NYSE:FCPT Four Corners Property Trust Q4 2023 Earnings Report $27.52 -0.12 (-0.42%) Closing price 06/11/2025 03:59 PM EasternExtended Trading$27.54 +0.02 (+0.06%) As of 08:02 AM Eastern Extended trading is trading that happens on electronic markets outside of regular trading hours. This is a fair market value extended hours price provided by Polygon.io. Learn more. ProfileEarnings HistoryForecast Four Corners Property Trust EPS ResultsActual EPS$0.27Consensus EPS $0.40Beat/MissMissed by -$0.13One Year Ago EPS$0.41Four Corners Property Trust Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$65.14 millionExpected Revenue$65.23 millionBeat/MissMissed by -$90.00 thousandYoY Revenue Growth+13.60%Four Corners Property Trust Announcement DetailsQuarterQ4 2023Date2/15/2024TimeAfter Market ClosesConference Call DateThursday, February 15, 2024Conference Call Time11:00AM ETUpcoming EarningsFour Corners Property Trust's Q2 2025 earnings is scheduled for Wednesday, July 30, 2025, with a conference call scheduled on Thursday, July 31, 2025 at 11:00 AM ET. Check back for transcripts, audio, and key financial metrics as they become available.Conference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptSlide DeckPress Release (8-K)Annual Report (10-K)Earnings HistoryCompany ProfileSlide DeckFull Screen Slide DeckPowered by Four Corners Property Trust Q4 2023 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrFebruary 15, 2024 ShareLink copied to clipboard.There are 8 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Hello, and welcome to the FCPT Fourth Quarter 2023 Financial Results Conference Call. My name is Elliot, and I'll be coordinating your call today. I'd now like to hand over to Gerry Morgan. Operator00:00:17The floor is yours. Please go ahead. Speaker 100:00:20Thank you, Elliot. During the course of this call, we will make forward looking some will prove to be incorrect. For a more detailed description of potential risks, please refer to our SEC filings, which can be found on our website. All of the information presented on this call is current as of today, February 15, 2024. In addition, reconciliation to non GAAP financial measures presented on this Call such as FFO and AFFO can be found in the company's supplemental report. Speaker 100:00:55And with that, I'll turn the call over to Bill. Thank you, Jerry. Good morning. Thank you Speaker 200:01:00for joining us to discuss our Q4 results. I will make introductory remarks, Patrick and Josh will comment further on the acquisition market, And Jerry will conclude the discussion of our financial results and capital position. We reported 4th quarter AFFO of $0.43 per share, is up $0.02 or 4.9 percent from Q4 last year. Our existing portfolio is performing exceptionally well with 99.8 percent rent collections for the quarter and 99.8 percent occupancy at quarter end. FCPT had a record acquisitions year with $333,000,000 of capital deployed in 2023. Speaker 200:01:41That was up 16% from a full year 2022, which was also a previous record acquisition year. We are benefiting from establishing verticals in medical retail, auto services and other retail in addition to restaurants, our historical core area of focus. These transactions were primarily funded with equity raised in late 2022 early 'twenty three at an average price about $27 per share. And with our June debt offering where we benefited from hedge gains to lock in a 5.4% yield to maturity. After utilizing these funds, we slowed down acquisition activity in the second half of the year to reflect the impact of higher interest rates on equity and debt sources of capital. Speaker 200:02:26I would also highlight that an impact of purposely slowing down acquisition activities in 2023 was an elevated level of broken deal costs, which increased property expenses by approximately $250,000 versus the 2022 level. While these impacted 2023 AFFO, It was the right decision to terminate transactions if they were no longer accretive. Year over year for the restaurant sector as a whole remained positive in the 4th quarter in the 4% range according to Baird Research. Although the casual dining sector has seen small declines off strong levels in the prior year period, Darden was a standout from that trend reporting same store sales growth of 4.1% and 4.9% for Olive Garden and Longhorn respectively for their quarters ending November 26. And Chili saw same store sales rise 5% for the most recent quarter ended December 27. Speaker 200:03:22All three brands saw margins expand as well as commodity and labor inflation easing. Our EBITDAR to rent coverage in the 4th quarter was 4.9 times for the significant majority of our portfolio that reports this figure. This remains amongst the strongest coverage within the net lease industry. Turning to capital sources, we issued $25,400,000 of equity in the Q4 at an average price of $25.34 We start the Q1 of 2024 with $234,000,000 of available capacity on our revolving credit facility, very minimal near term debt maturities and highly attractive