Greetings, and welcome to the Regency Centers Corporation third quarter 2022 earnings call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. A brief 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 you to Christy McElroy, SVP of Capital Markets. Thank you, Christy. You may begin.
Good morning, and welcome to Regency Centers' third quarter 2022 earnings conference call. Joining me today are Lisa Palmer, President and Chief Executive Officer, Mike Mas, Chief Financial Officer, Jim Thompson, Chief Operating Officer, Chris Leavitt, SVP and Treasurer, Alan Roth, Senior Managing Director of the East Region, and Nick Wibbenmeyer, Senior Managing Director of the West Region. As a reminder, today's discussion may contain forward-looking statements about the company's views of future business and financial performance, including forward earnings guidance and future market conditions. These are based on management's current beliefs and expectations and are subject to various risks and uncertainties. It's possible that actual results may differ materially from those suggested by the forward-looking statements we may make.
Factors and risks that could cause actual results to differ materially from these statements may be included in our presentation today and are described in more detail in our filings with the SEC, specifically in our most recent Form 10-K and 10-Q filings. In our discussion today, we will also reference certain non-GAAP financial measures. The comparable GAAP financial measures are included in this quarter's earnings materials, which are posted on our investor relations website. Please note that we have also posted a presentation on our website with additional information, including disclosures related to forward earnings guidance. Our caution on forward-looking statements also applies to these presentation materials. Lisa.
Thank you, Christy. Good morning, everyone. Thank you for joining us today. We are pleased to report another quarter of solid results. We've continued to see positive operating trends as tenant demand is strong and rent growth remains at healthy levels despite the challenging macroeconomic backdrop. We do recognize that neither we nor our tenants are immune to macro pressures, especially higher levels of inflation, rising interest rates, and lower consumer spending. This does create some uncertainty in the near term. If the last few years have proven anything, it's the resiliency of our people, assets, and our balance sheet in tough times. It is through a lens of what I would characterize as cautious optimism that we look ahead, and we remain confident that we are uniquely positioned to outperform.
The demographic profile of our portfolio provides greater cushion for inflationary impacts to be absorbed by consumers and for spending to continue through a softer economic environment. Our dense suburban trade areas also continue to benefit from structural tailwinds stemming from post-pandemic migration patterns and hybrid work, but also by a renewed appreciation for the value of brick-and-mortar retailing. Additionally, and just as importantly, we are well-positioned to continue to execute on our self-funded growth strategy. While the costs of raising incremental capital have risen meaningfully over the last several months, our strong free cash flow and balance sheet dry powder enable us to continue to invest in our value creation pipeline on an earnings accretive basis without the need to raise new equity capital or sell assets into an illiquid transaction market.
We remain focused on further growing our development and redevelopment pipelines, and the commencement of our Town and Country Center project last month is an example of that. Another example is our acquisition of East Meadow Plaza on Long Island, as we bought this as a redevelopment opportunity. With the backdrop of a more challenging financing environment, we are starting to see more opportunities come to us to co-invest in attractive development projects. On the acquisition side, while we always are looking for compelling opportunities, bid-ask spreads remain wide and volumes are low, so it will likely take time to get real price discovery. Regardless of when or where things settle, we do believe there will be less of an impact to values for well-located, grocery-anchored neighborhood and community centers at the upper end of the quality spectrum, in other words, for the types of assets that we own.
In the meantime, we are fortunate to have the liquidity and balance sheet capacity to take advantage of dislocation or other opportunities that may arise. Finally, as I step back and think about the potential for operating in a more challenging environment or in any environment for that matter, I feel grateful to be leading Regency with the quality of assets and the caliber of people that we have. I believe we are well-positioned to outperform over the long term, acting as both a safe haven and generating solid and sustainable growth, driving total shareholder returns with earnings growth plus dividend. I always like to remind you that I'm proud that we delivered our dividend consistently during the pandemic, even growing it, with another 4% increase just announced for the fourth quarter. Jim?
Thanks, Lisa, and good morning, everyone. We had another strong quarter and continue to experience healthy operating trends throughout the portfolio. Some of the highlights include continued robust tenant demand as evidenced by achieving our highest quarterly total leasing volumes on record, both in terms of square footage and number of deals executed. A strong leasing pipeline, including over $34 million of annual base rent forecasted from our 240 basis points of leases signed but not yet commenced. Further occupancy gains as we continue to fill vacant space, with percent leased up another 20 basis points over the second quarter and up 90 basis points over the prior year. Above average retention rates, with record high renewals executed in the third quarter. Healthy cash spreads of 7% and GAAP rent spreads over 13% in the quarter.
Continued prudent management of leasing CapEx, resulting in net effective rent growth in the mid-teens, and a return to pre-COVID historical levels of current year bad debt as a percent of revenues. Importantly, we're carefully monitoring our portfolio for any signs that these trends are softening. We remain encouraged by the continued strength and progress we are seeing, leading us to further increase our 2022 same property NOI guidance, excluding prior year collections, by 25 basis points to 5.5% at the midpoint. Turning to development and redevelopment, we continue to make great progress on our nearly $400 million of in-process projects around the country. Even with the increases in construction costs that we've seen over the last several years, our average yields have held firm in the 7%-8% range.
