NASDAQ:GLPI Gaming and Leisure Properties Q3 2024 Earnings Report $47.40 -0.23 (-0.48%) As of 03:10 PM Eastern ProfileEarnings HistoryForecast Gaming and Leisure Properties EPS ResultsActual EPS$0.67Consensus EPS $0.92Beat/MissMissed by -$0.25One Year Ago EPS$0.92Gaming and Leisure Properties Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$385.34 millionExpected Revenue$385.09 millionBeat/MissBeat by +$250.00 thousandYoY Revenue Growth+7.20%Gaming and Leisure Properties Announcement DetailsQuarterQ3 2024Date10/24/2024TimeAfter Market ClosesConference Call DateFriday, October 25, 2024Conference Call Time10:00AM ETUpcoming EarningsGaming and Leisure Properties' Q2 2025 earnings is scheduled for Thursday, July 24, 2025, with a conference call scheduled on Friday, July 25, 2025 at 10:00 AM ET. Check back for transcripts, audio, and key financial metrics as they become available.Conference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptQuarterly Report (10-Q)SEC FilingEarnings HistoryCompany ProfilePowered by Gaming and Leisure Properties Q3 2024 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrOctober 25, 2024 ShareLink copied to clipboard.There are 17 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Greetings, and welcome to the Gaming and Leisure Properties Third Quarter 2024 Earnings Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen only mode. A brief question and answer session will follow the formal presentation. As a reminder, this conference is being recorded. It is now my pleasure to introduce your host, Joe D'Aroni, Investor Relations. Operator00:00:29Thank you, sir. You may begin. Speaker 100:00:31Thank you, Christine, and good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining Gaming and Leisure Properties' Q3 2024 Earnings Call and Webcast. The press release distributed yesterday afternoon is available in the Investor Relations section on our website at www. Glpropinc.com. On today's call, management's prepared remarks and answers to your questions may contain forward looking statements as defined in the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Forward looking statements address matters that are subject to risks and uncertainties that may cause actual results to differ materially from those discussed today. Speaker 100:01:04Forward looking statements may include those related to revenue, operating income and financial guidance, as well as non GAAP financial measures such as FFO and AFFO. As a reminder, forward looking statements represent management's current estimates and the company assumes no obligation to update any forward looking statements in the future. We encourage listeners to review the more detailed discussions related to risk factors and forward looking statements contained in the company's filings with the SEC, including its 10 Q and in the earnings release as well as the definitions and reconciliations of non GAAP financial measures contained in the company's earnings release. On this morning's call, we are joined by Peter Carlino, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer at Gaming and Leisure Properties. Also joining today's call are Brandon Moore, President and Chief Operating Officer Desiree Burke, Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer Steve Ladney, Senior Vice President and Chief Development Officer and Matthew Demchak, Senior Vice President and Chief Investment Officer. Speaker 100:01:59With that, it's my pleasure to turn the call over to Peter Carlino. Please go ahead. Speaker 200:02:05Well, thank you, Joe, and good morning, everyone. We are, of course, pleased to present our 3rd quarter earnings results, which I think demonstrate our success and continue to build upon our outstanding portfolio of gaming properties. To encapsulate what I believe is the most important summary of this, let me read from the last line of my quoted press release comments. I think it does the best job of summarizing how we feel about where we are. We believe our ability to develop investment activity in 2024 of nearly $2,000,000,000 and an attractive blended yield of 8.4 percent is a firm affirmation of GLPI's disciplined capital investment approach. Speaker 200:02:56The combination of our unrivaled gaming and real estate experience and their strong balance sheet has positioned GLPI as a development funding and real estate partner of choice for operators of all sizes and has created a platform for near and long term growth and appreciation of shareholder value. I might also add that to the effect that we have been very successful in doing the significant prefunding to date. But I'm going to leave that to Desiree Burke, who I know is going to take to share her comments. Des, why don't you go ahead? Speaker 300:03:36Thank you, Peter. Good morning. For the Q3 of 2024, our total income from real estate exceeded the Q3 of 2023 by $25,800,000 The growth was driven by the Tioga acquisition, which increased income by 3.6, the Rockford acquisition, which increased cash income by 4.6, dollars The Casino Queen Marquette acquisition and the Baton Rouge Landside Development, which increased cash income by $1,500,000 The Strategic acquisition increased cash income by $2,300,000 dollars The acquisition of Valley Chicago Land, which increased our cash income by $1,100,000 and Valley's Tropicundant funding increased by $400,000 The recognition of escalators and percentage rent adjustments on our leases, which added $5,300,000 of cash income as well as the combination of non cash revenue growth ups, investment and lease adjustments and straight line rent adjustments, which drove a collective year over year increase of approximately 7,000,000 dollars As Peter said, we've been busy for this quarter with growth and development actually throughout 2024. Our operating expenses increased by $22,600,000 primarily due to non cash increase in the provision for credit losses that resulted from the Tropicana lease reclassification due to the recent investment. Related to the Valley Chicago property, the company will be capitalizing interest and deferring all rent received during a development period for financial reporting purposes. Speaker 300:05:11However, we will be adding the rent back and deducting the capitalized interest in deriving AFFO. The amended Penn master lease is subject contingent escalation on November 1, 'twenty four and if obtained would result in approximately $4,200,000 of additional rent for us. Included in our release is our full year 'twenty four AFFO guidance ranging from $3.74 to 3.76 per diluted share in OP units. Please note that this guidance does not include the impact of future transaction. However, it does anticipate our fundings for the Chicago Development Project, the Bell Development Project and the Island Development Project. Speaker 300:05:52Our 0 coupon treasury bill matures in 2025 at an applied yield of 4.9 percent and we've entered into forward sale agreements to sell 8,200,000 shares for net sales of $409,300,000 Our rent coverage ratios remain strong, remaining from 1.9 to 2.59 on our master leases as of the end of the prior quarter. As you can see, we've set our balance sheet up to be very strong as we head into 2025. With that, I'll turn the call back to Peter. Speaker 200:06:27Thanks, Des. And why don't we ask Matthew Demchick to offer his thoughts. Matthew? Speaker 400:06:36Sure. Thanks, Peter, and good morning, everyone. Thanks for joining us today. As we review our Q3 results, I want to highlight how our unwavering commitment to balance sheet strength and liquidity has enabled us to excel. Our leverage ratios remain robust. Speaker 400:06:52Our debt maturity schedule is well structured and our disciplined capital market strategy continues to de risk our business model. This quarter, we were judicious in our use of the ATM program, which was complemented by significant reverse inquiries from both existing and new investors, and we're pleased to welcome them to our shareholder roster and to have raised the capital through forward agreements given the timing of our cash needs. We're in a solid position as we look forward to our 2025 spend. We're particularly proud of successfully completing our inaugural 30 year bond issuance. This milestone not only extends the weighted average maturity of our liabilities, but also marks another step towards the institutionalization of our asset class. Speaker 400:07:36Our balanced and strategic approach positions GLPI with strong cash positive liquidity, enabling us to embark earmark funds toward existing development commitments, while also positioning us for future opportunities as they arise. In the Q3, we demonstrated our strategic ability and agility through the Bally's transaction announcements, which showcased our ability to create tailored solutions that benefit all stakeholders. We followed that up with an innovative first to market structure for a tribal investment with our I own loan, which includes an option for our partner to convert the loan into a lease. These case studies of our creative flexibility enrich ongoing dialogue with prospects in our pipeline. And this year's announced activity when combined with our other contractual future opportunities adds together into a pipeline that we've developed is becoming increasingly tangible and impactful. Speaker 400:08:36Our team remains dedicated to leveraging our organization's development expertise to closely monitor ongoing projects, while we remain steadfast in our effort to prudently deploy shareholder capital to enhance long term shareholder value on a per share basis. Thank you, and I'll hand things back to Peter. Speaker 200:08:56Well, thank you, Matthew. And as always, we have our entire team present with us today, and we anxiously anticipate your questions. So operator, would you please open the floor? Operator00:09:11Thank you. We will now be conducting a question and answer session. Our first question comes from the line of Barry Jonas with Truist. Please proceed with your question. Speaker 200:09:47Hey, guys. The I. O. N. Loan is notable as I believe it's the 1st gaming retail with Tribal Gaming. Speaker 200:09:54How did you get comfort with the structure and how confident are you that this could convert to sale leaseback? Brandon, that's a question for you. Speaker 500:10:04Yes. Thanks, Barry. So yes, the I own transaction, I would say, is the culmination in a multiyear process that we've been working on to try to come up with a structure that can be utilized in a situation where you have land held in trust by a tribe in a good REIT investment. I think it's probably just the first step. So this transaction with I own includes a 5 year loan to finance the construction of a greenfield development outside of Sacramento. Speaker 500:10:32But the most important part of that structure to us is a long term lease component whereby at the end of the loan term, the tribe can elect to convert the principal into a long term lease structure. And that long term lease structure and the documents necessary for that were all part of the NIGC's review and recovered by the declination letter that was received from the NIGC to move forward. We are cautiously Speaker 200:10:58optimistic here at the company that this long term lease structure Speaker 500:10:58is something that can be optimistic here at the company that this long term lease structure is something that can be utilized as an alternative form of funding for tribes that have land held in trust. We are in the process of meeting with tribes. We have met with over the last several years. We're in the process of going back to many of those tribes now that we have the letter in hand. And I think we'll know more in the coming months quarters as to whether or not this is a repeatable path forward that we can turn into new revenue stream for the company? Speaker 500:11:33Or is it something that the tribes may not find as valuable as we hope? Again, I think we're cautiously optimistic that this is a structure that can be utilized, but we'll know more in the coming months. And at this point, we've asked tribes to enter into NDAs as we talk about that structure in more detail. So I don't think we can share too much about the structure itself. As for the credit protections, which is I think where you were leading, we have all the same protections in this transaction that a commercial lender typically gets when lending to tribes in tribal countries. Speaker 500:12:09So we have the collateral of the accounts, we have the collateral of the assets and things at the tribe, we get all that the same way that a bank would. In addition to that, this lease structure would permit us to foreclose on a lease and step in and operate at the property. Now importantly, we can't operate the casino floor on the property. And so that is the rub in tribal land. Only the tribe can run the casino. Speaker 500:12:36But all the protections that we have in place that typical lenders receive, we are confident give us the protection to enter into this transaction and we're confident that we've underwritten it in a way that this transaction will be accretive for the company and gives us the opportunity to now roll this out with some other tribes and find out how big this opportunity could be. Speaker 200:13:01That's great. And just maybe just one point of clarification, the release said that there's a 45 year maximum period. What happens next? Speaker 500:13:11At the end of 45 years, obviously, we don't have C Simple in the land. The tribe will keep the land. We'll all go our separate ways. Theoretically, they can run this