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Good morning. This is Cyndi Holt, Senior Vice President of Finance and Investor Relations, and I would like to welcome you to the Tanger Factory Outlet Centers second quarter 2021 conference call.
Yesterday evening we issued our earnings release as well as our supplemental information package and investor presentation. This information is available on our Investor Relations website, investors.tangeroutlets.com.
Please note that during this conference call, some of management’s comments will be forward-looking statements that are subject to numerous risks and uncertainties and actual results could differ materially from those projected. We direct you to our filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission for a detailed discussion of these risks and uncertainties.
During the call, we will also discuss non-GAAP financial measures as defined by SEC Regulation G, including funds from operations or FFO, core FFO, same center net operating income, and adjusted EBITDA. Reconciliations of these non-GAAP measures to the most directly comparable GAAP financial measures are included in our earnings release and in our supplemental information.
This call is being recorded for rebroadcast for a period of time in the future. As such, it is important to note that management’s comments include time-sensitive information that may only be accurate as of today’s date, August 4, 2021.
At this time, all participants are in listen-only mode. Following management’s prepared comments, the call will be open for your questions. We request that everyone ask only one question and one follow-up to allow as many of you as possible to ask questions. If time permits, we are happy for you to re-queue for additional questions.
On the call today will be Steven Tanger, Executive Chair; Stephen Yalof, Chief Executive Officer; and Jim Williams, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer.
I will now turn the call over to Steven Tanger. Please go ahead, Steve.
Good morning and thank you for joining us for our second quarter 2021 earnings call. These results demonstrate the successful execution of our strategic initiatives and progress in continuing to evolve Tanger to drive improved profitability and shareholder value.
We have seen traffic and sales return to pre-pandemic levels as our open air centers offer an excellent value proposition for both retailers and shoppers. I would also like to welcome Sandeep Mathrani to Tanger’s board of directors. Sandeep is currently the CEO of WeWork and previously was CEO of Brookfield Properties Retail Group and of GGP. We are privileged to benefit from his experience and wisdom and look forward to his ongoing counsel and guidance.
I will now turn the call over to Steve Yalof to provide details on our second quarter performance and to discuss our strategic priorities.
Thank you Steve.
Our second quarter results demonstrate continued progress in the leasing, operating and marketing of our open air retail centers. Tenant sales and domestic traffic are now outpacing pre-pandemic levels. We have achieved a 130 basis point sequential increase in occupancy and a meaningful rebound in same center NOI. We are curating a compelling mix of brands and uses, creating a sense of place for experiential outings, connecting with shoppers in more personalized ways, and monetizing the non-store elements of our centers.
Same center NOI in the second quarter was up 88% compared to the second quarter of 2020 and represents 93% of the same period in 2019. For the second quarter, traffic to our domestic centers was above the same period of 2019. This sustained rebound in traffic levels clearly reflects the attraction of our open air shopping centers, their dominant market locations, and the value proposition that we offer to both our retainer partners and shoppers.
Tenant sales have followed a similar trajectory. Average tenant sales productivity grew to $424 per square foot for the trailing 12 months, up 7.3% from $395 per square foot for the comparable 2019 period. On a same center basis, average tenant sales increased 5.5%. Categories that are performing particularly well include athleisure, youth-oriented brands, jewelry, accessories, beauty and home.
Consolidated portfolio occupancy at quarter end was 93%, a 130 basis point increase from the end of the first quarter. We have recaptured 80,000 square feet of space due to bankruptcies and retailer restructurings through the end of the second quarter, and shortly after we recaptured an additional 55,000 square feet which was expected and represents negotiated early terminations for our legacy outlet brands, where we collected lease termination fees.
When we were unable to achieve desired rents, our strategic approach to leasing included shortening term to enable us to re-price or re-populate our real estate sooner and preserving variable rent upside by reducing break points and increasing variable rent pay rates. Some deals that were completed during the height of COVID uncertainty ultimately produced total rents that exceeded the prior contractual fixed rents. In these cases, our rent spreads don’t fully capture variable rent contributions as spreads measure the change in base rent and common area charges only.
Leasing activity continues to accelerate with over 300 new leases and renewals totaling 1.6 million square feet of leasing that commenced during the last 12 months. As of the end of the quarter, renewals executed or in process represented 54% of the space scheduled to expire during the year. This pace reflects our strategy to hold on some of our renewal leasing activity while the market continues to rebound and rental rates improve. This has proven sound as our sales and traffic continue to build.
