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Earnings Call: Q3 2021

Oct 28, 2021

Operator

Morning, and welcome to Getty Realty's Earnings Conference Call for the third quarter of 2021. This call is being recorded. After the presentation, there will be an opportunity to ask questions. Prior to starting the call, Joshua Dicker, Executive Vice President, General Counsel, and Secretary of the company, will read a safe harbor statement and provide information about non-GAAP financial measures. Please go ahead, Mr. Dicker.

Joshua Dicker
EVP, General Counsel, and Secretary, Getty Realty

Thank you, Operator. I would like to thank you all for joining us for Getty Realty's third quarter earnings conference call. Yesterday afternoon, the company released its financial results for the quarter ended September 30, 2021. The Form 8-K and earnings release are available in the investor relations section of our website at gettyrealty.com. Certain statements made in the course of this call are not based on historical information and may constitute forward-looking statements. These statements are based on management's current expectations and beliefs and are subject to trends, events, and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from those described in the forward-looking statements.

Examples of forward-looking statements include our 2021 guidance, and may also include statements made by management in their remarks and in response to questions, including regarding the company's response to the COVID-19 pandemic, future company operations, future financial performance, and the company's acquisition or redevelopment plans and opportunities. We caution you that such statements reflect our best judgment based on factors currently known to us, and that actual events or results could differ materially. I refer you to the company's annual report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2020, and subsequent quarterly reports filed on Form 10-Q, and our other filings made with the SEC for a more detailed discussion of the risks and other factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those expressed or implied in any forward-looking statements made today.

You should not place undue reliance on forward-looking statements, which reflect our view only as of the date hereof. The company undertakes no duty to update any forward-looking statements that may be made in the course of this call. Also, please refer to our earnings release for a discussion of our use of non-GAAP financial measures, including our definition of adjusted funds from operations or AFFO and our reconciliation of those measures to net earnings. With that, let me turn the call over to Christopher Constant, our Chief Executive Officer.

Christopher Constant
President and CEO, Getty Realty

Thank you, Josh. Good morning, everyone. Welcome to our earnings call for the third quarter of 2021. With Josh and me on the call today are Mark Olear, our Chief Operating Officer, and Brian Dickman, our Chief Financial Officer. I will lead off today's call by providing an overview of our performance for the third quarter of 2021, and highlight the company's investment and capital markets activities. I'll pass the call to Mark and Brian to discuss our portfolio and financial results in more detail. The net result of our well-positioned in-place portfolio and the continued execution of our active and accretive investment program was a 5.8% increase in total revenues, a 13.2% increase in adjusted funds from operations, and a 6.4% increase in AFFO per share.

The company benefited from the stability of its portfolio of convenience and automotive retail assets, which continued to perform well, meaning that we had another quarter of full rent collections, including all amounts owed to us as a result of our 2020 COVID-related rent deferments. The success of our investment strategies year to date has been a key contributor to our earnings growth. We invested $61.1 million in 25 properties during the quarter, and another $8.8 million just after quarter end, bringing our year-to-date total investment activity to more than $144 million. This accelerated pace of investment activity was highlighted by our ability to bring new high-quality tenants into our portfolio, including Flash Market, with sites located across the southeastern U.S., and Splash Car Wash, whose footprint spans the Northeast.

We also continued to successfully execute on our multiple investment strategies, which include traditional sale-leasebacks, accretive acquisitions of net leased properties, and development funding for new to industry assets. In addition, rent commenced on three redevelopment projects during the quarter, including our second and third projects with 7-Eleven for remodeled C&G locations in the Baltimore and Dallas Fort Worth MSAs, bringing our completed projects to 22 since the inception of our redevelopment program. We also announced yesterday that we successfully amended and extended our $300 million credit agreement, which now will mature in October 2025. The improved terms of our facility further validate the company's platform and strong performance over the last number of years.