Notably, we anticipate roughly $15 million of NOI coming online over the next 2 years from development and redevelopment projects currently in process. At our new much anticipated ground up East San Marco development here in Jacksonville, Publix opened their doors in August and the store is outperforming sales expectations. Leasing demand for the shop space was also very strong as the project is already 100% leased. We've also made significant progress over the last quarter at The Abbot, our redevelopment project in Cambridge, Massachusetts. The first tenant successfully opened and rent commenced in Q3, and we've recently signed a 17,000 sq ft lease for the entire fourth floor and have good momentum and interest in the remaining penthouse space.
As Lisa mentioned, last month we commenced construction at the Town and Country Center in Los Angeles, located across the street from The Grove and the L.A. Farmers Market. This long-awaited project will include a redevelopment of a former Kmart building into new retail space and approximately 300 luxury mid-rise apartments. We have partnered with a leading multifamily developer who will construct the apartments on a ground lease. Looking ahead, we are very focused on continuing to build our pipeline of value add development and redevelopment projects by executing on redevelopment opportunities that we have with our existing portfolio, sourcing new redevelopment projects through value add acquisitions, like our East Meadow, and by sourcing new ground up development opportunities, like our recently announced Glenwood Green.
This is a key element of our growth strategy and a core competency of Regency, and we believe that the tightening of the financing markets will favor our strong balance sheet and access to capital, affording us greater investment opportunities with developers and owners. In closing, I spent the last 42 years of my career learning and growing this business with this incredible company. There isn't a stronger team or more thoughtfully curated portfolio of shopping centers in this business than what Regency owns today. I have the utmost confidence that our operating and development platforms will continue to thrive under the leadership of Alan and Nick, and I look forward to watching Regency's future successes from the sidelines over the years to come. Mike.
Thanks, Jim. Good morning, everyone. I'll start by addressing third quarter results, walk through a few changes to our current year guidance, provide some comments on 2023, and touch base on our balance sheet. Same property NOI, excluding prior collections, was up 2.6% in the third quarter. This metric continues to be impacted by the noisier comps of uncollectible lease income last year, diluting the growth rate. As we've indicated previously, we are now back to a more historical run rate on collection losses of about 50 basis points on current year billings. Importantly, base rents contributed 3.9% to that growth rate, reflecting our strong embedded rent steps, combined with the progress we've made growing occupancy and marking our rents to market as we convert on our strong leasing pipeline.
I'll continue to stress that while we still have some remaining pandemic-related accounting anomalies impacting our same property NOI growth rate, we believe that base rent growth is the best representation of the trends driving our business today. Included within our Q3 results is close to $3 million of prior year reserve collections, now totaling $18 million year to date. We have increased our fourth quarter expectations for continued collections by another $2 million, bringing our full year 2022 guidance range to an anticipated total of $20 million. We also converted another 3% of our cash basis tenants back to accrual in the third quarter, resulting in a reversal of straight-line rent reserves that contributed another $4.6 million to Nareit FFO.
Following these conversions, we now have about 9% of our ABR remaining on a cash basis of accounting. As has been our practice, we have not included any potential fourth quarter conversions in our guidance, but it is possible that we may see another 1%-2% convert before year-end, which could result in an additional straight-line rent of $2 million-$3 million on top of what's currently in the 2022 guidance range. We raised our full year 2022 Nareit FFO range by $0.075 at the midpoint, $0.045 of which was driven by the prior year collections and straight-line rent reversals that I just discussed.
Most importantly, a large contributor to the increase was also further improvement in core trends, reflected in an increase in same property NOI growth, ex-prior year collections of 25 basis points at the midpoint to a new range of 5.25%-5.75%. Our revised core operating earnings per share range of $3.75-$3.78 excludes the impact of non-cash items, and when further backing out the impact of prior collections, represents year-over-year growth of 7%. We also made a few tweaks to our transactions guidance, mostly to adjust for the $30 million acquisition of East Meadow Plaza, which closed shortly after quarter end.
This is a value add opportunity for us, a low going-in cap rate under-earning center immediately adjacent to the Stew Leonard's anchored center that we bought as part of our Long Island portfolio late last year. This property is an ideal addition to our future redevelopment pipeline. Looking ahead to 2023, as usual, we will provide full year guidance in February. Recognizing that we still have some pandemic hangover noise in our numbers, we would like to provide some context as you think about modeling our earnings over the next year. I'd also refer you to slide 8 of our earnings presentation for additional details. First, with regard to prior collections, an area where we've certainly experienced the most dramatic change over the last several years.
