Greetings, and welcome to the STAG Industrial Third Quarter 2021 Earnings Conference 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 your host, Matts Pinard, Senior Vice President of Investor Relations. Thank you, sir. You may begin.
Thank you. Welcome to STAG Industrial's Conference Call covering the Third Quarter 2021 Results. In addition to the press release distributed yesterday, we have posted an unaudited quarterly supplemental information presentation on the company's website at stagindustrial.com under the Investor Relations section. On today's call, the company's prepared remarks and answers to your questions will contain forward-looking statements as defined in the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Forward-looking statements address matters that are subject to risks and uncertainties that may cause actual results to differ from those discussed today. Examples of forward-looking statements include forecasts of Core FFO, Same-Store NOI, G&A, acquisition and disposition volumes, retention rates, and other guidance, leasing prospects, rent collections, industry and economic trends, and other matters.
We encourage all our listeners to review the more detailed discussion related to these forward-looking statements contained in the company's filings with the SEC and the definitions and reconciliations and non-GAAP measures contained in the supplemental informational package available on the company's website. As a reminder, forward-looking statements represent management's estimates as of today. STAG Industrial assumes no obligation to update any forward-looking statements. On today's call, you will hear from Ben Butcher, our Chief Executive Officer, and Bill Crooker, our President and Chief Financial Officer. Also here with us today is Steve Kimball, our Chief Operating Officer, who is available to answer questions specific to operations. I will now turn the call over to Ben.
Thank you, Matt. Good morning, everybody, and welcome to the third quarter earnings call for STAG Industrial. We are pleased to have you join us and look forward to telling you about our third quarter results. Industrial market fundamentals remain sound with historic net absorption levels supported by broad-based demand across the nation. We're having daily conversations across our tenancy to help address their real estate needs. Conversation topics range from building expansions to sourcing additional space across the 60-plus markets in which we operate to sustainability related upgrades such as efficient lighting conversion. These themes were highlighted in our recently completed fifth annual tenant survey. This survey provides us an opportunity to obtain real-time insights into how our tenants are thinking about their businesses and how their real estate needs are evolving in these unprecedented times.
Not surprisingly, there was a dominant theme in their responses, the need for additional space. Tenants are looking to enhance the resilience and strength of their supply chains, as well as to support new growth initiatives. Labor availability remains a widely held concern and limiting factor in these growth initiatives by our tenants. The majority of respondents indicated e-commerce activity has increased over the last 12 months, consistent with the belief that there has been a structural change in consumer behavior. Continuing the trend, approximately 40% of the buildings in our portfolio support some level of e-commerce activity. Our tenants, like our society in general, are also more focused on ESG matters. In particular, the survey revealed a noticeable increase in the importance of sustainable building operations as a measure of building fit. STAG continues to be a leader in ESG.
We recently received our 2021 GRESB public disclosure letter grade rating of B. Our score remains above the REIT average and ranks second out of the 10 industrial real estate companies scored by GRESB. We look forward to releasing our inaugural corporate sustainability report in the coming weeks, which will provide a comprehensive view into how we are addressing and accomplishing our ESG initiatives. The demand for industrial real estate seen through our portfolio operating metrics and heard through our tenant survey is also reflected in the asset transaction market. Yesterday, we closed on the sale of a building located in Taunton, Massachusetts, which is approximately 40 miles south of Boston. Acquired vacant in 2019, the investment strategy included repositioning a 350,000 sq ft building to optimize its appeal as a warehouse facility.
A short-term lease was signed with a large private company as we initiated the permitting process. Shortly thereafter, we entered negotiations with a large e-commerce tenant to fully lease the facility on a long-term basis. This e-commerce tenant identified the facility as a primary location to service same-day delivery to Greater Boston, also known as last mile delivery, an example of the common misperception of the widely used term last mile. After executing a long-term lease to this tenant, we were approached by multiple interested buyers. We ultimately sold the building for gross proceeds of $78 million, representing a 48% unlevered IRR for our three-year hold period. Proceeds of this sale will be redeployed accretively into our opportunity set. A 150% nominal gain over our all-in cost basis was a great result for STAG.
This sale was consistent with our practice of selling assets that are worth more to others than they are to us. With that, I'll turn it over to Bill to discuss our third quarter operational results.
