Eastgroup Properties Inc (EGP) 2025 Q4 法說會逐字稿

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  • Operator

  • Good morning, ladies and gentlemen, and welcome to the EastGroup Properties fourth-quarter 2025 earnings conference call and webcast. (Operator Instructions) This call is being recorded on Thursday, February 5, 2026.

  • I would now like to turn the conference over to Marshall Loeb, CEO. Please go ahead.

  • Marshall Loeb - Chief Executive Officer, Director

  • Good morning, and thanks for calling in for our fourth-quarter 2025 conference call. As always, we appreciate your interest. I'm happy to say that joining me on this morning's call are Reid Dunbar, our President; Staci Tyler, our CFO; and Brent Wood, our COO.

  • Since we'll make forward-looking statements, we ask you listen to the following disclaimer.

  • Staci Tyler - Chief Financial Officer, Executive Vice President, Treasurer

  • Please note that our conference call today will contain financial measures such as PNOI and FFO that are non-GAAP measures as defined in Regulation G. Please refer to our most recent financial supplement and our earnings press release, both available on the Investor page of our website into our periodic reports furnished or filed with the SEC for definitions and further information regarding our use of these non-GAAP financial measures and a reconciliation of them to our GAAP results.

  • Please also note that some statements during this call are forward-looking statements as defined in and within the Safe Harbors under the Securities Act of 1933, the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and in the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Forward-looking statements in the earnings press release, along with our remarks, are made as of today and reflect our current views of the company's plans, intentions, expectations, strategies, and prospects based on the information currently available to the company and on assumptions it has made.

  • We undertake no duty to update such statements or remarks, whether as a result of new information, future or actual events, or otherwise. Such statements involve known and unknown risks, uncertainties, and other factors that may cause actual results to differ materially. Please see our SEC filings, including our most recent annual report on Form 10-K for more detail about these risks.

  • Marshall Loeb - Chief Executive Officer, Director

  • Thanks, Staci. Good morning. I'll start by thanking our team. They worked hard through a volatile environment last year, and I'm proud of the results achieved.

  • Our fourth quarter and annual results demonstrate our portfolio quality and resiliency within the industrial market. Some of the stats produced include funds from operations were $2.34 a share, up 8.8% over quarter. And for the year, FFO per share growth was 7.7%.

  • For over a decade now, our quarterly FFO per share has exceeded the FFO per share reported in the same quarter prior year, truly a long-term trend. Quarter end leasing was 97% with occupancy at 96.5%. Average quarterly occupancy was 96.2%, and which was up 40 basis points from fourth quarter 2024 and reverses a downward trend we've experienced for the last several quarters. Also notable with same-store occupancy at 97.4%. This strength shows the trend we've discussed where the portfolio is well leased while development leasing has been taking long.

  • Quarterly re-leasing spreads were 35% GAAP and 19% cash for leases signed during the quarter. Annual results were higher at 40% and 25% GAAP and cash, respectively, and cash same-store NOI rose 8.4% for the quarter and 6.7% for the year.

  • Finally, we have the most diversified rent roll in our sector, or our top 10 tenants falling to 6.8% of rents, down 40 basis points from last year. We target geographic and tenant diversity and strategic paths to stabilize earnings regardless of the economic environment.

  • In summary, we're pleased with our results and excited about the quantity of development leasing signed during the quarter, along with our current prospect activity.

  • Reid will now walk you through more of our fourth quarter details.

  • R. Reid Dunbar - President

  • In terms of leasing, fourth quarter improved materially from slower second and third quarter results, especially in development leasing. Our fourth quarter development leasing accounted for 52% of our annual total square footage, which makes it our best quarter of overall leasing in over three years.

  • We're excited to see this pickup in momentum with the key being sustainability. The headline volatility impacted long-term decision-making last year. We believe businesses are more accustomed to outside noise and simply can only delay expansion decisions so long.

  • We continue seeing a flight to quality which has contributed to EastGroup's portfolio occupancy outperforming the broader markets. As Class A shallow bay continues to be absorbed and new supply lagging, we anticipate increased decision-making and deal velocity.

  • On the other hand, our development pipeline is leasing and maintaining projected yields but at a slower pace. This, in turn, lower development start projections from earlier in the year.

  • On our development starts, as we stated before, pool by market demand within our parks. Based on current demand levels, we are forecasting 2026 starts to $250 million. Longer term, the continued decline in the supply pipeline is promising.

  • Starts remain historically low again this quarter. Couple this with the increasing difficulty we're experiencing with attaining zoning and permitting as demand increases, supply will be more challenged than historically to catch up. This limited availability in new modern facilities will place upward pressure on rents as demand stabilizes.

  • And as demand improves, our goal is to capitalize earlier than our peers on development opportunities based on the combination of our team's experience, our balance sheet strength, existing tenant expansion needs, and the land and permits we have in hand.

  • From an investment perspective, we're excited to continuing to be growing our Las Vegas footprint. We are also -- where we also added new land development sites in San Antonio, and in the fast-growing supply-constrained Northeast Dallas submarket.

  • Finally, as an important part of our long-term strategy, we continue modernizing our portfolio with our upcoming Fresno market exit.

  • Staci will now speak to several topics, including our assumptions within our 2026 guidance.

  • Staci Tyler - Chief Financial Officer, Executive Vice President, Treasurer

  • Thanks, Reid, and good morning. We are pleased to report strong results for the fourth quarter and year 2025. These results were achieved by our team through variable market conditions that improved during the last few months of the year. Our FFO results for both the quarter and year at the upper end of our guidance range at $2.34 per share for the fourth quarter and $8.98 per share for the year 2025, which represents 7.7% growth over prior year FFO per share, excluding gains on the voluntary conversion.

