NYSE:VNO Vornado Realty Trust Q3 2021 Earnings Report $39.56 -0.63 (-1.57%) As of 03:22 PM Eastern Earnings HistoryForecast Vornado Realty Trust EPS ResultsActual EPS$0.14Consensus EPS $0.72Beat/MissMissed by -$0.58One Year Ago EPS$0.59Vornado Realty Trust Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$409.21 millionExpected Revenue$380.50 millionBeat/MissBeat by +$28.71 millionYoY Revenue Growth+12.40%Vornado Realty Trust Announcement DetailsQuarterQ3 2021Date11/1/2021TimeAfter Market ClosesConference Call DateMonday, November 1, 2021Conference Call Time8:00PM ETConference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptSlide DeckQuarterly Report (10-Q)Earnings HistoryCompany ProfileSlide DeckFull Screen Slide DeckPowered by Vornado Realty Trust Q3 2021 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrNovember 1, 2021 ShareLink copied to clipboard.There are 12 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Good morning, and welcome to the Vornado Realty Trust Third Quarter 2021 Earnings Call. My name is Vanessa, and I will be your operator for today's call. This call is being recorded for replay purposes. All lines are in a listen only mode. Our speakers will address your questions at the end of the presentation during the question and answer session. Operator00:00:22At that time, please press star and one on your touch tone phone. I will now turn the call over to Ms. Kathy Creswell, Director of Investor Relations. Please go ahead. Speaker 100:00:33Thank you. Welcome to Vornado Realty Trust's 3rd quarter earnings call. Yesterday afternoon, we issued our 3rd earnings release and filed our quarterly report on Form 10 Q with the Securities and Exchange Commission. These documents as well as our supplemental Financial information package are available on our website, www.vno.com, under the Investor Relations section. In these documents and during today's call, we will discuss certain non GAAP financial measures. Speaker 100:01:03Reconciliations of these measures to the most directly Comparable GAAP measures are included in our earnings release, Form 10 Q and financial supplement. Please be aware that statements made during this Call may be deemed forward looking statements and actual results may differ materially from these statements due to a variety of risks, uncertainties and other factors. Please refer to our filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission, including our annual report on Form 10 ks for the year ended December 31, 2020, for more information regarding these risks and uncertainties. The call may include time sensitive information that may be accurate only as of today's date. The company does not undertake a duty to update any forward looking statements. Speaker 100:01:48On the call today from management for our opening comments are Stephen Roth, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer and Michael Franco, President and Chief Financial Officer. Our senior team is also President and available for questions. I will now turn the call over to Steven Roth. Speaker 200:02:05Thanks, Kathy, and good morning, everyone. I begin by saying that I am feeling quite optimistic About the economy, about New York City and about our business. New York City is recovering rapidly. The apartment market is a case in point. It suffered a vicious decline to 70% occupancy, nothing like that nothing even close to that has ever happened before as renters gave up their performance in the work from anywhere period to now having recovered the pre COVID occupancies at even higher than pre COVID rents. Speaker 200:02:38This will go down as the most rapid V shaped rebound in history. Public transit utilization rates are picking up Public transportation is of course the lifeblood of the city. Restaurants and sporting venues are literally jam packed and Broadway and other cultural venues have reopened. With travel restrictions coming off this month, international tourists will be returning. We can see increased automobile and pedestrian traffic everywhere. Speaker 200:03:06Vaccination rates among office workers are at high levels. I'm guessing around 90%. We're hearing unanimously that our tenants want their employees Back in the office. Board has occupancy has been climbing and this week we are now at 43%. I must admit that our tenants and we Are a little frustrated how long the return to work process is taking, but there is no doubt that work in office will win over work alone at the kitchen table. Speaker 200:03:34Key things we are hearing every day are health, wellness, culture, collaboration, purpose, productivity, socialization, all under the mantra of it's time to get back to work. While the timing of complete return to the office and each company's hybrid plan are still unknowable, It is clear to me that the office is still and will be the center of work and of success. Importantly, our business is rebounding on a trajectory of recovery and return to growth. Michael will cover our operating results in a few moments. We had a very good quarter and feel good about the trend line for the future. Speaker 200:04:12Many companies throughout Conry are experiencing significant post COVID pickup in activity and we are as well. Glenn and his team are as busy as they have ever been with deals in all of our assets. Citywide, 3rd quarter leasing volume reached its highest level since 2019. Our tenant tour activity and the volume of leasing proposals we are working on, particularly large proposal is robust as companies are thriving And clearly looking to growth and this heightened activity demonstrates the importance of the office to their businesses. The dominance in New York, its infrastructure and scale and its deep, talented and diverse workforce continue to give New York a dramatic competitive advantage. Speaker 200:04:55In particular, the tech sector continues to be voracious in their appetite for space in our submarkets And New York has clearly emerged as the 2nd largest and second most important tech hub in the country. Activities in the Penn District are full steam ahead. Here's the latest. At Farley, we are targeting opening the pool and the ninth Avenue entrance by year end. Facebook's tenant work is proceeding with 1st employee occupancy scheduled for Q2 2022. Speaker 200:05:26At the Moynihan Train Hall, we have completed 22 retail leases. We are gratified and validated that Starbucks reports that its Moynihan its new Moynihan store is Number 1 out of its 190 Manhattan locations. In Penn Station, our Long Island Railroad Concourse construction is about 1 third complete. We were now on both sides of this heavily track traffic concourse. It will be a big win for us. Speaker 200:05:53The 34th Street half of the Penn 1 Lobby is open and it is spectacular. Come take a look. Our unique three level world class amenity offering will Open shortly and the other half of the PENN1 lobby which runs on 33rd Street will be completed end of Q1 2022. At PENN2, our full building transformation is well underway. On schedule and on budget, the job is largely bought out. Speaker 200:06:37Let me review again our Penn District financing plan. Capital required to complete Farley PENN1 and PENN2 is about $1,000,000,000 before TIs and that will be paid for entirely from our cash on balance sheet. Further, Farley, PENN1 and PENN2 are free and clear unencumbered by any mortgage yet whatsoever. And most importantly, As these great assets come online, they will produce a $200,000,000 of incremental additional annual earnings. The Manhattan retail market has bottomed. Speaker 200:07:11It will take some time for rents to start rising again, but leasing activity and tenant inquiries are certainly picking up as residents, office workers and tourists return to the city. New York is still a most favorite location for retailers who are on top of their game. Of particular note is our recently announced deal with Wegmans, the premier grocer in our region at 770 Broadway, the Facebook building, Replacing Kmart and that's some big uptick. We also completed retail deals in this quarter with luxury, banks and food tenants. We have now completed the retail re tenanting of 595 Madison Avenue, the Fuller Building with luxury tenants Fendi and Berluti, both LVMH brands And Christophe and Stefano Ricci. Speaker 200:08:01As you know, we sold 3 Madison Avenue Street Retail Assets This Quarter and are contracted to sell 2 SoHo Street Retail Assets in the Q1 of 2022. We still believe in high street retail and believe demand, rents and activity have bothered. I'm happy to go into detail and the whys and the wherefores of these sales and Q and A. We reaffirm the updated guidance of our retail business discussed in our last earnings call. For 2021, we still expect to do a little better than cash NOI of $135,000,000 For 2022, the guidance is cash NOI Pardon me. Speaker 200:08:51Last year, the topic de jure was rent collections. You should know that rent collections Now it has been for a while at essentially 100%. Collections on the limited number of rent deferrals that we granted during the crisis are also The topic to join today is tenant employee occupancy rates. Companywide, this week we are now at 43% and that rate has been growing nicely since the summer. We are able to harvest lots of information about usage as employees badge in and many other operating statistics from our building level technology. Speaker 200:09:30Our buildings populated by financial types, market makers and traders enjoy occupancies in the 70s. Another factoid, the busiest day of each week is Wednesday. And another factoid, the number of unique employees who came to work in the month of October was 61%. Finally, let me spend a minute on sustainability where we can Continue to be the leader. Renato was recently selected as a global sector leader for all office retail diversified respondents In the 2020 Global Real Estate Sustainability Benchmark or GRESB or the GRESB Our GRESB score of 94 was our highest total score to date. Speaker 200:10:14We also placed 2nd out of 94 publicly listed real estate companies The Americas who responded to Gresby including most of our office peers. Kudos to Dan Egan and his team for their leadership. Thank you. Now to Michael. Speaker 300:10:30Thank you, Steve, and good morning, everyone. I will start with our Q3 financial results and then end with Few comments on the leasing and capital markets. With the recovery in New York City occurring as Steve described in his opening remarks, so is our business and financial results. 3rd quarter comparable FFO as adjusted was $0.71 per share compared to $0.61 for last year's Q3, An increase of $0.10 or 16%. The increase would have been 26%, but for the once every 3 year real estate tax increase, which is largely reimbursed by tenants next year, sort of a timing issue, if you will. Speaker 300:11:09We have provided a quarter over quarter bridge in our earnings release on Page 5 And our financial supplement on Page 7. The increase was driven by the following items. $0.10 from tenant related activities, including $0.06 from the commencement of new leases and $0.04 from the non recurrence of straight line rent and tenant receivable write offs impacting the prior period, $0.04 from the continued improvement in our variable businesses, dollars 0.02 from the acquisition of our partners 45% interest in One Park Avenue in August and $0.02 from lower G and A resulting from our overhead reduction program last December. The total of these increases is partially offset by following decreases, dollars 0.06 from the already mentioned real estate tax expense accrual due to an increase in the triennial Tax assessed value of the mart, which as I said will be largely build back to tenants beginning in January 2022 and $0.02 from an increase in other miscellaneous expenses, primarily related to our new preferred issuance, partially offset by interest expense savings. Our 3rd quarter comparable results are ahead of the 20 24th quarter run We discussed at the beginning of the year and on our last earnings call as is our expectation for this year's Q4. Speaker 300:12:24We had several non comparable items in the quarter as well, which totaled about $0.11 per share of income. With respect to our variable businesses, We are continuing to see a recovery as the city returns to normal. Signage is picking up nicely with healthy bookings continuing in the 4th quarter. BMS is now performing near pre pandemic levels. Our garages should be fully back in 2022. Speaker 300:12:48And finally, a number of trade shows have successfully taken place, albeit with lower attendance primarily due to travel restrictions. Other than Hotel Penn's income, we still expect to recover most of the income from our variable businesses next year with the full return in 2023. Companywide same store cash NOI for the Q3 increased by 2.8% over the prior year's Q3 It would have been 8.1%, but for the aforementioned additional real estate tax expense at the mart during the quarter. Our core New York office business was up 7.6%. Our retail same store cash NOI was up 14.2%, primarily due to the rent commencement on new leases at 595 Madison Avenue and 4 Union Square South and lower real estate taxes. Speaker 300:13:40Our office occupancy ended the quarter at 91.6%, up 50 basis points from the 2nd quarter, which we believe represented the bottom for our office occupancy. We expect this figure to keep moving up from here based on the leases we have out for signature and in negotiation. Retail occupancy was consistent with the 2nd quarter at 77.2%. Now turning to leasing markets. New York leasing volume reached its highest volume since the onset of the pandemic with more than 7,000,000 square feet leased during the quarter. Speaker 300:14:13Employment growth continues its upward trajectory, asking rents and concessions have stabilized for high quality buildings, even improving in some submarkets And sublease space has begun to be absorbed or removed. The theme of flight to quality has continued. Quality The landlord and access to transportation all continue to be the main focus for tenants coming out of the pandemic. And we are a major beneficiary given the quality of our and the capital we invested over the past 10 years to redevelop our assets. Notably, 65% of the deal volume in the city was new and expansion leases led by 15 deals in excess of 50,000 square feet. Speaker 300:14:55The majority of leasing action is being driven by the tech and financial service industries, which accounted for 60% of all activity. We enjoyed a solid 3rd quarter signing 27 office leases totaling 757,000 square feet With average starting rents of $77 per square foot and positive GAAP in cash mark to market of 4.2% and 1.4% respectively. The highlight for the quarter, which also happened to be the largest lease done in the market was an early lease renewal with Interpublic Group for 