properties to sell to 1031 buyers if we choose to access that source of liquidity. As we look ahead, the current capital market environment is making it challenging to deploy capital accretively. Speaker 200:04:10I want to restate something I said last quarter. In this environment, we remain disciplined allocators of capital. Since our inception In 2015, we have established mental models and structured our team incentives to discover to discourage deploying capital just to grow the company's overall size without also increasing per share metrics of earnings or intrinsic value. Our investment team does not work on commission and their goal is not tied to acquisition volumes as we have never given acquisition or earnings guidance. Finally, we benefit from low absolute and relative overhead and can be nimble and modulate our investment activities up and down without negatively impacting the organization or employee morale. Speaker 200:04:52All that said, the team is laser focused on building an accretive pipeline while minimizing risk. Cap rates have widened and we have found interesting investment opportunities that Pat will elaborate on. We believe that we are prepared to operate successfully in today's environment and expect to ratchet up activity we believe it is accretive to do so. With that, I'll turn it over to Patrick to further discuss the investment environment. Speaker 300:05:18Thanks, Bill. As Bill mentioned, our cost of capital rose in 2023 and while market cap rates did improve, the shift was not commensurate with the movement in interest rates. As such, we moderated our acquisitions volume down in Q4, despite the last few months historically being our busiest time of the year. In total, we closed on $12,800,000 across 6 properties for the quarter. We spent years building on our platform and team our continued progress in outpacing prior year's volume reflects our growing capacity. Speaker 300:05:46Additionally, while it's not reflected directly in the numbers, The quality of these properties was also particularly strong in 2023 versus prior years given the reduced number of active net lease buyers in the market to allow FCPT to be very selective. Our overall cap rate for the year was 20 bps higher than our previous year's acquisitions despite a large long term investment grade transaction with Darden as the tenant. We'd also like to note that our average initial lease term for the acquired properties this year was 4 years longer at 12 years compared to 8 years last year. It's worth pointing out that the cap rates for Q4 were higher than our full year figure and today we're pricing acquisitions above a 7% cap rate. Most of 2023's volume was closed in Q2 and early Q3 of this year and priced 2 to 3 months prior to that. Operator00:06:31For the Speaker 300:06:31year, our acquisitions have been roughly split between restaurant at 39%, medical retail at 36% and auto service at 23%. We continue to monitor the market and expect to have more favorable opportunities and more attractive pricing in 2024 compared to 2023. However, we note that the bid ask spread between buyers and sellers, while converging, still exists. As mentioned earlier, though, we believe that our team is entirely equipped transact where it meets our underwriting criteria and is still accretive. The macro backdrop continues to be uncertain. Speaker 300:07:02We've focused on what we know, purchasing accretive and high quality real estate leased to creditworthy tenants operating service based retail businesses. Josh, I'll turn it over to you to discuss dispositions, re leasing and our portfolio. Speaker 400:07:17Thanks, Patrick. We sold 1 Red Lobster property in October of Q4 last year was underperforming versus brand average for $3,800,000 representing a small gain. Over the course of the past 14 months, We have sold 6 of our weakest Red Lobster properties at a weighted average cap rate of 6.5% and have reduced our exposure from 2.9% of annual base rent last year down to less than 1.7% today. Currently, most of our Red Lobsters are master leased and the ones that are not in the master lease are reporting rent coverage in line or better than the rest of our portfolio. We are fortunate that even our weakest performing stores are able to be sold at attractive cap rates and recycled into our investments accretively. Speaker 400:08:04It reminds us that even if the capital markets continue to be challenging, our portfolio has immense value that can be unlocked through selective dispositions. Turning to leasing, we had 5 leases expire in Q4 with all 5 renewing above the current rent levels. This reinforces our confidence that rents are set at attractive levels for the tenants in our portfolio. Our portfolio today stands at 99.8% and remains well positioned with only 1.3% and 2.2% of annual base rent maturing in 2024 and 2025 respectively. And with that, Jerry, I'll turn it back over to you. Speaker 100:08:45Thanks, Josh. For the Q4, our cash rental revenues grew 15.8% on a year over year basis, including