  • The outperformance in fourth quarter was primarily driven by property net operating income and continued strong performance by our 62 million square foot operating portfolio, which ended the year 97% leased and 96.5% occupied. We also achieved net interest expense savings that resulted from lower bank credit facility balances and a lower interest rate than originally projected on our new $250 million unsecured term loan that closed in November at 4.13%.

  • We ended the year with $19 million drawn on our unsecured bank credit facility, leaving available capacity of over $650 million as of the end of the year. Our debt to total market capitalization was 14.7% at year-end. Our fourth quarter annualized debt-to-EBITDA ratio was 3 times; and our interest and fixed charge coverage was over 15 times. Our strong and flexible balance sheet positions us well to pursue growth opportunities that align with our time-tested strategy.

  • Looking forward to 2026, FFO is estimated to be in the range of $2.25 to $2.33 per share for the first quarter and $9.40 and $9.60 per share for the year. Those midpoints represent increases of 8% and 6.1% compared to the prior year periods, excluding gains on the voluntary conversions that result from interest claims. We are projecting strong cash same-property net operating income results for 2026 with a midpoint of 6.1%, driven by rental rate increases on in place and budgeted leases and expected same-property occupancy of 96.3%.

  • The midpoint of our 2026 guidance assumes $250 million in new development starts and $160 million in operating property acquisitions, which includes an acquisition in Jacksonville that is currently under contract with money at risk.

  • Our rent collections currently remain healthy and in line with historical averages. So our projections for 2026 uncollectible accounts include a typical run rate in the range of 30 basis points to 35 basis points of revenue. Please note that projected G&A expenses for 2026 are $27 million which includes an estimated $4 million or $0.07 per share in costs related to the executive team transitions that were announced in December.

  • Also, as a reminder, approximately 32% of the annual G&A expenses are expected to be recognized in first quarter, primarily due to accelerated expense for employees who are retirement eligible under our equity incentive plans. We have $140 million in unsecured debt maturing during fourth quarter 2026. We plan to fund those debt repayments and new investments throughout the year with our bank credit facilities and new debt issuance of $300 million.

  • While our guidance assumes debt issuance, we will remain flexible and monitor the equity markets and may utilize both debt and equity as sources of capital. We're pleased with our strong performance in 2025. And as we look ahead through the year 2026, we are confident in our high-quality portfolio of well-located, multi-tenant assets, and in our team's ability to execute in this steadily improving environment.

  • Now Marshall will make some final comments.

  • Marshall Loeb - Chief Executive Officer, Director

  • Thanks, Staci. In closing, we're pleased with our execution for the quarter and year. Market demand is picking up momentum, and we're hopeful it's sustainable. Regardless of the environment, our goals are to drive FFO per share growth and raise portfolio quality.

  • If we can do those, we'll continue creating NAV growth for our shareholders. Our executive team restructuring as a reflection of the growth we've achieved and even more so the opportunities we see within our markets.

  • Stepping back from the near term, I like our positioning as our portfolio is benefiting from several long-term positive secular trends such as population migration, near-shoring and onshoring trends, evolving logistic chains, and historically lower shallow bay market vacancies.

  • We also have a proven management team with a long-term public track record, our portfolio quality in terms of buildings and markets improves each quarter, our balance sheet is stronger than ever, and we're upgrading our diversity both in our tenant base as well as our geography.

  • Well, now I would like to open up the call for any questions.

  • Operator

  • (Operator Instructions) Craig Mailman, Citi.

  • Craig Mailman - Analyst

  • Congrats to Reid, Staci and Brent. I see Brent is already enjoying his promotion by not talking on the call. I wanted to just dive in a little bit more on the development leasing because that was a big uptick. And I know, Marshall, you had foreshadow that last quarter's call on the NAREIT. Just can you just walk through kind of what the -- a little bit more into what the prospect activity looks like?

  • And any trends you're pulling away from either sector that are more active than others? And also just give us a little bit of a sense of -- are these all organic growth to the portfolio? Or are some of these existing tenants that could leave some holes in the existing portfolio as they move into new space?

  • Marshall Loeb - Chief Executive Officer, Director

  • Good question. It was mostly -- it was, I guess, interesting in the great additive, but we had activity at all during the year. And then in fourth quarter, maybe it was long enough beyond tariff day that people started finally making a decision in getting leasing development leases signed. There weren't expansion, a couple were existing tenant relationships where, hey, we have you in Orlando and you need space in Tampa. And that was kind of a full building lease the team was able to get signed there.

  • So in terms of kind of trends, what I would say is it felt like you finally break through the ice a little bit, and we got in more than half of our development leasing signed for last year happened to be in fourth quarter. The tricky part is, I sure hope that's sustainable. We have good prospects activity.

  • The other thing a little bit that helped us last quarter with such a high square footage is the -- and I think it's with the construction pipeline being so low we have probably six to eight conversations in varying stages, and they won't all happen but where prospects could take a majority of all of the building, a couple of buildings pre-leased kind of build-to-suit opportunities. So that's -- that gave us a little bit of that confidence to raise development guidance this year, we think, is some of those happen.

  • And it's a mix of expansions relocation from California is one of the prospects. It's kind of a mixed bag and simply new to the portfolio, things like that. So I'm glad that it's pretty broad-based. And when I was looking at just the markets where we could have these pre-leases, it is probably about six different states. So it's pretty spread out.