Recall that in 2021, earnings benefited from prior collections by $46 million, and our current 2022 guidance now implies an impact of $20 million. We're proud of the success we've had collecting those rents, much of which we reserved during the height of the pandemic in 2020. These collections are evidence of the strength of our tenant base. Thankfully, there's not a whole lot left in this bucket. As we look ahead, we only expect to recognize another $3 million next year related to collections of receivables initially reserved in 2020 and 2021. Beyond those anticipated collections, the impact of pandemic related reserves should start to normalize. I'd also like to point out the impact of non-cash items, where our current year guidance of $43 million includes $12 million positive contribution from the reversal of straight-line rent reserves.
Our 2023 guidance will not include any further impact from conversions. As of right now, we expect total non-cash items, which include straight-line rents, above and below market rents, and amortization of above and below market debt of approximately $30 million for the full year 2023. Turning to the balance sheet, we remain well-positioned with one of the strongest balance sheets in the REIT sector, and we're proud to have been recognized for that strength by Moody's, placing us on positive outlook during the third quarter. Our leverage is at 5x net debt to EBITDA, which is the lower end of our target range, and we ended the quarter with full capacity on our revolver. We are extremely well prepared, whether the future holds further challenging conditions or increasing opportunities for value add investment.
The debt markets have remained volatile, and the rise in Treasury rates, along with wider credit spreads, has meaningfully impacted everyone's cost of new debt capital. With no unsecured debt maturities until the middle of 2024, we have no need to access these uncertain credit markets in the near term. We can remain patient. In addition, 99% of our pro-rata debt is fixed rate, and our low leverage and long dated maturity schedule will help to further suppress any potential negative impacts to our growth rate of marking our debt to market in the coming years. With that, I'll turn it back over to Lisa.
Thanks, Mike. Before turning to Q&A, I do want to take a moment to recognize Jim. Jim has been a cornerstone for Regency's success over the past 42 years. I thank you, Jim, on behalf of our entire company for your dedication and enormous contributions to Regency, building a legacy that we'll carry forward with Alan and Nick, with all that you've taught them. I also thank you for being such a terrific partner to me and to Mike and also to Hap. As a parting gift today for your last earnings call, Alan and Nick will handle the Q&A for you. I wish you all could see his smile right now. Congrats, Jim, and enjoy the next chapters. With that, we'll open it up for Q&A.
Thank you. At this time, we will be conducting a question and answer session. If you would like to ask a question, please press star one on the telephone keypad. A confirmation tone will indicate that 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 keys. One moment, please, while we poll for questions. Our first question comes from the line of Michael Goldsmith with UBS. Please proceed with your question.
Good morning. Thanks a lot for taking my question. Congratulations, Jim. The leasing environment continues to be strong. Can you talk a bit about your pipeline and the visibility you have into it even, you know, as the macro remains uncertain, as you said in your prepared remarks. On that topic, leased and commenced occupancy continue to move in line. Are construction delays that we've heard about kind of pushing out the ability to realize some of this leasing faster than maybe at first thought? Thanks.
Thanks, Michael. I'll let Alan address that question.
Yeah, Michael, good morning. The pipeline remains really strong. Strong demand is out there for sure. We've got north of 1 million sq ft of leases that are still in negotiation right now, so I feel really good about the future. Your last question relative to is construction delays the issue? Not really. In fact, it's actually more permitting delays. So it's more on the front end that we're dealing with. You know, our teams, whether it's our tenant coordinators in-house that are working on things diligently, whether we're engaging expediters from the outside, whether we are doing advanced landlord work on some vacant spaces to really help try and speed that process up.
There's a number of different levers that we're certainly working on to help compress those dates, but it is more permit driven than it is necessarily construction driven.
Is the permitting getting better or worse? Like, are the delays getting longer or are we narrowing at this point?
I'm gonna choose door number three and say it's staying pretty constant. It hasn't really gotten worse or better, Michael.
That's helpful. Then as a follow-up, Mike, on 2023, we appreciate the disclosure on page 8 of the presentation and your commentary. It looks like you're expecting prior year collection and non-cash items in 2023 that are $30 million less than 2022. Can you kind of walk through the assumptions there, what's included with that? I believe straight line is not included, so that could be a potential benefit next year. Can you just walk through that again? Thanks.
Yeah. I appreciate you noting page eight in the deck. It's a very helpful reminder for folks that prior year reserve collections, as we highlighted in the prepared remarks, aren't expected to recur at the same level that they did in 2022. There's frankly less to collect. In fact, our unresolved bucket of AR is down to about $5 million, and it's largely out west. This has been a theme for us over the last 18 months. The teams out there are making great progress, and we're really happy to see us in the final innings of that. $20 million in 2022 on prior year collections, we're telling you now to expect about $3 million on that line item next year.
Think about that in the context of 2023 expectations. From a non-cash perspective, that is where the straight line rent impact is included. It's really the conversions that they're the outlier, not the recurring nature of straight line rent. We had about $12 million of recurring conversions in 2022. Those obviously won't repeat. I gave a little bit of color on some anticipated Q4 conversions. Again, 1%-2% of our ABR could convert in the fourth quarter this year. That could lead to another $2 million-$3 million of impact in the fourth quarter. Be cognizant of that as well as you think about 2023.
The $30 million ± guidance on that page eight is the combination of straight line rent, above below market rent amortization, and the amortization of any debt mark to market.