Thank you, Ben, and good morning, everyone. Demand for industrial real estate continues to increase, driven by the acceleration of supply chain issues initiated by the COVID pandemic. Backlogs of ships at ports and other transportation bottlenecks, shipping cost increases, inventory mismatches, and labor constraints are driving demand for warehouse space as companies attempt to adjust their supply chain networks. Consumer adoption of e-commerce is permanent and reflected in our healthy portfolio operating results. Core FFO was $0.53 for the quarter, an increase of 15.2% as compared to the third quarter of 2020.
Included in Core FFO this quarter was the impact of a settlement agreement related to a former tenant. The settlement included a $1.7 million cash payment to STAG, which accounted for $0.01 of Core FFO per share this quarter. Cash available for distribution totaled $219.6 million year to date through the third quarter, an increase of 22.1% as compared to the first nine months of 2020. Net debt to run-rate adjusted EBITDA was 4.8 times at quarter end. We acquired 24 buildings for $427.2 million during the third quarter, with stabilized cash and straight-line cap rates of 5.3% and 5.7% respectively.
Our acquisition activity this quarter included further additions to our portfolio's growth in the Central Valley of California and our entry into the Salt Lake City sub-market. Year-to-date as of today, we have acquired $757.5 million of acquisitions with a healthy closing schedule of transactions under contract and subject to letter of intent as we head towards year-end. There continues to be increasing competition for larger single asset transactions and portfolios. Large capital sources simply don't have the ability to efficiently acquire at a granular individual asset level. Our platform was built to identify and underwrite individual assets, allowing us to deploy our relative value investment strategy nationwide while avoiding the auction-like pricing of larger transactions. This is reflected in our pipeline of $3.7 billion today. Dispositions for the quarter totaled $39.4 million.
As highlighted by Ben, subsequent to quarter end, we sold our Taunton, Massachusetts facility for $78 million, realizing a 3.1% cash cap rate on the sale. During the quarter, we commenced 22 leases totaling 3.7 million sq ft, which generated cash and straight line leasing spreads of 8% and 14.7% respectively. Retention was 55.7% for the quarter and 76.2% year to date. The broad-based demand for our assets is robust and has resulted in numerous instances of available space being backfilled immediately with minimal to no downtime. When adjusted for immediate backfills, retention was 77.7% for the third quarter and 89.8% for the year. Cash same-store NOI grew 2.9% for the quarter and 3.4% year to date.
This metric continues to be a high watermark for STAG, driven by strong rental escalators, cash leasing spreads, and lower average downtime for vacancy. Moving to capital market activity, we raised gross proceeds of $127.5 million through our ATM program at a weighted average share price of $39.59 in the third quarter. In addition to the equity raise through the ATM program, on September 29th, we fully settled all outstanding forward equity contracts and received $182.2 million in proceeds. On September 28th, we funded our previously announced private placement notes. The 10- and 12-year notes totaled $325 million and bear a weighted average interest rate of 2.82%. On October 26th, we refinanced our $750 million unsecured revolving credit facility.
The revolver matures in October 2025 with two two-month extension options. The facility bears an interest rate of LIBOR plus a spread of 77.5 basis points based on the company's current leverage level and debt rating, a reduction in pricing of 12.5 basis points. In addition, the company refinanced a $150 million unsecured term loan, which was previously set to mature in March 2022. The term loan now matures March 2027 and is fully swapped with an all-in interest rate of 2.15%. Finally, the company improved pricing on $675 million of term loan debt, specifically term loans E, F, and G.
The term loans now bear a current interest rate of LIBOR plus a spread of 85 basis points, a reduction in pricing of 50 basis points with no change to maturities. Our guidance is included on page 21 of our supplemental reporting package. Changes to our guidance are as follows. With approximately $758 million acquired plus assets on our closing schedule, our acquisition volume expectation for the year has been increased to a range of $1.1 billion-$1.2 billion, an increase to the low end of the range of $100 million. In conjunction with the update to acquisition volume, we revised our stabilized cash cap rate guidance to a range of 5.25%-5.5%, a decrease of the high end of the range by 25 basis points.
As a result of the Taunton, Massachusetts disposition, our disposition volume expectations for the year has been increased to a range of $150 million-$200 million, an increase to the low end of the range of $50 million. The expected level of G&A for the year has been adjusted to a range of $45 million-$46 million, a decrease of the high end by $1 million. Note that this range excludes non-recurring cash expenses related to the adoption of the retirement plan during 2021 and severance charges incurred in Q3 of 2021. Finally, we have updated our guidance related to Core FFO per diluted share to a range of $2.04-$2.06.