  • It's not any one market, things like that. So I cautiously optimistic as we turn the page, I'm really proud of the team, a good fourth quarter. We kind of finally got through and got things signed and we have good activity today that's just that conversion rate that will be key.

  • Brent Wood - Chief Operating Officer, Executive Vice President

  • And I would add to Marshall's comments on some of the specific development leasing in the year. Our average lease size in the quarter actually jumps to a little over 60,000 square feet which was a nice uptick from previous quarters, which obviously helps move the needle.

  • And then geographically, it was very dispersed. We saw great activity really from Florida all the way to California. So all of our development markets, we were fortunate to land some new deals in the quarter.

  • Operator

  • Samir Khanal, Bank of America.

  • Samir Khanal - Analyst

  • Marshall, I guess your comments are very encouraging to hear, especially from even listening the last question on development leasing. I guess how is that translating into pricing or market rent growth? I guess where do you see market rent growth going this year at the national level? And maybe talk about markets which are outperforming or even lagging at this point?

  • Marshall Loeb - Chief Executive Officer, Director

  • Sure. Samir, it feels like -- it's hard to speak for us, maybe a little bit nationally. We're so focused on more of the smile states. But I would say rent growth and we're pleased demands picked up, you're right. I have not really seen that translate into rent growth just yet.

  • I'm optimistic because construction pipeline is a seven-, eight-year low and that it's going to take a while to catch up that there will be rent growth, but we're not seeing it just yet. We're still in all of our markets, maybe absent California, probably inflation plus a little bit. So rents have hung in their construction pricing has come down. So we've been able to maintain our yields a little north of seven on the developments and things like that.

  • Look, there could be an inflection point. I keep calling for it, and eventually, I'll be right on when rents pick up again because I think there's just not much supply out there and as demand does stabilize it won't take a lot of kind of positive and just stable demand for people to start pushing rents, but we're not -- unfortunately not seeing it quite just yet, but at least we're trending in the right way as we ended the year.

  • Operator

  • Blaine Heck, Wells Fargo.

  • Blaine Heck - Analyst

  • Just taking Samir's question a step further. I know you guys are typically hesitant to forecast rent spreads. But just looking at your expirations this year, the average rent is a bit lower than your forward year expirations at this time last year. I guess does that give you any confidence that you can hold spreads somewhat steady year-over-year? Is that lower expiring rent more of a function of the mix of markets and just lower rent markets rolling over this year?

  • Marshall Loeb - Chief Executive Officer, Director

  • Blaine, It's Marshall. I felt right. I felt better, probably right looking at what has expired, but it is more market by market and even submarket by submarket in some of our markets as to where. But look, it's definitely trending down, but still -- look, I'm happy we ended the year at 40%, although we were lower at the end of the year a net effective than when we started the year. I think it will keep drifting down.

  • Hopefully, we'll hang on to it. We're several years away from having negative rent growth. And I remind myself, look, we're in a cyclical business. It's always underbuilt and then overbuilt and we're underbuilt.

  • And it's -- as the market shifts, as we were taking the last question, I think you'll have that rent inflection and we'll re-lift our mark-to-market within our portfolio. So we should have good positive re-leasing spreads this year. I think there'll be probably more like the back half of the year than the first half of last year.

  • And then it's just when does that market turn because there's not much vacancy. And even in the shallow bay because we have the older buildings, there's more functional obsolescence in shallow bay than there is big box because no one was building big-box buildings 20 years ago.

  • Brent Wood - Chief Operating Officer, Executive Vice President

  • Yes. And Blaine, I would add speaking specific to some of the markets, I like our diversity. So as California has maybe slowed some other markets like Houston, which is one of our larger markets has actually picked up some of that steam. So our diversity definitely helps as we go into the future quarters.

  • Operator

  • Alexander Goldfarb, Piper Sandler.

  • Alexander Goldfarb - Analyst

  • Congrats all around, and Reid. I'm assuming they told you all about the joys of endless NAREIT. So welcome to Reid -- question for you guys on competitive supply. Industrials are always a big institutional demand area and hard to believe that if things are good to getting better, that competitive supply is going to remain at a diminished level.

  • So what are you seeing for the appetite from lenders, whether it's banks or private credit for development and from the institutional equity side? What do you see as their appetite for existing versus getting back into development?

  • Brent Wood - Chief Operating Officer, Executive Vice President

  • Yes. Alex, this is Brent. Good to chat with you. Yes, competitive supply, as Marshall alluded to, we feel good about where that is. We spend a lot more time as a team talking about demand relative to supply. It's still tight.

  • When you look at multi-tenant, that vacancy rate is about half of the overall or half of the bigger box space at about 4.5% on a national level. But the one analogy we've been kind of giving if we could just have a little better uptick in signing and momentum.

  • We have a land bank and land inventory. We have literally plans with permits ready to go. We're obviously still actively developing, but we desire to do more and we're poised to move very quickly, and you see we guided to a little bit of a higher number this year, but we could accelerate from that, and we're poised to do it.

  • Our competitive set tends to be good regional developers and there are equity guys, partners out there. There's been risk off. I think that will begin to unthaw if the market turns on, you'll certainly see that come back around. But there's going to be a lag time there for them to -- typically, those type groups don't carry land inventory, so they may have to secure a site, which can be very time-consuming, get their equity partner together and get some of those ingredients together.