transaction back. So they could, if they need additional capital or funding, could seek to do a similar transaction. Speaker 500:13:26If not, then they keep their land or the federal government keeps their land and we all go our separate ways. Speaker 200:13:35Understood. All right. Thanks and congrats again. Speaker 500:13:39Thanks, Barry. Operator00:13:41Our next question comes from the line of Greg McGinniss with Scotiabank. Please proceed with your question. Speaker 600:13:48Hey, good morning. Good morning. Congrats on the tribal land deal. That's really one really interesting and great that you guys got that done. I'm curious, what's the incentive for them to extend past the initial 25 years? Speaker 600:14:03And also, is that lease going to have escalators included? Is it likely just to be a rollover of the 11% interest rate? Any details there would be appreciated. Speaker 500:14:16Yes. So this is getting into a little bit of stickier area. Yes, there will be escalation on the rent in the lease. I don't really want to get into on this call at this time the incentives for the tribe to extend the lease beyond 25 years to the 45 years. I think that's part of at the moment what we're hoping to keep confidential. Speaker 500:14:37But there are incentives for the tribe to extend that lease term from 25 years to 45 years. And the 45 years is really has to do with some structural elements to ensure that we have good REIT income out of this project. Speaker 600:14:54Okay. I guess separately, significant level of transactions now is year to date, which is great, but heavily weighted towards development versus in place cash flowing casinos. I mean, how are you guys viewing the risk that you're taking on the development side versus cash flowing operations? Or they're just not the opportunities that you expected or hope to see on the regular acquisitions? Speaker 200:15:27Let me take that Brandon, if I may and for the group. Look, I think we're still in business to buy existing assets when available and we're aggressively looking, talking, some embedded in the various announced Valley transactions that we have on the horizon. So we'll do that. But what has emerged is an opportunity with, I think, 1st pioneered by campus with Valley down in Baton Rouge, removing that property land side with great success. We'll get to repeat that opportunity with the Bell, also in Baton Rouge, as you would know, because we have that capability. Speaker 200:16:10I mean, we've built significant number of casino properties around the 96, over the years. I think we've announced previously, Jim Baum, who was the Head of Construction for me at Penn over many, many years involved with virtually all of our projects, is back with TLPI right now. And while we're not the contractor or developer, let's say in Chicago, we are hopefully providing a lot of creative high level help to make sure that that project is everything that Vale's would hope it to be and that it's delivered on time, on budget and the usual things. Yes, there is a measure of risk there, but I'm not going on wood when I say we have a long term track record of good success of bringing significant projects in on time and on budget. So we're willing to do both. Speaker 200:17:02I think that's a special capability that we add to our REIT, to the REIT business in a sense creating properties that we can lease back to operators. So right now, I think we'll go in either direction, but it's not because we see more or less opportunity. If we can't find opportunity, we'll make it. And I think that best summarizes what our attitude is about it with caution and care always. Speaker 600:17:33Okay. That's fair. I'm sorry, just one clarification question. That letter that you received from the National Indian Gaming Commission, is that just a framework for future deals? It doesn't actually give approval for anything else, right? Speaker 500:17:49Correct. What the NIGC letter effectively does is it lists the documents that have been reviewed and have been and I'll use the word approved, although that may not be the right word. They don't approve the content of the documents. What they are essentially ensuring is that those documents don't constitute a management agreement or management control that would have the potential of invalidating the transaction of the documents. And so the value of the declination letter, what most banks would receive is that you've had the NIGC look at your documents and ensure that you haven't violated that critical protection, the management. Speaker 500:18:26So that's what that includes. And would we have to go through the same process in the next deal? I think the answer is yes and no. In other words, yes, we would go for a declination letter, but now it's not an issue of first impression. And so presumably if we use the same documents in the same structure in the long term lease component, that should be something we can get through much faster than what this process entail. Speaker 600:18:50It's the same committee or commission that does the approval for all the in place for all those transactions potentially? Speaker 500:18:58It's the same government entity and this reached the highest levels of the legal department there up to the general counsel we were working with. And so the short answer is yes. At the present time, this would all go through the same folks. Now you can't guarantee that the same people will still be employed at the time that the next one comes through. Right. Speaker 500:19:16But to the extent that it is, yes, this has gone through the highest levels of the organization. And so we're confident that if we stick to the knitting that we've created that this will be something we can get approved. Speaker 600:19:27Great. Thank you. Speaker 700:19:29Thank you. Operator00:19:32Our next question comes from the line of David Katz with Jefferies. Please proceed with your question. Speaker 800:19:38Hi, good morning, everyone. Thanks for all of the information. There has been some public information around with respect to Las Vegas and the Tropicana site. And I just frankly wondered if there are any updated thoughts or perspectives you can share around your role in the redevelopment of that site. And I if I'm remembering correctly, I heard those buildings fall down live. Speaker 200:20:10They certainly did. Brandon, why don't you take that? Speaker 500:20:17Las Vegas is obviously a major focus for the company. I'd say our first priority continues to be ensuring and then preserving the value of the remainder parcel that we have in place. And so that's been our primary focus from the beginning. It continues to be our primary focus now. I'm sure all of you saw that the buildings came down were imploded a few weeks ago during G2E, which was an exciting event and the site is in the process of being cleared and making way for the A's to break ground on the stadium. Speaker 500:20:48The latest is both the A's and the integrated resort have filed pre submittals for entitlements with the county and some of that stuff has now come out into the media. So you can probably find a lot of those drawings and pictures out there. That was the necessary next step is to get all of the authorities, utilities, traffic in line so that we can begin the project. And then on the integrated resort side, Bally's is continuing to work with their design professionals to fine tune what that integrated resort might look like in Phase 1 and ultimately in Phases 2 and 3. And that process is still underway. Speaker 500:21:28And we are really waiting the outcome of some of that to determine how much, if any, additional dollars were either asked to determine how much, if any, additional dollars were either asked to provide or more importantly, willing to provide to support the construction of the integrated resort. Just as a reminder, the stadium is really is being financed all by the A's. So, that's not something that we'll participate in the land and quite frankly the stadium will be owned by the stadium authority in Las Vegas. And so that's not that part of the project we're not we won't be involved in. Speaker 800:21:59Very helpful. And I wanted to follow-up on some of the Native American activities. And just listening to some of the answers, when we think about collateral in that context, I'd like to just better understand your ability to ask collateral step in and manage the non gaming aspects of an asset generally speaking or versus the ability to sort of kick the building, right, which I guess previously have understood that you cannot on Native American land. Speaker 500:22:38Yes, that's not quite accurate. You can take the building as part of the lease. So we have a long term lease there in that structure whereby we could take occupancy back of the buildings and structures on the properties and to the extent that it's not gaming, we could run whatever amenities are there. You could theoretically, and I say theoretically, remove all the gaming and turn it into an Amazon distribution center if you wanted to during the lease term. So you have the ability to occupy and run the buildings. Speaker 500:23:13You just can't operate gaming. Now we all know that operating gaming is the primary driver to the revenue in those facilities and it's the amenities that really bring people in to drive the gaming. We're not we know that. And we're in the same position that a bank would be in to say the collateral package is all encompassing. In other words, you're going to take all revenue streams, all accounts, you're going to take the assets and the property. Speaker 500:23:41And it's that level of collateral and protection that really enables any creditor to a tribe to sit down with the tribe if there's a problem and figure out how that's going to be fixed. Because you have a mutual benefit, you and the tribe at that point of figuring out how do you get the cash flowing back to the tribe again and how do you fix whatever might be broken. And in gaming, that could be any number of things. It could be that competition has come in and the facility doesn't matter who runs the facility. It could be a management issue. Speaker 500:24:14We just don't know. You don't know what it will be, but we'll rely on the same collateral package plus the lease in order to secure our investments with the tribe. Speaker 800:24:25Super helpful. Speaker 500:24:26Thank Speaker 700:24:27you. Thank you. Operator00:24:30Our next question comes from the line of Chad Beynon with Macquarie. Please proceed with your question. Speaker 900:24:36Good morning. Thanks for taking my question. Just wanted to follow-up on the tribal discussion. It Sounds like you guys have obviously done more extensive work than anyone in the industry. You've gotten comfortable with it. Speaker 900:24:49You've explained the rules and regulations here this morning. So with that in mind, do you think the competitive set for these deals going forward might be smaller than what you've seen historically on the commercial side, just given all the nuances, all the differences? Or do you think it will be as competitive as what you've seen during the past couple of years in gaming? Thanks. Speaker 500:25:16I think it's probably to be determined. I think it's probably to be determined. We're out there to look. I think you have so the total addressable market of tribal intrast gaming is very large, which we all know. How much of that market we would be willing to invest in? Speaker 500:25:33How much of that market would be would want to take advantage of this type of structure and funding is to be determined. I think there are certainly tribes that don't need financing and are very well heeled and have all the things that they and then there are tribes that may be desperate for financing. We are probably somewhere towards the upper end, but we have to figure out how many tribes in there could utilize this type of structure on a long term basis to fund their capital needs. And that is the process we're undertaking now. And I think we just don't know enough at the moment to know how big that opportunity could be. Speaker 700:26:09Yes. But with respect to our competitive set as far as who may want to enter this market and compete against us for transactions, can't really speak to what others would or won't do. I can just tell you, we've spent a number of years, like multiple, multiple years working on this. And so there's an extensive amount of detail analysis and legal work, time and cultivating relationships that have gone into this to get us just to the starting line here. So I do think, look, I'm sure other people will take a look and I'm sure other people will compete. Speaker 700:26:48But their ability to do it with the same clarity that we have after, call it, 7 years of working on this, I think is probably not going to be as fruitful for some others. Speaker 900:27:03Thank you. Appreciate it. And then with the use of the ATM program and just the volatility of rates particularly here in the past 3 months, has anything changed in terms of how you view future leverage debt to EBITDA targets when running the business? Speaker 400:27:24No. I mean, we've been consistently conservative. We've got cash flow needs that go well into the next few years and we want to be in a position that continues to kind of backfill and allows us to be opportunistic on new transactions. What I don't want to do is end up in an environment where for small or medium deal, we're kind of against the wall and forced into an equity overhang position. And interestingly in this deal, we didn't do an overnight. Speaker 