We continue to gain ground on our lease spreads, which represent sequential improvement from those reported as of the end of the first quarter. Permanent leasing activity is continuing to build and we continue to pursue pop-up leases as a near term strategy. These transactions contribute to occupancy, higher cash flow, help maintain the variety and vibrancy of our centers, and provide us an opportunity to increase the value of our real estate as market conditions continue to improve.
The core tenancy of our portfolio remains apparel and footwear, however we are continuing to realize the tremendous appeal our centers offer to new categories and uses. The addition of new food concepts such as sit-down restaurants, iconic cookie and cupcake brands, local microbreweries, and upscale gourmet grocers has added to our place making experiential activations and entertaining uses which have helped achieve our goal of driving shopper visits, frequency, dwell time, and ultimately bigger baskets. Welcoming these new uses to Tanger’s provided the opportunity for our retailer partners to introduce their brands and concepts to a whole new shopper base.
Additionally, as part of our ESG strategy, this year we launched our small business initiative aimed at supporting up and coming retailers in our local communities. Through this program, we have discovered compelling new retailers and brands which have enhanced our tenant mix and provided us access to new shoppers.
We are focused on growing our non-store revenue streams, which are delivering promising results. These initiatives include creating onsite paid sponsorship and media opportunities where brands can promote their business on center but outside the four walls of their store. This includes marketing opportunities on bright walls, digital directories, and common area activations. In addition to providing more on-center branding, these programs and activations create fun ways to engage our shoppers during their visit.
This revenue is captured in the other revenues line, which year to date is up 88% from last year and 26% over 2019. As we continue to monetize our real estate and create additional revenue streams, we have stood up a peripheral land team to take advantage of our existing portfolio of our parcels and ancillary lands. We presently have peripheral land inventory at over two-thirds of our centers and will opportunistically acquire additional parcels as leasing demand for these property types increases. As an example, we have recently acquired an adjacent parcel to our Glendale, Arizona shopping center to expand our footprint at that center and provide more F&B and entertainment uses, as well as additional paid for event parking.
We continue to enhance and expand our digital initiatives as we execute our strategy to meet our customer where they are. To further develop seamless customer experiences that connect our digital and physical space, we’re expanding our online pre-shop capabilities where customers can search and see products that are available in store in our centers. Through our virtual shopper program, customers can shop remotely and either pick up in store or have merchandise shipped directly to them. We also continue to grow our Tanger flash pop-up sales and live sales through our website, app and social channels, which we host with participating retailers as we innovate and discover ways to reach customers.
Through all of our digital channels, we are providing more personalized and relevant content, and this quarter we have introduced our Tanger fashion director who shops our brands and retailers, curates looks, and posts them on our social media channels. This initiative is aimed at our loyal Tanger insiders and Tanger Club members who shop our centers with greater frequency and is designed to reach new and emerging shoppers to the brand. By providing more enriched and digital content for the center, our goal is to drive higher frequency of shopper visits and more engagement with our virtual shopper. These digital touch points complement our on-center experience and help to attract new customers, particularly in younger demographics.
In summary, we continue to execute our strategic plan and focus on our core business. We are delivering new leasing and actively pursuing new uses, new brands, and new categories with the goal of increasing center occupancy. We continue to grow and build our new revenue stream, such as paid media, sponsorship, and peripheral land, and we are innovating new ways to reach our customer to drive center visits.
We are seeing our traffic, leasing and business development results improving rapidly and we are positioned to use this momentum to increase the value of our real estate, drive cash flow, and deliver long term growth.
I would now like to turn the call over to Jim Williams to take you through our financial results, balance sheet and outlook for the remainder of 2021.
Thank you Steve.
We delivered strong second quarter results, showing continued positive momentum. Second quarter core FFO available to common shareholders was $0.43 per share compared to $0.10 per share in the second quarter of 2020. Core FFO for the second quarter of 2021 includes $0.02 per share dilution from the shares issued to date and excludes a charge of $14 million or $0.13 per share for the early extinguishment of debt since we redeemed $150 million of our 2023 bonds.