  • So much like we did coming out of the great financial crisis, we were sort of first to market, so to speak, and really ramped up and got more of our proportion of the activity -- and we kind of can't see that happening again if we could have a nice uptick, we could lean into it faster and ahead of the competition, maybe play a few innings of the game before the other team gets ready to play.

  • And so we -- to be fair, we've been saying that for about 24 months running now. But the ingredients are there for that to happen and -- that's going to happen. It's a matter of when could this be the year we hope so. We're poised if it is, we'll lean into it.

  • And if it's kind of like it's been in the last couple of years, we'll paddle with it sideways, if that's what it gives us. But we feel good about where the competitive set is and our ability to lean into it if we're given that opportunity.

  • Operator

  • Nick Thillman, Baird.

  • Nicholas Thillman - Analyst

  • Maybe a question for the COO or President here, I'm continuing on the land bank here. The overall basis here is around $32 a buildable foot I'm sure there's a little bit more permitting and costs going to have to go into that number. But as you just look at these new starts and potential yields, assuming relatively flat just rent growth here, like what type of yields are we talking about on additional starts from here?

  • R. Reid Dunbar - President

  • Yes. Nick, it's Reid Dunbar. I would say, going forward into 2026, we would anticipate similar yields of what we've achieved in '25. And thanks for pointing out the land bank, a little over 1,000 acres is something that we are bullish on. And as Brent mentioned, that's not easy to come by.

  • The permitting and entitlement periods now take longer and longer and more and more challenging. So the fact that we have the land that we do, the portfolio and the relationships that we have, we feel like we will be able to take advantage when that demand starts to pick up with the team in place and the majority of our or land, especially for second phase developments have permit in hand. So the team is geared up and ready to go, assuming the leasing continues to occur.

  • Operator

  • Brendan Lynch, Barclays.

  • Brendan Lynch - Analyst

  • Maybe one for Staci, and congrats again on your new position as you suggested that your guidance assumes additional debt issuances, but maybe you would consider issuing equity. Could you talk about the -- what would make you toggle between the two? In terms of capital allocation when looking at the development pipeline and perhaps scaling that beyond what you've guided to and potentially additional acquisitions throughout the year.

  • Staci Tyler - Chief Financial Officer, Executive Vice President, Treasurer

  • Sure. First of all, thanks, Brendan. Appreciate that. Excited for the team. And yes, as we enter the year, our guidance does assume $300 million in debt issuance and we really are constantly monitoring the debt and equity markets remaining flexible.

  • And we'll we assume debt issuance, we're monitoring the cost of that debt versus cost of equity, Ideally, we're in a situation where we can toggle back and forth and have a balanced approach.

  • But in guidance, we contemplate debt. We have plenty of room on the balance sheet to fund the opportunities that come our way this year between development starts acquisitions. So we could certainly issue debt or debt and equity beyond the $300 million.

  • And we also have plenty of capacity on our bank credit facilities. At year-end, we had less than 20 million drawn. So over $650 million available. So we can immediately fund those opportunities that we think makes strategic sense for the company, and then we can either issue debt or equity beyond that.

  • But right now, we're around a 3 times debt-to-EBITDA so when we think about the strength of our balance sheet, we have a lot of dry powder, sub-5 debt-to-EBITDA would be a long-term range that we would want to stay in. But even with the debt that we have contemplated, we're still in the low as we think through the end of the year.

  • So plenty of capacity if we were to find additional opportunities. So it's really not that we have capital constraints. It's more of the opportunities that we find and that's what the teams are working hard to find those opportunities that make sense. And with accretive acquisitions on day one, we can certainly enjoy using that dry powder to continue to grow earnings.

  • Operator

  • Todd Thomas, KeyBanc Capital Markets.

  • Todd Thomas - Analyst

  • I appreciate all the commentary around development leasing in the quarter and the prospect pipeline sounds encouraging. What's assumed in guidance in terms of development lease-up both on assets already converted, including Horizon West perhaps? And then what about the 1Q and 2Q scheduled conversions? How are you thinking about the lease up and sort of what's included in the guidance?

  • Marshall Loeb - Chief Executive Officer, Director

  • Todd, it's Marshall. For the year, we have around $0.07 of spec development leasing kind of assumed in our budget. And that kind of mirrors our starts this year as well and that it's pretty back-end weighted. So we're low the first two quarters of the year, and then it picks up in third and fourth quarter. And yes, and so there's -- we've got some time to identify.

  • We've got some leases side, obviously, in fourth quarter that we're getting those tenants in and the build-out finished and things like that. But at least those are signed and it's more construction. But in terms of landing new tenants, getting them in, really, the impact will be in third and fourth quarter, and that's -- if I'm an optimist, that also gives us a chance where we could get ahead of this year's budget.

  • Todd Thomas - Analyst

  • Okay. The $0.07 is all new incremental leasing or related to new incremental leasing? Or is some of that from the fourth quarter leasing that will come online late in the year.

  • Marshall Loeb - Chief Executive Officer, Director

  • It would be new -- if you said how much speculative leasing do you have in this year's budget at $0.07 of the [$9.50], and that's back half of the year. Does that make sense?

  • Todd Thomas - Analyst

  • Yes, sure.

  • Operator

  • Rich Anderson, Fitzgerald.