400:27:50We didn't need to. We've kind of pre equitized it through the balance sheet activities we did leading into this transaction. And you're going to continue to see us be thoughtful, measured and balanced as we go forward. Speaker 900:28:03Thanks. Congrats on Speaker 1000:28:04the new deal. Speaker 200:28:04And I Speaker 300:28:05would say keep in mind that we have the Lincoln option in the future and that will be funded with all that. So we definitely have intentionally kept our leverage low so that when we add that in at all debt financed, we're still comfortable with our leverage position. But I agree with Matthew, our whole commitment has not changed to where we are and just trying to keep our balance sheet as strong as possible. Speaker 700:28:32Appreciate it. Thank you. Speaker 200:28:35Thank you. Operator00:28:38Our next question comes from the line of Smedes Rose with Citi. Please proceed with your question. Speaker 1100:28:45Hi, thank you. Just on the I own agreement, I'm just wondering, I mean, there's a lot of Native American casinos in the Sacramento area. And do you just have a sense of why are they coming to casino land now? Did they just recently get a gaming compact or they I don't know, they more recently recognized tribes? Just wondering kind of around the timing. Speaker 1100:29:08And then maybe just if you could just speak your source of financing at 11%, I mean that's a pretty high rate or do you think they're just not able to access an alternative more traditional form of financing? Did you mention banks already have agreements somewhat like the ones that you've structured? Yes. Speaker 500:29:30Thanks, Meets. I think, as to your last question, the financing I think was going to be difficult for the tribe to get greenfield construction financing at an affordable rate at that facility. This was sort of a unique opportunity for us to take our development expertise and combine it with our desire to have a tribe that was willing to Speaker 200:29:50go to Washington with us and promote our structure. Speaker 500:29:50And we sort of to Washington with us and promote our structure. And we sort of tripped into this very unique opportunity with the Ione band with a very strong leadership that was willing to embrace our structure and see it through the NIGC. That's not something that you can do as a commercial entity on your own. And so I think this is sort of a combination of and a combination of there they had a need at the tribe for financing that could result in the development of their casino and not drown them in the leverage with it. We had a desire for a tribe to help us find a structure through a long term lease component that we could take to Washington through that combination we have this transaction. Speaker 500:30:33And so I think this is a mutually beneficial transaction. As to why now, I believe the tribe had the land and trust in 2020. So they've been working since they had it's about 2 28 acres outside of Sacramento. Once they had the land and trust, they began to develop and work on this project that will be developed by Warner Gaming. We're familiar with Warner from their efforts in the Spokane market. Speaker 500:30:59And so they are not new to tribal gaming and tribal development. And that was all part of the underwriting we undertook. We visited the site. We've done the economic study. So we're confident in their location and in their ability to get this done. Speaker 1100:31:15Thanks. That's great. And then just wondering, is there any just I know it's only been a few months, but any update on the Chicago asset? I know you've got the land. Any updates just on Valley's kind of drawing down on the credit line that you're providing there? Speaker 1100:31:30Or you think that would be later in their construction process? Speaker 200:31:34Steve, do you want to take a whack at that? Speaker 700:31:37Yes. With respect to funding around direct hard costs, I think from GLPI's perspective, the first set of construction that will kind of fall into our side of the ledger will be the casino podium caissons and the hotel podium caissons, which will start that part of the project will begin Q1 of 2025. So I think that's the first moment in time where literally things will start to go into the ground that we will be looking at for funding. Speaker 1100:32:17Very good. Thank you. Operator00:32:21Our next question comes from the line of Brad Heffern with RBC. Please proceed with your question. Speaker 1200:32:27Yes. Thanks. Good morning, everyone. If the I. Own deal does convert into a lease, is that at the same 11%? Speaker 1200:32:34And then more broadly, it sounds like there's a potential added layer of risk with this structure. Should we assume that in general, you will require a higher yield than maybe on a traditional regional gaming deal? Speaker 500:32:48Without getting into the details, the answer is it will be a little bit lower than the 11% construction funding rate, but it will like it is likely higher than anything you've seen from us in a regional deal. Speaker 700:33:02And with respect to commercial transactions versus tribal lease transactions, we would anticipate there will be an additional margin of cap rate applied to those transactions basically because at the conclusion of the 50, 45 years, excuse me, we will not own the land or building versus a traditional commercial transaction. Speaker 1200:33:31Yes. Okay. Got it. And then I was wondering if you could give an update on the cordish relationship. Obviously, Bossier is close to opening and then there's the Virginia project as well. Speaker 1200:33:43Is there any potential to be involved in either of those? Speaker 700:33:48Sure. So in Bossier, they are funding that themselves. We have had some conversations with them around future transactions that could potentially come out of that. But no, there's no updates really on that one. With respect to Petersburg and some of the other things that they there have been articles about other development type licenses that they are pursuing in different jurisdictions. Speaker 700:34:19We do have the 20% equity right to co invest with them on those types of transactions and we are in discussions around what we may or may not be interested in doing. Speaker 1200:34:36Okay. Thank you. Operator00:34:40Our next question comes from the line of Mitch Germain with Citizens JMP. Please proceed with your question. Speaker 1300:34:47Thank you. Just maybe closing the loop on the ION loan. Is it the way to consider this really just a tribe that might be looking to develop? Or could you also use the structure for somebody that is maybe looking to expand or refurbish an existing casino? Speaker 500:35:09I think the answer is that structure could be utilized for almost any funding needs in tribal country. And in other words, it could be building a hotel tower. It could be refinancing debt, quite frankly, if they want to use the proceeds from that. It could be any number of projects or things that a tribe or initiatives the tribe has that they would need funding for. The key for us will be analyzing what collateral and assets they have that can be contributed to the process. Speaker 500:35:36That may be a mix of commercially held property that we could take a collateral interest in and repossess and own and the tribal land and land held in trust that we would have our long term lease structure. So I think this gives us an opportunity to go to tribes, really have a discussion about their financing and funding needs and figure out with each tribe how this structure might be utilized as a part of their overall funding plan to meet their needs. And so it could be a little bit of everything, Mitch, to be determined. Speaker 700:36:09I think though to just kind of put one extra point on that. I think our interest is in the long term financing component here, the long term lease aspect of the transaction, not the short term loan transaction. So I think as we look to go forward, I think we're probably apt to do a little less greenfield, which would probably need a loan component in it and we're look to go more with the long term financing structure, which is going to be embedded predominantly with properties that are already open, running and profitable. Speaker 500:36:45Yes. Ideally, I think that's right. Our next transaction, future transactions, we're focused on the long term lease structure out of the gate. We do not anticipate having a lot of short term loans that could turn into the structure, could not. This was something we needed to do in this transaction to get the tribe comfortable to be the leader to go to the NIGC with us and help vet this process. Speaker 500:37:08So I think as we focus on this moving forward, we will be focused on the long term lease structure as the initial step, not an option. Speaker 1300:37:18Great. That's helpful. And then Desiree, a quick question. I think you had mentioned and Steve just talked about Chicago funding commencing in Q1. But I think you had mentioned that there that guidance implies that there's a couple of different of these loan arrangements that are embedded. Speaker 1300:37:37Can you maybe just kind of talk about how we should think about the Bell and the Ione project and what the funding schedule will look like over the next several quarters? Speaker 300:37:48Yes. So for 2024, it's pretty insignificant, right, the amount of funding that we have left versus the couple of months that we have remaining in the year. I would look forward to 20 25 when we provide financial guidance for 2025. We should have some more specifics around the actual funding amounts we're anticipating, likely give you a range of what those are to include in the models. Speaker 1400:38:15Great. Congrats on the quarter. Speaker 1200:38:18Thank you. Operator00:38:19Our next question comes from the line of Todd Thomas with KeyBanc. Please proceed with your question. Speaker 1500:38:27Hi, thanks. Good morning. First question, just Desiree sticking with you, question on the updated guidance, where the midpoint implies a $0.93 result in the 4th quarter, which is $0.02 below this quarter. I realize you did the notes offering and there's some maybe timing mismatch there and some dilution between what you're earning on that capital versus the cost of the debt. But there's only a few months left in the year. Speaker 1500:38:53I was just wondering if there's anything else to consider moving into the Q4 that might be having an impact? Speaker 300:39:01No. We raised a little bit of equity that has some dilution for the Q4 as well as those two bond financings is really what's driving it a little bit lower in the quarter. Speaker 1500:39:17Okay. And then I just wanted to circle back to the tribal deal, if I could. Even earlier this year, you've talked about Tribal Gaming as a tremendous opportunity. And I realize it's early, but if this is repeatable and it is a structure that can be employed, that you're comfortable working with and how should we think about the opportunity for GLPI going forward and sort of the company's appetite to migrate capital or allocate new capital toward tribal gaming assets if we look out sort of some number of years, 5 years or so? How would the complexion of the portfolio potentially look as we think about this as a new opportunity set? Speaker 200:40:10I think we all agree here that it's still unknown. And there's several of us who can speak to that. There's been conversations with others and the value is yet to be proven. Steve, Brandon, do you want to comment on just the tenor of such conversations as we've had, but this is just at the very, very beginning. We're excited for the Speaker 500:40:39Yes, I think it's right. We're sort of in the beginning. We've created a structure now that we know the NIGC is okay with. Now we need to take that structure and see how much demand there is in the tribal world for this type of funding. And we are very optimistic. Speaker 500:40:55And I think if the demand that we think is there is there, the next question for us will be that we have not answered yet. We need to look at the risk profile of that deal. So we know the risk profile of the Ione deal and why we undertook it. What we don't know fully is when we take this structure to the next drive, how can we improve upon that risk profile? And at the ultimate risk profile, how much capital are we willing to invest here from GLPI in that structure? Speaker 500:41:22And I think we need to better understand that risk profile on a rollout basis a little bit better before we can take the 2nd step of determining how much capital here we might be willing to allocate to that revenue stream. So I just think it's too early for us to fully answer that question at the moment. Speaker 800:41:39It's an exciting Speaker 700:41:40opportunity. It's an exciting invention, whether it gets accepted by the markets, we're waiting to see. Speaker 1500:41:50Okay. Thank you. Operator00:41:55Our next question comes from the line of Dan Guglielmo with Capital One. Please proceed with your question. Speaker 1600:42:02Hello, everyone. Thank you for taking my questions. Just one on the macro side. So long term treasury yields have been rising even after a large Fed rate cut. Does that change the way you all think about deploying capital since your portfolio does have such a long investment time horizon? Speaker 300:42:23I mean, clearly, we always consider what our cost of capital is and our spread to that cost of capital will be adjusted as needed on a transaction. But I mean, it doesn't change the fact that we are