514,000 Square Feet at 100 West 33rd Street. This important transaction reaffirms IPG's commitment to the Penn District and resolves what was our largest 2023 expiration. Importantly, we also executed on a full floor expansion with Google at 85 Tenth Avenue, increasing their total footprint in the building to just Our buildings which cater to financial service users continue to thrive. Speaker 300:15:59During the quarter, deals we completed include 52,000 Square Feet at 280 Park Avenue, 37,000 Square Feet at 888 7th Avenue And 19,000 Square Feet at 650 Madison Avenue. We are busy across our portfolio with more to come. Our leasing pipeline is very strong. We have 1,000,000 square feet of leases in negotiation with an additional 1,500,000 square feet trading paper or in advanced discussions. Our office expirations are very modest for the remainder of 2021 2022 with only 900 and 36,000 square feet expiring in total, representing only 5% of the portfolio and 189,000 of the square feet is in PENN1 and PENN2. Speaker 300:16:462023 office expirations totaled 1,500,000 square feet of which 350,000 is in PENN1 and PENN2. This total is down significantly since last quarter due to the Interpublic Group lease renewal. Retail leasing activity in the 3rd quarter 10 leases totaling 111,000 square feet with average starting rents of $110 per square foot and positive GAAP and cash mark to market of 45.3% 19.6% respectively. The largest transaction for the quarter was the previously announced 82,500 Square Foot Lease Signed with Wegmans at 770 Broadway. In addition, we completed the lease up of the retail at the Fuller Building with the lease to Stefano Ricci, giving us 4 luxury retailers there with new long term deals and reflecting the recovering market for the best locations. Speaker 300:17:39We also completed deals with Citibank at One Park and Capital One at 731 Lexington, reflecting the return of the banks to the marketplace. Finally, a word on the capital markets. The investment sales market is picking up again With a couple of recent strong office sales in addition to several other assets now in the market. Investor interest in New York is clearly rebounding As they see the Citi has bottomed and find the relative value compelling. On the debt side, pricing in the financing markets is as tight as we've ever seen We continue to be active in refinancing our debt to take advantage of the low rates. Speaker 300:18:16In September, we also took advantage of the tighter preferred market To refinance our $300,000,000 5.7 percent perpetual preferred shares with a 4.45 percent issuance of the same size, A very attractive rate for Forever Money. Finally, our current liquidity is a strong $4,443,000,000 including $2,268,000,000 of cash and restricted cash and $2,175,000,000 undrawn under our $2,750,000,000 revolving credit facilities. With that, I'll turn it over to the operator for Q and A. Operator00:18:51Thank you. We will now begin the question and answer before we move to the next caller. We have our first question from Emmanuel Korchman with Citi. Speaker 400:19:26Hey, good morning. It's Michael Bilerman here with Manny. Maybe if I can just start on putting capital to work, what's your current appetite To go out and buy assets, you obviously did the Park Avenue buyout of your joint venture partner. And so Is that something, Michael, you talked about the market with increased activity that you want to participate in? Or are you just hoarding your capital This point to pursue all the development and redevelopment types of activities and maybe just talk a little bit about If you are going to go external, whether you look at other property types rather than just office? Speaker 300:20:11Sure. Good morning, Michael. Look, the in terms of the capital deployment, We look at everything in the marketplace. As you know, there's been very little that's transacted for probably the 1st 12 months of the pandemic. And frankly, with short term rates at basically 0 and long term rates quite low as well, there's been very little So you've seen very little transaction activity. Speaker 300:20:38You're starting to see that pick up now with assets being brought out. And to date, the buyer universe, I would say, has generally been driven by Players that use higher leverage, although we're still in the early days. So to the extent we see compelling opportunities, we would act on those. So far The pricing is frankly not been compelling and as we compare both to what we're doing in Penn and prospectively what we can do in Penn, Those continue to be more attractive than just buying another asset that we're going to stabilize at a 5% yield After spending a lot of money and capital to lease it up or just to buy it. So We look, we're going to continue to look. Speaker 300:21:24If we find something interesting, we would certainly act on it. We have the capital to do that. But To date, capital continues to price assets quite aggressively notwithstanding the volume of activity is still down. Speaker 400:21:41And then can you just Speaker 200:21:43Michael, hang on. Speaker 500:21:45Yes, Stephen. Speaker 200:21:47Let me just good morning. Let me just add a little bit to what Michael said Michael Franco said. I mean, look, There has to be accretion In anything that we would buy. Right now, the math is topsy-turvy. So our stock sells in the marketplace, I don't know what it Probably close to an 8% cap rate. Speaker 200:22:15As of in our in Manhattan, Office buildings that we would even consider all sell at sub-five. So you can't that math is topsy-turvy. It makes to buy an asset for 5%. And by the way, when you take the capital that's required for these asset servicing assets year over year, Maybe the cash on cash is 4%, when our stock is selling for 7%. So anything that we would do there would be dilutive to shareholder wealth. Speaker 200:22:46And obviously, we're not going to do that. If we saw an empty building, by the way, that we can buy where we thought we could create A great deal of value, we might do that. So generally speaking, it's very difficult to For us to transact and grow right now. And so and what we do have on the other side of that We do have liquidity. We do have a very, very, very dry powder balance sheet. Speaker 200:23:17And we do have great opportunities to accretively spend that capital that's on our balance sheet in the Penn District. So that's our main focus right now. That was in the Penn District. So I'm just sort of doubling down with what Michael said. Speaker 400:23:32Well, that's helpful. And maybe A follow-up, Steve, just on the Penn District, where do things currently stand in terms of pursuing the tracker? I know it's probably a little bit Longer than you would like to have everything prepared and ready to go. So maybe just give us a little bit of an update where you are internally in terms Preparing all the financials and getting all of that done and also externally with a lot of new governmental Partners coming in to new seats, how is that all playing into sort of the timing of getting this tracker out Speaker 200:24:13Michael, thanks for that question. I remain committed to the tracker. And let's understand what I remain committed to. I remain committed to allowing our investors to choose Between our stable core business on the one hand, and then the Penn District, which is our high growth Development segment of our business and to be able to invest in either of those individually or both of those. We are very, very, very strong believers that we will create enormous values in the Penn District. Speaker 200:24:54We will create a district that will command premium pricing, and we couldn't be more excited about it. So I remain committed to it, number 1. Number 2 is we are well along with the paperwork and what have you that would be required to do To launch, we recognize what you said and that is we are seeing a complete turnover in government And senior government officials and we have pending matters with them. And so obviously, we're going to Maybe slide a little bit as we as that all plays out. We are very, very, very optimistic That the new government leaders at the city and state will be let me see, how do I say this, We'll be constructive, we'll be business friendly and recognize That the Penn District is something that requires and demands their attention and we believe we will get that their positive attention. Speaker 200:26:04The next thing is, I read in amongst the analysts Some skepticism about the idea of separating the Penn District. I'm very surprised at that. There's sort of a I'm enthusiastic about this as I've ever been about any project So I'm having trouble understanding it. Also we have had conversations with Multiple real estate investors as opposed to stock investors who share our judgment and my judgment about the potential of the Penn District. So but from the point of view of the analyst community, I am almost starting to believe that we are in a show me mode. Speaker 200:26:53So what that means is that we have to knock off some more leasing to be able to surface the values. So that's basically what's going on. We have no counterparty in the tracker. We have no timetable. It's going to smile a little bit, not too much. Speaker 200:27:15And we think it's going to be smashingly successful. Speaker 400:27:19Yes. And I appreciate those comments. And look, Steve, I think part of the skepticism out of the investment community, I think everyone recognizes What the Penn District represents, I've been following your company for almost 25 years and we've watched that area transform And it's always been that opportunity. I couldn't go through the list of things you've called at the Big Kahuna to a lot of other things. I think it is a similar it's in the same business that you are in, even though I would concur with your phrasing that You have core assets in this big development opportunity. Speaker 400:27:57I think trackers have typically been used where it's a business that Is it different than the parent company and has other comps or other things in there in terms to Highlight that value. Your comments about the private market, are much more akin to where I think investors sort of want to be able to highlight that value. But To your point, you don't want to give up a part of that project to a private, that's going to make all the money versus something that you believe should endure Speaker 200:28:38I guess so. I mean, the comment was so lengthy, I didn't really follow all of it. And the I understand the skepticism. I said I'm looking at it as a show me project. And believe me, we will show you. Speaker 400:28:56Great. All right. Thanks for the time, Steve. Operator00:29:00And thank you. Our next question is from Steve Bechle with Evercore ISI. Speaker 600:29:06Thanks. Good morning. I guess first, Michael, I wanted to just follow-up on your comments about the robust leasing pipeline. If you could just maybe provide a little more color on how much of that activity is for either PENN2 or some of the other developments And how much is for current vacancy or how much of that is forward renewals? I guess, kind of a split on new versus renewals would be helpful. Speaker 600:29:33Thanks. Speaker 300:29:35I'm going to let Glenn take it, Steve, but the answer is yes. Glenn, why don't you give some color on all that? Speaker 700:29:42Hi, Steve. So it's a very strong mix of everything. New deals both in Penn, New deals in the core portfolio, strong renewal activity throughout all of it and expansions everywhere. We're seeing strength throughout the portfolio both in Penn and the core portfolio in all different shapes and sizes with all different industry types. Things have picked up really well since we last spoke. Speaker 600:30:11And maybe just as a quick follow-up, When you're sort of talking to the tenants about space needs and space planning, what is the densities look like, Particularly on sort of the new deals and how do they compare from a space per employee perspective to maybe deals from 2 years ago? Speaker 200:30:31So I've said this Speaker 700:30:31the last couple of calls, we've seen no change at all in density. You're seeing maybe a different mix of Collaborative space, communal space versus cubicle office, but generally no change. People are planning for the future. They're back at it. A lot of them were acting as if it's pre pandemic times, growth, new fresh start, all about talent recruitment and moving forward. Speaker 300:30:59Stephen, in your question and then a lot of the questions or comments in the reports from different analysts, there Remains a skepticism as to whether New York Going to recover, whether people want to be in the office, etcetera. And a little bit picking up on Steve's comment, I think we're sort of in a show me mode In terms of when we put the points up on the Board, people see it. But as we look at the pipeline, There is activity literally at every building, all types of users. I mean Steve comment on the voracious appetite of tech, It's stronger now than it was pre COVID. And the financial types are booming. Speaker 300:31:46We're seeing heavy activity there. You have an economy where companies are doing very well. They're in growth mode and that's reflected in our pipeline. So I think leasing market is sending a very strong signal that New York is going to be fine. New York is going to be one of the winners. Speaker 300:32:03Companies want to locate here. And I think you're going to see those stats continue to get posted over the next several quarters. Obviously, this quarter was a good start, but there's much more In the queue, across our portfolio. Speaker 600:32:18Great. And then I guess Speaker 200:32:20Steve, good morning. Look, the stock market, if you look at the price of our stock and these Just the companies in the industry, they're all extremely, extremely depressed and they're doubly depressed from where they were pre COVID. There is in the stocks the sense in my mind the sentiment that nobody everybody is confused, uncertain And worry about work from home and how it will affect the CBD office business, okay? We acknowledge that. We believe 2 things. Speaker 200:32:59Number 1, well, actually, number 1, We believe in New York. We are seeing in the field that people are committed to New York. They're committed to stay in New York. They're committed to grow in New York. That's for the financial services industry, etcetera, the media industry, the entertainment industry and double and triple for the tech industry, Because the volume, the scale of New York can't be replicated anywhere. Speaker 200:33:26I mean, just if you just take 2 or 3 of the leading $1,000,000,000,000 tech firms, The leases they've signed in the last 14, 15 months, they need 15,000 engineers to fill that space. You can't get that In Austin or Nashville or wherever, okay? So the scale of New York is winning the