Thank you very much. Good luck in the fourth quarter.
Thank you, Michael.
Thanks, Michael.
Our next question comes from the line of Anthony Powell with Barclays. Please proceed with your question.
Hi, good morning. Just a follow-up question on the leases to commence. How do you expect that to evolve next year as you continue to, I guess, both lease and also get new stores open?
Since we're getting into the guidance realm there, I think I'll let Mike address that one.
Yeah. I'll take that, Anthony. It's a great question, and I'm gonna be a little careful with respect to 2023, as we talk about guidance. We wanna help with as many themes as we can. As you can imagine, we're still putting the finishing touches on our plan. We have some tailwind, which I'd like to talk about in the SNO pipeline, but there's certainly some headwinds forming, so we're gonna be patient between now and February. I mean, we're fortunate to have this 240 basis point SNO pipeline that we will deliver into 2023.
About 75% of that we anticipate delivering by the middle of next year. We'll deliver all of it by the end of next year per our plan. That's $34 million in total of ABR. Alan mentioned beyond that 1 million sq ft of leasing that's in our pipelines, whether it's in lease negotiation or negotiations of LOIs. That's about six months worth of activity. We've been carrying that level of activity for quite some time and continue to feel really good about the demand for our space. Those are really good indicators of how we think about the directionality of occupancy going into 2023. You've heard us also talk about post-pandemic, our recovery pace being in that 100 basis point area from a commenced occupancy perspective.
I'm really pleased to say that a year ago this time, Q3 of a year ago, we're now 80 basis points ahead of where we were. We're delivering space, we're leasing space, we're delivering space. We're really achieving those recovery rates that we had thought we could and that our portfolio deserves. I mean the consideration, Anthony, is gonna be move-outs. That is when I talk about the finer points of our plan for next year, that'll be what really drives our occupancy expectations next year. More to come on that in February.
You know, you would anticipate that some elements like ULI, we are at historical averages now, in the third quarter, and we anticipate to stay there in the fourth. Does 2023 sound like a historical average year? Those are the considerations we're having. I would anticipate that ULI expectations probably on the margin are modestly expected to be a little higher. Again, more to come up from a details perspective. Those are the elements that I would think about today as you model out 2023.
If I may just add one thing, 'cause this is something that we have said repeatedly in on calls and in meetings. Who knows what 2023 is gonna bring with regards to a recession? One thing that is different, 'cause we've been through cycles before. When we've entered other cycles, we've typically been at peak occupancy. Exactly what Mike just said, we're entering this one, if it happens, with still room to move and in terms of increasing occupancy, and we expect that to be the case. We're also entering it having been through a really tough two and a half years for our tenant base. Our existing tenant base is really healthy.
I think that is a differentiator with regards to what may be coming from an economic cycle. I think that's a really important difference and one to consider.
Thanks for that detail. Maybe one more. I think, Lisa, you mentioned that, you know, you're looking to do new developments with partners, ground up developments. Are you seeing more people looking to do more ground up developments given kind of the strength in the sector, until we see supply growth finally start to tick up a bit, given kind of what we've seen here?
Let me clarify. My prepared remarks were that given the scarcity of capital in today's capital market, some of the smaller developers are having a more difficult time sourcing debt financing. We are starting to have a rising number of incoming calls to potentially partner and help be that source of funding for these smaller developers. Very different than actively just seeking JV development partners.
Okay. Got it.
We will, when opportunities are brought to us, from JV partners, look to that, but we're still very, very much committed to achieving our strategic objectives of annually having a consistent start and completions of developments and redevelopment dollars. I like to say at least $200 million, if not north of.
Understood. Thank you.
Our next question comes from the line of Craig Mailman with Citigroup. Please proceed with your question.
Great. Good morning, everyone. Maybe I just want to follow up on that last topic, Lisa, your commentary around the JV partners, and just kind of square that up with your commentary about the lack of movement or more minimal movement potentially in valuations for the quality of assets that you guys seek and have in the portfolio. I mean, would that suggest that maybe you guys would be more interested in the debt side of some of these potential transactions versus the equity side? Or if you do the equity side, would it be more opportunistic where you might like to flip it? I'm just kind of curious about the quality of the opportunities relative to what you guys typically would look for.
For the last, you know, I would say coming out of the GFC, I believe that our development program has been very disciplined and focused on the quality of the assets, and that remains constant. Any opportunities that we think about in terms of if we have others coming to us to help them, it starts with the quality of the opportunity and the real estate and the asset. Is this something that we wanna own long term? If the answer to that is yes, then the decision tree is to continue the conversations and move forward and evaluate the opportunity. It always starts with the quality of the shopping center.
Okay. You know, you guys know that I think you throw off around $100 million of free cash flow. You kind of lever that up, it's around the $200 million that you kind of like to look out, put out per year rather. Can you guys just talk about how you view that cost of capital versus kind of potential deployment opportunities and kind of the cushion that that may give you from an accretion standpoint and kind of risk-adjusted returns?