When combined with our active ATM program, which we've used to raise more than $50 million this year, and our strong balance sheet, we continue to have access to capital and the right credit profile to support our growth objectives. Given our performance year to date, I am pleased that our board approved an increase of 5.1% in our recurring quarterly dividend to $0.41 per share. This represents the eighth straight year with a dividend increase. Our board believes this annual increase is appropriate as it maintains a stable payout ratio and is tied to the company's growth over the past year.

Furthermore, we are again pleased that our year-to-date accretive investment activity has positioned the company to raise its 2021 AFFO per share guidance. I want to reiterate our commitment to effectively executing on both new investment activity and the active asset management of our portfolio. Our teams continue to work diligently to source and underwrite new opportunities to invest across our target asset classes, including convenience stores, car washes, automotive related retail properties in strong metropolitan markets across the country, as well as to unlock embedded value through selective redevelopments. We believe our success year-to-date demonstrates our ability to source opportunities that align with our investment strategies, and that will continue to drive additional shareholder value. With that, I will turn the call over to Mark to discuss our portfolio and investment activities.

Mark Olear
EVP and COO, Getty Realty

Thank you, Chris. As of the end of the third quarter, our portfolio includes 1,011 net lease properties, five active redevelopment sites, and five vacant properties. Our weighted average lease term was approximately 8.8 years, and our overall occupancy, excluding active redevelopments, remains constant at 99.5%. Our portfolio spans 36 states across the country, plus Washington, D.C., and our annualized base rents, 63% of which come from the top 50 MSAs in the U.S., continue to be well covered by our trailing twelve-month tenant rent coverage ratio of 2.6 times. In terms of our investment activities, we had a highly successful quarter in which we invested $61.1 million in 25 properties.

Subsequent to the quarter end, we acquired two additional properties for $8.8 million, bringing our year-to-date investment activity to $144.5 million across 82 properties. We completed two transactions in the convenience and gas sector during the quarter. The first was a 15-property sale-leaseback with Flash Market, a subsidiary of Transit Energy Group. In this transaction, we invested $35.1 million to acquire the properties, which are located throughout the southeastern United States with a concentration around the Raleigh-Durham, North Carolina MSA. Properties acquired have an average store size of 3,600 sq ft and an average property size of 1.7 acres. In addition, 53% of the properties have subtenancies with either quick serve restaurants or auto service operators. We also completed our first development funding project with Refuel in the Charleston, South Carolina MSA.

Our total investment in the project was $4.5 million, including our final investment of $1.1 million during the third quarter. As per the terms of our development funding transactions, we acquired the property upon completion of development in conjunction with our final funding payment, and simultaneously entered into a long-term triple net lease. In the car wash sector, we completed three transactions in the quarter. We acquired two newly constructed properties from WhiteWater Express Car Wash in Michigan for $7 million. These properties were added to our existing unitary lease with WhiteWater. We also acquired two additional properties for an aggregate purchase price of $8 million, which are leased to GO Car Wash in San Antonio, Texas, and Las Vegas, Nevada, MSAs. Additionally, we acquired our first property with Splash Car Wash, which is located in New Haven, Connecticut MSA.

Our purchase price was $4 million for the property. In the auto service sector, we acquired our first Mavis Discount Tire property. We invested $4.6 million to acquire the property in the Chicago, Illinois MSA. Getty also advanced $1.2 million of development funding for three new industry convenience stores with Refuel in the Charleston, South Carolina MSA, bringing the total amount funded by Getty for these projects to $8.9 million at quarter end. As part of this transaction, we will accrue interest on our investment during the construction phase of the project, and we will expect to acquire the properties via sale-leaseback transaction upon completion and final funding. The weighted average initial lease term of our completed transactions for the quarter was 14.6 years, and our aggregate initial cash yield on our third quarter acquisitions was 6.7%.