still in the market to grow and to do accretive transaction. Speaker 400:42:39Yes, I mean Speaker 200:42:39at the end Speaker 400:42:40of the day, it's highly important for us to stay disciplined. We think about increasing the duration on the right side of the balance sheet and really hedging out that potential future risk. And that's where the 30 year issuance we did really pleases us a few months ago. I mean, we've opened that market to ourselves. We've been pretty focused otherwise to 10 year. Speaker 400:43:01I mean, we haven't gone short with anything outside of tax structuring. And you should continue to see us think that way. And also to Desiree's point, include that kind of tenor in our underwriting on the front end. Speaker 200:43:14Yes. Look, we're not about to do any transaction that's going to leave us underwater. I mean, I think, as I've been fond of saying on these calls over many years, there's no transaction we have to do. I never feel and we never feel pressure to stretch to something that just doesn't make economic sense. Where our business is all about a spread to the cost of capital and we will, as Matthew suggests, and remain disciplined. Speaker 1600:43:42Great, great. Thank you. Appreciate that. And then I saw a good article on Chicago this morning just around development funding. And outside of kind of Bally's and Casino Queen, are there other tenants coming and asking what they can do to improve their properties? Speaker 1600:43:57And would you all kind of help fund those improvements? And then kind of as a second part, is there like a capital outlay size that it worth your while? Is there kind of a $10,000,000 might not be enough, but $100,000,000 is, just curious there. Thanks. Speaker 700:44:13Sure. Yes, I can take a shot and if anybody else wants to add anything. I think the answer to your second part is, No, there's not really a size requirement. I think the answer is if someone at one of our tenants, has a project that makes sense capital wise and ROI wise for them to do and they're willing to allow us to assist them with funding and it's accretive to us, we're willing to entertain it. So that's the easy one. Speaker 700:44:41I think the first part of your question, I think is a huge opportunity. I think we continue to have discussions with all of tenants about capital improvements at their properties. If you look at Boyd's earnings yesterday, obviously there's a lot of excitement about what happened with their land side move at Treasure Chest. Obviously Casino Queen benefited greatly by the land side move in Baton Rouge. And we have the we already have the redevelopment projects going on, at some of the other properties. Speaker 700:45:10So I think we continue to have discussions with tenants. I think tenants are starting to see there there's upside, legitimate upside that is tangible, recognizable and hits their bottom line if they do make appropriate investments. So those discussions are picking up and I expect to have more of those opportunities to present them to us in the future. Speaker 1600:45:34Great. Thank you. Operator00:45:38Our next question comes from the line of R. J. Milligan with Raymond James. Please proceed with your question. Speaker 500:45:45Hey, good morning, guys. Hey, good morning, guys. Hey, good morning, Speaker 1100:45:50guys. I spent some time talking about Speaker 500:45:51the debt side. And I'm just thinking about expanding on an earlier question, as you talk about leverage and sources of capital. And I just more broadly, can you touch on just the general philosophy on equity funding and then maybe the distinction around ATM use? Speaker 400:46:08Yes. Thanks, RJ. Well, you think about philosophy, I think of the Fed's mandate price stability of MAX employment. For us, we've got no equity overhang and ensure that existing shareholders benefit from our new announcements, not kind of opportunists that flip into deals. That means we need to optimally capitalize the company as we move forward and also be very measured with our ATM use and balanced. Speaker 400:46:33And when you get a new deal, you get to look at, hey, if you consider the existing leverage of the company and the impact of the incremental investment, are you off size in any way compared to your target leverage? And for us, that's 5% to 5.5% and we've become very comfortable at the lower end of that range. And given the environment, we actually chose to go below that range to get some extra firepower for future opportunities considered of Lincoln. And in this situation, we weren't off sides in the short term or in the long term. And that led us to say, hey, all right, we're in a position to then use the ATM, use the forward and do it in a balanced way. Speaker 400:47:13And we would have done less this quarter if it weren't for some deep interest that we had from some very thoughtful shareholders and we're able to get more done. And we thought, hey, in this case, given where the stock is, relative cost of equity and debt, cost of equity versus when we underwrote the deals, we'll take the burden at hand and we did that. And again, it puts us in a great position with ample cash for our base case 2025 business plan. And as we move forward, we're going to continue to weigh the same things. And my hope is in hindsight, you'll say those guys were thoughtful, balanced and measured. Speaker 400:47:46But we can't predict exactly how it will play out because it's a function of all these moving variables. But hopefully that gives you some insight. Speaker 500:47:56Yes, that's helpful, Matt. Thanks guys. That's it for me. Speaker 200:47:58Thank you. Operator00:48:02Our next question comes from the line of Chris Darling with Green Street. Please proceed with your question. Speaker 1400:48:08Thanks. Good morning. Going back to an earlier question around potentially pursuing traditional sale leasebacks or redevelopments with tribal operators, is that ultimately a more difficult hurdle to overcome, given that I'd imagine traditional financing alternatives may be more competitive from a pricing standpoint? And I ask I just wonder if you're going to be functionally limited to projects that fit further out on the risk spectrum where pricing might make more sense from the standpoint of both parties? Speaker 700:48:36Chris, I'm sorry. To clarify, your question is about a tribal sale leaseback versus tribal current traditional financing? Speaker 1400:48:46Yes, exactly. Speaker 700:48:48Yes. So currently the tribal financing is actually not as in many cases not as price beneficial to the operators as a traditional commercial gaming enterprises debt financing would be. So there's already kind of an additional margin that they're already paying. I think the one big aspect that needs to be considered and obviously we'll talk to the tribes about it as they think about this alternative is the right now the average tenure that they would be able to achieve on a debt financing is probably max 8 years. And so what that means is the tribal people who are receiving the distributions have a refinancing risk to their distribution every call it 5 to 8 years. Speaker 700:49:44And as we all know, rates change and things change. So one of the major benefits that a long term lease structure would provide someone is the ability to kind of steady out their distributions and reduce that refinancing risk in a very material way. So if you're talking about 8 years versus 45, I think we all can see that there's a pretty big benefit there. So look, we're going to have discussions. We'll see where they go. Speaker 700:50:12I don't disagree that there's definitely some nuances that are different, but that's the opportunity that's presented itself and that's why we think we will get better margins on these types of investments than we would on a traditional commercial deal. Speaker 1400:50:29Okay. That's really interesting and helpful to hear. And maybe just shifting gears a little bit, just as you think about the traditional commercial gaming space and recent conversations you might have had with any potential counterparties, What's the latest you can share just around transaction pricing? Maybe you could speak to how any bid ask spread that you might have be observing and how that might be evolving more recently here? Speaker 700:50:54Yes, I think the most recent conversations look, I think when the credit markets were less than enthusiastic over the last 12 months, I think a lot of potential counterparties somewhat sat on their hands. And I think what's happened now that people see rates are maybe going to come in some, or at least on the short end, they've started to kind of reengage their thought process around could they potentially do a transaction. So the good news is I feel like that the current rate environment is causing folks to be a little more open and thoughtful around potential transactions. The slight downside I would suggest is that everyone thinks rates are going to grind so much tighter that all of a sudden everyone's asset values will be high again and you can pay a significantly more aggressive cap rate than reality. So think Speaker 200:51:48we're there's Speaker 700:51:48going to be more discussions whether it results in more transactions, only time will tell. Speaker 1400:51:54All right. Appreciate the time. That's all for me. Speaker 200:51:59Thank you. Operator00:52:03Our final question comes from the line of Ronald Kamdem with Morgan Stanley. Please proceed with your question. Speaker 1000:52:10Hey, thanks for taking my question. You have Jenny on for Ron. So first, I think we're very impressive by the innovative avenues GLP has been pursuing this in the last few quarters. I'm just curious if there's any other like initiatives such as other avenues or like non gaming deals or other new opportunities from the new relationships or development opportunities on the pipeline. If you can comment on the criteria for those opportunities you're evaluating will be great. Speaker 1000:52:40Thanks. Speaker 200:52:42The quick answer I'll call on outside of gaming is really nothing. I mean, we're not looking to move away from gaming as our source business. We look at stuff on a regular basis, always have some actually pretty thoroughly. But again, as we've said call after call, quarter after quarter, we haven't found any other territory that is as stable, dependable and rock solid as gaming. So long as we can keep doing that, we will. Speaker 200:53:16And but again, not turn our noses up on any good opportunity. As to what's out on the horizon, it's never predictable. It's serendipitous to some degree. We source transactions, but we also, as I noticed somebody, I just read it one of the notes this morning, I've been quoted as saying we kiss a lot of frogs and indeed we do, always looking for a princess. And Steve, how would you want to characterize what we're seeing out in the world? Speaker 700:53:53Well, look, I think my comments would probably be similar to what I was saying to the last question. I know, Matt, were you going to say something prior to Matt answering? Excuse me, Peter. Okay. I think you've covered everything, Peter. Speaker 200:54:10Okay. Then we have. Speaker 1000:54:13That makes sense. I think the second one, I want to switch back to Bally Chicago. I think you mentioned 1st round of funding is going to be Q1 'twenty five. Maybe talk a little bit more, do you like how many rounds of funding like are you planning in 2025 and like the approximate amount of outstanding in 2025 just for my models? Thanks. Speaker 300:54:36Yes. So we are still refining our timing on the fundings, working with Vale's and the construction team. So as I said earlier, we will be providing that with our 2025 guidance, but we're not in a position right now to provide 2025 fundings. Speaker 1000:54:55That makes sense. Yes, that's all for me. Thanks so much. Speaker 200:55:00Well, thank you. If that's it, then we're happy to close off our call. I hope that our presentation has been helpful, and we will look forward to connecting with you all at the end of the next quarter. Thank you so much. Operator00:55:18Ladies and gentlemen, this does conclude today's teleconference. You may disconnect your lines at this time. Thank you for your participation and have a wonderful day. Speaker 200:55:30Thanks, operator.Read morePowered by Key Takeaways Total Q3 income from real estate rose by $25.8 million year-over-year, driven by acquisitions of Tioga, Rockford, Casino Queen Marquette, strategic tribal lands, and Valley Chicago land. Management deployed nearly $2 billion in development and investment activity through 2024 at an 8.4 percent blended yield, underscoring GLPI’s disciplined capital approach. GLPI completed a first-of-its-kind tribal finance structure with I Own, a 5-year loan convertible into a 45-year lease on trust land, securing tribal NIGC approval and opening a new non-management funding avenue. Balance‐sheet strength remains a priority: full‐year AFFO guidance of $3.74–$3.76 per share, strong master-lease rent coverage (1.9–2.59x), and a $409.3 million forward equity raise alongside an inaugural 30-year bond issue. GLPI’s pipeline benefits from tailored development and capital solutions—ranging from Chicago and Baton Rouge projects to tribal partnerships—leveraging its real estate and gaming expertise for long-term growth. AI Generated. May Contain Errors.Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallGaming and Leisure Properties Q3 202400:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2x Earnings DocumentsQuarterly report(10-Q) Gaming and Leisure Properties Earnings HeadlinesAnalysts Set Gaming and Leisure Properties, Inc. (NASDAQ:GLPI) Target Price at $54.63June 4, 2025 | americanbankingnews.comWells Fargo & Company Has Lowered Expectations for Gaming and Leisure Properties (NASDAQ:GLPI) Stock PriceJune 4, 2025 | americanbankingnews.comTrump wipes out trillions overnight…Is there anybody more powerful than Donald Trump right now? In a single tariff announcement, he wiped out nearly $5 trillion in wealth from the S&P 500 and $6.4 trillion from the Dow Jones… Not to mention the countless trillions of dollars lost in every market around the world… leaving the major political powers scrambling in fear of Trump’s next move.June 12, 2025 | Porter & Company (Ad)Breaking Down Gaming and Leisure Props: 8 Analysts Share Their ViewsJune 3, 2025 | benzinga.comGaming and Leisure Properties Announces Dividend Increase with 6.65% Yield!May 17, 2025 | msn.comGaming and Leisure Properties, Inc. Announces Second Quarter 2025 Cash Dividend Increase to $0.78 per ShareMay 16, 2025 | quiverquant.comSee More Gaming and Leisure Properties Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like Gaming and Leisure Properties? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on Gaming and Leisure Properties and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About Gaming and Leisure PropertiesGaming & Leisure Properties, Inc. engages in the provision of acquiring, financing, and owning real estate property to be leased to gaming operators in triple-net lease arrangements. The company was founded on February 13, 2013 and is headquartered in Wyomissing, PA.View Gaming and Leisure Properties 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 Broadcom Slides on Solid Earnings, AI Outlook Still StrongFive Below Pops on Strong Earnings, But Rally May StallRed Robin's Comeback: Q1 Earnings Spark Investor HopesOllie’s Q1 Earnings: The Good, the Bad, and What’s NextBroadcom Earnings Preview: AVGO Stock Near Record HighsUlta’s Beautiful Q1 Earnings Report Points to More Gains Aheade.l.f. Beauty Sees Record Surge After Earnings, Rhode Deal Upcoming Earnings Accenture (6/20/2025)FedEx (6/24/2025)Micron Technology (6/25/2025)Paychex (6/25/2025)NIKE (6/26/2025)Bank of America (7/14/2025)JPMorgan Chase & Co. (7/14/2025)Wells Fargo & Company (7/14/2025)Interactive Brokers Group (7/15/2025)América Móvil (7/15/2025) 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 17 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Greetings, and welcome to the Gaming and Leisure Properties Third Quarter 2024 Earnings Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen only mode. A brief question and answer session will follow the formal presentation. As a reminder, this conference is being recorded. It is now my pleasure to introduce your host, Joe D'Aroni, Investor Relations. Operator00:00:29Thank you, sir. You may begin. Speaker 100:00:31Thank you, Christine, and good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining Gaming and Leisure Properties' Q3 2024 Earnings Call and Webcast. The press release distributed yesterday afternoon is available in the Investor Relations section on our website at www. Glpropinc.com. On today's call, management's prepared remarks and answers to your questions may contain forward looking statements as defined in the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Forward looking statements address matters that are subject to risks and uncertainties that may cause actual results to differ materially from those discussed today. Speaker 100:01:04Forward looking statements may include those related to revenue, operating income and financial guidance, as well as non GAAP financial measures such as FFO and AFFO. As a reminder, forward looking statements represent management's current estimates and the company assumes no obligation to update any forward looking statements in the future. We encourage listeners to review the more detailed discussions related to risk factors and forward looking statements contained in the company's filings with the SEC, including its 10 Q and in the earnings release as well as the definitions and reconciliations of non GAAP financial measures contained in the company's earnings release. On this morning's call, we are joined by Peter Carlino, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer at Gaming and Leisure Properties. Also joining today's call are Brandon Moore, President and Chief Operating Officer Desiree Burke, Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer Steve Ladney, Senior Vice President and Chief Development Officer and Matthew Demchak, Senior Vice President and Chief Investment Officer. Speaker 100:01:59With that, it's my pleasure to turn the call over to Peter Carlino. Please go ahead. Speaker 200:02:05Well, thank you, Joe, and good morning, everyone. We are, of course, pleased to present our 3rd quarter earnings results, which I think demonstrate our success and continue to build upon our outstanding portfolio of gaming properties. To encapsulate what I believe is the most important summary of this, let me read from the last line of my quoted press release comments. I think it does the best job of summarizing how we feel about where we are. We believe our ability to develop investment activity in 2024 of nearly $2,000,000,000 and an attractive blended yield of 8.4 percent is a firm affirmation of GLPI's disciplined capital investment approach. Speaker 200:02:56The combination of our unrivaled gaming and real estate experience and their strong balance sheet has positioned GLPI as a development funding and real estate partner of choice for operators of all sizes and has created a platform for near and long term growth and appreciation of shareholder value. I might also add that to the effect that we have been very successful in doing the significant prefunding to date. But I'm going to leave that to Desiree Burke, who I know is going to take to share her comments. Des, why don't you go ahead? Speaker 300:03:36Thank you, Peter. Good morning. For the Q3 of 2024, our total income from real estate exceeded the Q3 of 2023 by $25,800,000 The growth was driven by the Tioga acquisition, which increased income by 3.6, the Rockford acquisition, which increased cash income by 4.6, dollars The Casino Queen Marquette acquisition and the Baton Rouge Landside Development, which increased cash income by $1,500,000 The Strategic acquisition increased cash income by $2,300,000 dollars The acquisition of Valley Chicago Land, which increased our cash income by $1,100,000 and Valley's Tropicundant funding increased by $400,000 The recognition of escalators and percentage rent adjustments on our leases, which added $5,300,000 of cash income as well as the combination of non cash revenue growth ups, investment and lease adjustments and straight line rent adjustments, which drove a collective year over year increase of approximately 7,000,000 dollars As Peter said, we've been busy for this quarter with growth and development actually throughout 2024. Our operating expenses increased by $22,600,000 primarily due to non cash increase in the provision for credit losses that resulted from the Tropicana lease reclassification due to the recent investment. Related to the Valley Chicago property, the company will be capitalizing interest and deferring all rent received during a development period for financial reporting purposes. Speaker 300:05:11However, we will be adding the rent back and deducting the capitalized interest in deriving AFFO. The amended Penn master lease is subject contingent escalation on November 1, 'twenty four and if obtained would result in approximately $4,200,000 of additional rent for us. Included in our release is our full year 'twenty four AFFO guidance ranging from $3.74 to 3.76 per diluted share in OP units. Please note that this guidance does not include the impact of future transaction. However, it does anticipate our fundings for the Chicago Development Project, the Bell Development Project and the Island Development Project. Speaker 300:05:52Our 0 coupon treasury bill matures in 2025 at an applied yield of 4.9 percent and we've entered into forward sale agreements to sell 8,200,000 shares for net sales of $409,300,000 Our rent coverage ratios remain strong, remaining from 1.9 to 2.59 on our master leases as of the end of the prior quarter. As you can see, we've set our balance sheet up to be very strong as we head into 2025. With that, I'll turn the call back to Peter. Speaker 200:06:27Thanks, Des. And why don't we ask Matthew Demchick to offer his thoughts. Matthew? Speaker 400:06:36Sure. Thanks, Peter, and good morning, everyone. Thanks for joining us today. As we review our Q3 results, I want to highlight how our unwavering commitment to balance sheet strength and liquidity has enabled us to excel. Our leverage ratios remain robust. Speaker 400:06:52Our debt maturity schedule is well structured and our disciplined capital market strategy continues to de risk our business model. This quarter, we were judicious in our use of the ATM program, which was complemented by significant reverse inquiries from both existing and new investors, and we're pleased to welcome them to our shareholder roster and to have raised the capital through forward agreements given the timing of our cash needs. We're in a solid position as we look forward to our 2025 spend. We're particularly proud of successfully completing our inaugural 30 year bond issuance. This milestone not only extends the weighted average maturity of our liabilities, but also marks another step towards the institutionalization of our asset class. Speaker 400:07:36Our balanced and strategic approach positions GLPI with strong cash positive liquidity, enabling us to embark earmark funds toward existing development commitments, while also positioning us for future opportunities as they arise. In the Q3, we demonstrated our strategic ability and agility through the Bally's transaction announcements, which showcased our ability to create tailored solutions that benefit all stakeholders. We followed that up with an innovative first to market structure for a tribal investment with our I own loan, which includes an option for our partner to convert the loan into a lease. These case studies of our creative flexibility enrich ongoing dialogue with prospects in our pipeline. And this year's announced activity when combined with our other contractual future opportunities adds together into a pipeline that we've developed is becoming increasingly tangible and impactful. Speaker 400:08:36Our team remains dedicated to leveraging our organization's development expertise to closely monitor ongoing projects, while we remain steadfast in our effort to prudently deploy shareholder capital to enhance long term shareholder value on a per share basis. Thank you, and I'll hand things back to Peter. Speaker 200:08:56Well, thank you, Matthew. And as always, we have our entire team present with us today, and we anxiously anticipate your questions. So operator, would you please open the floor? Operator00:09:11Thank you. We will now be conducting a question and answer session. Our first question comes from the line of Barry Jonas with Truist. Please proceed with your question. Speaker 200:09:47Hey, guys. The I. O. N. Loan is notable as I believe it's the 1st gaming retail with Tribal Gaming. Speaker 200:09:54How did you get comfort with the structure and how confident are you that this could convert to sale leaseback? Brandon, that's a question for you. Speaker 500:10:04Yes. Thanks, Barry. So yes, the I own transaction, I would say, is the culmination in a multiyear process that we've been working on to try to come up with a structure that can be utilized in a situation where you have land held in trust by a tribe in a good REIT investment. I think it's probably just the first step. So this transaction with I own includes a 5 year loan to finance the construction of a greenfield development outside of Sacramento. Speaker 500:10:32But the most important part of that structure to us is a long term lease component whereby at the end of the loan term, the tribe can elect to convert the principal into a long term lease structure. And that long term lease structure and the documents necessary for that were all part of the NIGC's review and recovered by the declination letter that was received from the NIGC to move forward. We are cautiously Speaker 200:10:58optimistic here at the company that this long term lease structure Speaker 500:10:58is something that can be optimistic here at the company that this long term lease structure is something that can be utilized as an alternative form of funding for tribes that have land held in trust. We are in the process of meeting with tribes. We have met with over the last several years. We're in the process of going back to many of those tribes now that we have the letter in hand. And I think we'll know more in the coming months quarters as to whether or not this is a repeatable path forward that we can turn into new revenue stream for the company? Speaker 500:11:33Or is it something that the tribes may not find as valuable as we hope? Again, I think we're cautiously optimistic that this is a structure that can be utilized, but we'll know more in the coming months. And at this point, we've asked tribes to enter into NDAs as we talk about that structure in more detail. So I don't think we can share too much about the structure itself. As for the credit protections, which is I think where you were leading, we have all the same protections in this