Same center NOI for the consolidated portfolio increased 87.6% for the quarter as the prior year reflects reductions in rental revenues due to the pandemic along with higher variable rents driven by better than expected tenant sales performance this year. As we discussed last quarter, we have maintained high rent collections. We have collected approximately 98% of contractual fixed rents billed in the first half of 2021. We have also continued to collect rents billed for prior periods, including amounts related to 2020 that we allowed our tenants to defer to 2021. Through July 30, 2021, we had collected 98% of the 2020 deferred rents due to be repaid in the first half of 2021.
During the second quarter, we opportunistically raised capital using our ATM program to further reduce debt and strengthen our balance sheet. We issued 3.1 million common shares that generated $58 million of net proceeds at a weighted average price of $18.85 per share. Year to date, we sold 10 million shares and raised $187 million of equity at an average price of $18.97 per share.
As previously announced, on April 30 we completed the partial early redemption of $150 million aggregate principal amount of our 3.875% senior notes due December 2023 for $163 million in cash. This reduction in debt improves our leverage ratio and enhances our balance sheet flexibility. Subsequent to the redemption, $100 million remains outstanding.
We also paid down our unsecured term loan by an additional $25 million in June, bringing the outstanding balance to $300 million. Additionally in July, we amended and extended our unsecured lines of credit, pushing the maturity date to July 2026 including extension options and providing borrowing capacity of $520 million with an accordion feature to increase capacity to $1.2 billion. The facility includes a sustainability metric tying potential interest rate savings to LEED and Energy Star certifications. This further demonstrates our commitment and accountability regarding environmental initiatives.
We have no significant debt maturities until December 2023.
We have always prioritized maintaining a strong financial position. We will continue our disciplined and prudent approach to capital allocation. Our board will continue to evaluate dividend distributions alongside earnings growth, and our priority uses of capital include investing in our portfolio to grow NOI, reducing leverage to pre-COVID levels over time, extending debt maturities, and evaluating selective growth opportunities.
Our guidance assumes current macro conditions continue for the remainder of the year and that there are no further government-mandated retail shutdowns. For the full year 2021, we expect core FFO to be in the range of $1.52 and $1.59 per share, up from our prior expectations of $1.47 to $1.57. This guidance reflects continued sequential improvement in our business offset by the additional dilution of approximately $0.02 per share related to the common shares sold in the second quarter, which is in addition to the $0.04 of dilution from the first quarter issuances included in our prior guidance.
Our guidance also reflects year-over-year comparisons which get more difficult in the back half of 2021 due to higher occupancy and lower operating expenses last year as well as lease termination fees and reserve reversals that we recognized in the second half of 2020. Our guidance includes the 135,000 square feet of space we have recaptured to date through the end of July along with potential for an additional 65,000 square feet related to bankruptcies and brand-wide restructurings for the remainder of the year.
For additional details on our key assumptions, please see our release issued last night.
I’d now like to open it up for questions. Operator, can we take our first question?
[Operator instructions]
Our first question comes from Katy McConnell with Citi. Please go ahead.
Great, thanks. Good morning everyone.
With percentage rent up significantly this quarter and relative to history, how should we think about an annualized run rate going forward, and can you talk about how your structuring percentage rent into your new leasing deals today?
Good morning Katy, thanks for the question. With regard to percentage rent, all we can say is percentage rent definitely is a reflection on our sales performance, and as our sales performance continues to improve, I’m sure we’ll see a material impact to our percentage rent on a going forward basis.
With regard to deal structure, if you look back a year ago and consider the height of uncertainty around COVID, we structured deals, particularly renewal deals that leaned fairly heavily on variable rent. These were shorter term deals, but those variable rent deals included lower break points, higher pay rates, and where we exchanged with our retailer partners some downside protection, we structured deals that gave us more upside if the market inflected and sales returned. As our sales numbers would indicate, the sales across our portfolio came back far stronger than, I guess, we all had anticipated a year ago, and we find ourselves in that enviable position to have a pretty big gain as far as variable rents are concerned.
Got it, okay. Thanks.
Then you lowered your capex guidance fairly significantly this quarter, so can you provide some more background on what drove that change and how capex could trend next year?