Subsequent to quarter end, we acquired two properties in the Burlington, Vermont MSA from Splash Car Wash. Purchase price was $8.8 million, and the cap rate was consistent with our year-to-date acquisition activity. We ended the quarter with a strong investment pipeline and remain highly committed to continuing to grow our portfolio of convenience and automotive retail real estate. We expect to pursue that growth through continued sourcing of direct sale-leaseback, acquisitions of net lease properties, and development funding for new industry assets. Moving to our redevelopment platform. During the quarter, we invested approximately $331,000 in both completed projects and sites which remain in our pipeline. In addition, rent commenced on three redevelopment projects during the quarter, including two 7-Eleven convenience stores and one property leased to BJ's Wholesale Club, which is adjacent to one of our newly constructed superstores.

In aggregate, we invested $0.5 million in these three projects and generated return on investment capital of 43%. At quarter end, we had eight signed leases or letters of intent, which includes five active projects and three projects at properties which are currently subject to triple net leases and have not yet been recaptured from the current tenants. The company expects rent to commence at two additional development sites during the fourth quarter of 2021.

In total, we have invested approximately $1.9 million in eight redevelopment projects in our pipeline and estimate that these projects will require a total investment by Getty of $7.4 million. We project these redevelopments will generate incremental returns to the company in excess of where we can invest these funds in the acquisition market today.

Turning to our asset management activities for the quarter, we sold one property during the quarter, realizing $2.3 million in gross proceeds and exited five lease properties. We expect the total net impact of these activities will have de minimis impact on our financial results. As we look ahead, we will continue to selectively dispose of properties that we determine are no longer competitive in their current format, do not have compelling redevelopment potential. With that, I turn the call over to Brian to discuss our financial results.

Brian Dickman
EVP, CFO, and Treasurer, Getty Realty

Thanks, Mark. Good morning, everyone. Let me start with a recap of earnings. AFFO, which we believe best reflects the company's core operating performance, was $0.50 per share for the third quarter, representing a year-over-year increase of 6.4%. FFO was $0.48 per share for the quarter. Our total revenues were $40.1 million, representing a year-over-year increase of 5.8%. Rental income, which excludes tenant reimbursements and interest on notes and mortgages receivables, grew 7.5% to $34.3 million. Strong acquisition activity over the last 12 months and recurring rent escalators in our leases were the primary drivers of the increase, with additional contribution from rent commencements at completed redevelopment projects. On the expense side, G&A costs increased in the quarter, primarily due to employee-related expenses, including non-cash stock-based compensation.

Property costs decreased marginally due to reductions in real estate tax expense. Environmental expenses, which are highly variable due to a number of estimates and non-cash adjustments, increased in the quarter due to certain legal fees and changes in net remediation costs and estimates. We turn to the balance sheet and our capital markets activities. We ended the quarter with $567.5 million of total debt outstanding, including $525 million of long-term fixed-rate unsecured notes and $42.5 million outstanding on our $300 million revolving credit facility. Our weighted average borrowing cost was 4%, and the weighted average maturity of our debt was 6.3 years. In addition, our total debt to total market capitalization was 29%.

Our total debt to total asset value was 37%, and our net debt to EBITDA was 5.1x. Each of these leverage metrics are calculated according to the definitions in our loan agreements. As Chris mentioned yesterday, we announced the amendment and extension of our $300 million revolving credit facility, which is now set to mature in October 2025, with two six-month extensions, where we have the option to extend to October 2026. In addition to extending the term, we were able to reduce the interest rate by 20-50 basis points, depending on where we are in the leverage-based pricing grid, and amend certain covenant provisions to align with those generally applicable to investment-grade rated REITs. We also amended each of our outstanding unsecured notes to conform to the new credit facility covenant provisions.