transaction that a commercial lender typically gets when lending to tribes in tribal countries. Speaker 500:12:09So we have the collateral of the accounts, we have the collateral of the assets and things at the tribe, we get all that the same way that a bank would. In addition to that, this lease structure would permit us to foreclose on a lease and step in and operate at the property. Now importantly, we can't operate the casino floor on the property. And so that is the rub in tribal land. Only the tribe can run the casino. Speaker 500:12:36But all the protections that we have in place that typical lenders receive, we are confident give us the protection to enter into this transaction and we're confident that we've underwritten it in a way that this transaction will be accretive for the company and gives us the opportunity to now roll this out with some other tribes and find out how big this opportunity could be. Speaker 200:13:01That's great. And just maybe just one point of clarification, the release said that there's a 45 year maximum period. What happens next? Speaker 500:13:11At the end of 45 years, obviously, we don't have C Simple in the land. The tribe will keep the land. We'll all go our separate ways. Theoretically, they can run this transaction back. So they could, if they need additional capital or funding, could seek to do a similar transaction. Speaker 500:13:26If not, then they keep their land or the federal government keeps their land and we all go our separate ways. Speaker 200:13:35Understood. All right. Thanks and congrats again. Speaker 500:13:39Thanks, Barry. Operator00:13:41Our next question comes from the line of Greg McGinniss with Scotiabank. Please proceed with your question. Speaker 600:13:48Hey, good morning. Good morning. Congrats on the tribal land deal. That's really one really interesting and great that you guys got that done. I'm curious, what's the incentive for them to extend past the initial 25 years? Speaker 600:14:03And also, is that lease going to have escalators included? Is it likely just to be a rollover of the 11% interest rate? Any details there would be appreciated. Speaker 500:14:16Yes. So this is getting into a little bit of stickier area. Yes, there will be escalation on the rent in the lease. I don't really want to get into on this call at this time the incentives for the tribe to extend the lease beyond 25 years to the 45 years. I think that's part of at the moment what we're hoping to keep confidential. Speaker 500:14:37But there are incentives for the tribe to extend that lease term from 25 years to 45 years. And the 45 years is really has to do with some structural elements to ensure that we have good REIT income out of this project. Speaker 600:14:54Okay. I guess separately, significant level of transactions now is year to date, which is great, but heavily weighted towards development versus in place cash flowing casinos. I mean, how are you guys viewing the risk that you're taking on the development side versus cash flowing operations? Or they're just not the opportunities that you expected or hope to see on the regular acquisitions? Speaker 200:15:27Let me take that Brandon, if I may and for the group. Look, I think we're still in business to buy existing assets when available and we're aggressively looking, talking, some embedded in the various announced Valley transactions that we have on the horizon. So we'll do that. But what has emerged is an opportunity with, I think, 1st pioneered by campus with Valley down in Baton Rouge, removing that property land side with great success. We'll get to repeat that opportunity with the Bell, also in Baton Rouge, as you would know, because we have that capability. Speaker 200:16:10I mean, we've built significant number of casino properties around the 96, over the years. I think we've announced previously, Jim Baum, who was the Head of Construction for me at Penn over many, many years involved with virtually all of our projects, is back with TLPI right now. And while we're not the contractor or developer, let's say in Chicago, we are hopefully providing a lot of creative high level help to make sure that that project is everything that Vale's would hope it to be and that it's delivered on time, on budget and the usual things. Yes, there is a measure of risk there, but I'm not going on wood when I say we have a long term track record of good success of bringing significant projects in on time and on budget. So we're willing to do both. Speaker 200:17:02I think that's a special capability that we add to our REIT, to the REIT business in a sense creating properties that we can lease back to operators. So right now, I think we'll go in either direction, but it's not because we see more or less opportunity. If we can't find opportunity, we'll make it. And I think that best summarizes what our attitude is about it with caution and care always. Speaker 600:17:33Okay. That's fair. I'm sorry, just one clarification question. That letter that you received from the National Indian Gaming Commission, is that just a framework for future deals? It doesn't actually give approval for anything else, right? Speaker 500:17:49Correct. What the NIGC letter effectively does is it lists the documents that have been reviewed and have been and I'll use the word approved, although that may not be the right word. They don't approve the content of the documents. What they are essentially ensuring is that those documents don't constitute a management agreement or management control that would have the potential of invalidating the transaction of the documents. And so the value of the declination letter, what most banks would receive is that you've had the NIGC look at your documents and ensure that you haven't violated that critical protection, the management. Speaker 500:18:26So that's what that includes. And would we have to go through the same process in the next deal? I think the answer is yes and no. In other words, yes, we would go for a declination letter, but now it's not an issue of first impression. And so presumably if we use the same documents in the same structure in the long term lease component, that should be something we can get through much faster than what this process entail. Speaker 600:18:50It's the same committee or commission that does the approval for all the in place for all those transactions potentially? Speaker 500:18:58It's the same government entity and this reached the highest levels of the legal department there up to the general counsel we were working with. And so the short answer is yes. At the present time, this would all go through the same folks. Now you can't guarantee that the same people will still be employed at the time that the next one comes through. Right. Speaker 500:19:16But to the extent that it is, yes, this has gone through the highest levels of the organization. And so we're confident that if we stick to the knitting that we've created that this will be something we can get approved. Speaker 600:19:27Great. Thank you. Speaker 700:19:29Thank you. Operator00:19:32Our next question comes from the line of David Katz with Jefferies. Please proceed with your question. Speaker 800:19:38Hi, good morning, everyone. Thanks for all of the information. There has been some public information around with respect to Las Vegas and the Tropicana site. And I just frankly wondered if there are any updated thoughts or perspectives you can share around your role in the redevelopment of that site. And I if I'm remembering correctly, I heard those buildings fall down live. Speaker 200:20:10They certainly did. Brandon, why don't you take that? Speaker 500:20:17Las Vegas is obviously a major focus for the company. I'd say our first priority continues to be ensuring and then preserving the value of the remainder parcel that we have in place. And so that's been our primary focus from the beginning. It continues to be our primary focus now. I'm sure all of you saw that the buildings came down were imploded a few weeks ago during G2E, which was an exciting event and the site is in the process of being cleared and making way for the A's to break ground on the stadium. Speaker 500:20:48The latest is both the A's and the integrated resort have filed pre submittals for entitlements with the county and some of that stuff has now come out into the media. So you can probably find a lot of those drawings and pictures out there. That was the necessary next step is to get all of the authorities, utilities, traffic in line so that we can begin the project. And then on the integrated resort side, Bally's is continuing to work with their design professionals to fine tune what that integrated resort might look like in Phase 1 and ultimately in Phases 2 and 3. And that process is still underway. Speaker 500:21:28And we are really waiting the outcome of some of that to determine how much, if any, additional dollars were either asked to determine how much, if any, additional dollars were either asked to provide or more importantly, willing to provide to support the construction of the integrated resort. Just as a reminder, the stadium is really is being financed all by the A's. So, that's not something that we'll participate in the land and quite frankly the stadium will be owned by the stadium authority in Las Vegas. And so that's not that part of the project we're not we won't be involved in. Speaker 800:21:59Very helpful. And I wanted to follow-up on some of the Native American activities. And just listening to some of the answers, when we think about collateral in that context, I'd like to just better understand your ability to ask collateral step in and manage the non gaming aspects of an asset generally speaking or versus the ability to sort of kick the building, right, which I guess previously have understood that you cannot on Native American land. Speaker 500:22:38Yes, that's not quite accurate. You can take the building as part of the lease. So we have a long term lease there in that structure whereby we could take occupancy back of the buildings and structures on the properties and to the extent that it's not gaming, we could run whatever amenities are there. You could theoretically, and I say theoretically, remove all the gaming and turn it into an Amazon distribution center if you wanted to during the lease term. So you have the ability to occupy and run the buildings. Speaker 500:23:13You just can't operate gaming. Now we all know that operating gaming is the primary driver to the revenue in those facilities and it's the amenities that really bring people in to drive the gaming. We're not we know that. And we're in the same position that a bank would be in to say the collateral package is all encompassing. In other words, you're going to take all revenue streams, all accounts, you're going to take the assets and the property. Speaker 500:23:41And it's that level of collateral and protection that really enables any creditor to a tribe to sit down with the tribe if there's a problem and figure out how that's going to be fixed. Because you have a mutual benefit, you and the tribe at that point of figuring out how do you get the cash flowing back to the tribe again and how do you fix whatever might be broken. And in gaming, that could be any number of things. It could be that competition has come in and the facility doesn't matter who runs the facility. It could be a management issue. Speaker 500:24:14We just don't know. You don't know what it will be, but we'll rely on the same collateral package plus the lease in order to secure our investments with the tribe. Speaker 800:24:25Super helpful. Speaker 500:24:26Thank Speaker 700:24:27you. Thank you. Operator00:24:30Our next question comes from the line of Chad Beynon with Macquarie. Please proceed with your question. Speaker 900:24:36Good morning. Thanks for taking my question. Just wanted to follow-up on the tribal discussion. It Sounds like you guys have obviously done more extensive work than anyone in the industry. You've gotten comfortable with it. Speaker 900:24:49You've explained the rules and regulations here this morning. So with that in mind, do you think the competitive set for these deals going forward might be smaller than what you've seen historically on the commercial side, just given all the nuances, all the differences? Or do you think it will be as competitive as what you've seen during the past couple of years in gaming? Thanks. Speaker 500:25:16I think it's probably to be determined. I think it's probably to be determined. We're out there to look. I think you have so the total addressable market of tribal intrast gaming is very large, which we all know. How much of that market we would be willing to invest in? Speaker 500:25:33How much of that market would be would want to take advantage of this type of structure and funding is to be determined. I think there are certainly tribes that don't need financing and are very well heeled and have all the things that they and then there are tribes that may be desperate for financing. We are probably somewhere towards the upper end, but we have to figure out how many tribes in there could utilize this type of structure on a long term basis to fund their capital needs. And that is the process we're undertaking now. And I think we just don't know enough at the moment to know how big that opportunity could be. Speaker 700:26:09Yes. But with respect to our competitive set as far as who may want to enter this market and compete against us for transactions, can't really speak to what others would or won't do. I can just tell you, we've spent a number