Sure, Craig, I'll start, and Lisa may jump in here too. You're exactly right. We have talked about $135 million plus or minus in anticipated free cash flow that the portfolio is throwing off in connection with the low leverage that we carry. That, let's call it non-dilutive capital, maybe that's a better description for that. We have access to $135 million of non-dilutive capital. We are also targeting 5x- 5.5x leverage overall. We can lever that capital at a rate of about 50%, and that provides actually north of $200 million, about $270 million, approaching $300 million of capacity for us to invest accretively.
Now, to your question, how do we then think about investment return thresholds? You know, we have this great source of capital, non-dilutive capital. We can be competitive, we can be aggressive, but we're also very conscious and aware of where valuations are, what risk premiums need to be, especially in the development business, and those remain the same. We do target, you know, spreads of 150+ basis points to what we would determine what we would think to be in place cap rates. Today, those. That's a little bit more challenging to wrap your head around because of the lack of data points that are out there in the market today, but we are finding, as Lisa mentioned, just good conversations, opportunities to advance conversations in this space.
Those returns, we have confidence it will be accretive to earnings because of that non-dilutive capital source. We also think we'll end up achieving return thresholds that make sense to us from an NAV basis and from an incremental cost of capital basis.
Great. Thank you.
Our next question comes to the line of Ki Bin Kim with Truist Securities. Please proceed with your question.
Thank you. Good morning. Congratulations, Jim. So first question. You know, your occupancy today is about 94.7%. When you look at the prior peak, it was hovering around 95%. I know this isn't perfectly apples to apples, and your portfolio has shifted, but how should we think about the lease occupancy upside from here on out? And can you describe the existing vacancy quality or desirability as it compares to the rest of the portfolio?
Very quickly, I want to comment on the peak occupancy comment, and then I'll have Alan address the quality of the vacant space, if you will. I'm probably a little bit older than you, Ki Bin, so perhaps I remember the peak occupancy a little bit more clearly. We, I mean, we were north of 96%, certainly going into the GFC, and got pretty close to it again, if not exceeded it, coming out. I'm getting very adamant head nods, yes, around the table. Exceeded 96%, and our shop space exceeded 94% at in the peak for a very short period of time. I believe that we have. I'm sorry, 92%.
I believe we have the ability to get back there again. That's when I talk about entering this potential m-recession, if that's what it is and becomes, that we still have opportunity to continue to grow that occupancy.
Ki Bin.
Alan.
Yeah. Ki Bin, this is Alan. To answer your vacancy quality, feel really good about what's there, and I think that's evidenced by, if you look at our cash rent spreads for the quarter at 14%, which we're obviously strong. If you think about it also in the context of space that's been vacant for less than 12 months, we actually were driving 20% cash rent spreads. Again, another testament to, I think, the quality. On top of that, if we look at our embedded rent steps, you know, it was the highest quarter we've ever had.
Our ability to drive those cash rent spreads, our ability to have these embedded rent steps at averaging 2.5%, and in many instances north of 3%, does speak to the quality of the vacancy, and I feel really good about setting our eyes at that 96%+ that Lisa had mentioned.
Lisa, you're right. I had to unhide a couple columns in my Excel model. 96% is right. Second question, on the signed but not leased, pipeline, $34 million of ABR, how much of that is replacing existing occupancy?
Ki Bin, it's all incremental. None of that is replacing anything that is rent paying today.
Okay. Thank you.
Thanks, Ki Bin.
Our next question comes from the line of Derek Johnston with Deutsche Bank. Please proceed with your question.
Hey, everybody. Good morning, and thanks. You know, the lease rate pretty close to pre-pandemic. Are you now able, do you feel, to focus on rates over occupancy? How does the possible recession impact, you know, your underwriting and thinking or actual ability to push rents? I'll make it a two-part because you might not answer the second part. You know, what feels like a realistic goal for the lease rate over the next year?
Derek, I'm actually looking at Mike to make sure that I don't speak out of turn too much. I'll try to stay away from guidance and keep it at a much higher level in macro. Generally speaking, I think that if you were to run a correlation between percent leased and rent spreads, you're gonna see that there's a pretty strong correlation. I mean, the more occupied you are, the less space there is available to lease, the more pricing power that you have. We continue to see that. Add on top of that inflation, and I think that we're gonna be able to continue to drive healthy increases in rents. I'm looking. I think that's probably. I'll leave it at that.
In terms of guidance from rental spreads, contractual rent spreads we've talked about. We continue to see that in nearly all of our leases, more than the vast majority. We're always close to averaging close to 3%, and we are seeing that still very, very steadily and in more cases than even last quarter, greater than 3%. We continue to see increases in rents.
Yeah. Derek, with respect to 2023 guidance, I mean, largely from a rent spread perspective, it's largely what's in our SNO pipeline. The spreads that we've already achieved are what's really gonna drive our growth into 2023. The challenge for us, and we are up to the challenge, is to maintain what we're seeing in today's spreads in that mid- to upper single-digit area.