Hi Katy, this is Jim. The reduction in capex really reflects our strategy and how we are approaching the leasing environment right now. Certainly as Steve said, we’re very pleased to see the rebound in our traffic and sales, and we’re trying to be very strategic on how we negotiate many of these leases, so some of the leasing activity has been pushed to 2022 and that’s reflective of the reduction in our capex spend.
So would you expect next year’s level to be more similar to your original guidance for this year?
Yes Katy. I think this is purely a timing thing, and again from a strategic thing, we’re trying to negotiate these leases at the right time. I think next year, you’ll see it probably normalize to something similar to what we guided to originally this year.
Okay, that’s helpful. Thank you.
Our next question comes from Todd Thomas with Keybanc. Please go ahead.
Hey, good morning. This is Robbie [indiscernible] on the line for Todd Thomas. Just wanted to ask here how much occupancy is temporary or short term in nature, and can you talk about success in converting these short term leases into permanent ones?
Good morning Robbie. We’ve talked about it in past quarters, but we’re up to about 9.5% in short term right now, and again let’s just go back and talk about the fact that short term leasing or temp leasing, or pop-up leasing as we like to call it, was really a strategy for us. Going back to a year ago when times where most uncertain and our folks weren’t traveling and our retailer partners weren’t traveling, we empowered our general managers and really essentially deputized 36 new members of our leasing team to go out and help us fill space in shopping centers, that was vacancy that was created by brand-wide restructuring and other bankruptcies, and they did a pretty fantastic job.
A number of things occurred as a result. We were able to, first of all, turn lights on in a number of vacant rooms, get them to cash flow, and really with our strategy of increasing the value of our real estate and driving our cash flow and delivering long term growth, this went a long way. We brought new tenants into the shopping center that brought different customers, and some of those uses turned out to be great draw uses for our properties and ones that we’re in discussions with right now to turn into longer term deals.
All in all, I find that the shopper in general probably doesn’t know the difference between a short term lease and a full term lease, but they certainly know the difference between a closed store and an open store, and with a strategy of keeping lights on and stores opened, we’ve created opportunity for ourselves to increase our near term occupancy but also test some new concepts in our shopping centers with improved pull results.
Perfect. Just one more here from me. Are retailers reporting any changes to sales, traffic, or any operating conditions related to the delta variant and the rise in new cases? Just wondering if you’re seeing or hearing anything from them, since they’re on the ground.
We have not heard any of that yet.
Perfect, thanks so much.
Thanks Robbie.
The next question comes from Samir Khanal with Evercore. Please go ahead.
Good morning everyone. Steve, you talked about how sales are up and traffic is up. Maybe give us a breakdown, maybe centers or regions where you’re maybe seeing a better return in traffic and sales than others. I know you’ve talked about the initiatives you ran at some of the centers. I’m just trying to see if there’s any differences you’re seeing from center to center or region to region here.
Well Samir, I would say that the centers that--our core shopping centers are located in geographies that are drive-to resort and in the top 50 MSAs. That’s really the sweet spot of our portfolio, and those seem to be the markets that have shown the greatest amount of improvement.
On the flipside of that, we’ve got a couple of shopping centers that are dependent on other things to drive traffic, whether it’s international tourism or casino gambling or the hotel business or entertainment uses, and as you could probably imagine, although those are coming back, they’re not coming back at the same pace that the other centers are.
Got it. I guess my--just as a second question here, your occupancy was up quite a lot in the second quarter. You still have pressure on rents, right, and especially on the new rent side, so I’m just trying to understand how do you think about spreads, how do you think that metric will trend, let’s say, over the next 12 months as you guys think about balancing occupancy and rents over the next few quarters?
Well, we spend a lot of time thinking about rent and rent spreads and obviously prioritizing leasing our centers, and if you take a look at some of the legacy vacancy caused by some of those brands that had gone out in recent years, stores that closed at the high rent pay mark that we’re now replacing with different uses to the portfolio, so in an effort to be a little bit less dependent on the apparel and the footwear, we’re pivoting to new uses.
We talked about some of those uses in the opening remarks, new deals like Dick’s Sporting Goods, Purple Mattresses, Nantucket Meat and Fish - these are brands that are iconic, great draws to our shopping center, new uses in both the direct-to-consumer space, going with grocery uses in some of our shopping centers which in fact we’re seeing great results from a traffic draw point of view, but also with the frequency of customer. Historically folks would come to an outlet maybe once on their trip to a particular resort community, but with the grocery store in this particular center, we’re seeing far more frequency of visit by that same customer.