of years, like multiple, multiple years working on this. And so there's an extensive amount of detail analysis and legal work, time and cultivating relationships that have gone into this to get us just to the starting line here. So I do think, look, I'm sure other people will take a look and I'm sure other people will compete. Speaker 700:26:48But their ability to do it with the same clarity that we have after, call it, 7 years of working on this, I think is probably not going to be as fruitful for some others. Speaker 900:27:03Thank you. Appreciate it. And then with the use of the ATM program and just the volatility of rates particularly here in the past 3 months, has anything changed in terms of how you view future leverage debt to EBITDA targets when running the business? Speaker 400:27:24No. I mean, we've been consistently conservative. We've got cash flow needs that go well into the next few years and we want to be in a position that continues to kind of backfill and allows us to be opportunistic on new transactions. What I don't want to do is end up in an environment where for small or medium deal, we're kind of against the wall and forced into an equity overhang position. And interestingly in this deal, we didn't do an overnight. Speaker 400:27:50We didn't need to. We've kind of pre equitized it through the balance sheet activities we did leading into this transaction. And you're going to continue to see us be thoughtful, measured and balanced as we go forward. Speaker 900:28:03Thanks. Congrats on Speaker 1000:28:04the new deal. Speaker 200:28:04And I Speaker 300:28:05would say keep in mind that we have the Lincoln option in the future and that will be funded with all that. So we definitely have intentionally kept our leverage low so that when we add that in at all debt financed, we're still comfortable with our leverage position. But I agree with Matthew, our whole commitment has not changed to where we are and just trying to keep our balance sheet as strong as possible. Speaker 700:28:32Appreciate it. Thank you. Speaker 200:28:35Thank you. Operator00:28:38Our next question comes from the line of Smedes Rose with Citi. Please proceed with your question. Speaker 1100:28:45Hi, thank you. Just on the I own agreement, I'm just wondering, I mean, there's a lot of Native American casinos in the Sacramento area. And do you just have a sense of why are they coming to casino land now? Did they just recently get a gaming compact or they I don't know, they more recently recognized tribes? Just wondering kind of around the timing. Speaker 1100:29:08And then maybe just if you could just speak your source of financing at 11%, I mean that's a pretty high rate or do you think they're just not able to access an alternative more traditional form of financing? Did you mention banks already have agreements somewhat like the ones that you've structured? Yes. Speaker 500:29:30Thanks, Meets. I think, as to your last question, the financing I think was going to be difficult for the tribe to get greenfield construction financing at an affordable rate at that facility. This was sort of a unique opportunity for us to take our development expertise and combine it with our desire to have a tribe that was willing to Speaker 200:29:50go to Washington with us and promote our structure. Speaker 500:29:50And we sort of to Washington with us and promote our structure. And we sort of tripped into this very unique opportunity with the Ione band with a very strong leadership that was willing to embrace our structure and see it through the NIGC. That's not something that you can do as a commercial entity on your own. And so I think this is sort of a combination of and a combination of there they had a need at the tribe for financing that could result in the development of their casino and not drown them in the leverage with it. We had a desire for a tribe to help us find a structure through a long term lease component that we could take to Washington through that combination we have this transaction. Speaker 500:30:33And so I think this is a mutually beneficial transaction. As to why now, I believe the tribe had the land and trust in 2020. So they've been working since they had it's about 2 28 acres outside of Sacramento. Once they had the land and trust, they began to develop and work on this project that will be developed by Warner Gaming. We're familiar with Warner from their efforts in the Spokane market. Speaker 500:30:59And so they are not new to tribal gaming and tribal development. And that was all part of the underwriting we undertook. We visited the site. We've done the economic study. So we're confident in their location and in their ability to get this done. Speaker 1100:31:15Thanks. That's great. And then just wondering, is there any just I know it's only been a few months, but any update on the Chicago asset? I know you've got the land. Any updates just on Valley's kind of drawing down on the credit line that you're providing there? Speaker 1100:31:30Or you think that would be later in their construction process? Speaker 200:31:34Steve, do you want to take a whack at that? Speaker 700:31:37Yes. With respect to funding around direct hard costs, I think from GLPI's perspective, the first set of construction that will kind of fall into our side of the ledger will be the casino podium caissons and the hotel podium caissons, which will start that part of the project will begin Q1 of 2025. So I think that's the first moment in time where literally things will start to go into the ground that we will be looking at for funding. Speaker 1100:32:17Very good. Thank you. Operator00:32:21Our next question comes from the line of Brad Heffern with RBC. Please proceed with your question. Speaker 1200:32:27Yes. Thanks. Good morning, everyone. If the I. Own deal does convert into a lease, is that at the same 11%? Speaker 1200:32:34And then more broadly, it sounds like there's a potential added layer of risk with this structure. Should we assume that in general, you will require a higher yield than maybe on a traditional regional gaming deal? Speaker 500:32:48Without getting into the details, the answer is it will be a little bit lower than the 11% construction funding rate, but it will like it is likely higher than anything you've seen from us in a regional deal. Speaker 700:33:02And with respect to commercial transactions versus tribal lease transactions, we would anticipate there will be an additional margin of cap rate applied to those transactions basically because at the conclusion of the 50, 45 years, excuse me, we will not own the land or building versus a traditional commercial transaction. Speaker 1200:33:31Yes. Okay. Got it. And then I was wondering if you could give an update on the cordish relationship. Obviously, Bossier is close to opening and then there's the Virginia project as well. Speaker 1200:33:43Is there any potential to be involved in either of those? Speaker 700:33:48Sure. So in Bossier, they are funding that themselves. We have had some conversations with them around future transactions that could potentially come out of that. But no, there's no updates really on that one. With respect to Petersburg and some of the other things that they there have been articles about other development type licenses that they are pursuing in different jurisdictions. Speaker 700:34:19We do have the 20% equity right to co invest with them on those types of transactions and we are in discussions around what we may or may not be interested in doing. Speaker 1200:34:36Okay. Thank you. Operator00:34:40Our next question comes from the line of Mitch Germain with Citizens JMP. Please proceed with your question. Speaker 1300:34:47Thank you. Just maybe closing the loop on the ION loan. Is it the way to consider this really just a tribe that might be looking to develop? Or could you also use the structure for somebody that is maybe looking to expand or refurbish an existing casino? Speaker 500:35:09I think the answer is that structure could be utilized for almost any funding needs in tribal country. And in other words, it could be building a hotel tower. It could be refinancing debt, quite frankly, if they want to use the proceeds from that. It could be any number of projects or things that a tribe or initiatives the tribe has that they would need funding for. The key for us will be analyzing what collateral and assets they have that can be contributed to the process. Speaker 500:35:36That may be a mix of commercially held property that we could take a collateral interest in and repossess and own and the tribal land and land held in trust that we would have our long term lease structure. So I think this gives us an opportunity to go to tribes, really have a discussion about their financing and funding needs and figure out with each tribe how this structure might be utilized as a part of their overall funding plan to meet their needs. And so it could be a little bit of everything, Mitch, to be determined. Speaker 700:36:09I think though to just kind of put one extra point on that. I think our interest is in the long term financing component here, the long term lease aspect of the transaction, not the short term loan transaction. So I think as we look to go forward, I think we're probably apt to do a little less greenfield, which would probably need a loan component in it and we're look to go more with the long term financing structure, which is going to be embedded predominantly with properties that are already open, running and profitable. Speaker 500:36:45Yes. Ideally, I think that's right. Our next transaction, future transactions, we're focused on the long term lease structure out of the gate. We do not anticipate having a lot of short term loans that could turn into the structure, could not. This was something we needed to do in this transaction to get the tribe comfortable to be the leader to go to the NIGC with us and help vet this process. Speaker 500:37:08So I think as we focus on this moving forward, we will be focused on the long term lease structure as the initial step, not an option. Speaker 1300:37:18Great. That's helpful. And then Desiree, a quick question. I think you had mentioned and Steve just talked about Chicago funding commencing in Q1. But I think you had mentioned that there that guidance implies that there's a couple of different of these loan arrangements that are embedded. Speaker 1300:37:37Can you maybe just kind of talk about how we should think about the Bell and the Ione project and what the funding schedule will look like over the next several quarters? Speaker 300:37:48Yes. So for 2024, it's pretty insignificant, right, the amount of funding that we have left versus the couple of months that we have remaining in the year. I would look forward to 20 25 when we provide financial guidance for 2025. We should have some more specifics around the actual funding amounts we're anticipating, likely give you a range of what those are to include in the models. Speaker 1400:38:15Great. Congrats on the quarter. Speaker 1200:38:18Thank you. Operator00:38:19Our next question comes from the line of Todd Thomas with KeyBanc. Please proceed with your question. Speaker 1500:38:27Hi, thanks. Good morning. First question, just Desiree sticking with you, question on the updated guidance, where the midpoint implies a $0.93 result in the 4th quarter, which is $0.02 below this quarter. I realize you did the notes offering and there's some maybe timing mismatch there and some dilution between what you're earning on that capital versus the cost of the debt. But there's only a few months left in the year. Speaker 1500:38:53I was just wondering if there's anything else to consider moving into the Q4 that might be having an impact? Speaker 300:39:01No. We raised a little bit of equity that has some dilution for the Q4 as well as those two bond financings is really what's driving it a little bit lower in the quarter. Speaker 1500:39:17Okay. And then I just wanted to circle back to the tribal deal, if I could. Even earlier this year, you've talked about Tribal Gaming as a tremendous opportunity. And I realize it's early, but if this is repeatable and it is a structure that can be employed, that you're comfortable working with and how should we think about the opportunity for GLPI going forward and sort of the company's appetite to migrate capital or allocate new capital toward tribal gaming assets if we look out sort of some number of years, 5 years or so? How would the complexion of the portfolio potentially look as we think about this as a new opportunity set? Speaker 200:40:10I think we all agree here that it's still unknown. And there's several of us who can speak to that. There's been conversations with others and the value is yet to be proven. Steve, Brandon, do you want to comment on just the tenor of such conversations as we've had, but this is just at the very, very beginning. We're excited for the Speaker 500:40:39Yes, I think it's right. We're sort of in the beginning. We've created a structure now that we know the NIGC is okay with. Now we need to take that structure and see how much demand there is in the tribal world for this type of funding. And we are very optimistic. Speaker 500:40:55And I think if the demand that we think is there is there, the next question for us will be that we have not answered yet. We need to look at the risk profile of that deal. So we know the risk profile of the Ione deal and why we undertook it. What we don't know fully is when we take this structure to the next drive, how can we improve upon that risk profile? And at the