the benefit of rental increases and the $333,000,000 of acquisitions that were closed in the last 12 months. We reported $57,000,000 of cash rental income for the 4th quarter After excluding $600,000 of straight line and other non cash rental adjustments and on a run rate basis, our current annual Cash based rent for leases in place as of December 31 is $218,200,000 and our weighted average 5 year annual cash remains at 1.4%. As Bill mentioned, we collected 99.8% of base rent in the 4th quarter And there were no material changes to our collectability or credit reserves nor any balance sheet impairments. Cash G and A expense excluding stock based compensation was $4,100,000 representing 7.1 percent of cash rental income for the quarter down and compared to 8% for Q4 2022. Speaker 100:09:48For your modeling purposes, we expect cash $17,000,000 for 2024. As a reminder, we take a conservative approach to G and A and expense 100% of costs associated with our internal investment team. With respect to the balance sheet, at quarter end, we had $259,000,000 of liquidity comprised of $60,000,000 of unrestricted cash, $8,000,000 of 10.31 proceeds available to redeploy and $236,000,000 of undrawn revolver capacity. With respect to overall leverage, our net debt to adjusted EBITDA in the 4th quarter was 5.5 times and our fixed charge coverage ratio was a healthy 4.4 times. Our only near term debt maturity is a $50,000,000 private note due in June of 2024. Speaker 100:10:34Otherwise, our next debt obligation is $150,000,000 of bank term debt due in November of 2025. While we won't comment on specific timing or strategy, we expect to address this small maturity well prior to its expiration in June. And based on our strong credit profile and recent conversations with multiple banks in our lender group, we expect that the bank market remains open to us at an attractive cost of capital amongst the many options we have available when thinking about this maturity. We remain committed to layering and using conservatism in our debt maturity stacking. And with that, I'll turn it back over to Elliot for investor Q and A. Speaker 500:11:15Thank Operator00:11:30First question today comes from Anthony Paolone with JPMorgan. Speaker 600:11:40Just wondering if you could talk, Bill, about just What you think is a good deal today, whether it's just a higher yield or what's maybe the lease length or real estate basis like how you're sizing up the things that you like versus not doing anything? Speaker 200:12:03I'd invert the question. I look at net lease more of Having selection bias excluding attributes. So we're now being very focused on Having truly triple net leases even in industries where it's not always the case like medical and auto service, It's being focused on having longer lease term, higher credit tenants, and we're still getting pricing in north of a 7 cap. So we've always been quite selective. As Pat mentioned, the more recent environment allows us to be even more so. Speaker 200:12:43So it really is being able to very quickly ignore properties that We still see every once in a while that are priced very aggressively or have very high rents or have small Unproven tenants. That's the way I would look at it. You're seeing more Investment grade, triple net, new construction, medical retail in our pipeline would be one example. Speaker 600:13:17And you mentioned in the 7s, like is that I think the couple of deals you've done so far this year, I think we're like a 6.9% and talked to 7s, do you think that's good enough versus like where you think your capital costs are right now? Or do you think there should be some more movement upwards or how should we think about that? Speaker 200:13:39I think the trend seems to be in our direction. Obviously, the recent Fed commentary has sent the market up and down seemingly on a daily basis. But I would say that the cap rates, we're seeing good stuff to do in the low-7s and that Kind of works with our current cost of capital. It certainly would be a lot more obvious if we had a couple more bucks on our stock price. Operator00:14:09Okay. Thank you. Thanks. We now turn to Connor Sibisky with Wells Fargo. Your line is open. Operator00:14:17Please go ahead. Speaker 500:14:21Good morning. Thank you for the time. In the opening remarks, you the elevated level of broken deal costs that impacted acquisition volumes. I'm just curious maybe if you could extrapolate on that point a little Does that just due to pricing dislocations between FCPT and the seller? Or are there any other factors to consider in those broken deals? Speaker 200:14:45Yes. I would just I mean, maybe to get one level more detailed, it's not that we're walking away from deposits. We haven't been doing that. It's that when you're working on an LOI, you have legal costs, Perhaps you've engaged some 3rd party experts to look at environmental or to analyze a structural issue with the building. And historically, that's part of our business. Speaker 200:15:14If we're going to buy North of 100 