This is an increase equal to $0.02 at the midpoint, representing 8.5% accretion over the prior year. I will now turn it back over to Ben.
Thanks, Bill. Another great quarter driven by the strong industrial fundamentals and the excellent execution by the STAG team. In our view, these strong fundamentals are likely to persist for some time. I have no doubt that the matching execution excellence by the STAG team will persist for the long term. Thank you for your time this morning. We'll now turn it back to the operator for questions.
Thank you. We will now be conducting a question-and-answer session. If you would like to ask a question, please 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 keys. Once again, if you would like to ask a question, press star one at this time. One moment please while we poll for questions. Thank you. Our first question comes from the line of Sheila McGrath with Evercore. Please proceed with your question.
Yes, good morning. Ben, I was just wondering if you could give us your big picture thoughts on rent growth profile or outlook on secondary markets versus primary markets, and where you think STAG's place rents compare right now versus market compared to like a couple years ago.
Well, first of all, good morning, Sheila. Always good to talk to you. Secondary markets have always been, in our view, and I think the data supports this, less volatile than primary markets. Obviously during a period of quickly rising rents, the primary markets, that volatility works to the benefit of landlords. We are seeing strong rent growth against the secondary across all the markets, the secondary and primary markets that we operate in. We expect that to continue. I think the mark-to-market you know, without getting into too great detail, but the fact that you have stronger rising rents must mean that the portfolio is slightly more under market than it would've been a few years ago. That's more of an academic answer than a you know, a asset-by-asset evaluation.
I think that shows up in the rent spreads, which are, you know, we expect to run in the high single digits. Nothing specific in terms of an answer. Again, we feel our portfolio's in a good place.
Okay, thanks. Bill, G&A guidance went lower at the top end. There were some adjustments for severance or something that you mentioned. Can you comment on what might be a good run rate for us to think about in fourth quarter or more importantly for 2022?
Yeah. Hey, Sheila. I mean, without getting into, you know, guidance for next year, which would include new hires, cost of living adjustments, but run-rate Q3 for Q1, I would add probably another $750,000, and that's more related to the retirement plan we put in place at the beginning of the year. Those costs will be front-loaded for some employees that are eligible. So it's an additional $750,000 from Q3 to Q1.
Okay.
Sheila, I might add that as always, we note that we have a very scalable business, so the growth in our portfolio, which is sizable, does not translate directly to G&A. It's the marginal add to G&A is de minimis compared to the size of the portfolio gain.
Just to reiterate, that's not, you know, guidance for next year. We'll come out with our official G&A guidance in January, in February, excuse me.
Okay. Last question. Two acquisitions in the quarter were vacant. Just wondering if you have tenants in hand for those, or do you have to do a lot of CapEx spend to reposition those assets?
These assets are effectively ready to lease. The underwriting for our acquiring assets, whether they're tenanted or untenanted, it's the same. We're looking at the projected downtime capital costs, et cetera, and the lease achievement once leased, the rental achievement once leased, and evaluating our returns going forward. Again, these assets, though vacant, by our projections, still meet our return thresholds.
Yeah. We're very comfortable with the leasability of the assets. There's three buildings that we acquired vacant, one of which we've already have a lease in hand. The others, we expect leases in the not too distant future.
Okay, great. Thank you.
Thank you.
Our next question comes from a line of Emmanuel Korchman with Citi. Please proceed with your question.
Hey, it's Chris McCurry on with Manny Korchman. I was just wondering if you could comment around the acquisition strategy, specifically how steep competition is in some of these target markets. You lowered your acquisition cap rate guidance. I'm just wondering, is that just a factor of more competition in these markets?
Well, certainly competition is a factor, but the main reason that cap rates are lower than they were in prior periods is that the rent growth profiles and the cash flow profiles of the assets we're buying is better, so that the future cash flows justify, given our return requirements, the lower cap rates. As we've said before, cap rates are a point-in-time measure. They can be altered. There's a bunch of different cap rates that people quote. We're interested in long-term cash flows and making sure that we deliver the returns to our shareholders that we think they deserve.
Yeah. As we mentioned in the prepared remarks, we're seeing, you know, a lot greater competition in bigger asset sizes and portfolios. Our sweet spot in that $5 million-$30 million range, we're still able to achieve our historical hit rates for those smaller asset sizes.