ultimate risk profile, how much capital are we willing to invest here from GLPI in that structure? Speaker 500:41:22And I think we need to better understand that risk profile on a rollout basis a little bit better before we can take the 2nd step of determining how much capital here we might be willing to allocate to that revenue stream. So I just think it's too early for us to fully answer that question at the moment. Speaker 800:41:39It's an exciting Speaker 700:41:40opportunity. It's an exciting invention, whether it gets accepted by the markets, we're waiting to see. Speaker 1500:41:50Okay. Thank you. Operator00:41:55Our next question comes from the line of Dan Guglielmo with Capital One. Please proceed with your question. Speaker 1600:42:02Hello, everyone. Thank you for taking my questions. Just one on the macro side. So long term treasury yields have been rising even after a large Fed rate cut. Does that change the way you all think about deploying capital since your portfolio does have such a long investment time horizon? Speaker 300:42:23I mean, clearly, we always consider what our cost of capital is and our spread to that cost of capital will be adjusted as needed on a transaction. But I mean, it doesn't change the fact that we are still in the market to grow and to do accretive transaction. Speaker 400:42:39Yes, I mean Speaker 200:42:39at the end Speaker 400:42:40of the day, it's highly important for us to stay disciplined. We think about increasing the duration on the right side of the balance sheet and really hedging out that potential future risk. And that's where the 30 year issuance we did really pleases us a few months ago. I mean, we've opened that market to ourselves. We've been pretty focused otherwise to 10 year. Speaker 400:43:01I mean, we haven't gone short with anything outside of tax structuring. And you should continue to see us think that way. And also to Desiree's point, include that kind of tenor in our underwriting on the front end. Speaker 200:43:14Yes. Look, we're not about to do any transaction that's going to leave us underwater. I mean, I think, as I've been fond of saying on these calls over many years, there's no transaction we have to do. I never feel and we never feel pressure to stretch to something that just doesn't make economic sense. Where our business is all about a spread to the cost of capital and we will, as Matthew suggests, and remain disciplined. Speaker 1600:43:42Great, great. Thank you. Appreciate that. And then I saw a good article on Chicago this morning just around development funding. And outside of kind of Bally's and Casino Queen, are there other tenants coming and asking what they can do to improve their properties? Speaker 1600:43:57And would you all kind of help fund those improvements? And then kind of as a second part, is there like a capital outlay size that it worth your while? Is there kind of a $10,000,000 might not be enough, but $100,000,000 is, just curious there. Thanks. Speaker 700:44:13Sure. Yes, I can take a shot and if anybody else wants to add anything. I think the answer to your second part is, No, there's not really a size requirement. I think the answer is if someone at one of our tenants, has a project that makes sense capital wise and ROI wise for them to do and they're willing to allow us to assist them with funding and it's accretive to us, we're willing to entertain it. So that's the easy one. Speaker 700:44:41I think the first part of your question, I think is a huge opportunity. I think we continue to have discussions with all of tenants about capital improvements at their properties. If you look at Boyd's earnings yesterday, obviously there's a lot of excitement about what happened with their land side move at Treasure Chest. Obviously Casino Queen benefited greatly by the land side move in Baton Rouge. And we have the we already have the redevelopment projects going on, at some of the other properties. Speaker 700:45:10So I think we continue to have discussions with tenants. I think tenants are starting to see there there's upside, legitimate upside that is tangible, recognizable and hits their bottom line if they do make appropriate investments. So those discussions are picking up and I expect to have more of those opportunities to present them to us in the future. Speaker 1600:45:34Great. Thank you. Operator00:45:38Our next question comes from the line of R. J. Milligan with Raymond James. Please proceed with your question. Speaker 500:45:45Hey, good morning, guys. Hey, good morning, guys. Hey, good morning, Speaker 1100:45:50guys. I spent some time talking about Speaker 500:45:51the debt side. And I'm just thinking about expanding on an earlier question, as you talk about leverage and sources of capital. And I just more broadly, can you touch on just the general philosophy on equity funding and then maybe the distinction around ATM use? Speaker 400:46:08Yes. Thanks, RJ. Well, you think about philosophy, I think of the Fed's mandate price stability of MAX employment. For us, we've got no equity overhang and ensure that existing shareholders benefit from our new announcements, not kind of opportunists that flip into deals. That means we need to optimally capitalize the company as we move forward and also be very measured with our ATM use and balanced. Speaker 400:46:33And when you get a new deal, you get to look at, hey, if you consider the existing leverage of the company and the impact of the incremental investment, are you off size in any way compared to your target leverage? And for us, that's 5% to 5.5% and we've become very comfortable at the lower end of that range. And given the environment, we actually chose to go below that range to get some extra firepower for future opportunities considered of Lincoln. And in this situation, we weren't off sides in the short term or in the long term. And that led us to say, hey, all right, we're in a position to then use the ATM, use the forward and do it in a balanced way. Speaker 400:47:13And we would have done less this quarter if it weren't for some deep interest that we had from some very thoughtful shareholders and we're able to get more done. And we thought, hey, in this case, given where the stock is, relative cost of equity and debt, cost of equity versus when we underwrote the deals, we'll take the burden at hand and we did that. And again, it puts us in a great position with ample cash for our base case 2025 business plan. And as we move forward, we're going to continue to weigh the same things. And my hope is in hindsight, you'll say those guys were thoughtful, balanced and measured. Speaker 400:47:46But we can't predict exactly how it will play out because it's a function of all these moving variables. But hopefully that gives you some insight. Speaker 500:47:56Yes, that's helpful, Matt. Thanks guys. That's it for me. Speaker 200:47:58Thank you. Operator00:48:02Our next question comes from the line of Chris Darling with Green Street. Please proceed with your question. Speaker 1400:48:08Thanks. Good morning. Going back to an earlier question around potentially pursuing traditional sale leasebacks or redevelopments with tribal operators, is that ultimately a more difficult hurdle to overcome, given that I'd imagine traditional financing alternatives may be more competitive from a pricing standpoint? And I ask I just wonder if you're going to be functionally limited to projects that fit further out on the risk spectrum where pricing might make more sense from the standpoint of both parties? Speaker 700:48:36Chris, I'm sorry. To clarify, your question is about a tribal sale leaseback versus tribal current traditional financing? Speaker 1400:48:46Yes, exactly. Speaker 700:48:48Yes. So currently the tribal financing is actually not as in many cases not as price beneficial to the operators as a traditional commercial gaming enterprises debt financing would be. So there's already kind of an additional margin that they're already paying. I think the one big aspect that needs to be considered and obviously we'll talk to the tribes about it as they think about this alternative is the right now the average tenure that they would be able to achieve on a debt financing is probably max 8 years. And so what that means is the tribal people who are receiving the distributions have a refinancing risk to their distribution every call it 5 to 8 years. Speaker 700:49:44And as we all know, rates change and things change. So one of the major benefits that a long term lease structure would provide someone is the ability to kind of steady out their distributions and reduce that refinancing risk in a very material way. So if you're talking about 8 years versus 45, I think we all can see that there's a pretty big benefit there. So look, we're going to have discussions. We'll see where they go. Speaker 700:50:12I don't disagree that there's definitely some nuances that are different, but that's the opportunity that's presented itself and that's why we think we will get better margins on these types of investments than we would on a traditional commercial deal. Speaker 1400:50:29Okay. That's really interesting and helpful to hear. And maybe just shifting gears a little bit, just as you think about the traditional commercial gaming space and recent conversations you might have had with any potential counterparties, What's the latest you can share just around transaction pricing? Maybe you could speak to how any bid ask spread that you might have be observing and how that might be evolving more recently here? Speaker 700:50:54Yes, I think the most recent conversations look, I think when the credit markets were less than enthusiastic over the last 12 months, I think a lot of potential counterparties somewhat sat on their hands. And I think what's happened now that people see rates are maybe going to come in some, or at least on the short end, they've started to kind of reengage their thought process around could they potentially do a transaction. So the good news is I feel like that the current rate environment is causing folks to be a little more open and thoughtful around potential transactions. The slight downside I would suggest is that everyone thinks rates are going to grind so much tighter that all of a sudden everyone's asset values will be high again and you can pay a significantly more aggressive cap rate than reality. So think Speaker 200:51:48we're there's Speaker 700:51:48going to be more discussions whether it results in more transactions, only time will tell. Speaker 1400:51:54All right. Appreciate the time. That's all for me. Speaker 200:51:59Thank you. Operator00:52:03Our final question comes from the line of Ronald Kamdem with Morgan Stanley. Please proceed with your question. Speaker 1000:52:10Hey, thanks for taking my question. You have Jenny on for Ron. So first, I think we're very impressive by the innovative avenues GLP has been pursuing this in the last few quarters. I'm just curious if there's any other like initiatives such as other avenues or like non gaming deals or other new opportunities from the new relationships or development opportunities on the pipeline. If you can comment on the criteria for those opportunities you're evaluating will be great. Speaker 1000:52:40Thanks. Speaker 200:52:42The quick answer I'll call on outside of gaming is really nothing. I mean, we're not looking to move away from gaming as our source business. We look at stuff on a regular basis, always have some actually pretty thoroughly. But again, as we've said call after call, quarter after quarter, we haven't found any other territory that is as stable, dependable and rock solid as gaming. So long as we can keep doing that, we will. Speaker 200:53:16And but again, not turn our noses up on any good opportunity. As to what's out on the horizon, it's never predictable. It's serendipitous to some degree. We source transactions, but we also, as I noticed somebody, I just read it one of the notes this morning, I've been quoted as saying we kiss a lot of frogs and indeed we do, always looking for a princess. And Steve, how would you want to characterize what we're seeing out in the world? Speaker 700:53:53Well, look, I think my comments would probably be similar to what I was saying to the last question. I know, Matt, were you going to say something prior to Matt answering? Excuse me, Peter. Okay. I think you've covered everything, Peter. Speaker 200:54:10Okay. Then we have. Speaker 1000:54:13That makes sense. I think the second one, I want to switch back to Bally Chicago. I think you mentioned 1st round of funding is going to be Q1 'twenty five. Maybe talk a little bit more, do you like how many rounds of funding like are you planning in 2025 and like the approximate amount of outstanding in 2025 just for my models? Thanks. Speaker 300:54:36Yes. So we are still refining our timing on the fundings, working with Vale's and the construction team. So as I said earlier, we will be providing that with our 2025 guidance, but we're not in a position right now to provide 2025 fundings. Speaker 1000:54:55That makes sense. Yes, that's all for me. Thanks so much. Speaker 200:55:00Well, thank you. If that's it, then we're happy to close off our call. I hope that our presentation has been helpful, and we will look forward to connecting with you all at the end of the next quarter. Thank you so much. Operator00:55:18Ladies and gentlemen, this does conclude today's teleconference. You may disconnect your lines at this time. Thank you for your participation and have a wonderful day. Speaker 200:55:30Thanks, operator.Read morePowered by