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Artis Real Estate Investment Pref Shs Series E T.AX.P.E

Alternate Symbol(s):  T.AX.P.I | T.AX.UN | ARESF

Artis Real Estate Investment Trust is an unincorporated closed-end REIT based in Canada. Artis REIT's portfolio comprises properties located in Central and Western Canada and select markets throughout the United States, including regions such as Alberta, British Columbia, Manitoba, Ontario, Saskatchewan, Arizona, Minnesota, Colorado, New York, and Wisconsin. The properties are divided into three categories: office, retail, and industrial. The industrial properties account for most of the portfolio, followed by the office properties and the retail properties.


TSX:AX.P.E - Post by User

Post by incomedreamer11on Mar 04, 2024 10:08am
79 Views
Post# 35913068

Scotia comments after conference

Scotia comments after conference

A Short Term Recovery Still Possible, but Long-Term Story Lacks Visibility

OUR TAKE: Neutral. We maintain our SP rating, with our key estimates down an avg. 6% (Exhibit 1) vs. the 1% sector avg. (Exhibit 2) following another quarter falling short of FFOPU expectations, primarily on higher interest expense (Exhibit 13). Post Q3 results, we opined AX looked like a potential near-term trade (-10% vs. +10% for sector) predicated on asset sales (which did not materialize yet). Those appear to be simply delayed (see call highlights below), which should give the lagging unit price a bit of a boost (like today), despite an ongoing “Strategic Review” that doesn’t appear to be leading to a notable detour from the “Status Quo” of selling assets that are sellable at a reasonable price (i.e., Industrial and Retail); we were expecting something additive. AX distribution is intact and while asset sales seem forthcoming, we also note AX has unreasonably high interest income (see below) and its desire to return to FFOPU and NAVPU growth may require a re-think of the distribution, in our view. The combination of successful asset sales plus Fed/BoC rate cuts would likely see notable unit price appreciation, but we continue to struggle seeing the long-term vision.

KEY POINTS

What’s changed? We’ve applied a 50% probability of a 50% distribution cut, with our 2024E distribution/un falling 25% to $0.45, equating to a 2024E AFFO payout ratio of 84%. Our target multiple falls 1.0x to 9.5x on lack of debt reduction progress (we estimate proportionate Debt/GBV was +150bp q/q to 62% incl. prefs as debt; Exhibit 4) and ranges from 6.0x (Office) to 15x (Industrial).

Call takeaways. AX noted 12 properties totalling ~$450M of dispositions is under contract/approaching and reiterated confidence in dealing with $261M of debt maturities in 2024 (Exhibit 3), with 17% under term sheet, 50% expected to be extended and no concern over the remaining 33% (we note mortgages for assets held for sale = $135M). The 2024 debt maturities are all in the U.S. and AX clarified all assets in the portfolio with mortgages are recourse in nature. AX floating rate exposure remains extremely high at 63% (Exhibit 3 above), which should fall with dispositions but AX is also strategically anticipating Fed/BoC rate cuts (i.e., making a call that rates are falling). We note 300 Main in Winnipeg (a ~$200M residential development) was reclassified into IPP in Q4 but the FFOPU impact was not known. Stabilized NOI = $10M/yr (i.e., 5% yield) but stabilized FFO impact was again unclear. AX is still accruing 18% on the initial $100M CUF Iris preferred investoment (was 23% in Q4) in kind (not cash). The interest income = a material 34% of AX 2024E FFO and is expected to remain PIK in the near-term (i.e., balance now = $144M). Lastly, on AX equity securities, it confirmed it remains only D and FCR and AX actually purchased ~$2M in Q1.

Q4/23 Highlights & Developments

OUR TAKE: Slight negative. Reported FFOPU was $0.25. Ex. $0.5M of lease termination fees and $0.7M of other non-recurring items, we estimate recurring FFOPU was $0.253 vs. $0.265 q/q and $0.300 y/y, below our $0.266 and $0.264 consensus (range = $0.25-$0.27); The print = 16% y/y erosion (Q3/23A = 24% y/y erosion).

Limited completed dispositions in Q4, but large uptick in disclosed assets held for sale. It appears that only $24M (1 office, 1 industrial) of the $110M that was previously cited as closed/unconditional transacted in Q4/23. That said, assets HFS were +$303M q/q to $572M and = 19% of IPP (Q3 = +$126M q/q to $269M).

Special Committee update: Limited. A sale of the REIT was pursued but didn’t yield bids in proximity to IFRS NAVPU (Q4/23A = $13.96, down 9% q/q). Office assets appear to be the stumbling block given disclosed healthy private market demand for Industrial and Retail. We didn’t expect “status quo” to be the outcome of the Strategic Review, and the Board remains committed to pursuing near-term strategic alternatives, but its a bit more unclear what those may beNo disclosed change to the distribution (for now, in our view).

Capital recycling update. AX renewed its NCIB on December 19th, but did not repurchase units in Q4/23. AX FV investment in equity securities were +$18M q/q to $152M (all FV gains; Q3 = fell $35M q/q). Post-Q, AX sold equity securities for $27M of net proceeds and purchased $2M.

IFRS NAVPU fell $1.30 (-9%) q/q to $13.96 vs. our $12.50 (Q3 = -$1.02 q/q to $15.26), incl. a $120M FV loss ($1.10/un; Q3 = $88M FV loss). The $120M FV loss = 4% of IPP (Q3 = 3%) was driven primarily by a $92M FV loss in Office (Q3 = -$80M). Portfolio IFRS cap rate was +17bp q/q to 6.89% (vs. our 7.21%; Q3 = +12bp q/q), driven by Industrial +13bp (Q3 = +17bp), Office +29bp (Q3 = +18bp) and Retail +9bp (Q3 = +7bp). Residential was flat q/q at 4.50% (Q3 = flat).

Occupancy improves slightly q/q. In-place occupancy was +20bp q/q to 90.1% (Q3 = -40bp q/q to 89.9%), while committed occupancy fell 20bp q/q to 90.9% (Q3 = -80bp q/q to 91.1%). In-place CAD was +50bp q/q to 89.8% (Q3 = -40bp q/q), while U.S. fell 10bp q/q to 90.3% (Q3 = -30bp q/q). Avg. total portfolio rent on lease renewal was +5.8% (Q3 = +3.5%). In-place rent was +0.4% q/q to $15.15/sf (Q3 = +2.4% q/q) and is 1.7% above AX-est. market (Q3 = 1.0% above). SPNOI was +9.2% in CAD and 9.0% in local currency (Q3 = +6.0%/+3.8%)By asset class, y/y SPNOI in CAD was: Industrial (+17.6%; Q3 = +21.3%), Office 4.3%; Q3 = -5.3%), Retail (+12.4%; Q3 = -2.6%)

Liquidity and D/EBITDA improves, while floating-rate debt exposure decreases. Q4 liquidity was +$17M q/q to $164M (Q3 = -$304M q/q to $147M), incl. $29M in cash and $135M in available revolving credit; = 0.63x 2024 mortgage debt maturities (Q3 = 0.45x 2023-2024). Total debt/GBV was +150bp q/q to 50.9% (Q3 = +220bp q/q to 49.4%) on large FV loss; Again, AX does not disclose proportionate, which in both cases is likely notably higher than disclosed total metrics. Disclosed debt/EBITDA fell 0.3x q/q to 7.7x (Q3 = +0.2x q/q to 8.0x). Unhedged variable-rate debt as a % of total debt fell 10.2% q/q to 62.8%. Unencumbered assets to unsecured debt fell 0.05x q/q to 1.62x (Q3 = -0.1x q/q to 1.67x).


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