Where we're seeing the impact of greater competition is that our hit rates are much lower than they were a couple years ago. We have expanded our capacity to identify and underwrite, but to buy the $1 billion-$2 billion that we're projecting to buy this year, we're having to look at more assets or underwrite more assets to get to that number. But that's what our peculiar advantage in the market. Our ability to do that allows us to still get the returns that we're achieving for our shareholders.
Got it. Yeah, more on that. Makes sense. Switching over to dispositions, what exactly are you looking to sell today, and what is the appetite to use some of those proceeds for land or covered land plays?
What we're looking to sell today is what we've always been looking to sell, which is our assets that others think are worth more than we think they're worth in our portfolio. The Taunton asset obviously was a prime example of that. It's not an asset that we disliked owning. Someone else was willing to pay not only more, significantly more than we thought it was worth to us in our portfolio. As we evaluate our portfolio, there are other assets that will pop up or be evaluated by our staff as potential candidates to sell. That we continue to review our portfolio, and undoubtedly we'll find some of those this year, and that's in our projected disposition total of $100 million-$200 million for this year.
We expect, you know, we have not issued guidance for next year, but that's not unreasonable number to expect. Covered land plays, we look at it the same way we look at a tenanted building. What are the prospects for that building, whether it's, you know, a tear down and rebuild, an expansion, an improvement to the existing structure, perhaps it's an improvement in tenancy, you know, of an existing structure. All those things can be evaluated on the basis of their cash flow going forward. Again, given our return requirements, not only on a per share basis, but on an absolute basis, if they meet those return requirements, we're happy to buy those.
Got it. Thanks.
Our next question comes from the line of Blaine Heck with Wells Fargo. Please proceed with your question.
Great, good morning. Guys, if you think about your cost of capital, it's been solid, probably not exactly where you want it to be, but it's enabled you guys to buy some lower cap rate assets with longer duration, maybe in better markets. Do you think your acquisition pipeline changes at all if your cost of capital were to increase for whatever reason?
If our cost of capital increases, obviously we wouldn't be able to buy the same cash flows that we can buy today. You know, the returns on a higher cost of capital, you know, we'd have to find more attractive financial deals. The answer to that is, of course, a change in cost of capital will change, especially our per share metrics, Core FFO per share, AFFO per share, et cetera. We're hopeful that the market appreciates our ability to identify and acquire assets that are accretive, and therefore, our cost of capital, certainly on the equity side, we hope to improve going forward. I think, you know, the other side of the equation are the 30% of our capital structure that is debt.
There are learned people who are projecting increases in the cost of debt, and there are learned people who are projecting decreases to the cost of debt. What we are cognitive of and pay attention to is that our forward projections of the cost of debt during our hold period. We believe we're a rational assessor of cost of capital not only today but going forward.
Makes sense. Okay. Bill, just a question on same-store expenses this quarter. If I'm looking at it right, the expenses increased a little over 18% year-over-year this quarter. I know you guys are reimbursed for a lot of the expenses given your lease structure, but just wanted to ask what the driver of that increase was.
Yeah, I mean, the primary driver is just occupancy. Some of these expenses are paid for directly by the tenant, and when paid directly by the tenant, they don't show up on our P&L. When you have an occupancy decline, those expenses now show up on the P&L.
Got it. Lastly, just wanted to touch on retention this quarter. You guys were a little lower than normal at 56%. I think you guys typically point to tenant expansions as the reason for most of your move-outs. Does that apply to this quarter? You know, looking forward, is there any reason you think the lower retention could stick around, or should we expect it to normalize closer to, I guess, the 70% mark?
nothing, you know, when we talk about expansion, it's tenants that feel they need more space, you know, not really looking to expand the building.
Right.
That can be through consolidation, whatever. I think that still remains one of the principal reasons why tenants vacate buildings. I don't have any color.
Yeah, I mean, in this situation, Blaine, we mentioned it on the prepared remarks, retention was 56%, but when adjusting for immediate backfills, it was 78%. That was just situations where we're able to push rent a little bit more. Those immediate backfill tenants, we were able to roll up low double-digit rent cash over rents.
again, the reason for the original tenant departing may be, as Bill said, rent, you know, rent sticker shock or, again, in normal course of business, it's most typically they're looking for more space. Indeed, in our tenant survey, we had a significant number of our tenants, who are, you know, looking for more space, and we're able to accommodate them in many instances.