All in all, this was a good transaction for Getty. We reduced our cost of capital, improved some terms, and importantly, demonstrated the continued support of our bank group and unsecured noteholders. With the credit facility extended, our nearest debt maturity is now the $75 million of senior unsecured notes that come due in June of 2023. Moving to ATM activity, we continue to be selective with our equity issuance during the quarter, raising $19.8 million at an average price of $31.12 per share. Year to date, we've raised a total of $50.1 million through the ATM. We think about our future capital needs more broadly. We remain committed to maintaining a strong credit profile with meaningful liquidity and access to capital, low to moderate leverage, and a well-laddered and flexible balance sheet.

With respect to our environmental liability, we ended the quarter at $47.8 million, which was a decrease of approximately $300,000 from the end of 2020. For the quarter, net environmental remediation spending was approximately $1.3 million. Finally, as a result of our investment in capital markets activities in the first nine months of the year, we're raising our 2021 AFFO per share guidance to a range of $1.93-$1.94 from our previous range of $1.89-$1.91. Our guidance includes transaction activity completed year to date, but does not otherwise assume potential acquisitions or capital markets activities for the remainder of 2021.

Factors which may impact our guidance include variability with respect to certain operating costs and our expectation that we will remain active in pursuing acquisitions and redevelopments, which could result in additional expenses, including certain property demolition costs and transaction costs for deals that are ultimately not completed. With that, I will ask the operator to open the call for questions.

Operator

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 Brad Heffern with RBC. Please proceed with your question.

Brad Heffern
Director, RBC

Hey, good morning, everyone. Thanks for taking the questions. On the acquisition front, I was just wondering if you could talk through how deal flow looks right now. Obviously, the $61 million number was pretty robust. Do you think that that's a sustainable run rate number, or how are you viewing that?

Mark Olear
EVP and COO, Getty Realty

Yeah, this is Mark. I can comment on, you know, our pipeline, as I mentioned, in the comments, is very healthy. We're very happy with where it is. The flow of opportunities we're seeing and, you know, warrant full underwriting is ahead of where it was this time last year. We continue to grow our opportunity sets and our relationships and all the, you know, retail verticals that we've now expanded into. You know, I'd say that, we're pretty happy with what we have to look at, and we look forward to, you know, reporting on more as we go forward.

Brad Heffern
Director, RBC

Okay. I appreciate the increased disclosure on the escalators. I was curious for the CPI-linked escalators, do those have caps? You know, the escalator guidance ticked up by 10 basis points is part of the reason that CPI linkage or any color you can give on that? Thanks.

Brian Dickman
EVP, CFO, and Treasurer, Getty Realty

Yeah. Hey, Brad. It's Brian. The CPI, it's a small number of leases. One of them just happens to be somewhat material dollar amount. It's not the, you know, typical escalator clause we have in the leases. They do have floors and ceilings, so they're collared, which is pretty typical when you have that structure. In terms of the tick up from the 1.6% to the 1.7%, we did have the Flash Market deal, the Transit deal that has 2% annual escalators. That's probably the difference there again on the round.

Mark Olear
EVP and COO, Getty Realty

For the most part, I think what we're seeing in our negotiations and the deals we're closing are the structures that are in line with the majority of our deals, which are annual escalators, you know, in 1.5%-2% range.

Brad Heffern
Director, RBC

Okay, thank you.

Operator

Our next question comes from the line of Lizzie Doykan with Bank of America. Please proceed with your question.

Lizzie Doykan
Equity Research Analyst, Bank of America

Hi, good morning, everybody. This is Lizzie on for Joshua Dennerlein. I'm just curious to see if you guys can comment on any specific opportunities to accelerate redevelopment plans for 2022.

Mark Olear
EVP and COO, Getty Realty

You know, we have a constant effort to deliver with the returns that we've reported, deliver at you know as high a volume and as fast a pace as possible in the redevelopment program. You know, there are certain barriers to growing that materially from where we are today with respect to extracting properties from leases. You know, the marketing efforts, the entitlement efforts are always a challenge. You know, the typical development hurdles that you experience in getting these projects through permitting and construction. You know, I think right now the pace we're on is about what we see. You know, again, we have a constant effort by the asset management team to call opportunities out of the portfolio, but there are certain restrictions and obstacles to significant growth at that pace.