That is our strategic objective. We think we have the right portfolio, the right team, sourcing the right tenants and to Lisa's point, in spite of some of these headwinds or challenges, to continue to drive rent spreads at those levels, to continue that pace of growth, in 2024 and beyond.
Okay, great. Then just touching on The Abbot, can we get a little more clarity on the early leasing that was mentioned in the opening remarks? You know, obviously, how it's tracking versus, you know, plan or initial underwriting. You know, how are you feeling about it? What about leaning in and possibly commencing, you know, some more of these mixed-use projects, you know, given what seems to be pretty good success in Cambridge.
I'll start with the latter part of that question, and then I'll kick it over to Alan to talk about the property specifically. I think generally speaking, again, I'll go back to the 12+ years coming out of the GFC, been very focused and disciplined on developing quality, primarily grocery-anchored shopping centers. Doesn't mean that it won't—that it has to be grocery anchored, but primarily grocery-anchored shopping centers. Even in those cases where we have had the opportunity to add density to existing shopping centers, we also, again, really focus on participating and developing the retail portion of that shopping center.
When there is other opportunities to bring in, for example, Town and Country Center is a great example since we just started that, where we partnered with a multifamily developer to do the multifamily development of that. That's how we will pursue those types of projects. The Abbot was a little bit different. That did come with our merger with Equity One. It was already in process. It's a lot more vertically integrated. I'll let Alan speak to the leasing and how it even with our leasing of that, it's still very similar uses to what we would do if it was a horizontal shopping center. With that, I'll toss it to Alan.
Yeah, Derek, I am really proud of what the team has accomplished there. All of our ground floor retail is spoken for and leased, and they've done an exceptional job, you know, with the uses in terms of merchandising credit, rents, et cetera. What remains left is our premier penthouse space. It's a space that originally was gonna be taken by a fourth-floor tenant, and they just decided in the eleventh hour just to take one space. If we wanna have one space left to lease, it's that one, and the demand has been really strong on it. We just hosted a grand opening event there last week, well attended. The feedback from the retailers that are open is that they are doing remarkably well.
Again, we're thrilled with the project, and we're thrilled with the support that we've gotten from the entire Cambridge community.
Thank you.
Our next question comes from the line of Craig Schmidt with Bank of America. Please proceed with your question.
Thank you. My questions are on Town and Country. Oh, first, congratulations to Jim. It's been very interesting to watch you and your work at Regency. Going to Town and Country, I'm just wondering, do you know any of the new retailers you're going to be adding to that complex?
We'll let Nick adopt that question. Nick has been dying for someone to ask him about Town & Country.
Yes. No. Good morning, Craig, and thank you for the question. No, we're extremely excited. As Jim mentioned in the opening remarks, just a phenomenal piece of real estate, obviously, across the street from The Grove. Retail demand, as you can appreciate, has been extremely strong, even with long lead time before delivery. The new anchor tenant to the new phase will be Whole Foods, building a new store. They are currently a tenant in the shopping center. They'll be relocating into a new prototype, underneath the vertical residential that Holland is developing. Really excited about having them reimagine what their experience of the consumer will be in that shopping center, and clearly excited about future tenants we will add in and around them in the future phase.
Obviously you do. What comps for luxury apartments in the Mid-Wilshire area?
We do. Again, just to reiterate, we are leasing the air rights to Holland. The good news about that structure is our rent is 100% committed from Holland through an air rights lease structure. As you can appreciate, Holland is hyper-focused on what those rents are gonna be. We feel very, very confident they're going to achieve their underwritten rents, and therefore feel extremely confident that it's gonna be a really successful partnership for both.
Great. Just yeah, I was reading about, you know, you had robust community feedback. What are some of that feedback, and how did that relate to how you're setting up the property going forward?
The really good news is, again, with the lead time we have, we can be extremely patient. The conversations we've been having with tenants are really at the preliminary stage, now that construction is starting, now that we are gonna see shovels in the ground, now that it's become public that Whole Foods will be relocating, it really allows us to lean into those conversations. Again, with this type of quality of real estate, with a couple of years of lead time, we're gonna continue to progress conversations appropriately, but also continue to be extremely patient as we expect to be able to pick from the best of the best throughout the industry.
Okay. Thank you very much.
Thanks, Craig Schmidt.
Our next question comes from the line of Hong Zhang with JP Morgan. Please proceed with your question.
Yeah. Hi. I guess a quick question on how to think about commenced occupancy, given you've grown commenced occupancy 60 basis points since the beginning of the year. Just given your comments about strength of tenant quality and your backlog of commencement, is it fair to say that you would expect a greater than 60 basis points increase in commenced occupancy by year end next year?
We'll take it easy on 2023. I'm sorry. More to come, I think is something you'll hear from us pretty often. Let me take the opportunity to take your comment and speak to 2022, and then we can extend that from a trajectory standpoint. Base rent, as I said in my remarks, just continue to focus on base rent as the best indicator. Because of our high degree of cash-basis tenancy, 2021 is providing a very sloppy comparison year in our quarter-over-quarter results. We're all accustomed to that. Our disclosure does an excellent job of explaining that phenomenon. Base rent growth, just to repeat some numbers, in first quarter of this year was 2.8%. That grew to 3% in the second quarter.