  • Richard Anderson - Analyst

  • Congrats, everybody. So Marshall, every brain has four lobes, so I want to get to one or two of Marshall lobes. And when you're thinking about guidance going forward, last year at this time, it was $8.80 million to $89.0. You did $8.95, so you beat that by $0.10 you did -- you beat same-store NOI by 100 basis points, ultimately versus the initial guidance. So when you're -- and that year last year required hopscotching, hopscotch -- yes, hopscotching through Liberation Day, new politics and so on.

  • So when you think about the forward view today, I imagine you feel more confident than you did a year ago today. And what's the reality about setting guidance in your mind with perhaps a cleaner sort of runway? Is there an element of conservatism? Do you kind of put yourself in a position to hopefully have a beat and raise type of year? Like how -- what's the reality factor around setting guidance today with hoping to expand upon it as the year progresses?

  • Marshall Loeb - Chief Executive Officer, Director

  • Rich, it's Marshall. I don't know that I have frontal or a rear lobe actually -- but I appreciate the creativity. On our budgets, we'll -- they bubble up kind of sweep by sweep from the field. So we'll look rather than corporate budgeting. I think I hear is what you need to do that may or may not be realistic.

  • So that's kind of always been our approach. They know what they can do. And then the regionals will challenge them on the budget to try to make sure it's not either. And then you kind of get to no personalities, I could -- one day over a beer, I can tell you who's conservative, who's aggressive and who's usually spot on, on their budget and things like that.

  • So I think what I'll complement the team, we'll scrub the budget and usually push, and it ends up a little higher than what bubbled up from the field. but they do a great job of finding ways to beat it. Once we said it, we do talk about what's our budget versus what's our goal, and we'll find ways to beat it. In terms of a year ago, we felt. That's why I guess one of the cautionary retail is we felt good.

  • Last year, fourth quarter was our best -- one of our best quarters for leasing. First quarter was really good. It was really a Liberation Day that was kind of starting April where it felt like, I remember that first quarter call where people were thinking, have you stress tested the lower end of your guidance and things like that.

  • So for what it's worth, if we guess this year, I would say I think people are maybe a little more numb to headlines, but I'm expecting a year where we'll have some tumultuous headlines. And I just hope that doesn't throw long-term capital allocation decisions, meaning development leasing. But I'm expecting it to be, like last year, it was a good year, but it was choppy water for a lot of the time. And I would guess this year until we get closer to midterms or whatever.

  • But look, at the end of the day, regardless, we got to go lease this space in this building. So it's like simple and straightforward. We know what our task is to go get the vacancies, and especially within our development leasing done, and that will pull the ticket for the next building as well. So I hope we're being conservative and I'll let you be the first one to remind me that we were conservative then, if you're right.

  • Richard Anderson - Analyst

  • Is guidance versus goal? Like what's the typical spread there? This is not a second question, by the way.

  • Marshall Loeb - Chief Executive Officer, Director

  • Yes. No, there's no increment. They just look, our comp in the field is that if you can beat your goals, you know there's a little more incentive. And that's where -- but there's no $0.06, $0.05 anything. It's just a is what we've all signed on to, and so it's your job one to deliver it.

  • And then two, if we can help you or find ways to get a little ahead of it, that's what benefits our shareholders. So how do we find that window really depending on at the market gives. Sometimes it's leaning into development. Sometimes it's leaning into acquisitions or buying value-add or being creative and figuring out how to make a lease work that looks like it's about debt or something like that.

  • Brent Wood - Chief Operating Officer, Executive Vice President

  • Yes. I would just add to that, Rich, having been in the field, it gets I think our midpoint of guidance, just a slight bit lower for '26 and '25. But if you asked us, do we think occupancy would be lower, not necessarily, but when you get in that 96%, 97% range and you're rolling budget up, it becomes challenging to say I'm going to be 100% leased this year and everything is going to go. And it could. But then as you roll that up organically being 20 bps down in that sort of range is really just a deal going here or there one way or the other.

  • So I hope, as you said, our trends have been to be a bit ahead of where we are, and we feel like we could do that again. But you've got to have a starting point somewhere. And obviously, this is the jump out of the gate and the field is trying to be reasonable with what they're seeing and then we certainly hope to better as we go through the year.

  • Operator

  • Michael Griffin, Evercore ISI.

  • Michael Griffin - Equity Analyst

  • I wanted to circle back on supply and maybe dig a little deeper. Obviously, it feels like maybe there are going to be some puts and takes of '26, but the outlook feels better, I guess, relative to 2025. But Marshall, if we do see this inflection point, is there a worry that supply could then follow precipitously pick back up and then we're just kind of in the same state we've been in over the past couple of years of overbuilding? Or are there maybe more onerous, whether it's regulations, cost constraints, kind of governors that would put a meter on that, I guess, forward future shadow supply?

  • Marshall Loeb - Chief Executive Officer, Director

  • Michael, I think -- and I don't mean to be, but a little bit yes and no. And that I think the no part of my answer, you're right that getting permits and things, and I've usually attribute it to Amazon. Everybody wants the good or service or package delivered quickly, but no one wants the distribution building in your neighborhood. So we've seen zoning get materially harder and more time-consuming when we go through.

  • And so that's what we'll -- and as Brent mentioned earlier, the private developers typically aren't structured balance sheet-wise to carry land, carry a construction team, have a permit in hand. So long term, yes, we're a cyclical business. It will attract capital where people are making money. Other people imitate and jump in and everyone became an industrial developer last cycle and we overbuilt.

  • Brent Wood - Chief Operating Officer, Executive Vice President

  • So long term, you're right, but I think it's going to be -- I'd say longer term, it's going to be measured in a few years before people can kind of gear back up, get the land, get through permitting. And I know how much we struggle finding good land sites it will take a while for people to find the site and get through the process.