Lizzie Doykan
Equity Research Analyst, Bank of America

Okay. My second question is how are your C-store tenants thinking about electric vehicles and working to capitalize on that trend? I don't know if you guys have any more insight into that as that's becoming more of a hot topic.

Mark Olear
EVP and COO, Getty Realty

Yeah. Yeah. I think it's been a hot topic for several years now, with our operators who are on the ground. You know, there are certain operators that are evaluating adding charging stations, right, at their properties. Now, just to caution everyone, that's not gonna be a charging station at each and every property. There are certain properties that lend themselves more towards longer commutes or longer driving times where a charging station really fits well. You know, the goal for our operators, right, is to drive traffic not only to their locations for fueling or for charging, but for convenience store items and food, beverages.

What you've seen is sort of a concerted effort by tenants, right, with we've talked about this in the past, you know, membership programs or loyalty programs, right, to drive traffic to the location, whether again, it's charging or gas or adding a car wash on site. Most importantly, the food and the convenience store items within the store. I think what you can expect in short is that you'll start to see our operators, right, again, where it makes sense for them, adding charging stations at certain properties.

Lizzie Doykan
Equity Research Analyst, Bank of America

Great. Thank you.

Operator

Our next question comes from the line of Todd Thomas with KeyBanc Capital Markets. Please proceed with your question.

Todd Thomas
Managing Director and Senior Equity Research Analyst, KeyBanc Capital Markets

Hi. Thanks. Good morning. Just first question on the investments completed in the quarter. Sorry if I missed this, but can you just discuss the cap rate or the initial yields on those investments? Can you discuss you know sort of the environment in general around pricing, you know, the competition that you're seeing and whether you're starting to you know see any you know reduction in yields or cap rate compression as you you know move forward with future investments?

Mark Olear
EVP and COO, Getty Realty

The market's been active in the verticals that we're targeting. Certainly, it's competitive, it's attractive set of retail operations. The cap rates were compressing kind of coming out of last year and certainly in through this year. We continue to acquire in that range of mid-sixs to seven is the market for the product we're looking at. It's active. We feel we're competitive. I'm not sure what the run rate will be here over the next few quarters of the continued compression. I think we're priced accordingly on the asset side.

Todd Thomas
Managing Director and Senior Equity Research Analyst, KeyBanc Capital Markets

Okay. That's helpful. I just wanted to follow up on the rent escalators across the portfolio. So you commented, Brian, on you know, the increase to 1.7 from 1.6. You know, talked about the Flash Market deal and, you know, some other deals are closing. Do you expect CPI increases to have any impact on that 1.7% annual rent escalation in the near term? I mean, do you expect to see that improve as we move into 2022 from that current annual rate?

Brian Dickman
EVP, CFO, and Treasurer, Getty Realty

I don't think you'd see anything material there, Todd. You know, we use the floor, right, of the collars on the CPIs in our calculation. And it's in every three-year reset. As again, we're talking in our portfolio, it is really a handful of leases, just one of them happens to be a larger unitary lease. And it's in every three-year reset, and it's got the floor and it's got the ceiling. No, I don't expect that to have any significant impact on our operations here as we sit here today.

Todd Thomas
Managing Director and Senior Equity Research Analyst, KeyBanc Capital Markets

Okay. Got it. You know, just in terms of the balance sheet and funding investments, you know, as we move ahead here, you've obviously utilized the ATM a little bit. You know, leverage ticked up just slightly 5.1x debt to EBITDA from 5x last quarter. Can you just remind us, you know, what the long-term target leverage level is for the company and sort of where you see that trending in the near term?