day, Plus the talent pool. So that's factoid number 1. Factoid number 2 is, is the business Leaders that we deal with every day, they understand work from home. Speaker 200:33:58They're grappling with what their policies are going to be, What the hybrid solutions are going to be 3 days in the office, 4 days in the office, whatever it is. They know that they're grappling with it now. Yes, they continue to believe that they need office space, lots of it, in fact, higher quality office space to recruit their talent And retain their talent. So we're finding in the marketplace an economy between actually a very aggressive and robust demand for space From the big boys in each of the major industries and the uncertainty, the skepticism Of work from home in the marketplace. So we're betting that our tenants know what they're doing. Speaker 200:34:45And we think that So we think that work from the office will win. It will be nipped around the edges by some hybrid thing. People work from home some number of days a week. But the people we talk to everybody, they want the people back in the office. That's the way to And they're really curious about it. Speaker 200:35:07So we think that that's the answer. We are very, very pleased with the demand The space notwithstanding the uncertainty that's in the securities market. Speaker 600:35:22Great. And just as a quick second question. Michael, The trade shows, I know we're back a little bit in the Q3 and I know I think last quarter you had mentioned that I think NeoCon was moving in the Q4. Do you have any sense at This point is to how big trade shows could be in the Q4 and I guess what's on the books Next year already and how did the sizes shape up to kind of pre pandemic? Speaker 300:35:51We had Since July, Steve, we produced 8 trade shows, including our 2 largest shows, NeoCon and the Armory Show in New York. Obviously, there were travel restrictions, particularly internationally, which impacted attendance. And so I would say levels are probably closer to half of what they were historically, but they were put on successfully. We got the machine working again And obviously performance year over year was positive. So our expectation is that we're going to put on a full set of trade shows next year. Speaker 300:36:29We're going to see a substantial recovery. I think just being realistic, we don't think trade shows come back fully in 2022. It's 23 before that fully stabilizes, but in 2021 overall trade shows Don't contribute a lot to our variable businesses as we currently project. And next year, we think the number will Several $1,000,000 incremental. I don't want to give you a number today just because we need to spend a little time with our team, refine that and obviously it's a guess, but we do think the trend Now that the machinery is working, people are getting used to it, international travels open back up, we'll see a decent recovery next year. Speaker 600:37:16Hey, Steve. Speaker 200:37:18The overriding fact is that these trade shows are Desperately important to our clients as the major sales activity for Each of these individual companies. So the trade shows are here to stay. They're really important, okay? So we can't predict what's going to happen this quarter, next quarter. But our budgets show that Couple of years out, the trade show business will get back to where it was pre COVID. Speaker 200:37:50And the main reason is because this is a really important business to our clients. Speaker 600:37:58Great. Thanks. That's it. Operator00:38:02And thank you so much. We have our next question from Nick Yulico with Scotiabank. Speaker 800:38:09Thanks. Good morning, everyone. Just going back to the leasing Activity, you're talking about the pipeline being pretty strong, not that much in expirations next year. I mean, how should we is there any Preview you can give us about how to think about occupancy and how it could trend in, I guess, in particular, the New York City office portfolio? Speaker 700:38:30Glenn? So Nick, Michael mentioned it in his remarks. We believe our office occupancy has bottomed. Now at 91.6 percent and we think it's going to continue to improve quarter to quarter based on the action we have. Historically, We were at 96%, 97%. Speaker 700:38:49So where we are was all due to COVID. We're on our way back. We feel it's getting better and that we have hit the inflection point and going back up. Speaker 800:39:01Okay, thanks. And then second question is just about the Penn District. I know you talked about Hotel Penn Being the prime development site in the city, and going back to your prior disclosures on that, you had, I think In your NAV estimated $500,000,000 for that project, which is about $2.50 a foot of zoning Per zoning, I guess. And I guess I'm wondering if that's still the thought on the value of that there. And then as well how we should think about Penn 1, where you have the ground lease reset coming in 2023, if you have any update there and how we should think about Is Hotel Penn at $2.50 a foot number a good way to think about the potential land value reset at Penn 1? Speaker 200:39:54We continue to be happy with the number that's in our NAV. We see no reason to raise it. And with respect to the rent arbitration, we have no comments. Speaker 800:40:12Okay. I guess just in terms of, I mean, should we think about that $2.50 a foot Value that was implied for Hotel Penn being a reasonable number to think about, Penn 1, which is right across the street? Speaker 200:40:30It would be inappropriate for us to lead you either way in terms of your internal calculation. I'm not going to do that. I don't think it's appropriate. And I'm not going to talk about a very important financial arbitration in this format. Speaker 800:40:50Okay. Yes, I mean, just the reason I asked is because you do have that footnote in the Talking about the ground value reset could be material impacting the yield on the project. So at some point, it would be helpful to understand Yes, potential land value reset there. Thanks. Speaker 200:41:04I think the disclosure in the footnote is appropriate. And obviously, the final answer is unknowable and we'll go through the process and we'll hope for the best. Speaker 800:41:21Thanks. Speaker 200:41:23Thank Operator00:41:23you. We have our next question from Jamie Feldman with Bank of America. Speaker 500:41:31Thank you and good morning. I'd like to go back to your comments on retail. It sounds like you think it could be bottoming here. Just your thoughts on why and what we should expect going forward? Speaker 300:41:45I mean, Jamie, look, I think the comments on retail are reflective of what we're seeing on the ground from tenants. Tenants were In a shell for a year. Obviously, there were few people on the streets. Vacancy Was high and not much was going on. Right now the transaction machine is working again. Speaker 300:42:07People are back out on the streets. You're seeing tourism pick up, Albeit, it's all been domestic so far. International tourism will kick off actually in the next week, Which should be another shot in the arm for the city. And we don't expect it to snap back to 60,000,000 people immediately, but that's The trend line from the city being opening and the attendance at sporting events and Broadway shows and other things It's quite good and quite indicative of what we think is going to happen. So retailers want to know there are shoppers out there. Speaker 300:42:43And there are clearly shoppers out there Again, and we've talked about the flight to quality in the best locations and that's continuing to occur. We've been a beneficiary of that At a place like a Fuller, for example, at a place like a 770, which is a prime spot for Wegmans to go to. And fundamentally, we're just seeing more interest from retailers. By the way, that's all submarkets, right? The Tourist oriented submarkets of Fifth Avenue and Times Square, obviously, you would expect to be the ones to come back to last because that's so dependent on tourism. Speaker 300:43:17And with that now opening up, Retailers wanted to see it happen. But again, even there, we're seeing inquiry from tenants in both those submarkets. Rents are obviously down. That's inducing demand. And so there's discussions that are underway and an action that's occurring. Speaker 300:43:39That's what gives us, I think, the confidence to make that statement. I think Steve was pretty clear. Activity has to happen before you start getting rental And it's going to take, I think, a decent amount of activity before that happens. So I wouldn't expect rents to rise near term, but once we start Getting some pace of transactions, I think that'll be a shot in the arm for the market. Speaker 200:44:04But to To be clear, Jay, this is going to be a multiyear recovery. This is not going to be A rapid V shape rebound. It's going to take years for this market to recover. And it may never recover to the peaks That were 5 or 7 years ago. Speaker 500:44:27Okay. Thank you. And then I get Speaker 200:44:31And it has bottomed and it will recover. And think about it this way, the shutdown from COVID was Probably the most traumatic event that any of us have ever lived through. The total shutdown of the global economy, I mean, that's never happened before. The retailers, hotels, airlines, etcetera, all I mean, The suffering was monumental. So the first reaction from the retailers was to go into a shell, stop everything And shed liability. Speaker 200:45:09So the market went stone cold for the better one or 2 years. People are now understanding that there is life after it. People are succeeding. The better retailers are actually thriving from And we are seeing a very, very robust pickup in interest and demand. We are not seeing an aggressive increase And pricing that people are willing to pay. Speaker 200:45:35So we're bottomed, we're in a recovery. We are budgeting And underwriting that the recovery will be slow paced. Speaker 500:45:46Okay. Thank you. And then I guess as you think about this Speaker 200:45:49I'm sorry. And we did reaffirm our guidance on retail in my prepared remarks. Speaker 500:45:58Right. Do you see I know in your prepared remarks, you'd mentioned the sales. I mean, do you see yourself More or do you see yourself actually buying going forward? Speaker 200:46:14We certainly We are certainly as probably the most expert in retail around. And we will buy the highest quality at very attractive prices And there hasn't been that kind of availability or offering yet. I said Let me give you a feeling for the 5 assets that we have either sold or contracted to sell what our thinking was, okay. Number 1, Those assets this year are losing actually have a negative income of more than $3,000,000 I think we said in the press release that the occupancy was 30% and the vacancy therefore was 70%. That is accurate, of course. Speaker 200:47:09But there's one factoid that you have to consider. There is one tenant In those five properties that is basically a swing tenant who is Rebuilding a store. And so if you take that out and we know for sure that that tenant is going to leave in a couple of years, Because it's a swing tenant, it's not a pop up, it's a swing tenant. And so if you take that out, I think the occupancy is 11%. So if you take that into account, and by the way, if you take the so that would make the when that goes away, the earnings are The negative earnings are greater than $3,000,000 The capital if you add the capital that would be required to lease up Those five properties and we have to lease up 90% of them. Speaker 200:48:04So it's almost a total lease up job. You take the time And you take our underwriting as to how long it will take to climb up to a decent return. Our judgment was that for our business, it's a proper strategy to sell those assets. And so the proceeds where the assets are unencumbered, there's no debt on the assets. So that will bring in a 100 and I think it's 84 $5,000,000 of new cash that we think we can put to better use. Speaker 200:48:35Now we are selling the Madison Avenue assets to a friend And they are an extremely substantial offshore buyer who have a history of Making very intelligent distressed buys. We know that, we respect it and we're friends, we laugh about it to each other. We expect that the buyer of the Madison Avenue Properties will make money and have a very satisfactory Investment, but it will be in our judgment over a 10 year haul. That time frame made us to be A seller rather than a holder of those assets. So we believe that the buyer will do well and we think the seller, that's us, will do well. Speaker 200:49:29There's one last point. 25 years ago, Madison Avenue was an isolated oasis in New York. There was one submarket that worked in terms of luxury, high income, And that was the Upper East Side. Over the 25 and there was and so obviously the luxury brands all clustered In Madison Avenue, Madison Avenue had effectively an oligopoly or a monopoly on luxury shopping In the city of New York because all the customers live within walking distance of that and all the tourists Basically, staying in Upper East Side, logic. Over the years, that has been diluted enormously, So that every submarket, whether it be in Chelsea or Tribeca or the Lenz Village or the Upper Westside, Every submarket now is thriving with customers for these brands. Speaker 200:50:36So obviously, over the years, instead of having 1 store in Madison Avenue, they now have 5 stores, 1 in the Meat Pocking, 1 in Chelsea, 1 here in there. So Madison Avenue has been deleted diluted enormously. It was that sociodemographic thinking That also led us to be a seller of those assets. And by the way, that thinking is totally different Then Fifth Avenue at Times Square, which continue to be enormous attractions. Speaker 500:51:08So as you think about putting capital to work, I mean, do you still think luxury is the way to go? Or no, you're thinking actually more Middle of the road type brand? Speaker 200:51:22We're agnostic to that. We are retail investors. We love our Times Square assets, which are not really luxury. We love our Fifth Avenue assets and so we're agnostic as to the price point of our customers. We're in the landlord business, not in the retail business. Speaker 500:51:43Okay. And if I could just ask, you had talked about no debt on any of the assets at Penn Station, at least the development, redevelopment assets. What's the plan there to put more permanent capital on those projects? And how do you think about using those funds? Speaker 200:52:00We will obviously have a financing plan for the growth of the Penn District. We're very comfortable now having those assets unencumbered for the moment. And I think it's premature to start getting into What are what we will how we will permanently finance those assets if we do. Our balance sheet Our strength is based upon a mix of secured debt, unsecured debt, lines