  • And thankfully, we're -- it's something we purposely have but we have the team, the land, the balance sheet and the permits in hand and that will give us several quarters, if not a couple of years, as -- before the like -- start getting land and they get it permitted and then flip the land and all the things. So it will get overheated. That's just what we do.

  • But that we'll have a pretty long runway before we get to that. And along that way, that's when our mark-to-market should pick up. And when you'll see our development starts go from $180 million last year, which we scaled that to hopefully that wherever the market takes us $400 million in starts or more.

  • Operator

  • Mike Mueller, JPMorgan.

  • Michael Mueller - Analyst

  • With the expanded management structure, what aspects of your operations do you think you're going to be better at than before you added the extra depth?

  • Marshall Loeb - Chief Executive Officer, Director

  • All the things I delegated, I guess, my answer on -- good question. I'm excited for the team and maybe a little bit. I'll go to the if you're in a call, I'll go to the rearview mirror and then the windshield, we had not changed our structure, and it's worked been a little over 20 years, and we were 19 million square feet.

  • And just as the world evolved and has gotten more complicated with corporate responsibility. The company has grown, we pick square footage and property-wise, a lot more analysts and things. And so our team was just -- we've got a really strong team.

  • Now I'll tie that into why we've usually found ways to beat our budget. So I'm excited for all three of them. I always probably -- I'll put it on myself part-time COO for the last few years and Brent's got a great background and just the more I got tied into Zoom calls, non-deal road shows, conferences, it's harder to just go sit in a -- sit in a suburban with the brokers and stared a piece of land in Austin, Texas and all the fun things that we do. So I'm excited about that and excited for Staci, who's been with us for as young as she is, an awful long time and taken on more and more.

  • And then Reid, we've done so well in the central region, we said, okay, let's get Reid involved with. As you've seen us kind of work through our markets where I'm excited we're talking with one of your peers yesterday when we exited Santa Barbara, we're maybe a few weeks away from exiting Fresno, we've sold four of our five buildings in Jackson and Reed took us into Nashville and John Coleman and team into Raleigh of -- we spend a lot of time talking about where do we want our capital allocation and research and where are those markets, we can create a lot of value with development.

  • But then the other way we can create value for our shareholders is where do those rents go over time? And where is population moving and land constraints and things like that. So just as we grow -- it's gotten -- which is -- comes with growth, more complicated. And we said, okay, let's divide this up. And it's just time to do it every 20 years we'll rethink our structure a little bit. So we've got a lot more operating efficiencies in.

  • Brent Wood - Chief Operating Officer, Executive Vice President

  • Yes. I would just jump in and add to that. like Marshall said, is we've grown as a company, everything we've done kind of -- which is fun, we're very horizontal, it happens organically and the addition of myself and Reid, kind of expanding role. I view it more as just trying to help -- not change the strategy or anything, but help support our team in the field. It'll be a little more communicated from corporate to the team in the field.

  • And look, when you're on the ground in development leasing and all the things you're doing and our team does a great job of that, the forestry also trying to help think strategically think long term, think runway where do we have more opportunity, communicate capital access or limitations from corporate to the field.

  • So just better with that, more efficiencies, more perhaps analytical review within our portfolio and looking at trends and those things. So just sort of an exciting time to take the next step and put ourselves in a better position to keep doing what we do, but do it maybe a little better, more efficiently and lean into it just as well as we can.

  • Marshall Loeb - Chief Executive Officer, Director

  • And apologies, I agree with Brent totally. I should add, I talked about the rearview there. The other reason that led us to this was that, look, we talk about this inflection point. And I think if pick whatever. So if we were in a classroom, you can see it coming. You can see the low supply. You can see demand. You can see the delay in supply coming.

  • One of the goals, as we Reid talked about, is we while we have the land we do and every in the balance sheet, we really want to step in and make a while the sun shines when you're in a cyclical business, we're going to stay disciplined with our new investments, but we really wanted to have the right team in place and the right structure in place, we've grown a lot and growth just for growth's sake is never a goal of ours, but we really think we're going to have a really good opportunity as the market stabilizes to really take advantage of our competition lagging behind us with our skill set, and we needed to restructure our team a little bit so that we can move more quickly on those opportunities.

  • Operator

  • Vikram Malhotra, Mizuho.

  • Vikram Malhotra - Analyst

  • I just wanted to clarify sort of two things, and maybe you can expand. I guess, one, you've started new developments. You've talked about like an improving cycle and trying to take advantage of when things turn further. I'm hoping you can give maybe more granular anecdotes either by tenants or from your folks in the field on like what's actually turning kind of this new up cycle?

  • And then related to the list where your thoughts are on absolute rent in the Sunbelt. You've had this fantastic run from an occupancy cost standpoint. I'm wondering is there a chance there's a sticker shock just from the absolute rent levels we've seen?

  • Marshall Loeb - Chief Executive Officer, Director

  • Maybe a couple of thoughts. I'll try and Vikram -- what makes me more excited it again, what I would say on the development side, it's one, the quantity of development leasing we got.

  • I mentioned over half of our annual total was the fourth quarter the sizes of those leases were larger, as Reid mentioned, and so we're seeing tenants under 50,000 feet, but now we actually got some larger tenants and people being more comfortable with their capital allocation and kind of layering in on top of that, it's abnormal for us or it's atypical for us to have as many large tenants. 92% of our rents come from tenants under 200,000 square feet.