buildings a year, there are times when you get down the road with a building and then you find something that dissuades you from buying it. But just in this environment, we're making sure that We don't get wed to a property Speaker 500:15:36and Speaker 200:15:39make bad long term decisions to avoid deal costs. So it was notable in 2023, wasn't really notable in years past. I thought it was worth mentioning. Speaker 500:15:51Okay. That's good color. I appreciate the context there. And then just quickly on the watch list, I mean, appreciate the work In getting out of some of those Red Lobster assets, is there anything else in the portfolio that you have eyes on right now? Or Maybe in the context of the choppy macro environment, are you considering changing any of the criteria to put something on a watch list? Speaker 200:16:15No. I think that's a definitive no. Maybe to add to my comments and segue this to Anthony's previous question, we are very happy that we didn't do novel net lease in the last handful of years. And what do I mean by novel net lease? Carvan is $9,000,000 car washes, bowling alleys, things like that, that you could get higher yields and we could certainly be doing those right now with an 8 handle on it. Speaker 200:16:55But The credit is much more tenuous than what we've been doing. So one of the important factors of having a consistent model that Errors on being conservative is when you have choppy macro, your portfolio hangs in there better than your peers. Speaker 500:17:17Okay. I'll leave it there. Thank you for the time. Operator00:17:29We'll now turn to Alex Fagan with Baird. Your line is open. Please go ahead. Speaker 700:17:35Hey, good morning. Thank you for taking my question. First one is, What is the investment pipeline looking like? And how likely will we see an even higher percentage of medical and auto service assets as part of that investment total in 2024? Speaker 200:17:54Hard to predict full year volumes because you'll still be sourcing deals for 7, 8 more months before You know exactly what's going to happen in 2024. I would imagine that the percentages absent chunky portfolio will remain relatively consistent with what we've done in the past. The pipeline is quite decent. I would say that we look at the pipeline in a green, yellow, orange, red Color coded way, green being deals that we intend to close in the near term, yellow that we're negotiating LOIs, orange being On the radar, red being out there in the ether, we don't know whether they're going to happen, but they're certainly not close. I would say we've got a lot of things in the Orange pipeline right now that if we had a little bit of better cost of capital and could lean into, we think would have actually pretty sensible ROAs associated with them or unlevered IRRs, however you want to look at it. Speaker 200:19:03It's just Funding with the current equity and debt capital markets make it a little bit harder. So it's really as much a function of sources of capital as it is what we could deploy that capital for. Speaker 700:19:25Got it. Thanks for the color. And actually on the potential for any big portfolio deals, are there any ones that are interesting the Four Corners is currently looking at? Speaker 200:19:36We're always looking at deals of various sizes. And you've seen throughout our history, there's been, oh, I don't know, a half dozen deals, whether it's The original Chili's portfolio or Pat's Cheddar's deal last summer or large outparcel transactions, we're always working on something. But this is, as we mentioned in the remarks, this is a market where buyers and sellers are 30, 40 basis points apart on where they're willing to transact. And so we're seeing more deals where the seller pulls there are assets from the market than we have in the past. Operator00:20:30This concludes our Q and A. I'll now hand back to Bill Lenehan for final remarks. Speaker 200:20:36Thank you, Elliot. Well, I'm pleased to have the call conclude in about the 20 minute mark as we were able to accomplish in our early days. Operator00:20:53Ladies and gentlemen, today's call has now concluded. We'd like to thank you for your participation. You may now disconnect your lines.Read morePowered by Key Takeaways Q4 AFFO of $0.43 per share, up 4.9% year-over-year, demonstrating continued growth. The portfolio maintained 99.8% occupancy and rent collections for the quarter, reflecting strong operational performance. FCPT achieved a record $333 million of acquisitions in 2023—up 16%—and expanded into medical retail and auto service sectors. Higher interest rates led to a deliberate slowdown in acquisitions in H2 2023 and increased broken-deal costs by ~$250,000, modestly impacting AFFO. The balance sheet remains robust with $259 million of liquidity, minimal near-term maturities, net debt/adjusted EBITDA of 5.5×, and fixed-charge coverage of 4.4×. AI Generated. May Contain Errors.Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallFour Corners Property Trust Q4 202300:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2x Earnings DocumentsSlide DeckPress Release(8-K)Annual report(10-K) Four Corners Property Trust Earnings HeadlinesFour Corners Property Trust appoints new board chairJune 11 at 4:41 AM | investing.comFour Corners Property Trust appoints Douglas Hansen board chairmanJune 10 at 2:49 AM | seekingalpha.comGold Hits New Highs as Global Markets SpiralWhen Trump took office in 2017, gold was just $1,100 an ounce. By the time he left, it had soared to $1,839. Now… as new tariffs take effect, gold is breaking records again. You've hopefully already seen this in action… but gold is surpassing $3,000 per ounce for the first time EVER.June 12, 2025 | Premier Gold Co (Ad)Four Corners Property Trust appoints Douglas Hansen as board chairmanJune 10 at 2:49 AM | msn.comFour Corners Property Trust declares $0.355 dividendJune 10 at 2:49 AM | msn.comFCPT Appoints Douglas Hansen as the New Chair of the Board of DirectorsJune 9 at 4:19 PM | businesswire.comSee More Four Corners Property Trust Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like Four Corners Property Trust? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on Four Corners Property Trust and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About Four Corners Property TrustFour Corners Property Trust (NYSE:FCPT) engages in the owning, acquisition, and leasing of properties for use in the restaurant and food-service related industries. It operates through the Real Estate Operations and Restaurant Operations segments. The Real Estate Operations segment consists of rental revenues generated by leasing restaurant properties. The Restaurant Operations segment includes the Kerrow Restaurant operating business. The company was founded on July 2, 2015 and is headquartered in Mill Valley, CA.View Four Corners Property Trust ProfileRead more More Earnings Resources from MarketBeat Earnings Tools Today's Earnings Tomorrow's Earnings Next Week's Earnings Upcoming Earnings Calls Earnings Newsletter Earnings Call Transcripts Earnings Beats & Misses Corporate Guidance Earnings Screener Earnings By Country U.S. Earnings Reports Canadian Earnings Reports U.K. Earnings Reports Latest Articles 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. 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There are 8 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Hello, and welcome to the FCPT Fourth Quarter 2023 Financial Results Conference Call. My name is Elliot, and I'll be coordinating your call today. I'd now like to hand over to Gerry Morgan. Operator00:00:17The floor is yours. Please go ahead. Speaker 100:00:20Thank you, Elliot. During the course of this call, we will make forward looking some will prove to be incorrect. For a more detailed description of potential risks, please refer to our SEC filings, which can be found on our website. All of the information presented on this call is current as of today, February 15, 2024. In addition, reconciliation to non GAAP financial measures presented on this Call such as FFO and AFFO can be found in the company's supplemental report. Speaker 100:00:55And with that, I'll turn the call over to Bill. Thank you, Jerry. Good morning. Thank you Speaker 200:01:00for joining us to discuss our Q4 results. I will make introductory remarks, Patrick and Josh will comment further on the acquisition market, And Jerry will conclude the discussion of our financial results and capital position. We reported 4th quarter AFFO of $0.43 per share, is up $0.02 or 4.9 percent from Q4 last year. Our existing portfolio is performing exceptionally well with 99.8 percent rent collections for the quarter and 99.8 percent occupancy at quarter end. FCPT had a record acquisitions year with $333,000,000 of capital deployed in 2023. Speaker 200:01:41That was up 16% from a full year 2022, which was also a previous record acquisition year. We are benefiting from establishing verticals in medical retail, auto services and other retail in addition to restaurants, our historical core area of focus. These transactions were primarily funded with equity raised in late 2022 early 'twenty three at an average price about $27 per share. And with our June debt offering where we benefited from hedge gains to lock in a 5.4% yield to maturity. After utilizing these funds, we slowed down acquisition activity in the second half of the year to reflect the impact of higher interest rates on equity and debt sources of capital. Speaker 200:02:26I would also highlight that an impact of purposely slowing down acquisition activities in 2023 was an elevated level of broken deal costs, which increased property expenses by approximately $250,000 versus the 2022 level. While these impacted 2023 AFFO, It was the right decision to terminate transactions if they were no longer accretive. Year over year for the restaurant sector as a whole remained positive in the 4th quarter in the 4% range according to Baird Research. Although the casual dining sector has seen small declines off strong levels in the prior year period, Darden