of credit And unencumbered assets are an important part of that. So right now, we're very comfortable having those assets unencumbered. Speaker 200:52:41We're even more Comfortable with having, I don't know, those assets are worth an enormous amount of money, many 1,000,000,000 of dollars. We're very comfortable having those assets available as a source of credit should the opportunities come up. Speaker 500:53:02Okay. And I assume that helps with the tracking stock if they're not encumbered? Or does that have nothing to do with it? Speaker 200:53:10The tracking stock will have its own financing plan, which we'll get to when we launch the tracker. Okay. All right. Thanks for Speaker 500:53:19your time. Speaker 200:53:21Having low debt on the tracker is an important part of that strategy. Speaker 500:53:27Okay. All right. Thank you. Operator00:53:30And we have our next question from John Kim with BMO Capital Markets. Speaker 900:53:37Thank you. Good morning. I realized the tax estimate at the mark is backwards looking, but are you surprised by the level of increase, Just given you renovated the asset 5 years ago over the last year and a half, almost 2 years, there's been a lot of disruption to the trade show and office occupancy Of the asset, I was just wondering if you were surprised by the amount of increase on taxes there? Speaker 300:54:07John, look, I would say anytime your taxes go up 47%, you're surprised at the magnitude of that. So we knew there would be an increase. I think the magnitude has surprised the entire market. We were not alone, right? I think there's been a number of articles written about How most of the large landlords have been impacted by similar increases. Speaker 300:54:31So it's high. We're certainly going to appeal it. We don't make any promises on that, but it is what it is. And as we said, The meaningful portion of that will be reimbursed by tenants beginning in 2022 and we're I think we're no different than the balance of the market, frankly. Speaker 800:54:57A few years ago, you gave Speaker 900:55:00An indication that you thought you could collect 80% of the tax increase as a tenant reimbursement. Do you feel like you could still Obtain that level of reimbursement from your tenant? Speaker 300:55:12Yes. I mean, I think, look, it's obviously dependent on the occupancy in the building, is down a little bit now, but I think 75%, 80% is not a incorrect assumption. It'll be in that neighborhood. Speaker 900:55:27Okay. My second question is on Facebook, now it's called Meta, I suppose, I'm looking to expand in New York. I'm wondering if they do expand at 770 Broadway, can you accommodate them without losing Verizon as a tenant? No. So the net impact would be like nothing? Speaker 200:56:01First of all, these are important clients and these are pending transactions. So we're really not going to speak about anything. We're really not going to get into the detail of it. But obviously, if a tenant moves in and a tenant moves out, The net result will be pretty much the same. Speaker 900:56:24Are you looking elsewhere in your portfolio? Speaker 200:56:27Say it again. Speaker 900:56:30Is Facebook looking elsewhere in your portfolio to expand? Speaker 200:56:33We're not going to comment on Facebook or pending transactions with important clients. Speaker 900:56:40Okay. Thank you. Operator00:56:44Thank you. Our next question is from Alexander Goldfarb with Piper Sandler. Speaker 1000:56:54Hey, good morning. Good morning down there, Steve. So just Want to go back to Michael's opening questions. I think you can appreciate the skepticism. I mean the original Penn Station was around for about 50 years And you guys have been talking about the redevelopment for 2020 clearly enhanced by what's gone to the Westside. Speaker 1000:57:12But if you're a Vino shareholder, You may or may not be able to hold the tracking stock when it's spun out for whatever fund mandates you have. And if the whole Thing that we've been looking at the past 10, 15 years has been this Holy Grail of confluence between Midtown South and the Far West Side. Now Penn Station is going to be there You're a Vino shareholder who has held out for that. How is the tracking stock helpful in that if not every Vino shareholder Can own the tracker and also that's what that's where a lot of that revenue growth or sorry, earnings growth is going to come from, So I think that's the area where people are grappling, which is how does this help an existing Vino share Not be able to actually own a tracker versus right now they can pencil and model all this upside that you guys have been laying out. Speaker 200:58:06Well, obviously, if you sell the tracker, you're not going to benefit from it. I mean, that goes without saying. Speaker 1000:58:13Right. But some not every fund can own the tracker because of mandates. Speaker 200:58:18We are unhappy with the fact that, As you say, some of our shareholders will have to sell the tracker. We've done the calculation. We think at the margin, it is not a significant transfer. And so It's unfortunate that some investors have to sell it. But what we're looking at is the greater good is the investors that Keep it or buy it, we think will be enormously enhanced by the transaction. Speaker 200:58:54Said another way, we think that the Penn District's future in the larger company where it's diluted Is not as good an outcome as if it's separated where it's a pure play for the Penn District. We understand what you're saying. We're unhappy about the fact that some funds will have to sell. They are not large numbers. We think they're we think it's handleable. Speaker 200:59:25But what we believe is the greater good will be enhanced by the idea. Speaker 1000:59:31But it's still a synthetic, Steve, isn't it? I mean, it's just laying Sort of paper claim to the it's not like Alexander's, which physically owns those assets. It's just laying claim on paper. A synthetic, it's not like it's a direct, correct? Speaker 200:59:48It is the answer is yes. But that's sort of argumentative, Alex. The tracker should perform as the asset The underlying assets that it is that it tracks as they perform. Okay. Speaker 301:00:09Alex, if you think about I think your Alexander's analogy actually is an interesting one. If you think about Alexander's, Alexander's is an externally advised entity, Right. The public owns 1 third. Speaker 1001:00:19Yes. Speaker 301:00:20That stock is done, when you look at it from the time that development really commenced substantially in that company Has done extraordinarily well. And so I think the corollary here is actually quite similar, Right. We're in the yes, we've been talking about it for a long time, but the reality is the development really just commenced In the last couple of years, right? And it's underway right now with Farley, PENN1, PENN2 and obviously a lot more behind that. We've talked about the public owning a portion of it, not all of it, probably less than half of it. Speaker 301:00:59And so if you think It's kind of like Alexander's in the sense of that public tracker is sort of an externally advised entity Managed by Vornado, very similar to Alexander's. And in terms of the shareholders that there's no the only shareholders that are going to be forced to sell this are some of the index funds. By the way, not all of them, not most of them, but some of them. Any investor That is an active investor that makes dedicated decisions about specific companies can continue on both pieces. By the way, they can sop up even more of The tracker. Speaker 301:01:36So, we talk about this like there's 4 sellers, there's no buyers. On the other side, we know for a fact there are investors that We have tremendous belief in the Penn District, would like to just own the Penn District, like the higher risk, higher reward, believe in What's going on in that part of the city and what we're doing and prefer to own that directly and not with everything else. There's going to be obviously, it will settle out when we distribute it. There'll be some net selling from some of the Funds that you alluded to that have to sell, but we also think there is a group of investors that are not in Vornado that We'll sop up that demand and our goal is for that to trade very well. And I think your Alexander's analogy coming back, that is a very good Analogy in terms of the trajectory of that company once the development commenced. Speaker 1001:02:26Okay. And then Steve, going back to the politics, clearly the mayor race, We can only do better. And either candidate is obviously much more pro business, much more understanding of the city than the prior. But when you look at the governor's race, there Hochul is definitely tracking to the left as she tries to veer off State Attorney General James, so if you look at what's going on in the good eviction, probably end up with statewide rent control. Why are you optimistic at the state level that It will be as productive and supportive of real estate and business in New York as the mayor election when the When you look at the politics, it seems to be taking the opposite angle. Speaker 201:03:11I can't answer that question, Alex. We've met the Governor. She's a seasoned politician with a 25 year career. She has an entire career of being supportive of business. She understands what's Going on in New York, she understands the Penn District and we believe that she will be a perfectly fine leader. Speaker 201:03:40And other than that, I can't get into it. I want to get back for a moment to Michael's very fine answer to your question about the tracker. There are trade offs here. In order to create a separate legal entity, a spin off for example, which we have done twice before with JBT Smith and Urban Edge. We would have to have a totally separate management team, Totally separate board, totally separate everything. Speaker 201:04:13So that's an untenable that's not a doable prospect and it's untenable and we can't Speaker 1101:04:19do it. Speaker 201:04:20We need the same people with our leasing and development team, for example, okay. And also it would be very the additional overhead would be enormous. So the trade off is that we can use the same team, the same board, the same governance, But we can get investors to be able to invest in whichever part of our company they want to or both, okay? So it's interesting. I expect that many investors will continue to hold both securities, which is actually the same thing as if we did Nothing in terms of separating the tractor. Speaker 201:05:06But at the margin, there will be a new group, as Michael said, of investors who actually Have a enormous level of enthusiasm for the Westside of New York, for tech coming into New York and for what we're In the Penn District and at the margin we think it will be a very successful, investment. Speaker 1001:05:27Okay. Thank you, Steve. Thank you, Michael. Operator01:05:31And we have our last question from Ronald Kamdem with Morgan Stanley. Speaker 1101:05:38Two quick ones for me. One is just going back to sort of the retail portfolio. Just curious in terms of More commentary when retailers are looking at space today, what are they focused on? Is it occupancy costs? Is it gross margin? Speaker 1101:05:53Is it But traffic levels just sort of what's making the marginal decision for retailers maybe today that may have been different sort of pre pandemic and so forth? Thanks. Speaker 201:06:05It's the same as it's always been forever and that is what sales volume can they do in a particular store Versus the cost structure versus the rent. Things are a little different today than they were. Some Stores in Manhattan were sort of flagships and advertising for the brand. That's kind of gone by the wayside. Retailers today want to make money in each individual store. Speaker 201:06:32So the number one statistic is what their expected sales volumes will be Versus what the health index would be the occupancy cost. Speaker 1101:06:45Great. And then if I could just follow-up on the Wegmans deal, just any sort of color on what the opportunity could be in Portfolio, is there anything different about sort of their lease structure versus the typical structure? Any color would be helpful. Speaker 201:07:03I don't think I have anything to add there. I mean, we're replacing first of all, 770 Broadway is the Facebook building. We're replacing Kmart with Wegmans. That's a huge uptick. The rent is significantly higher and it's a traditional lease. Speaker 201:07:21It's a And we're very, very excited about it. And there may be other opportunities with Wegmans in the rest of our portfolio. Speaker 1101:07:34Great. That's it for me. Thank you. Operator01:07:38And thank you. We have no further questions in queue. I will now turn the call over to Mr. Stephen Roth, RONADO Chairman and CEO for closing remarks. Speaker 201:07:49Thank you. One final important note before we end this call and that is that Kathy Creswell's this is Kathy Creswell's earnings call before she retires. I want to thank her for her many years of service and friendship. We wish her well I'm sure everybody on the call wishes her well. We'll see you at the next call. Speaker 201:08:09Thanks very much. Operator01:08:12And thank you, ladies and gentlemen. This concludes today's conference. Thank you for participating. You may now disconnect.Read morePowered by Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallVornado Realty Trust Q3 202100:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2x Earnings DocumentsSlide DeckQuarterly report(10-Q) Vornado Realty Trust Earnings HeadlinesVornado Realty Trust: What's With The Occupancy DipMay 12 at 2:51 AM | seekingalpha.comVornado Realty Trust (NYSE:VNO) Receives $38.00 Average Target Price from AnalystsMay 11 at 1:51 AM | americanbankingnews.comTrump’s Bitcoin Reserve is No Accident…Bryce Paul believes this is the #1 coin to buy right now The catalyst behind this surge is a massive new blockchain development…May 13, 2025 | Crypto 101 Media (Ad)Earnings call transcript: Vornado Realty Trust Q1 2025 sees EPS beat, stock risesMay 7, 2025 | investing.comVornado Realty Trust Finalizes 70-Year Master Lease with NYU for 770 BroadwayMay 7, 2025 | nasdaq.comVornado Realty Trust (NYSE:VNO) Q1 2025 Earnings Call TranscriptMay 7, 2025 | msn.comSee More Vornado Realty Trust Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like Vornado Realty Trust? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on Vornado Realty Trust and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About Vornado Realty TrustVornado Realty Trust (NYSE:VNO) is a fully - integrated equity real estate investment trust.View Vornado Realty Trust ProfileRead more More Earnings Resources from MarketBeat Earnings Tools Today's Earnings Tomorrow's Earnings Next Week's Earnings Upcoming Earnings Calls Earnings Newsletter Earnings Call Transcripts Earnings Beats & Misses Corporate Guidance Earnings Screener Earnings By Country U.S. Earnings Reports Canadian Earnings Reports U.K. Earnings Reports Latest Articles Can Shopify Stock Make a Comeback After an Earnings Sell-Off?Rocket Lab: Earnings Miss But Neutron Momentum HoldsWhy Nearly 20 Analysts Raised Meta Price Targets Post-EarningsOXY Stock Rebound Begins Following Solid Earnings BeatMonolithic Power Systems: Will Strong Earnings Spark a Recovery?Datadog Earnings Delight: Q1 Strength and an Upbeat Forecast Upwork's Earnings Beat Fuels Stock Rally—Is Freelancing Booming? Upcoming Earnings Cisco Systems (5/14/2025)Toyota Motor (5/14/2025)Applied Materials (5/15/2025)Copart (5/15/2025)NetEase (5/15/2025)Alibaba Group (5/15/2025)Deere & Company (5/15/2025)Mizuho Financial Group (5/15/2025)National Grid (5/15/2025)Walmart (5/15/2025) Get 30 Days of MarketBeat All Access for Free Sign up for MarketBeat All Access to gain access to MarketBeat's full suite of research tools. Start Your 30-Day Trial MarketBeat All Access Features Best-in-Class Portfolio Monitoring Get personalized stock ideas. Compare portfolio to indices. Check stock news, ratings, SEC filings, and more. Stock Ideas and Recommendations See daily stock ideas from top analysts. Receive short-term trading ideas from MarketBeat. Identify trending stocks on social media. Advanced Stock Screeners and Research Tools Use our seven stock screeners to find suitable stocks. Stay informed with MarketBeat's real-time news. Export data to Excel for personal analysis. Sign in to your free account to enjoy these benefits In-depth profiles and analysis for 20,000 public companies. Real-time analyst ratings, insider transactions, earnings data, and more. Our daily ratings and market update email newsletter. Sign in to your free account to enjoy all that MarketBeat has to offer. Sign In Create Account Your Email Address: Email Address Required Your Password: Password Required Log In or Sign in with Facebook Sign in with Google Forgot your password? Your Email Address: Please enter your email address. Please enter a valid email address Choose a Password: Please enter your password. Your password must be at least 8 characters long and contain at least 1 number, 1 letter, and 1 special character. Create My Account (Free) or Sign in with Facebook Sign in with Google By creating a free account, you agree to our terms of service. This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
There are 12 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Good morning, and welcome to the Vornado Realty Trust Third Quarter 2021 Earnings Call. My name is Vanessa, and I will be your operator for today's call. This call is being recorded for replay purposes. All lines are in a listen only mode. Our speakers will address your questions at the end of the presentation during the question and answer session. Operator00:00:22At that time, please press star and one on your touch tone phone. I will now turn the call over to Ms. Kathy Creswell, Director of Investor Relations. Please go ahead. Speaker 100:00:33Thank you. Welcome to Vornado Realty Trust's 3rd quarter earnings call. Yesterday afternoon, we issued our 3rd earnings release and filed our quarterly report on Form 10 Q with the Securities and Exchange Commission. These documents as well as our supplemental Financial information package are available on our website, www.vno.com, under the Investor Relations section. In these documents and during today's call, we will discuss certain non GAAP financial measures. Speaker 100:01:03Reconciliations of these measures to the most directly Comparable GAAP measures are included in our earnings release, Form 10 Q and financial supplement. Please be aware that statements made during this Call may be deemed forward looking statements and actual results may differ materially from these statements due to a variety of risks, uncertainties and other factors. Please refer to our filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission, including our annual report on Form 10 ks for the year ended December 31, 2020, for more information regarding these risks and uncertainties. The call may include time sensitive information that may be accurate only as of today's date. The company does not undertake a duty to update any forward looking statements. Speaker 100:01:48On the call today from management for our opening comments are Stephen Roth, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer and Michael Franco, President and Chief Financial Officer. Our senior team is also President and available for questions. I will now turn the call over to Steven Roth. Speaker 200:02:05Thanks, Kathy, and good morning, everyone. I begin by saying that I am feeling quite optimistic About the economy, about New York City and about our business. New York City is recovering rapidly. The apartment market is a case in point. It suffered a vicious decline to 70% occupancy, nothing like that nothing even close to that has ever happened before as renters gave up their performance in the work from anywhere period to now having recovered the pre COVID occupancies at even higher than pre COVID rents. Speaker 200:02:38This will go down as the most rapid V shaped rebound in history. Public transit utilization rates are picking up Public transportation is of course the lifeblood of the city. Restaurants and sporting venues are literally jam packed and Broadway and other cultural venues have reopened. With travel restrictions coming off this month, international tourists will be returning. We can see increased automobile and pedestrian traffic everywhere. Speaker 200:03:06Vaccination rates among office workers are at high levels. I'm guessing around 90%. We're hearing unanimously that our tenants want their employees Back in the office. Board has occupancy has been climbing and this week we are now at 43%. I must admit that our tenants and we Are a little frustrated how long the return to work process is taking, but there is no doubt that work in office will win over work alone at the kitchen table. Speaker 200:03:34Key things we are hearing every day are health, wellness, culture, collaboration, purpose, productivity, socialization, all under the mantra of it's time to get back to work. While the timing of complete return to the office and each company's hybrid plan are still unknowable, It is clear to me that the office is still and will be the center of work and of success. Importantly, our business is rebounding on a trajectory of recovery and return to growth. Michael will cover our operating results in a few moments. We had a very good quarter and feel good about the trend line for the future. Speaker 200:04:12Many companies throughout Conry are experiencing significant post COVID pickup in activity and we are as well. Glenn and his team are as busy as they have ever been with deals in all of our assets. Citywide, 3rd quarter leasing volume reached its highest level since 2019. Our tenant tour activity and the volume of leasing proposals we are working on, particularly large proposal is robust as companies are thriving And clearly looking to growth and this heightened activity demonstrates the importance of the office to their businesses. The dominance in New York, its infrastructure and scale and its deep, talented and diverse workforce continue to give New York a dramatic competitive advantage. Speaker 200:04:55In particular, the tech sector continues to be voracious in their appetite for space in our submarkets And New York has clearly emerged as the 2nd largest and second most important tech hub in the country. Activities in the Penn District are full steam ahead. Here's the latest. At Farley, we are targeting opening the pool and the ninth Avenue entrance by year end. Facebook's tenant work is proceeding with 1st employee occupancy scheduled for Q2 2022. Speaker 200:05:26At the Moynihan Train Hall, we have completed 22 retail leases. We are gratified and validated that Starbucks reports that its Moynihan its new Moynihan store is Number 1 out of its 190 Manhattan locations. In Penn Station, our Long Island Railroad Concourse construction is about 1 third complete. We were now on both sides of this heavily track traffic concourse. It will be a big win for us. Speaker 200:05:53The 34th Street half of the Penn 1 Lobby is open and it is spectacular. Come take a look. Our unique three level world class amenity offering will Open shortly and the other half of the PENN1 lobby which runs on 33rd Street will be completed end of Q1 2022. At PENN2, our full building transformation is well underway. On schedule and on budget, the job is largely bought out. Speaker 200:06:37Let me review again our Penn District financing plan. Capital required to complete Farley PENN1 and PENN2 is about $1,000,000,000 before TIs and that will be paid for entirely from our cash on balance sheet. Further, Farley, PENN1 and PENN2 are free and clear unencumbered by any mortgage yet whatsoever. And most importantly, As these great assets come online, they will produce a $200,000,000 of incremental additional annual earnings. The Manhattan retail market has bottomed. Speaker 200:07:11It will take some time for rents to start rising again, but leasing activity and tenant inquiries are certainly picking up as residents, office workers and tourists return to the city. New York is still a most favorite location for retailers who are on top of their game. Of particular note is our recently announced deal with Wegmans, the premier grocer in our region at 770 Broadway, the Facebook building, Replacing Kmart and that's some big uptick. We also completed retail deals in this quarter with luxury, banks and food tenants. We have now completed the retail re tenanting of 595 Madison Avenue, the Fuller Building with luxury tenants Fendi and Berluti, both LVMH brands And Christophe and Stefano Ricci. Speaker 200:08:01As you know, we sold 3 Madison Avenue Street Retail Assets This Quarter and are contracted to sell 2 SoHo Street Retail Assets in the Q1 of 2022. We still believe in high street retail and believe demand, rents and activity have bothered. I'm happy to go into detail and the whys and the wherefores of these sales and Q and A. We reaffirm the updated guidance of our retail business discussed in our last earnings call. For 2021, we still expect to do a little better than cash NOI of $135,000,000 For 2022, the guidance is cash NOI Pardon me. Speaker 200:08:51Last year, the topic de jure was rent collections. You should know that rent collections Now it has been for a while at essentially 100%. Collections on the limited number of rent deferrals that we granted during the crisis are also The topic to join today is tenant employee occupancy rates. Companywide, this week we are now at 43% and that rate has been growing nicely since the summer. We are able to harvest lots of information about usage as employees badge in and many other operating statistics from our building level technology. Speaker 200:09:30Our buildings populated by financial types, market makers and traders enjoy occupancies in the 70s. Another factoid, the busiest day of each week is Wednesday. And another factoid, the number of unique employees who came to work in the month of October was 61%. Finally, let me spend a minute on sustainability where we can Continue to be the leader. Renato was recently selected as a global sector leader for all office retail diversified respondents In the 2020 Global Real Estate Sustainability Benchmark or GRESB or the GRESB Our GRESB score of 94 was our highest total score to date. Speaker 200:10:14We also placed 2nd out of 94 publicly listed real estate companies The Americas who responded to Gresby including most of our office peers. Kudos to Dan Egan and his team for their leadership. Thank you. Now to Michael. Speaker 300:10:30Thank you, Steve, and good morning, everyone. I will start with our Q3 financial results and then end with Few comments on the leasing and capital markets. With the recovery in New York City occurring as Steve described in his opening remarks, so is our business and financial results. 3rd quarter comparable FFO as adjusted was $0.71 per share compared to $0.61 for last year's Q3, An increase of $0.10 or 16%. The increase would have been 26%, but for the once every 3 year real estate tax increase, which is largely reimbursed by tenants next year, sort of a timing issue, if you will. Speaker 300:11:09We have provided a quarter over quarter bridge in our earnings release on Page 5 And our financial supplement on Page 7. The increase was driven by the following items. $0.10 from tenant related activities, including $0.06 from the commencement of new leases and $0.04 from the non recurrence of straight line rent and tenant receivable write offs impacting the prior period, $0.04 from the continued improvement in our variable businesses, dollars 0.02 from the acquisition of our partners 45% interest in One Park Avenue in August and $0.02 from lower G and A resulting from our overhead reduction program last December. The total of these increases is partially offset by following decreases, dollars 0.06 from the already mentioned real estate tax expense accrual due to an increase in the triennial Tax assessed value of the mart, which as I said will be largely build back to tenants beginning in January 2022 and $0.02 from an increase in other miscellaneous expenses, primarily related to our new preferred issuance, partially offset by interest expense savings. Our 3rd quarter comparable results are ahead of the 20 24th quarter run We discussed at the beginning of the year and on our last earnings call as is our expectation for this year's Q4. Speaker 300:12:24We had several non comparable items in the quarter as well, which totaled about $0.11 per share of income. With respect to our variable businesses, We are continuing to see a recovery as the city returns to normal. Signage is picking up nicely with healthy bookings continuing in the 4th quarter. BMS is now performing near pre pandemic levels. Our garages should be fully back in 2022. Speaker 300:12:48And finally, a number of trade shows have successfully taken place, albeit with lower attendance primarily due to travel restrictions. Other than Hotel Penn's income, we still expect to recover most of the income from our variable businesses next year with the full return in 2023. Companywide same store cash NOI for the Q3 increased by 2.8% over the prior year's Q3 It would have been 8.1%, but for the aforementioned additional real estate tax expense at the mart during the quarter. Our core New York office business was up 7.6%. Our retail same store cash NOI was up 14.2%, primarily due to the rent commencement on new leases at 595 Madison Avenue and 4 Union Square South and lower real estate taxes. Speaker 300:13:40Our office occupancy ended the quarter at 91.6%, up 50 basis points from the 2nd quarter, which we believe represented