That grew to 3.9% in the third. You can imply from our guidance and our revision to guidance that the fourth quarter will continue to march forward, again, consistent with the 60 basis points of rise in commenced occupancy, as you mentioned, Hong. Pair that with some of the comments we've made about leasing demand, about our SNO pipeline that exists today, about the shadow leasing pipeline that extends beyond that Alan shared some details with us on. I do think it's fair to say that we are positioned to grow base rent through what could be a softer economy. One of the reasons we're positioned to do that is because of the circumstances that Lisa articulated.
Much of the weakness was eliminated in 2020 and 2021, so we're coming into this position from a period of strength. Good well-located vacancy, good demand from the markets. More to come on how much growth we should anticipate in 2023. I do think we like this trajectory that we're on.
Thanks. Apologies if you talked about this before, but could you talk a little bit about the value add opportunity you see at East Meadow Plaza?
Yeah. I'll just start really quickly and again, toss it to Alan to talk about the project. As I said in my prepared remarks, we bought that as a redevelopment opportunity. You know, clearly, with our disclosure, you can back into what the going-in cap rate was. It was a very low going-in cap rate. We expect unlevered IRRs approaching 10% on that, so it is a development-like return. I'll toss that to Alan.
Yeah, Hong. We've so we bought that from a family that's owned the land since the 1920s. You know, obviously coming off the heels of acquiring the adjacent Stew Leonard's anchored asset back in December of last year, we're really excited about our ability to connect these two assets. We are gonna be working with the local municipality on a redevelopment, but our team up in the Northeast is really excited to do what we do best. That is enhance merchandising, implement our placemaking strategy, and connect to the community through the redevelopment of the asset. A lot to unlock. I just think, you know, the center of gravity by creating both of these assets into one larger project will really be fantastic.
We're looking forward to that completion.
Got it. It sounds like we'll see in the redevelopment pipeline sooner rather than later.
Correct.
Yes.
Cool. Thanks and congrats, Jim.
Thank you.
To ask a question, please press star one. Our next question comes from the line of Wes Golladay with Baird. Please proceed with your question.
Hey, everyone. I wanna go back to the comment about talking about the catching up with inflation. Is there a way to measure, you know, how much upside is in the portfolio, being that these are long duration leases? If you have that data, that would be nice.
I didn't pick up the-
Yeah. Not sure.
the words before option. I'm sorry, Wes.
Yeah. Is the best way to look at it, you know, the embedded growth in the portfolio to look at the renewals that you're signing that don't have an option?
I wanna make sure that we do address it as we can. If you do, I think when you think about how we are positioned, I think this is what you're saying, to capture what may be rising market rents due to inflation. The best way to look at that really is to look at what percentage of our space is expiring, and what market rents are that are expiring. It's difficult for you to see what the mix is of anchor and shop, and that gets a little bit more difficult. Your question then becomes what percentage of them have options? Is that what you're
Yeah. Well
I'm trying to understand what you're getting to.
Yeah. Well, I guess when you do renewals, right, your renewal spread that you cite is a mix of tenants that had options or that were maybe set at a lock rate, and then ones where you negotiate with them, "Hey, this is where the new rate is," and you get a big pop on the ones that they don't have an option on. I was wondering if you had the delineation between those two types of renewals.
Okay. The question is more clear now.
Yeah, the renewal rate on.
Sorry.
Sorry, Wes. The renewal rate on the lease spread on renewals without options is 8%. The bucket that is exercising options is at 5%.
Gotcha. Is that the best way to look at the embedded growth in the portfolio as it stands today in your
I mean, I think it's a little bit more complex than that. I think we have to start with our lease. We have to start with our contractual rent increases. You know, those are our—we are indeed putting in place 2%. We have in place 2% contractual increases in our kind of same space portfolio. That contributes about 1.3%-1.4% to our growth profile. I think you have to start the conversation there. As Alan mentioned earlier, we're hitting kind of peak levels that we haven't seen from a new threshold from a contractual increase perspective. You add onto that what we're experiencing on the lease spreads. Yes, some of that is gonna be contractual.
Some of our tenants have fixed rate options that they have to their benefit that will have, as I mentioned, a bit of a dilutive impact on that ability to grow. Where we can maintain control of space, limit options to our tenants, then attack that new market rent growth, that's where that is the other lever that we can pull to increase our growth profile. The third element that is available to us today is all about this peak occupancy level, and we've spent some time today talking about that. We have room to run, and that'll be probably more of an amplifying impact going in as we think about the 2023, 2024 in the near term than the impact coming from the lease spreads.
Got it. Thanks everyone, and congratulations, Jim.
Thanks, Wes.
Thank you.
Our next question comes from the line of Ronald Kamdem with Morgan Stanley. Please proceed with your question.