Brian Dickman
EVP, CFO, and Treasurer, Getty Realty

Yeah. I think we're in a really good position when it comes to capital. Just generally speaking, there's significant capacity on the revolver, significant headroom within leverage. We've typically, you know, guided in the 4.5-5.5x , allowing for, you know, opportunities to maybe tick up a little bit above that into the higher fives if it was appropriate. Sitting where we are at 5x , 5.1, again, significant headroom there. Capital markets are broadly constructive. I think we're in a place where, you know, you'll see us execute as we have been. We'll utilize the revolver, we'll utilize the ATM.

If there's an opportunity or a need, you know, to look for permanent capital, I think, as we sit here today, again, I think we have options and markets are broadly, you know, constructive, you know, to our asset class and our business.

Todd Thomas
Managing Director and Senior Equity Research Analyst, KeyBanc Capital Markets

Okay. All right. Great. Thank you.

Operator

Our next question comes from the line of John Massocca with Ladenburg Thalmann. Please proceed with your question.

John Massocca
VP and Equity Research Analyst, Ladenburg Thalmann

Good morning, everyone. With regards to the Flash Market deal, I guess, if you could provide some color on how that was sourced, you know, why they were a seller of the real estate, and was that transaction maybe typical of what you're seeing in the pipeline today for C store deals?

Christopher Constant
President and CEO, Getty Realty

Yeah. So specific to the Flash Market deal, obviously they're an existing chain. They are in the process of acquiring some regional competitors. The transaction was really a combination of sale-leasebacks on existing owned sites, but also part of the overall acquisition financing. Again, sourced direct through our team here and, you know, pretty typical of what we've been able to do specifically, you know, in the C&G space and car wash space. As we expand into the other asset classes, you know, we gain those long-term relationships. That's what we hope to do as we broaden our investment thesis.

John Massocca
VP and Equity Research Analyst, Ladenburg Thalmann

It sounds like it was kind of, you know, smaller M&A. I mean, is that something you're seeing accelerate or continue as we kinda look forward into 4Q, maybe even 2022?

Christopher Constant
President and CEO, Getty Realty

Well, I think just the asset classes that we are targeting, C&G, car wash, auto service, you know, those are asset classes that we've been saying have been consolidating for a number of years now. You know, again, this is sort of what we think we do well, right? Is kind of partner with operators who are growing, taking market share, right? Becoming a dominant presence within their region or even nationally and you know, establish a long-term partnership. We hope to do more with all of these types of tenants over time as they grow their businesses.

John Massocca
VP and Equity Research Analyst, Ladenburg Thalmann

I feel like I remember, and maybe this was pre-pandemic, it felt like, you know, pricing was getting kind of lofty and maybe slowing down some of that M&A, and kind of tenants and potential tenants. Has that been re-accelerating over the last couple of quarters?

Christopher Constant
President and CEO, Getty Realty

No, I think the pricing, specifically on the very large transactions, right, was where we saw, I guess, pretty high multiples. Again, this is talking about the operating businesses in the M&A context. You know, again, I don't wanna comment on their deal specifically, but there are opportunities where one competitor, you know, can acquire, you know, either a direct comp within a market or enter an adjacent market, and do it, you know, at an attractive price. You gain scale, specifically in C&G and car wash, right? There are certain synergies that are able to be realized in pretty short order. That certainly helps from an operator's pricing on the M&A side.

John Massocca
VP and Equity Research Analyst, Ladenburg Thalmann

Okay. Bigger picture, you know, as you kind of look back at how the portfolio, your portfolio has performed historically, during periods of kind of rising gas prices, as we kind of see gas prices kind of moving upward, is that gonna have any impact, you think, potentially on tenant credit, just, you know, if there is some kind of pressure on visitation and, I know they can kind of pass a lot of that pricing on to consumers, but, you know, historically, has there been any kind of impact on how tenants perform during periods of rising gas prices?