  • For us to have six to eight to nine conversations going on with we'll take a couple of your buildings? Or can you build me a building and things like that, not all over 200,000 feet, but they're all certainly north of 100,000. And we won't get all of those and some will be put on hold in every other reason, but just the quantity of those decisions and really the diverse tenant base and diverse geography.

  • If it was all happening in Florida, it might be one thing, but it's really across all three of our regions in multiple markets and you kind of go, okay, it feels like stalling a little bit. If we got this many finished and we've got this much more dialogue going from the field where there -- when we talk to them and say, hey, I got to call on someone well it's 150,000-foot pre-lease, there's a lot to work through. So that makes us feel a little better.

  • And then we do look each quarter while we lose tenants kind of going on the absolute rent, where we still have that embedded growth, if there's sticker shock, all of our tenants even renewals have a tenet broker. So that's usually where they'll get the sticker shock if it does come before they talk to us, and we don't lose tenants of rent.

  • It's usually a consolidation or leaving the market or every once in a while, a bankruptcy or something like that. we can only charge market rents for maybe a little above market rents if we're doing a good job managing the park and things like that.

  • But thankfully, the rents or the rents in the market -- and look, we're really cheap alternative as people move to faster and faster service. I think if you don't have that last distribution hub, you may can cut costs, but you're going to cut your service so badly. If you're train air conditioning or Home Depot or one of those, you can have a low-cost structure, but your revenue is going to be falling even faster.

  • Brent Wood - Chief Operating Officer, Executive Vice President

  • Yes. And I would just add to that, Vikram, as far as absolute rents and certainly, rents have had significant increase, say, even post COVID, but really supply and demand, right? So I mean, demand the options are limited. So if you need the space, you've got to pay to get it. I think one important thing to note about this cycle of sorts is that the vacancy is much tighter than we've seen in some of the other cycles.

  • If you go back to great financial crisis, you started to see vacancies get into the 12%, 14%, like I think our operating portfolio maybe got down to 88% or something. And certainly, we've not seen anything near that level. But the point being is even when you look right now, I mentioned earlier in multi-tenant vacancy being 4%, 4.5%, if you say things have been slow over the last few years, and you're still running at a 4.5% vacancy.

  • There's not again, we're talking about not a huge pivot or tsunami that we need to kind of turn and get things to where you could push even push on rents because we don't have that wall of vacancy that got dumped into the market and mainly because capital got pulled back and so supply began to come down even when leasing was still strong so we don't have that wall of vacancy to work your way through back to a good stable market. Thankfully, we've kind of maintained a sideways good, stable market of uptick.

  • I think there's even room to push rents versus relative to sticker shock of where they are today. So time will tell, but as Marsall said, much more time spent in our shop talking about demand relative to rents.

  • Vikram Malhotra - Analyst

  • Makes sense. And congrats everyone on the new roles, Reid, Brent, Staci. Look forward to working with all of you in your new roles.

  • Operator

  • Eric Borden, BMO Capital Markets.

  • Eric Borden - Analyst

  • Good morning, everyone, and congrats. I just wanted to just circle back to the occupancy. I appreciate your comments on the decline related to a couple of leases in '26. But just curious, how much of the expected decline is in the first quarter is related to move-outs versus development projects being added to the operating portfolio.

  • Staci Tyler - Chief Financial Officer, Executive Vice President, Treasurer

  • Really, in first quarter, there's not much of an impact from development transfers. We are seeing that more as we look throughout the second, third and fourth quarters. And I think some of that, as Marshall alluded to earlier, is opportunity for us. We have some work to do, but that's where we could hopefully see an increase in our occupancy -- actual occupancy compared to projections as the year goes on.

  • First quarter is pretty flat really from fourth to first quarter. So we start projecting that for later in the year. And again, that's the budget and not the goal, just with the uncertainty in the environment, it's hard to know exactly the timing of when we'll see occupancy there.

  • But that's definitely, as we look at occupancy for the year '26 where we do see a decline in projections from '25 to '26, it really is due to those development transfers. The core portfolio that's in place is not declining. It's the drag. We would be flat, if not for those development transfers.

  • Brent Wood - Chief Operating Officer, Executive Vice President

  • Eric, I would add the increasing development projections, to some extent, that comes at the decline of same-store sales. So a lot of our leasing comes from our existing tenant base, which typically is consolidation or expansion. So our development business grows, our same-store sales may decline. So we're taking times half a step back to take a full step forward. But net-net, FFO, we anticipate to increase and we see that as a winning strategy.

  • Operator

  • Omotayo Okusanya, Deutsche Bank.

  • Omotayo Okusanya - Analyst

  • Good morning, everyone. Just a follow-up question around tariffs. Just kind of curious your thoughts at this point on the Supreme Court and how things may kind of turn out from that end. And even if the Supreme Court does kind of say, current tariff policy is not constitutional or legal, Kind of what happens next?

  • And how do you kind of think your tenant base kind of deals with all that in terms of either kind of pulling back on a wait-and-see basis or they just kind of keep ticking up space because they need to. Just curious how you're thinking about all like that whole iteration around tariff policy?

  • Marshall Loeb - Chief Executive Officer, Director

  • Good question. And I think, thankfully, I guess, as we think of the tariffs. One, certainly, it's that noise level or headline impact -- tweak impact on our tenants that you'd love to minimize that so that their decision-making goes smoothly. So I hope there's no shocks to the system like that.