Got it. Thanks, guys.
Thanks.
Our next question comes from the line of Michael Carroll with RBC Capital Markets. Please proceed with your question.
Yeah, thanks. Ben, with regard to STAG's hit rate on new acquisitions, can you quantify where that number is today and how has it trended? I believe it's down roughly 50% versus pre-COVID level. I mean, first is that correct? Is this just a new, I guess, should we expect it to kind of stay at this level given all the competition that we're seeing in the industrial space?
I think, you know, there's a few things going on. This past quarter, we're a little better than 12%, which is say two-thirds of our pre-COVID hit rate. Earlier in the year had been running sub 10%. Obviously there's a lot of competition in the market. There's also a lot of assets being brought to market, and our activity in unsolicited bids has also been increased, which by nature have a lower hit rate, so the seller hasn't decided to sell at the time we approach them, you know, hasn't made that overt decision to sell. There's a number of factors that go into it. I think you're right, though, the competition is certainly a big piece of that.
We continue to underwrite deals in primary markets where, you know, the hit rate is gonna be lower because of the amount of competition. As I said, the unsolicited offers are always gonna have a lower hit rate because we don't know for certain that the seller is indeed a seller.
Okay.
You know, just one of the advantages of our, the improvements we've made to the people, systems, and processes on our acquisition team is we have an even greater and a growing ability to identify and underwrite assets, so we can maintain volume even though we have that lower hit rate.
Okay. Yeah, understood. I guess, Bill, earlier, and I know that you kinda mentioned this already in the Q&A regarding the competition for those larger assets, does the size of asset matter to garner that increased competition depending on the market or region, or is it fairly uniform that these new investors coming into the space just are trying to buy larger portfolios or larger single assets to deploy capital?
I mean, it's not 100% uniform, Mike. I mean, there are some markets that, some of the larger investors just do not feel comfortable investing in, which is perfectly fine with us. I would say absent that, it's pretty uniform in that, the larger deal sizes, $40 million plus, just garner a much lower cap rate in this environment.
I'm sorry if I missed this. Can you quantify the difference between the cap rate for those larger versus the smaller transactions? I mean, is there an easy way to do that?
It's a continuum, so, you know, the $40 million deal attracts a certain amount of capital, the $400 million deal attracts a certain amount of capital, and the $4 billion deal attracts a certain amount of capital. It's really where, you know, some of our, especially the non-traded REITs, you know, to the extent that they feel they can get involved, they typically drive lower cap rates. I wouldn't say there's a good algorithm to assess the differential. It's when they, you know, when some of these passive sources of capital or income-oriented sources of capital show up, it's gonna drive cap rates down.
Okay. Last one from me is, what percentage of the assets that you typically acquire are below $40 million? I believe it's a large part, right?
Yeah, I don't have the exact percentage. I mean, you can look at our earnings releases and supplementals to figure that out, but it's a very high percentage.
Okay, great. Thank you.
We'll try and give you some numbers on that.
Our next question comes from the line of Vince Tibone with Green Street . Please proceed with your question.
Hi, good morning. I would like to dive into acquisition cap rates a little deeper. Can you discuss the difference in cash cap rates between stabilized 100% leased assets and vacant properties where you're taking some leasing risk? Just how much higher are the, you know, estimated stabilized cap rates for vacant buildings compared to something similar that's fully leased?
Vince, this is Ben. I thought you were gonna give me an easy one. The vacant ones have zero cap rate. But you had. You did insert stabilized, so I have to differ from that. It's probably 25 or maybe a little bit more basis points. It obviously depends on the velocity of the market, how fast it's gonna be leased, or you know, projected to be leased, et cetera. 25 plus is probably not a bad assessment.
Okay. That's helpful. Can you just share your kind of typical leasing outcomes on some of these, you know, vacant acquisitions, or what you underwrite in terms of the amount of downtime and whatnot?
Yeah, again, market specific. You know, some markets we're underwriting 6 months, some right at nine, some 12. Our experience has been in current market conditions, we generally have outperformed our underwriting, but we remain conservative in how we view the world. We're looking for the midpoint, not the optimistic point.
Yeah, I mean, a couple examples, Vince. I mean, one of the deals we acquired this quarter, we were underwriting nine months, and we already have a lease in hand for one of the buildings. Also we mentioned that Taunton facility that we just sold. I mean, that was an acquisition that we acquired vacant. We put a short-term lease in there almost immediately, and subsequently put a large e-commerce tenant in there for a long-term lease.