Mark Olear
EVP and COO, Getty Realty

Yeah, certainly, you know, rapid movements in wholesale pricing, right, has been historically a declining retail margin environment. We have a slide actually in our investor presentation, which goes through kind of the change in retail margins over the last several years. I think one thing you're seeing is there has been a steady shift upwards in retail fuel margins over the last several years. If you think about you know, pricing and demand for fuel, we expect that trend to continue and be stabilized there at a higher level. I'm not trying to call a specific you know, cents per gallon margin, but just at a higher level on a permanent basis.

I think that's gonna help our tenants pass along a lot of the higher costs to the consumer.

John Massocca
VP and Equity Research Analyst, Ladenburg Thalmann

Okay. That's it for me. Thank you very much for the question.

Operator

Our next question comes from the line of Wes Golladay with Robert W. Baird. Please proceed with your question.

Wes Golladay
Senior Research Analyst, Robert W. Baird

Hey. Good morning, guys. Can you talk about how the composition of the pipeline is changing? Is it more driven by new relationships maybe versus a few years ago? Obviously making some progress on the car washes, but you did do a tire store deal this quarter, so is that becoming a bigger part of the pipeline as well?

Mark Olear
EVP and COO, Getty Realty

Yeah, if you look back where we were a couple years back, we were kind of a flat-footed start on car wash, and we grew that to you know a material part of our pipeline. You know, the pipeline is still weighted towards gas convenience operators. That said, it's you know it's growing, you know both sides of that equation are growing. We plan or you know we should expect that we grow all those pieces of the pie at different paces, but grow certainly over the next couple years.

You know, I think that many of our deals to your question on, you know, sourcing or composition, you know, it's through the efforts of our investment acquisition team to both, you know, grow where it's appropriate existing relationships with our stronger tenants, and also to create new opportunities for not only geographic but tenant and category diversity amongst the portfolio. I think we're kind of succeeding on all fronts there.

Wes Golladay
Senior Research Analyst, Robert W. Baird

I guess when we look at, you know, timing to build these relationships and actually get into that, for that to translate into deal volume, is that a multi-year process or is it a linear growth or does it grow exponential, maybe a few years later?

Mark Olear
EVP and COO, Getty Realty

Listen, I think we're looking for long-term relationships with strong operators and as their businesses grow and they look to acquire, you know, everyone's looking to take the lumpiness out of all their programs. There are ebbs and flows with all our tenant relationships and in the pipeline. You know, we just constantly manage those relationships to be ready to be a, you know, a funding partner when appropriate. Some of these are, you know, deals that come up quickly and there's a gap between the next deal. Some are pretty steady state. You know, the combination of all those relationship management, pipeline management, you know, kind of fuels the program on an ongoing basis.

Wes Golladay
Senior Research Analyst, Robert W. Baird

Okay. You did mention selling some non-core assets, but I guess would you also be open to selling assets opportunistically, you know, looking at the, I think you delivered two 7-Eleven this quarter, and they have a pretty strong bid in the private market?

Mark Olear
EVP and COO, Getty Realty

Typically, we've been, you know, especially with our new developments, you know, buy and hold investors. If you look at what we've been selling, right, it's been kind of underperforming assets across the portfolio. Just holistically, we look at sort of all of our options. Again, I wouldn't guide you towards expecting significant asset sales, you know, of what we consider to be core holdings.

Wes Golladay
Senior Research Analyst, Robert W. Baird

Okay. Thanks, guys.

Operator

As a reminder, it is star one to ask your question. There are no further questions in the queue. I'd like to hand the call back to management for closing remarks.

Christopher Constant
President and CEO, Getty Realty

Great. Thank you, operator, and thank you everyone for joining us this morning for our third quarter call. We look forward to getting back on with everyone, I think, in late February when we close out our fourth quarter and fiscal year 2021, and we appreciate your interest in the company.

Operator

Ladies and gentlemen, this does conclude today's teleconference.

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