybe something in, Michael, you know this very well, probably the buildings that are more plain vanilla or would have missions that are geographically challenged for us as a REIT.
Okay, great. Just last one for me. Could we get an update on the Atlanta, I guess, build to suit? I know that's been kind of in the design phase for a little while now. Is there a expectation that that can kind of break ground soon?
Yeah. I'll start and hand it to Meghan. Yes, the answer is finally. I think the wonderful thing is folks on this call should be reminded, we do non-speculative development. That's certainly very important in general and particularly important right now. This project was off and running as our third FDA laboratory just before COVID broke out. The government basically had a lot of things on their mind and a lot of people working from home, and I think got sidetracked a little bit, which obviously wasn't terrific for anyone. Now we are, thanks to our team, Mark Bauer, Michael Ibe, have worked very hard on getting this back on track with the federal government.
I think we'll be in future quarters talking about the renewal of people on site and building this amazing laboratory for the FDA. Yes, I think we're finally there. It's been a lot of work. It certainly hasn't been from our side, the issues, but I think the government now realizes that they better get going. We're confident, and I've said this is the first time I've said that in a little while, that this will be underway in the near future.
Thank you.
Our next question comes from the line of John Kim with BMO Capital Markets. Please proceed with your question.
Thank you. You had mentioned price discovery and cap rate expansion back in your last call and at the June Nareit. Since that time, the 10-year compared to June, but the 10-year's come down 70 basis points. I was wondering if your asset type is more tied to 10-year than the typical office assets, or is it purely based on funding costs?
Yeah. I mean, look.
John, good morning. It's Meghan. Obviously, there is definitely a correlation to tenure. I think we also see a little more tying in the private market participants to something more in the 5-7 range, in terms of how they think about their financing today. You know, absolutely, it's everybody in our market is looking to those base rates and spreads as well, as we settle in here to where cap rates are starting to normalize.
Yeah. You know, and again, it's not precise science, but you know, as we've looked over time and we think about you know, a 1-point move you know, a 100 basis point movement in the 10-year as we've correlated cap rates over time, you think of that as you know, being sort of 14-17 basis points in cap rate. I mean, that's in the classroom and you know, the real world is different. If you ran regressions and other things, that's the kind of level of correlation that you can imagine.
Given the price discovery and increased acquisition opportunities that you're seeing or foreshadowing, are you less inclined to buy back shares on your share repurchase program than when you first instituted it?
I mean, the answer is no. I think it's a tool that's in our toolbox. You know, as we talk about you know potential you know dispositions and we you know look at the environment that we're gonna move into, we're gonna have every corporate finance tool available to maximize return for our shareholders.
Just to clarify on capital recycling, are these, you know, purely gonna be third-party sales or is it an opportunity to sell assets into your joint venture?
Yeah. Currently, we'd be considering third-party sales. Obviously we do have a third party, excuse me, a joint venture partner who is very eager to continue to deploy capital into this space. We're always looking for opportunities to continue that relationship as well. Outside of the scope of this potential capital recycling.
As you have identified those opportunities, did any components of your bull's eye target change, and that's the reason for the sales at this time?
No, I think that's one thing that we're trying to adhere to, and I would say absolutely no changes in that area. I think that one thing, just to sort of reiterate, and Darrell mentioned this, is the competitive environment for buying these properties. There are a couple folks out there that we have happily sparred with for the last 10 years or 12 years that are knowledgeable. There were a whole lot of new players we saw in the last 12 months-18 months that simply cannot get financed in this market. I think from the standpoint of our acquisitions going forward, we are very pleased that a number of these players have dropped out on the fringes, and I think it just bodes for a terrific opportunity, as Darrell mentioned.
From our standpoint, we're pretty excited about the prospects for being able to manage this market much more effectively than we've been able to for the last 18 months.
That's very helpful. Thank you.
Our next question comes from the line of Peter Abramowitz with Jefferies. Please proceed with your question.
Yeah, thank you. I just wanted to ask, within the acquisition markets, are there any portfolio deals that are out there, that you've been looking at? Even if ones that you're not considering is, have you observed kind of a difference in pricing between those and kind of one-off single assets?
Well, I think that, you know, we've always said there are a number of larger portfolios out there. This is probably not a time you're seeing a lot of that occurring. I think that people do value portfolios more, in that it's difficult to put some great buildings together right now, obviously. Always I think there's a premium on the portfolio acquisitions. We've enjoyed several of them, as you noted, and of course our JV opportunity that we're still purchasing now. I think there is a premium to portfolios for sure.
Okay. On the development side, I know it's a fair amount of legwork here with FDA Atlanta, as you mentioned earlier. Just wondering if you could go into a little bit more detail on kind of the broader opportunity set.
Yeah
kind of, you know, what we could expect potentially over the next year.
Well, I think and I'll let Meghan step in as well. I think this is really gonna be a really exciting area. You got a couple things going on. As Darrell mentioned, some of the smaller regional developers in this space are having troubles getting financing. The government has been slow, and so initial indications of what they need in a new development project can change. These smaller developers cannot figure out what pricing's gonna be for the next one to two, three or whenever. You've seen it in Atlanta. Imagine if you were a small developer out on the line with a construction loan trying to get that building done. I think that the government understands that pricing is only going up.
Inflation is not their friend, and so they're gonna wanna move quicker on some of these development projects in the next several years. I think there's gonna be more room, certainly for the more successful developers that we know, including ourselves, for opportunities, and we're certainly gonna avail ourselves of that. Just like I mentioned in the space of acquisitions, I think this is a good spot for the larger, more seasoned and well-capitalized folks within this business to see some great opportunities. A lot of those smaller developers I think are going to be selling to some of these larger players like us. We will be standing by with a life ring and ready to help out, and we've done this in the past.