These uses are working, they’re enhancing, and they’re replacing old legacy space, and might be doing so at a lower base rent but we’re being strategic the variable rent component of these deals, and in many instances the sum of those two parts is higher than the old base rents that we were collecting, although those numbers are reflected in our rent spreads.
That’s it for me. Thanks so much, Steve.
Thanks Samir.
The next question comes from Caitlin Burrows with Goldman Sachs. Please go ahead.
Hi, good morning. I first had a quick follow-up on the recent leases that were more reliant on the percent rents. Over the life of those leases, does that sales threshold change or is it consistent over the life of that lease?
Caitlin, I’m sure you know all leases are written differently, but rents that have a base rent component and a percentage rent component to it, as the base rent grows, whether it’s a CTI or a fixed annual increase, so does that natural breakpoint commensurately grow with the growth of the base rent.
Okay, got it. Then I was wondering on the recapture estimate of 200,000 square feet for the year, I know you guys gave that estimate back with 4Q earnings, so I was just wondering if you could give some commentary on how that’s playing out versus initial expectation in terms of the timing, exact stores that are impacted, or anything like that.
We mentioned that we’ve got another 55,000 square feet back early this quarter from one of the legacy brands - it was expected, and we knew it was coming back, but that was really the bulk of our known space coming back. Beginning of the quarter, we shared 200,000 square feet of guidance, but in that remainder is definitely some buffer.
Got it, okay. Then maybe just a last one, wondering if you can give any updated commentary, if there is some, on the Nashville development. Given the strength in retail that we’ve seen this year, just wondering if there’s been progress there, or not quite yet.
Yes, we announced when we get to 60% leased, we’ll put a shovel in the ground, and we anticipate we’ll probably get there the beginning of next year. We think it’s a great market and there’s definitely some interest from our retailer partners, and we’ll certainly keep you updated as progress moves forward on that development.
Okay, great. Thanks.
Our next question comes from Craig Schmidt with Bank of America. Please go ahead.
Thank you. My question surrounds the chart, Outlet Center Ranking. I’m wondering if within the fifth and sixth tiers, I know that you periodically cull the portfolio, but looking at the occupancy, it still hasn’t really worked its way up, and just the difference between square footage percent of total and portfolio NOI percent of total, I’m just wondering if these are assets that maybe you might want to consider disposing of.
Craig, thanks for the question. First of all, the center is still cash flow, and we’re not currently marketing any of our centers.
Okay, so all the centers in that list, you’re saying have positive cash flow still?
I’m sorry, I think what you said is all those centers are cash flowing?
I’m just confirming--I’m sorry, I was just confirming that all 30 of these centers met with their positive cash flow.
Yes.
Okay, thanks a lot.
As a reminder, if you have a question, please press star then one.
The next question comes from Mike Mueller with JP Morgan. Please go ahead.
Yes, hi. Looking at what you’ve done year to date for FFO and the full year guidance, it implies an average quarterly FFO of about $0.36 to get to the midpoint of the range. Can you walk through what the major moving parts are from the $0.43 Q2 print down to that $0.36? It looks like there may have been a couple cent one-time property tax benefits, but just if you could bridge that gap, that would be helpful.
Sure Mike, good morning - this is Jim. You did identify one of the major things there, the refund of property taxes was around $0.02 a share. There’s also another penny a share per quarter that we expect from the dilution of the ATM shares we issued in the second quarter - that’s on top of the $0.04 dilution that we had built into the guidance last time. I think the remaining thing really that’s driving that is you’ve got the effect of the 55,000 square feet that came back in July that Steve just mentioned, and that potential 65,000 additional feet that may come back before the end of the year. Then the final component is we do have higher operating expenses in the second half as we go through events like back to school and the holiday season. Those are your main components.
Got it, okay. That was it, thank you.
This concludes our question and answer session. I would like to turn the conference back over to Steve Tanger for any closing remarks.
Good morning. I wanted to thank each of our colleagues on the Tanger team for their tireless efforts to produce these excellent results. Have a wonderful summer, and I hope to see you soon. Goodbye.
The conference has now concluded. Thank you for attending today’s presentation. You may now disconnect.