Yeah, effectively, that one had negative downtime because the short-term lease paid to get out of the lease. You know, we're seeing, again, downtimes are running shorter than our underwritten downtimes on a general basis. We have a number of times where we have an asset that's brought to us as an investment, and then there's a reset to the investment analysis because a lease has been executed prior to our acquisition, so the seller may be looking for additional proceeds based on their having leased the building before we even bought it.
That makes sense. Very helpful. Thank you.
Our next question comes from the line of Chris Lucas with Capital One. Please proceed with your question.
Hey, good morning, guys. Just maybe a follow-up question to that. Ben, should we be thinking about your acquisition mix maybe shifting to a little bit more value add given the tailwinds that exist in the industrial market fundamentals?
I think the answer to that is, you know, what we buy, where we find returns. If the world has shifted to focusing just on cash flow, which, you know, you could argue that the introduction of all this non-traded money, which is income-oriented, might result in and might mean that you can find better returns in value add. But that's a pendulum that swings back and forth. Probably not a big arc, the pendulum, so it's not like value add gets really attractive and income gets really unattractive.
There's small gradations, and we react to where, you know, we're going where what Wayne Gretzky said, "We go where the puck's going to be." We're going to find the places where we underwrite the best returns for our shareholders, and it may be in value add or it may be in income. We are continuing to look for those returns as opposed to any particular category.
You're not putting any guide rails in terms of maximums, in terms of what you're willing to do on the value add?
No, I don't think that the pendulum swings that far, so. We're looking across a whole bunch of different markets which have different sort of, to some extent anyway, have different realities going on between cash, you know, cash flowing assets and value add assets. Across all those markets, we don't expect to move very far from the median, you know, of how much of our acquisitions are value add versus immediately income producing.
Okay, and then let me-
Yeah
Segue into markets. Are you seeing any markets where there are significant rent spikes and/or tenants being more aggressive about their space needs and trying to get out in front of it and therefore taking space in advance of when they need it more so than they might have in the past?
Yeah, I think the answer to that is yes. I mean, you have persisting very low vacancy in some markets where, you know, that's the driver for tenants trying to get out in front. I don't think you're gonna see, we certainly haven't seen, you know, the kind of activities you saw in lab or urban office in some prior cycles where people, you know, had went out and, you know, I think of downtown San Francisco where, you know, the people just were going out trying to secure they had space way in advance of need. I haven't seen that. Steve, have you seen this?
No, not to this, you know, to a specific market, but broadly based, I think what Ben just said is correct.
Okay, great. That's all I had this morning. Thank you.
Thanks, Chris.
As a reminder, if you would like to ask a question, press star one on your telephone keypad. Our next question comes from the line of Michael Mueller with JP Morgan. Please proceed with your question.
Yeah, hi. I got on the call a little late, so I apologize if you touched on this at the beginning. Two questions. One, if you're looking at just what you think the portfolio mark-to-market is today, what would you say that is? And then second, thinking about bumps and escalators, what is the average in place for the overall portfolio? And then if we're looking at the leases that were signed in 2021, are they at a similar level or a different level?
I'll let Bill answer the second part of the question for it first.
Yeah. Hey, Mike. The average escalator in the portfolio today is still around 2.25. New and renewal leases, we're signing new leases around that 3% mark and renewals anywhere from 2.5%-3%. Consistent with what we've seen this whole year.
Great.
The first part of the question, remind me what that was?
mark-to-market.
Oh, mark-to-market. Yeah. I mean, we're still obviously, given the backdrop of across the whole country, obviously varying by market, of very fast rent growth relative to long-term norms, is highly likely and we believe our portfolio is under market. We don't have a specific number of how far under market, but reflecting the rent spreads that we're achieving, we certainly know that our portfolio in total is under market.
Got it. Okay. That was it. Thank you.
Thanks, Mike.
Thank you. We have no further questions at this time. Mr. Butcher, I would like to turn the floor back over to you for closing comments.
Thank you very much to the participants and to the operator. Another good quarter. The team here is executing extremely well, continues to execute in a primarily virtual environment. We have a huge opportunity set in front of us, and we look forward to continuing to deliver good returns to our shareholders. Thank you for your time this morning.
Ladies and gentlemen, this does conclude today's teleconference. You may disconnect your lines at this time. Thank you for your participation, and have a wonderful day.