As you'll recall, the FEMA Tracy was a wonderful opportunity that our development team took on from another developer. From that standpoint, I'm pretty excited about what we might see in the next several years.
Got it. That's all for me. Thank you.
Our next question comes from the line of Michael Lewis with Truist. Please proceed with your question.
Great, thank you. You know, your cash flow growth, the last handful of quarters has been quite strong. It looks like a lot of that is due to capital expenditures going down on a year-over-year basis. You know, I might have expected the opposite given inflationary pressures and growth in the portfolio. Could you just talk a little bit about, you know, what's happening on the CapEx front and on your cash flow growth?
Hey, Mike. Good morning. Absolutely. The dynamic you're seeing over the last couple quarters, in terms of FFO conversion down to FFO adjusted and CAD is coming from a couple places. One, obviously, as we've worked through some renewals, over the course of last year, our free rent burden has lifted a bit in the first half of the year. That's to the tune of about $2 million. You also, you know, we've talked about this for years, but the effect of the amortization of above and below market leases continues to be that burn off is, while a headwind to FFO growth, obviously creates more conversion to cash.
You know, that's contributing about another $1 million when you think about sort of the six-month year to date, year-over-year comparison. From a CapEx perspective, that's always one where we really look to think about over a more medium term arc and trying to live in that $1-$1.50 per foot. We will obviously oftentimes wait for renewals to occur to ensure that we are fully up to speed on some of our maintenance capital items. That can ebb and flow, but over the longer term, medium to longer term, you are gonna still see that $1-$1.50 per foot range.
Okay. Do you expect cash flow growth to be better than FFO growth, you know, as far as we could see, or is it tough to determine that at this point?
Yeah. When I look out over the next two to five years, that dynamic on the above/below burning off, as well as the effect of continuing to buy younger assets, which require less in terms of maintenance capital, yes, that's an expectation I have for the portfolio.
Okay. Great. Just last from me, a clarification on how the expense reimbursements work. I think you, Meghan, said something about the CPI. I understand CPI escalators when they're applied to rent, but for expenses, don't you just get expense reimbursement based on what the actual expenses are over the place here? I'm not sure what the CPI has to do with that. Maybe I heard wrong or I misunderstood.
No. I appreciate the question. Let's set the record straight on that. Inherent to our rent is an agreed upon OpEx base. Every year, starting from the first year, that base, let's call it $8 a foot, accretes or grows on a compounded basis annually with urban CPI. At the end of the lease year, the year-over-year index comparison is made, and that increase is added to the OpEx base for the ensuing year. No, it's not actually tied to actual operating expenses, but I will say that we are well matched in terms of our current base and accumulated reimbursements above that base to our actual operating expenses.
We do have that nice sort of insulation from NOI degradation by virtue of being well matched.
Okay, I understand. I guess it's possible, you know, a property say their taxes or their utilities don't go up as much as the CPI. It still would be, you know, CPI applied to that base year. To your point, you're kind of protected from an overall inflation standpoint.
Yeah, that's right. It's a broad CPI index and has proven certainly today to be providing the protection that we would expect it to.
Okay. Got it. Thanks a lot.
As a reminder, it is star one to ask a question. Our next question comes from the line of Bill Crow with Raymond James. Please proceed with your question.
Hey, good morning. A question for you. Based on your comments on competitors kind of pulling back from the marketplace and price discovery, just given your dominance in the space, I'm wondering if it doesn't make sense for you to pull back further and for longer, maybe help push rate yields on acquisitions up even further.
Well, Bill, I think that, you know, we are definitely not gonna be the last group standing to validate expensive prices. You can figure that we have the foot on the brake and the accelerator. We are not gonna keep marking the market, you know, all the way as the cap rates increase. We're gonna be very careful there. We agree that there is absolutely no reason to shoot ourselves in the foot by playing ridiculous prices in the market.
Yeah.
You know, so you're dead on. As to the timing, that you know, when the turnaround occurs, there's a whole lot of reasons, as you might be heading into a recession, that things, opportunities could move quicker than we even see. Rest assured, we, and I wanna use the term correctly, we're not, you know, on the sidelines not watching the game. We are eagerly watching, but and not running in until we see the right plays being called.
Great. Can you remind me when the forward equity sale has to be completed?
We have 12 months from the end of the quarter to settle our forward equity.
Great. Great. Then this is not really a comment on Easterly, but it's amazing how, gosh, the last couple of decades, you know, times like this where stocks are going down helps management to identify non-core assets. I'm just curious whether you had thought about capital recycling, you know, last year or the year before, you know, as a viable source of financing instead of just hitting the equity markets.
I think we've always thought of it. Boy, don't we wish we all thought of this on, maybe December 15th or something, or executed on December 15th. I think that, you know, we balance a lot of different things, and there's new knowledge coming in all the time. I think that, you know, you're correct. During these periods, turndowns, it's a wonderful opportunity to really go through and figure out what's core and non-core to our particular business. That's what we're doing right now.
Okay. That's all for me. Thank you.
Thank you.
There are no further questions in the queue. I'd like to hand the call back over to Darrell Crate for closing remarks.
Great. Thank you, everyone, and thanks for joining the Easterly Government Properties second quarter 2022 conference call. We appreciate your time this morning, and we look forward to keeping you appraised of future developments as they occur.
Ladies and gentlemen, this does conclude today's teleconference. Thank you for your participation. You may disconnect your lines at this time, and have a wonderful day.