was a standout from that trend reporting same store sales growth of 4.1% and 4.9% for Olive Garden and Longhorn respectively for their quarters ending November 26. And Chili saw same store sales rise 5% for the most recent quarter ended December 27. Speaker 200:03:22All three brands saw margins expand as well as commodity and labor inflation easing. Our EBITDAR to rent coverage in the 4th quarter was 4.9 times for the significant majority of our portfolio that reports this figure. This remains amongst the strongest coverage within the net lease industry. Turning to capital sources, we issued $25,400,000 of equity in the Q4 at an average price of $25.34 We start the Q1 of 2024 with $234,000,000 of available capacity on our revolving credit facility, very minimal near term debt maturities and highly attractive properties to sell to 1031 buyers if we choose to access that source of liquidity. As we look ahead, the current capital market environment is making it challenging to deploy capital accretively. Speaker 200:04:10I want to restate something I said last quarter. In this environment, we remain disciplined allocators of capital. Since our inception In 2015, we have established mental models and structured our team incentives to discover to discourage deploying capital just to grow the company's overall size without also increasing per share metrics of earnings or intrinsic value. Our investment team does not work on commission and their goal is not tied to acquisition volumes as we have never given acquisition or earnings guidance. Finally, we benefit from low absolute and relative overhead and can be nimble and modulate our investment activities up and down without negatively impacting the organization or employee morale. Speaker 200:04:52All that said, the team is laser focused on building an accretive pipeline while minimizing risk. Cap rates have widened and we have found interesting investment opportunities that Pat will elaborate on. We believe that we are prepared to operate successfully in today's environment and expect to ratchet up activity we believe it is accretive to do so. With that, I'll turn it over to Patrick to further discuss the investment environment. Speaker 300:05:18Thanks, Bill. As Bill mentioned, our cost of capital rose in 2023 and while market cap rates did improve, the shift was not commensurate with the movement in interest rates. As such, we moderated our acquisitions volume down in Q4, despite the last few months historically being our busiest time of the year. In total, we closed on $12,800,000 across 6 properties for the quarter. We spent years building on our platform and team our continued progress in outpacing prior year's volume reflects our growing capacity. Speaker 300:05:46Additionally, while it's not reflected directly in the numbers, The quality of these properties was also particularly strong in 2023 versus prior years given the reduced number of active net lease buyers in the market to allow FCPT to be very selective. Our overall cap rate for the year was 20 bps higher than our previous year's acquisitions despite a large long term investment grade transaction with Darden as the tenant. We'd also like to note that our average initial lease term for the acquired properties this year was 4 years longer at 12 years compared to 8 years last year. It's worth pointing out that the cap rates for Q4 were higher than our full year figure and today we're pricing acquisitions above a 7% cap rate. Most of 2023's volume was closed in Q2 and early Q3 of this year and priced 2 to 3 months prior to that. Operator00:06:31For the Speaker 300:06:31year, our acquisitions have been roughly split between restaurant at 39%, medical retail at 36% and auto service at 23%. We continue to monitor the market and expect to have more favorable opportunities and more attractive pricing in 2024 compared to 2023. However, we note that the bid ask spread between buyers and sellers, while converging, still exists. As mentioned earlier, though, we believe that our team is entirely equipped transact where it meets our underwriting criteria and is still accretive. The macro backdrop continues to be uncertain. Speaker 300:07:02We've focused on what we know, purchasing accretive and high quality real estate leased to creditworthy tenants operating service based retail businesses. Josh, I'll turn it over to you to discuss dispositions, re leasing and our portfolio. Speaker 400:07:17Thanks, Patrick. We sold 1 Red Lobster property in October of Q4 last year was underperforming versus brand average for $3,800,000 representing a small gain. Over the course of the past 14 months, We have sold 6 of our weakest Red Lobster properties at a weighted average cap rate of 6.5% and have reduced our exposure from 2.9% of annual base rent last year down to less than 1.7% today. Currently, most of our Red Lobsters are master leased and the ones that are not in the master lease are reporting rent coverage in line or better than the rest of our portfolio. We are fortunate that even