  • The only other commented as tariffs hit us last year and we really rippled through it. It did impact us on say, our Dominguez building a little bit were prospects. It's near the ports of LA and Long Beach in that South Bay Area, Carson, California.

  • But by and large, it also reminds us over the years where we've said markets like Houston and Jacksonville, where we've been in since the where we like metro area distribution, we want to be that last mile and a fast-growing higher-income area because that customer base is a lot stickier. And if you're buying a good or service or I'll go with a good, you don't care if it came from China or Mexico, you just are buying the item online and you want to deliver to your home or business really quickly.

  • So that noise is a good reminder for us why ports are so volatile, and we're not trying to guess which Board is going to gain -- I'm not smart enough to guess which port is going to gain and lose market share that we're just pretty confident that Orlando and Atlanta and Dallas and Phoenix are going to have more people over the next 5 to 10 years, and we want to be in the middle of all that with the best, most convenient locations.

  • So we try to -- again, I think we try to take as many ways as we can as a company to minimize or eliminate less whether it's how we develop it phases in a park or be near consumers or our balance sheet are all the things we can do, but we also say as we're reducing that risk we don't want to reduce the return at all. So that's just kind of one more way we go about it. And we can't eliminate the headline risk and how people make decisions, but we're working on it. We sure like to.

  • Operator

  • Jessica Zheng, Green Street.

  • Jessica Zheng - Analyst

  • Just noting on that previous question. Just curious if you're seeing a pickup of offshoring or nearshoring related leases in any of your markets recently?

  • R. Reid Dunbar - President

  • Yes, this is Reid, Jessica. Activity for nearshoring is definitely at least from what we're hearing from the brokerage community and some of the prospects has definitely picked up markets like Houston and Dallas are actually seeing an uptick in advanced manufacturing and users that need higher power requirements.

  • So I would say that is a driver and will be a tailwind for us going into the future. A lot of our markets that we're in don't specifically cater to those larger users, but a lot of the ancillary uses we may make benefit from going forward.

  • Operator

  • Ronald Kamden, Morgan Stanley.

  • Ronald Kamdem - Analyst

  • Just, I guess, a quick two-parter. So first, obviously, the development leasing was encouraging. The guide sort of assumes, I think, starts picking up, got some acquisitions. Just can you remind us what the spread is looking like today between sort of cap rates and IRRs on acquisitions versus development, starting. Just curious what that spread is.

  • And then the quick follow-up is just the exit of Fresno, any other sort of markets where you're paring back to capital recycle.

  • Marshall Loeb - Chief Executive Officer, Director

  • It's Marshall. I'll go reversal. Yes. The markets we're exiting, as we mentioned, this is -- it goes back a few years. Santa Barbara, excited about Fresno. It's a project Brent bought in the '90s. And so just modernizing and updating our portfolio. And we'll -- hopefully, we'll have that closed in a couple of weeks or so.

  • Jackson is another market where we had five buildings. We're down to one building. We'll continue to -- it's leased, but work on an exit there. And then the other one we've done is -- and you've seen us go into Raleigh and Nashville. We've talked about sulfate potential.

  • Again, Capital City has technology university presence, and we may never get to Salt Lake, but I'd rather not surprise anyone. But New Orleans being on another market where we could scale back a little bit there. And so that's kind of how we're thinking on our markets.

  • And then going back to the first part of your question was on development, leasing and kind of how we're seeing it. But yes, we're encouraged where we're headed with it. I think it's going in our direction and, and look, I think on the development, I guess I remember -- we've been developing to call it a low [7, 7.1 to 7.3] is probably on average on a ground-up development. And really, the acquisitions we've made have been more strategic than opportunistic.

  • We've said it's been the building around the corner and something in our submarket they're still in the low to mid-5s. So there's still a lot of demand for quality industrial shallow bay buildings, Cap rates have been pretty sticky. And kind of given that we're probably on the high end, maybe 180 basis points better return closer to 200 on a development today than a straight-out acquisition.

  • And that's why we really haven't bought a portfolio or anything. It's usually been one-off buildings here and there and the bigger the portfolio, the lower the operate it attracts more capital and it gets priced with that, but it can certainly drift into the force in some of our better markets as well.

  • Brent Wood - Chief Operating Officer, Executive Vice President

  • Yes. I would just add to that, Ron, the development leasing. And as Marshall said, but what I did, I like to see is just some consistency. First quarter last year was good. Second and third was challenging, fourth end well but trying to stack good quarter behind good quarters would be nice.

  • And so hopefully, we can get a little more quiet macro environment, rates continue to down the economy slightly uptick better, again, to kind of get that confidence in executing and moving a little faster would all work in our favor. And so excited about the fourth quarter. We need to stack a couple of those together. And again, we back and weighted our starts that we're hoping for that, but we'll see, but we're in a good position if that happens.

  • Operator

  • We have no further questions. I will turn the call back over to Marshall Loeb for closing comments.

  • Marshall Loeb - Chief Executive Officer, Director

  • Thanks, everyone, for your time and interest in EastGroup. If we didn't get to your question or if you have anything to follow up, feel free to reach out to us, and we look forward to seeing you probably here in a few weeks, most of you. Thank you.

  • Brent Wood - Chief Operating Officer, Executive Vice President

  • Thank you.

  • R. Reid Dunbar - President

  • Thank you.

  • Staci Tyler - Chief Financial Officer, Executive Vice President, Treasurer

  • Bye-bye.

  • Operator

  • Ladies and gentlemen, this concludes your conference call today. We thank you for your participation and you may now disconnect.