the bottom for our office occupancy. We expect this figure to keep moving up from here based on the leases we have out for signature and in negotiation. Retail occupancy was consistent with the 2nd quarter at 77.2%. Now turning to leasing markets. New York leasing volume reached its highest volume since the onset of the pandemic with more than 7,000,000 square feet leased during the quarter. Speaker 300:14:13Employment growth continues its upward trajectory, asking rents and concessions have stabilized for high quality buildings, even improving in some submarkets And sublease space has begun to be absorbed or removed. The theme of flight to quality has continued. Quality The landlord and access to transportation all continue to be the main focus for tenants coming out of the pandemic. And we are a major beneficiary given the quality of our and the capital we invested over the past 10 years to redevelop our assets. Notably, 65% of the deal volume in the city was new and expansion leases led by 15 deals in excess of 50,000 square feet. Speaker 300:14:55The majority of leasing action is being driven by the tech and financial service industries, which accounted for 60% of all activity. We enjoyed a solid 3rd quarter signing 27 office leases totaling 757,000 square feet With average starting rents of $77 per square foot and positive GAAP in cash mark to market of 4.2% and 1.4% respectively. The highlight for the quarter, which also happened to be the largest lease done in the market was an early lease renewal with Interpublic Group for 514,000 Square Feet at 100 West 33rd Street. This important transaction reaffirms IPG's commitment to the Penn District and resolves what was our largest 2023 expiration. Importantly, we also executed on a full floor expansion with Google at 85 Tenth Avenue, increasing their total footprint in the building to just Our buildings which cater to financial service users continue to thrive. Speaker 300:15:59During the quarter, deals we completed include 52,000 Square Feet at 280 Park Avenue, 37,000 Square Feet at 888 7th Avenue And 19,000 Square Feet at 650 Madison Avenue. We are busy across our portfolio with more to come. Our leasing pipeline is very strong. We have 1,000,000 square feet of leases in negotiation with an additional 1,500,000 square feet trading paper or in advanced discussions. Our office expirations are very modest for the remainder of 2021 2022 with only 900 and 36,000 square feet expiring in total, representing only 5% of the portfolio and 189,000 of the square feet is in PENN1 and PENN2. Speaker 300:16:462023 office expirations totaled 1,500,000 square feet of which 350,000 is in PENN1 and PENN2. This total is down significantly since last quarter due to the Interpublic Group lease renewal. Retail leasing activity in the 3rd quarter 10 leases totaling 111,000 square feet with average starting rents of $110 per square foot and positive GAAP and cash mark to market of 45.3% 19.6% respectively. The largest transaction for the quarter was the previously announced 82,500 Square Foot Lease Signed with Wegmans at 770 Broadway. In addition, we completed the lease up of the retail at the Fuller Building with the lease to Stefano Ricci, giving us 4 luxury retailers there with new long term deals and reflecting the recovering market for the best locations. Speaker 300:17:39We also completed deals with Citibank at One Park and Capital One at 731 Lexington, reflecting the return of the banks to the marketplace. Finally, a word on the capital markets. The investment sales market is picking up again With a couple of recent strong office sales in addition to several other assets now in the market. Investor interest in New York is clearly rebounding As they see the Citi has bottomed and find the relative value compelling. On the debt side, pricing in the financing markets is as tight as we've ever seen We continue to be active in refinancing our debt to take advantage of the low rates. Speaker 300:18:16In September, we also took advantage of the tighter preferred market To refinance our $300,000,000 5.7 percent perpetual preferred shares with a 4.45 percent issuance of the same size, A very attractive rate for Forever Money. Finally, our current liquidity is a strong $4,443,000,000 including $2,268,000,000 of cash and restricted cash and $2,175,000,000 undrawn under our $2,750,000,000 revolving credit facilities. With that, I'll turn it over to the operator for Q and A. Operator00:18:51Thank you. We will now begin the question and answer before we move to the next caller. We have our first question from Emmanuel Korchman with Citi. Speaker 400:19:26Hey, good morning. It's Michael Bilerman here with Manny. Maybe if I can just start on putting capital to work, what's your current appetite To go out and buy assets, you obviously did the Park Avenue buyout of your joint venture partner. And so Is that something, Michael, you talked about the market with increased activity that you want to participate in? Or are you just hoarding your capital This point to pursue all the development and redevelopment types of activities and maybe just talk a little bit about If you are going to go external, whether you look at other property types rather than just office? Speaker 300:20:11Sure. Good morning, Michael. Look, the in terms of the capital deployment, We look at everything in the marketplace. As you know, there's been very little that's transacted for probably the 1st 12 months of the pandemic. And frankly, with short term rates at basically 0 and long term rates quite low as well, there's been very little So you've seen very little transaction activity. Speaker 300:20:38You're starting to see that pick up now with assets being brought out. And to date, the buyer universe, I would say, has generally been driven by Players that use higher leverage, although we're still in the early days. So to the extent we see compelling opportunities, we would act on those. So far The pricing is frankly not been compelling and as we compare both to what we're doing in Penn and prospectively what we can do in Penn, Those continue to be more attractive than just buying another asset that we're going to stabilize at a 5% yield After spending a lot of money and capital to lease it up or just to buy it. So We look, we're going to continue to look. Speaker 300:21:24If we find something interesting, we would certainly act on it. We have the capital to do that. But To date, capital continues to price assets quite aggressively notwithstanding the volume of activity is still down. Speaker 400:21:41And then can you just Speaker 200:21:43Michael, hang on. Speaker 500:21:45Yes, Stephen. Speaker 200:21:47Let me just good morning. Let me just add a little bit to what Michael said Michael Franco said. I mean, look, There has to be accretion In anything that we would buy. Right now, the math is topsy-turvy. So our stock sells in the marketplace, I don't know what it Probably close to an 8% cap rate. Speaker 200:22:15As of in our in Manhattan, Office buildings that we would even consider all sell at sub-five. So you can't that math is topsy-turvy. It makes to buy an asset for 5%. And by the way, when you take the capital that's required for these asset servicing assets year over year, Maybe the cash on cash is 4%, when our stock is selling for 7%. So anything that we would do there would be dilutive to shareholder wealth. Speaker 200:22:46And obviously, we're not going to do that. If we saw an empty building, by the way, that we can buy where we thought we could create A great deal of value, we might do that. So generally speaking, it's very difficult to For us to transact and grow right now. And so and what we do have on the other side of that We do have liquidity. We do have a very, very, very dry powder balance sheet. Speaker 200:23:17And we do have great opportunities to accretively spend that capital that's on our balance sheet in the Penn District. So that's our main focus right now. That was in the Penn District. So I'm just sort of doubling down with what Michael said. Speaker 400:23:32Well, that's helpful. And maybe A follow-up, Steve, just on the Penn District, where do things currently stand in terms of pursuing the tracker? I know it's probably a little bit Longer than you would like to have everything prepared and ready to go. So maybe just give us a little bit of an update where you are internally in terms Preparing all the financials and getting all of that done and also externally with a lot of new governmental Partners coming in to new seats, how is that all playing into sort of the timing of getting this tracker out Speaker 200:24:13Michael, thanks for that question. I remain committed to the tracker. And let's understand what I remain committed to. I remain committed to allowing our investors to choose Between our stable core business on the one hand, and then the Penn District, which is our high growth Development segment of our business and to be able to invest in either of those individually or both of those. We are very, very, very strong believers that we will create enormous values in the Penn District. Speaker 200:24:54We will create a district that will command premium pricing, and we couldn't be more excited about it. So I remain committed to it, number 1. Number 2 is we are well along with the paperwork and what have you that would be required to do To launch, we recognize what you said and that is we are seeing a complete turnover in government And senior government officials and we have pending matters with them. And so obviously, we're going to Maybe slide a little bit as we as that all plays out. We are very, very, very optimistic That the new government leaders at the city and state will be let me see, how do I say this, We'll be constructive, we'll be business friendly and recognize That the Penn District is something that requires and demands their attention and we believe we will get that their positive attention. Speaker 200:26:04The next thing is, I read in amongst the analysts Some skepticism about the idea of separating the Penn District. I'm very surprised at that. There's sort of a I'm enthusiastic about this as I've ever been about any project So I'm having trouble understanding it. Also we have had conversations with Multiple real estate investors as opposed to stock investors who share our judgment and my judgment about the potential of the Penn District. So but from the point of view of the analyst community, I am almost starting to believe that we are in a show me mode. Speaker 200:26:53So what that means is that we have to knock off some more leasing to be able to surface the values. So that's basically what's going on. We have no counterparty in the tracker. We have no timetable. It's going to smile a little bit, not too much. Speaker 200:27:15And we think it's going to be smashingly successful. Speaker 400:27:19Yes. And I appreciate those comments. And look, Steve, I think part of the skepticism out of the investment community, I think everyone recognizes What the Penn District represents, I've been following your company for almost 25 years and we've watched that area transform And it's always been that opportunity. I couldn't go through the list of things you've called at the Big Kahuna to a lot of other things. I think it is a similar it's in the same business that you are in, even though I would concur with your phrasing that You have core assets in this big development opportunity. Speaker 400:27:57I think trackers have typically been used where it's a business that Is it different than the parent company and has other comps or other things in there in terms to Highlight that value. Your comments about the private market, are much more akin to where I think investors sort of want to be able to highlight that value. But To your point, you don't want to give up a part of that project to a private, that's going to make all the money versus something that you believe should endure Speaker 200:28:38I guess so. I mean, the comment was so lengthy, I didn't really follow all of it. And the I understand the skepticism. I said I'm looking at it as a show me project. And believe me, we will show you. Speaker 400:28:56Great. All right. Thanks for the time, Steve. Operator00:29:00And thank you. Our next question is from Steve Bechle with Evercore ISI. Speaker 600:29:06Thanks. Good morning. I guess first, Michael, I wanted to just follow-up on your comments about the robust leasing pipeline. If you could just maybe provide a little more color on how much of that activity is for either PENN2 or some of the other developments And how much is for current vacancy or how much of that is forward renewals? I guess, kind of a split on new versus renewals would be helpful. Speaker 600:29:33Thanks. Speaker 300:29:35I'm going to let Glenn take it, Steve, but the answer is yes. Glenn, why don't you give some color on all that? Speaker 700:29:42Hi, Steve. So it's a very strong mix of everything. New deals both in Penn, New deals in the core portfolio, strong renewal activity throughout all of it and expansions everywhere. We're seeing strength throughout the portfolio both in Penn and the core portfolio in all different shapes and sizes with all different industry types. Things have picked up really well since we last spoke. Speaker 600:30:11And maybe just as a quick follow-up, When you're sort of talking to the tenants about space needs and space planning, what is the densities look like, Particularly on sort of the new deals and how do they compare from a space per employee perspective to maybe deals from 2 years ago? Speaker 200:30:31So I've said this Speaker 700:30:31the last couple of calls, we've seen no change at all in density. You're seeing maybe a different mix of Collaborative space, communal space versus cubicle office, but generally no change. People are planning for the future. They're back at it. A lot of them were acting as if it's pre pandemic times, growth, new fresh start, all about talent recruitment and moving forward. Speaker 300:30:59Stephen, in your question and then a lot of the questions or comments in the reports from different analysts, there Remains a skepticism as to whether New York Going to recover, whether people want to be in the office, etcetera. And a little bit picking up on Steve's comment, I think we're sort of in a show me mode In terms of when we put the points up on the Board, people see it. But as we look at the pipeline, There is activity literally at every building, all types of users. I mean Steve comment on the voracious appetite of tech, It's stronger now than it was pre COVID. And the financial types are booming. Speaker 300:31:46We're seeing heavy activity there. You have an economy where companies are doing very well. They're in growth mode and that's reflected in our pipeline. So I think leasing market is sending a very strong signal that New York is going to be