our weakest performing stores are able to be sold at attractive cap rates and recycled into our investments accretively. Speaker 400:08:04It reminds us that even if the capital markets continue to be challenging, our portfolio has immense value that can be unlocked through selective dispositions. Turning to leasing, we had 5 leases expire in Q4 with all 5 renewing above the current rent levels. This reinforces our confidence that rents are set at attractive levels for the tenants in our portfolio. Our portfolio today stands at 99.8% and remains well positioned with only 1.3% and 2.2% of annual base rent maturing in 2024 and 2025 respectively. And with that, Jerry, I'll turn it back over to you. Speaker 100:08:45Thanks, Josh. For the Q4, our cash rental revenues grew 15.8% on a year over year basis, including the benefit of rental increases and the $333,000,000 of acquisitions that were closed in the last 12 months. We reported $57,000,000 of cash rental income for the 4th quarter After excluding $600,000 of straight line and other non cash rental adjustments and on a run rate basis, our current annual Cash based rent for leases in place as of December 31 is $218,200,000 and our weighted average 5 year annual cash remains at 1.4%. As Bill mentioned, we collected 99.8% of base rent in the 4th quarter And there were no material changes to our collectability or credit reserves nor any balance sheet impairments. Cash G and A expense excluding stock based compensation was $4,100,000 representing 7.1 percent of cash rental income for the quarter down and compared to 8% for Q4 2022. Speaker 100:09:48For your modeling purposes, we expect cash $17,000,000 for 2024. As a reminder, we take a conservative approach to G and A and expense 100% of costs associated with our internal investment team. With respect to the balance sheet, at quarter end, we had $259,000,000 of liquidity comprised of $60,000,000 of unrestricted cash, $8,000,000 of 10.31 proceeds available to redeploy and $236,000,000 of undrawn revolver capacity. With respect to overall leverage, our net debt to adjusted EBITDA in the 4th quarter was 5.5 times and our fixed charge coverage ratio was a healthy 4.4 times. Our only near term debt maturity is a $50,000,000 private note due in June of 2024. Speaker 100:10:34Otherwise, our next debt obligation is $150,000,000 of bank term debt due in November of 2025. While we won't comment on specific timing or strategy, we expect to address this small maturity well prior to its expiration in June. And based on our strong credit profile and recent conversations with multiple banks in our lender group, we expect that the bank market remains open to us at an attractive cost of capital amongst the many options we have available when thinking about this maturity. We remain committed to layering and using conservatism in our debt maturity stacking. And with that, I'll turn it back over to Elliot for investor Q and A. Speaker 500:11:15Thank Operator00:11:30First question today comes from Anthony Paolone with JPMorgan. Speaker 600:11:40Just wondering if you could talk, Bill, about just What you think is a good deal today, whether it's just a higher yield or what's maybe the lease length or real estate basis like how you're sizing up the things that you like versus not doing anything? Speaker 200:12:03I'd invert the question. I look at net lease more of Having selection bias excluding attributes. So we're now being very focused on Having truly triple net leases even in industries where it's not always the case like medical and auto service, It's being focused on having longer lease term, higher credit tenants, and we're still getting pricing in north of a 7 cap. So we've always been quite selective. As Pat mentioned, the more recent environment allows us to be even more so. Speaker 200:12:43So it really is being able to very quickly ignore properties that We still see every once in a while that are priced very aggressively or have very high rents or have small Unproven tenants. That's the way I would look at it. You're seeing more Investment grade, triple net, new construction, medical retail in our pipeline would be one example. Speaker 600:13:17And you mentioned in the 7s, like is that I think the couple of deals you've done so far this year, I think we're like a 6.9% and talked to 7s, do you think that's good enough versus like where you think your capital costs are right now? Or do you think there should be some more movement upwards or how should we think about that? Speaker 200:13:39I think the trend seems to be in our direction. Obviously, the recent Fed commentary has sent the market up and down seemingly on a daily basis. But I would say that the cap rates, we're seeing good stuff to do in the low-7s and that Kind of works with our current cost of capital. It certainly would be a lot more obvious if we had a couple more bucks on our stock price. Operator00:14:09Okay. Thank you. Thanks. We now turn to Connor Sibisky with Wells Fargo. Your line is open. Operator00:14:17Please go