Great. Just a couple quick ones, starting with sort of the occupancy gains. Just trying to get a sense of, in your mind, just how much more full the portfolio can get, or when we're thinking about sort of the same store growth function, you know, in the next couple years. Clearly, the base rents are a big driver. We're trying to understand how much more occupancy can drive that. Thanks.
Yeah, I think it's been.
Getting the guidance again.
Yeah. It's a little bit of guidance and kind of asked and answered differently today. More to come, Ron, on our expectations for 2023, but I'll just reiterate, we feel good about the quality of the portfolio. The weakness has largely been shed. We feel good about our SNO pipeline and delivering that rent. We feel great about the shadow pipeline that's behind that and the negotiations that are ongoing. We do see continued opportunities to grow base rent from here. Just more to come on our expectations for achieving peak occupancy, whether that's at the end of 2023 or into 2024. More to come on that in February.
Great. Then apologies if this has been, if it's been asked already, but have you commented on sort of the Kroger-Albertsons deal, Chris? What implications for the company, implications for the industry? What's your take on that? Thanks.
We had not had that question yet. Generally speaking, as long as I've been in this business, which is now over 26 years, not quite as long as Jim's 42 years, but the grocery industry clearly has always been one of consolidation and of the stronger operators getting stronger and the top grocers getting better. It's why our strategy has always focused on investing in shopping centers that are anchored by the top grocers in that market, whether it's by market share, but it's really by the productivity of those stores and the sales that they generate. The combination of Kroger and Albertsons just creates an even better operator, and we think that that's a positive.
It'll allow them to invest further into their business, in all aspects of their business, both digital and also in the in-store experience, which they both were already doing. Now, combined, they will be able to do that even better.
Great. Thanks. Congrats, Jim.
Thank you.
Our next question comes from Linda Tsai with Jefferies. Please proceed with your question.
Hi, good morning. Can you remind us pre-pandemic what percentage of your tenants were on cash basis? I know it's been going down about 2%-3% a quarter, and it's at 9%, but where do you think it ends up by year-end 2023?
Hey, Linda, it's Mike. We're at 9% today. We get this question often, and it's hard to answer only because the policies from a GAAP perspective that we're applying today don't quite match what those policies and GAAP treatment was pre-pandemic. You know, we were in the mid-single digit area, 5% plus or minus previous to that. You know, I called for maybe another 1%-2% that could convert in the fourth quarter. We're getting down to where we're going to normalize somewhere in that mid-single digit area.
Got it. Maybe on the idea that you could see a slight uptick in move-outs early next year, given the more uncertain environment. Coupled with the idea that your tenant base is a lot stronger headed into than, you know, versus headed into past recessions, what's the best way to think about bad debt for next year?
A couple questions in there. We didn't comment on the seasonality expectation of Q1 move-outs. I think you're alluding to the fact that it typically is a stronger move-out type of quarter. More to come when we put out full 2023 expectations. From a bad debt perspective, I'll reiterate what I said earlier. We are at historically average rates today from a third quarter and the fourth quarter from an expectation standpoint. It would not be out of the question, again, is next year a historically average year? It would not be out of the question to think that it would not be, and that we would be prudent to plan for some sort of modest increase in our rate, but I don't.
By no means, do I anticipate that we will equal the rates that we had in 2021 or 2020.
Just reiterating again, I'll go back to my prepared remarks of, I characterize it as cautious optimism, in that none of us really do know where the economy is going to settle, if you will, with regards to the recessionary, if there are recessionary impacts. What I think to clarify Mike's comments, the answer to a question earlier is the leasing is essentially accounted for because we have our signed, not occupied leases that are coming online. The uncertainty is in the level of move-outs. Because when you have a move-out, that impact is immediate because they stop paying rent. I think that's what you're referring to. We did not indicate that we expect it to be there to be an uptick. Said that more to come in February when we give guidance.
Thank you.
Our next question comes from the line of Paulina Rojas with Green Street. Please proceed with your question.
Hello. I only have one quick question. Regarding the transaction market, are there any areas or markets where cap rates have increased less, or the reaction to the macro headwinds has been, in your mind, more market agnostic?
Yeah, Paulina, I'll just address that by a little bit of what I said in the pre-prepared remarks as well. There's been very low volumes in the transaction market, so very little price discovery. The bid-ask spreads are still really wide. I would say that is market agnostic. It is not that there aren't any specific markets where price discovery is better than others, and volumes are low across the country. At this point in time, it's still market agnostic.
Okay. Thank you. That's all.
Thank you.
There are no further questions at this time, and I would like to turn the floor back over to Lisa Palmer for any closing comments.
First, thank you all for your time this morning. One last, if you heard me say when we were closing the pre-prepared remarks that I wish you all could see Jim smile when we said that he wasn't gonna answer the questions. You also didn't have the opportunity to see how relaxed he was this whole time while we were answering your questions. Jim, this is the least that we could give you, and you deserve. Thank you so much. Enjoy your time.
Thank you much. Thanks for the bye.
Thank you. Well, have a great weekend.
This concludes the conference. You may now disconnect your lines at this time. Thank you for your participation, and have a great day.