fine. New York is going to be one of the winners. Speaker 300:32:03Companies want to locate here. And I think you're going to see those stats continue to get posted over the next several quarters. Obviously, this quarter was a good start, but there's much more In the queue, across our portfolio. Speaker 600:32:18Great. And then I guess Speaker 200:32:20Steve, good morning. Look, the stock market, if you look at the price of our stock and these Just the companies in the industry, they're all extremely, extremely depressed and they're doubly depressed from where they were pre COVID. There is in the stocks the sense in my mind the sentiment that nobody everybody is confused, uncertain And worry about work from home and how it will affect the CBD office business, okay? We acknowledge that. We believe 2 things. Speaker 200:32:59Number 1, well, actually, number 1, We believe in New York. We are seeing in the field that people are committed to New York. They're committed to stay in New York. They're committed to grow in New York. That's for the financial services industry, etcetera, the media industry, the entertainment industry and double and triple for the tech industry, Because the volume, the scale of New York can't be replicated anywhere. Speaker 200:33:26I mean, just if you just take 2 or 3 of the leading $1,000,000,000,000 tech firms, The leases they've signed in the last 14, 15 months, they need 15,000 engineers to fill that space. You can't get that In Austin or Nashville or wherever, okay? So the scale of New York is winning the day, Plus the talent pool. So that's factoid number 1. Factoid number 2 is, is the business Leaders that we deal with every day, they understand work from home. Speaker 200:33:58They're grappling with what their policies are going to be, What the hybrid solutions are going to be 3 days in the office, 4 days in the office, whatever it is. They know that they're grappling with it now. Yes, they continue to believe that they need office space, lots of it, in fact, higher quality office space to recruit their talent And retain their talent. So we're finding in the marketplace an economy between actually a very aggressive and robust demand for space From the big boys in each of the major industries and the uncertainty, the skepticism Of work from home in the marketplace. So we're betting that our tenants know what they're doing. Speaker 200:34:45And we think that So we think that work from the office will win. It will be nipped around the edges by some hybrid thing. People work from home some number of days a week. But the people we talk to everybody, they want the people back in the office. That's the way to And they're really curious about it. Speaker 200:35:07So we think that that's the answer. We are very, very pleased with the demand The space notwithstanding the uncertainty that's in the securities market. Speaker 600:35:22Great. And just as a quick second question. Michael, The trade shows, I know we're back a little bit in the Q3 and I know I think last quarter you had mentioned that I think NeoCon was moving in the Q4. Do you have any sense at This point is to how big trade shows could be in the Q4 and I guess what's on the books Next year already and how did the sizes shape up to kind of pre pandemic? Speaker 300:35:51We had Since July, Steve, we produced 8 trade shows, including our 2 largest shows, NeoCon and the Armory Show in New York. Obviously, there were travel restrictions, particularly internationally, which impacted attendance. And so I would say levels are probably closer to half of what they were historically, but they were put on successfully. We got the machine working again And obviously performance year over year was positive. So our expectation is that we're going to put on a full set of trade shows next year. Speaker 300:36:29We're going to see a substantial recovery. I think just being realistic, we don't think trade shows come back fully in 2022. It's 23 before that fully stabilizes, but in 2021 overall trade shows Don't contribute a lot to our variable businesses as we currently project. And next year, we think the number will Several $1,000,000 incremental. I don't want to give you a number today just because we need to spend a little time with our team, refine that and obviously it's a guess, but we do think the trend Now that the machinery is working, people are getting used to it, international travels open back up, we'll see a decent recovery next year. Speaker 600:37:16Hey, Steve. Speaker 200:37:18The overriding fact is that these trade shows are Desperately important to our clients as the major sales activity for Each of these individual companies. So the trade shows are here to stay. They're really important, okay? So we can't predict what's going to happen this quarter, next quarter. But our budgets show that Couple of years out, the trade show business will get back to where it was pre COVID. Speaker 200:37:50And the main reason is because this is a really important business to our clients. Speaker 600:37:58Great. Thanks. That's it. Operator00:38:02And thank you so much. We have our next question from Nick Yulico with Scotiabank. Speaker 800:38:09Thanks. Good morning, everyone. Just going back to the leasing Activity, you're talking about the pipeline being pretty strong, not that much in expirations next year. I mean, how should we is there any Preview you can give us about how to think about occupancy and how it could trend in, I guess, in particular, the New York City office portfolio? Speaker 700:38:30Glenn? So Nick, Michael mentioned it in his remarks. We believe our office occupancy has bottomed. Now at 91.6 percent and we think it's going to continue to improve quarter to quarter based on the action we have. Historically, We were at 96%, 97%. Speaker 700:38:49So where we are was all due to COVID. We're on our way back. We feel it's getting better and that we have hit the inflection point and going back up. Speaker 800:39:01Okay, thanks. And then second question is just about the Penn District. I know you talked about Hotel Penn Being the prime development site in the city, and going back to your prior disclosures on that, you had, I think In your NAV estimated $500,000,000 for that project, which is about $2.50 a foot of zoning Per zoning, I guess. And I guess I'm wondering if that's still the thought on the value of that there. And then as well how we should think about Penn 1, where you have the ground lease reset coming in 2023, if you have any update there and how we should think about Is Hotel Penn at $2.50 a foot number a good way to think about the potential land value reset at Penn 1? Speaker 200:39:54We continue to be happy with the number that's in our NAV. We see no reason to raise it. And with respect to the rent arbitration, we have no comments. Speaker 800:40:12Okay. I guess just in terms of, I mean, should we think about that $2.50 a foot Value that was implied for Hotel Penn being a reasonable number to think about, Penn 1, which is right across the street? Speaker 200:40:30It would be inappropriate for us to lead you either way in terms of your internal calculation. I'm not going to do that. I don't think it's appropriate. And I'm not going to talk about a very important financial arbitration in this format. Speaker 800:40:50Okay. Yes, I mean, just the reason I asked is because you do have that footnote in the Talking about the ground value reset could be material impacting the yield on the project. So at some point, it would be helpful to understand Yes, potential land value reset there. Thanks. Speaker 200:41:04I think the disclosure in the footnote is appropriate. And obviously, the final answer is unknowable and we'll go through the process and we'll hope for the best. Speaker 800:41:21Thanks. Speaker 200:41:23Thank Operator00:41:23you. We have our next question from Jamie Feldman with Bank of America. Speaker 500:41:31Thank you and good morning. I'd like to go back to your comments on retail. It sounds like you think it could be bottoming here. Just your thoughts on why and what we should expect going forward? Speaker 300:41:45I mean, Jamie, look, I think the comments on retail are reflective of what we're seeing on the ground from tenants. Tenants were In a shell for a year. Obviously, there were few people on the streets. Vacancy Was high and not much was going on. Right now the transaction machine is working again. Speaker 300:42:07People are back out on the streets. You're seeing tourism pick up, Albeit, it's all been domestic so far. International tourism will kick off actually in the next week, Which should be another shot in the arm for the city. And we don't expect it to snap back to 60,000,000 people immediately, but that's The trend line from the city being opening and the attendance at sporting events and Broadway shows and other things It's quite good and quite indicative of what we think is going to happen. So retailers want to know there are shoppers out there. Speaker 300:42:43And there are clearly shoppers out there Again, and we've talked about the flight to quality in the best locations and that's continuing to occur. We've been a beneficiary of that At a place like a Fuller, for example, at a place like a 770, which is a prime spot for Wegmans to go to. And fundamentally, we're just seeing more interest from retailers. By the way, that's all submarkets, right? The Tourist oriented submarkets of Fifth Avenue and Times Square, obviously, you would expect to be the ones to come back to last because that's so dependent on tourism. Speaker 300:43:17And with that now opening up, Retailers wanted to see it happen. But again, even there, we're seeing inquiry from tenants in both those submarkets. Rents are obviously down. That's inducing demand. And so there's discussions that are underway and an action that's occurring. Speaker 300:43:39That's what gives us, I think, the confidence to make that statement. I think Steve was pretty clear. Activity has to happen before you start getting rental And it's going to take, I think, a decent amount of activity before that happens. So I wouldn't expect rents to rise near term, but once we start Getting some pace of transactions, I think that'll be a shot in the arm for the market. Speaker 200:44:04But to To be clear, Jay, this is going to be a multiyear recovery. This is not going to be A rapid V shape rebound. It's going to take years for this market to recover. And it may never recover to the peaks That were 5 or 7 years ago. Speaker 500:44:27Okay. Thank you. And then I get Speaker 200:44:31And it has bottomed and it will recover. And think about it this way, the shutdown from COVID was Probably the most traumatic event that any of us have ever lived through. The total shutdown of the global economy, I mean, that's never happened before. The retailers, hotels, airlines, etcetera, all I mean, The suffering was monumental. So the first reaction from the retailers was to go into a shell, stop everything And shed liability. Speaker 200:45:09So the market went stone cold for the better one or 2 years. People are now understanding that there is life after it. People are succeeding. The better retailers are actually thriving from And we are seeing a very, very robust pickup in interest and demand. We are not seeing an aggressive increase And pricing that people are willing to pay. Speaker 200:45:35So we're bottomed, we're in a recovery. We are budgeting And underwriting that the recovery will be slow paced. Speaker 500:45:46Okay. Thank you. And then I guess as you think about this Speaker 200:45:49I'm sorry. And we did reaffirm our guidance on retail in my prepared remarks. Speaker 500:45:58Right. Do you see I know in your prepared remarks, you'd mentioned the sales. I mean, do you see yourself More or do you see yourself actually buying going forward? Speaker 200:46:14We certainly We are certainly as probably the most expert in retail around. And we will buy the highest quality at very attractive prices And there hasn't been that kind of availability or offering yet. I said Let me give you a feeling for the 5 assets that we have either sold or contracted to sell what our thinking was, okay. Number 1, Those assets this year are losing actually have a negative income of more than $3,000,000 I think we said in the press release that the occupancy was 30% and the vacancy therefore was 70%. That is accurate, of course. Speaker 200:47:09But there's one factoid that you have to consider. There is one tenant In those five properties that is basically a swing tenant who is Rebuilding a store. And so if you take that out and we know for sure that that tenant is going to leave in a couple of years, Because it's a swing tenant, it's not a pop up, it's a swing tenant. And so if you take that out, I think the occupancy is 11%. So if you take that into account, and by the way, if you take the so that would make the when that goes away, the earnings are The negative earnings are greater than $3,000,000 The capital if you add the capital that would be required to lease up Those five properties and we have to lease up 90% of them. Speaker 200:48:04So it's almost a total lease up job. You take the time And you take our underwriting as to how long it will take to climb up to a decent return. Our judgment was that for our business, it's a proper strategy to sell those assets. And so the proceeds where the assets are unencumbered, there's no debt on the assets. So that will bring in a 100 and I think it's 84 $5,000,000 of new cash that we think we can put to better use. Speaker 200:48:35Now we are selling the Madison Avenue assets to a friend And they are an extremely substantial offshore buyer who have a history of Making very intelligent distressed buys. We know that, we respect it and we're friends, we laugh about it to each other. We expect that the buyer of the Madison Avenue Properties will make money and have a very satisfactory Investment, but it will be in our judgment over a 10 year haul. That time frame made us to be A seller rather than a holder of those assets. So we believe that the buyer will do well and we think the seller, that's us, will do well. Speaker 200:49:29There's one last point. 