ahead. Speaker 500:14:21Good morning. Thank you for the time. In the opening remarks, you the elevated level of broken deal costs that impacted acquisition volumes. I'm just curious maybe if you could extrapolate on that point a little Does that just due to pricing dislocations between FCPT and the seller? Or are there any other factors to consider in those broken deals? Speaker 200:14:45Yes. I would just I mean, maybe to get one level more detailed, it's not that we're walking away from deposits. We haven't been doing that. It's that when you're working on an LOI, you have legal costs, Perhaps you've engaged some 3rd party experts to look at environmental or to analyze a structural issue with the building. And historically, that's part of our business. Speaker 200:15:14If we're going to buy North of 100 buildings a year, there are times when you get down the road with a building and then you find something that dissuades you from buying it. But just in this environment, we're making sure that We don't get wed to a property Speaker 500:15:36and Speaker 200:15:39make bad long term decisions to avoid deal costs. So it was notable in 2023, wasn't really notable in years past. I thought it was worth mentioning. Speaker 500:15:51Okay. That's good color. I appreciate the context there. And then just quickly on the watch list, I mean, appreciate the work In getting out of some of those Red Lobster assets, is there anything else in the portfolio that you have eyes on right now? Or Maybe in the context of the choppy macro environment, are you considering changing any of the criteria to put something on a watch list? Speaker 200:16:15No. I think that's a definitive no. Maybe to add to my comments and segue this to Anthony's previous question, we are very happy that we didn't do novel net lease in the last handful of years. And what do I mean by novel net lease? Carvan is $9,000,000 car washes, bowling alleys, things like that, that you could get higher yields and we could certainly be doing those right now with an 8 handle on it. Speaker 200:16:55But The credit is much more tenuous than what we've been doing. So one of the important factors of having a consistent model that Errors on being conservative is when you have choppy macro, your portfolio hangs in there better than your peers. Speaker 500:17:17Okay. I'll leave it there. Thank you for the time. Operator00:17:29We'll now turn to Alex Fagan with Baird. Your line is open. Please go ahead. Speaker 700:17:35Hey, good morning. Thank you for taking my question. First one is, What is the investment pipeline looking like? And how likely will we see an even higher percentage of medical and auto service assets as part of that investment total in 2024? Speaker 200:17:54Hard to predict full year volumes because you'll still be sourcing deals for 7, 8 more months before You know exactly what's going to happen in 2024. I would imagine that the percentages absent chunky portfolio will remain relatively consistent with what we've done in the past. The pipeline is quite decent. I would say that we look at the pipeline in a green, yellow, orange, red Color coded way, green being deals that we intend to close in the near term, yellow that we're negotiating LOIs, orange being On the radar, red being out there in the ether, we don't know whether they're going to happen, but they're certainly not close. I would say we've got a lot of things in the Orange pipeline right now that if we had a little bit of better cost of capital and could lean into, we think would have actually pretty sensible ROAs associated with them or unlevered IRRs, however you want to look at it. Speaker 200:19:03It's just Funding with the current equity and debt capital markets make it a little bit harder. So it's really as much a function of sources of capital as it is what we could deploy that capital for. Speaker 700:19:25Got it. Thanks for the color. And actually on the potential for any big portfolio deals, are there any ones that are interesting the Four Corners is currently looking at? Speaker 200:19:36We're always looking at deals of various sizes. And you've seen throughout our history, there's been, oh, I don't know, a half dozen deals, whether it's The original Chili's portfolio or Pat's Cheddar's deal last summer or large outparcel transactions, we're always working on something. But this is, as we mentioned in the remarks, this is a market where buyers and sellers are 30, 40 basis points apart on where they're willing to transact. And so we're seeing more deals where the seller pulls there are assets from the market than we have in the past. Operator00:20:30This concludes our Q and A. I'll now hand back to Bill Lenehan for final remarks. Speaker 200:20:36Thank you, Elliot. Well, I'm pleased to have the call conclude in about the 20 minute mark as we were able to accomplish in our early days. Operator00:20:53Ladies and gentlemen, today's call has now concluded. We'd like to thank you for your participation. You may now disconnect your lines.Read morePowered by