25 years ago, Madison Avenue was an isolated oasis in New York. There was one submarket that worked in terms of luxury, high income, And that was the Upper East Side. Over the 25 and there was and so obviously the luxury brands all clustered In Madison Avenue, Madison Avenue had effectively an oligopoly or a monopoly on luxury shopping In the city of New York because all the customers live within walking distance of that and all the tourists Basically, staying in Upper East Side, logic. Over the years, that has been diluted enormously, So that every submarket, whether it be in Chelsea or Tribeca or the Lenz Village or the Upper Westside, Every submarket now is thriving with customers for these brands. Speaker 200:50:36So obviously, over the years, instead of having 1 store in Madison Avenue, they now have 5 stores, 1 in the Meat Pocking, 1 in Chelsea, 1 here in there. So Madison Avenue has been deleted diluted enormously. It was that sociodemographic thinking That also led us to be a seller of those assets. And by the way, that thinking is totally different Then Fifth Avenue at Times Square, which continue to be enormous attractions. Speaker 500:51:08So as you think about putting capital to work, I mean, do you still think luxury is the way to go? Or no, you're thinking actually more Middle of the road type brand? Speaker 200:51:22We're agnostic to that. We are retail investors. We love our Times Square assets, which are not really luxury. We love our Fifth Avenue assets and so we're agnostic as to the price point of our customers. We're in the landlord business, not in the retail business. Speaker 500:51:43Okay. And if I could just ask, you had talked about no debt on any of the assets at Penn Station, at least the development, redevelopment assets. What's the plan there to put more permanent capital on those projects? And how do you think about using those funds? Speaker 200:52:00We will obviously have a financing plan for the growth of the Penn District. We're very comfortable now having those assets unencumbered for the moment. And I think it's premature to start getting into What are what we will how we will permanently finance those assets if we do. Our balance sheet Our strength is based upon a mix of secured debt, unsecured debt, lines of credit And unencumbered assets are an important part of that. So right now, we're very comfortable having those assets unencumbered. Speaker 200:52:41We're even more Comfortable with having, I don't know, those assets are worth an enormous amount of money, many 1,000,000,000 of dollars. We're very comfortable having those assets available as a source of credit should the opportunities come up. Speaker 500:53:02Okay. And I assume that helps with the tracking stock if they're not encumbered? Or does that have nothing to do with it? Speaker 200:53:10The tracking stock will have its own financing plan, which we'll get to when we launch the tracker. Okay. All right. Thanks for Speaker 500:53:19your time. Speaker 200:53:21Having low debt on the tracker is an important part of that strategy. Speaker 500:53:27Okay. All right. Thank you. Operator00:53:30And we have our next question from John Kim with BMO Capital Markets. Speaker 900:53:37Thank you. Good morning. I realized the tax estimate at the mark is backwards looking, but are you surprised by the level of increase, Just given you renovated the asset 5 years ago over the last year and a half, almost 2 years, there's been a lot of disruption to the trade show and office occupancy Of the asset, I was just wondering if you were surprised by the amount of increase on taxes there? Speaker 300:54:07John, look, I would say anytime your taxes go up 47%, you're surprised at the magnitude of that. So we knew there would be an increase. I think the magnitude has surprised the entire market. We were not alone, right? I think there's been a number of articles written about How most of the large landlords have been impacted by similar increases. Speaker 300:54:31So it's high. We're certainly going to appeal it. We don't make any promises on that, but it is what it is. And as we said, The meaningful portion of that will be reimbursed by tenants beginning in 2022 and we're I think we're no different than the balance of the market, frankly. Speaker 800:54:57A few years ago, you gave Speaker 900:55:00An indication that you thought you could collect 80% of the tax increase as a tenant reimbursement. Do you feel like you could still Obtain that level of reimbursement from your tenant? Speaker 300:55:12Yes. I mean, I think, look, it's obviously dependent on the occupancy in the building, is down a little bit now, but I think 75%, 80% is not a incorrect assumption. It'll be in that neighborhood. Speaker 900:55:27Okay. My second question is on Facebook, now it's called Meta, I suppose, I'm looking to expand in New York. I'm wondering if they do expand at 770 Broadway, can you accommodate them without losing Verizon as a tenant? No. So the net impact would be like nothing? Speaker 200:56:01First of all, these are important clients and these are pending transactions. So we're really not going to speak about anything. We're really not going to get into the detail of it. But obviously, if a tenant moves in and a tenant moves out, The net result will be pretty much the same. Speaker 900:56:24Are you looking elsewhere in your portfolio? Speaker 200:56:27Say it again. Speaker 900:56:30Is Facebook looking elsewhere in your portfolio to expand? Speaker 200:56:33We're not going to comment on Facebook or pending transactions with important clients. Speaker 900:56:40Okay. Thank you. Operator00:56:44Thank you. Our next question is from Alexander Goldfarb with Piper Sandler. Speaker 1000:56:54Hey, good morning. Good morning down there, Steve. So just Want to go back to Michael's opening questions. I think you can appreciate the skepticism. I mean the original Penn Station was around for about 50 years And you guys have been talking about the redevelopment for 2020 clearly enhanced by what's gone to the Westside. Speaker 1000:57:12But if you're a Vino shareholder, You may or may not be able to hold the tracking stock when it's spun out for whatever fund mandates you have. And if the whole Thing that we've been looking at the past 10, 15 years has been this Holy Grail of confluence between Midtown South and the Far West Side. Now Penn Station is going to be there You're a Vino shareholder who has held out for that. How is the tracking stock helpful in that if not every Vino shareholder Can own the tracker and also that's what that's where a lot of that revenue growth or sorry, earnings growth is going to come from, So I think that's the area where people are grappling, which is how does this help an existing Vino share Not be able to actually own a tracker versus right now they can pencil and model all this upside that you guys have been laying out. Speaker 200:58:06Well, obviously, if you sell the tracker, you're not going to benefit from it. I mean, that goes without saying. Speaker 1000:58:13Right. But some not every fund can own the tracker because of mandates. Speaker 200:58:18We are unhappy with the fact that, As you say, some of our shareholders will have to sell the tracker. We've done the calculation. We think at the margin, it is not a significant transfer. And so It's unfortunate that some investors have to sell it. But what we're looking at is the greater good is the investors that Keep it or buy it, we think will be enormously enhanced by the transaction. Speaker 200:58:54Said another way, we think that the Penn District's future in the larger company where it's diluted Is not as good an outcome as if it's separated where it's a pure play for the Penn District. We understand what you're saying. We're unhappy about the fact that some funds will have to sell. They are not large numbers. We think they're we think it's handleable. Speaker 200:59:25But what we believe is the greater good will be enhanced by the idea. Speaker 1000:59:31But it's still a synthetic, Steve, isn't it? I mean, it's just laying Sort of paper claim to the it's not like Alexander's, which physically owns those assets. It's just laying claim on paper. A synthetic, it's not like it's a direct, correct? Speaker 200:59:48It is the answer is yes. But that's sort of argumentative, Alex. The tracker should perform as the asset The underlying assets that it is that it tracks as they perform. Okay. Speaker 301:00:09Alex, if you think about I think your Alexander's analogy actually is an interesting one. If you think about Alexander's, Alexander's is an externally advised entity, Right. The public owns 1 third. Speaker 1001:00:19Yes. Speaker 301:00:20That stock is done, when you look at it from the time that development really commenced substantially in that company Has done extraordinarily well. And so I think the corollary here is actually quite similar, Right. We're in the yes, we've been talking about it for a long time, but the reality is the development really just commenced In the last couple of years, right? And it's underway right now with Farley, PENN1, PENN2 and obviously a lot more behind that. We've talked about the public owning a portion of it, not all of it, probably less than half of it. Speaker 301:00:59And so if you think It's kind of like Alexander's in the sense of that public tracker is sort of an externally advised entity Managed by Vornado, very similar to Alexander's. And in terms of the shareholders that there's no the only shareholders that are going to be forced to sell this are some of the index funds. By the way, not all of them, not most of them, but some of them. Any investor That is an active investor that makes dedicated decisions about specific companies can continue on both pieces. By the way, they can sop up even more of The tracker. Speaker 301:01:36So, we talk about this like there's 4 sellers, there's no buyers. On the other side, we know for a fact there are investors that We have tremendous belief in the Penn District, would like to just own the Penn District, like the higher risk, higher reward, believe in What's going on in that part of the city and what we're doing and prefer to own that directly and not with everything else. There's going to be obviously, it will settle out when we distribute it. There'll be some net selling from some of the Funds that you alluded to that have to sell, but we also think there is a group of investors that are not in Vornado that We'll sop up that demand and our goal is for that to trade very well. And I think your Alexander's analogy coming back, that is a very good Analogy in terms of the trajectory of that company once the development commenced. Speaker 1001:02:26Okay. And then Steve, going back to the politics, clearly the mayor race, We can only do better. And either candidate is obviously much more pro business, much more understanding of the city than the prior. But when you look at the governor's race, there Hochul is definitely tracking to the left as she tries to veer off State Attorney General James, so if you look at what's going on in the good eviction, probably end up with statewide rent control. Why are you optimistic at the state level that It will be as productive and supportive of real estate and business in New York as the mayor election when the When you look at the politics, it seems to be taking the opposite angle. Speaker 201:03:11I can't answer that question, Alex. We've met the Governor. She's a seasoned politician with a 25 year career. She has an entire career of being supportive of business. She understands what's Going on in New York, she understands the Penn District and we believe that she will be a perfectly fine leader. Speaker 201:03:40And other than that, I can't get into it. I want to get back for a moment to Michael's very fine answer to your question about the tracker. There are trade offs here. In order to create a separate legal entity, a spin off for example, which we have done twice before with JBT Smith and Urban Edge. We would have to have a totally separate management team, Totally separate board, totally separate everything. Speaker 201:04:13So that's an untenable that's not a doable prospect and it's untenable and we can't Speaker 1101:04:19do it. Speaker 201:04:20We need the same people with our leasing and development team, for example, okay. And also it would be very the additional overhead would be enormous. So the trade off is that we can use the same team, the same board, the same governance, But we can get investors to be able to invest in whichever part of our company they want to or both, okay? So it's interesting. I expect that many investors will continue to hold both securities, which is actually the same thing as if we did Nothing in terms of separating the tractor. Speaker 201:05:06But at the margin, there will be a new group, as Michael said, of investors who actually Have a enormous level of enthusiasm for the Westside of New York, for tech coming into New York and for what we're In the Penn District and at the margin we think it will be a very successful, investment. Speaker 1001:05:27Okay. Thank you, Steve. Thank you, Michael. Operator01:05:31And we have our last question from Ronald Kamdem with Morgan Stanley. Speaker 1101:05:38Two quick ones for me. One is just going back to sort of the retail portfolio. Just curious in terms of More commentary when retailers are looking at space today, what are they focused on? Is it occupancy costs? Is it gross margin? Speaker 1101:05:53Is it But traffic levels just sort of what's making the marginal decision for retailers maybe today that may have been different sort of pre pandemic and so forth? Thanks. Speaker 201:06:05It's the same as it's always been forever and that is what sales volume can they do in a particular store Versus the cost structure versus the rent. Things are a little different today than they were. Some Stores in Manhattan were sort of flagships and advertising for the brand. That's kind of gone by the wayside. Retailers today want to make money in each individual store. Speaker 201:06:32So the number one statistic is what their expected sales volumes will be Versus what the health index would be the occupancy cost. Speaker 1101:06:45Great. And then if I could just follow-up on the Wegmans deal, just any sort of color on what the opportunity could be in Portfolio, is there anything different about sort of their lease structure versus the typical structure? Any color would be helpful. Speaker 201:07:03I don't think I have anything to add there. I mean, we're replacing first of all, 770 Broadway is the Facebook building. We're replacing Kmart with Wegmans. That's a huge uptick. The rent is significantly higher and it's a traditional lease. Speaker 201:07:21It's a And we're very, very excited about it. And there may be other opportunities with Wegmans in the rest of our portfolio. Speaker 1101:07:34Great. That's it for me. Thank you. Operator01:07:38And thank you. We have no further questions in queue. I will now turn the call over to Mr. Stephen Roth, RONADO Chairman and CEO for closing remarks. Speaker 201:07:49Thank you. One final important note before we end this call and that is that Kathy Creswell's this is Kathy Creswell's earnings call before she retires. I want to thank her for her many years of service and friendship. We wish her well I'm sure everybody on the call wishes her well. We'll see you at the next call. Speaker 201:08:09Thanks very much. Operator01:08:12And thank you, ladies and gentlemen. This concludes today's conference. Thank you for participating. You may now disconnect.Read morePowered by