Essential Properties Realty Trust Inc (EPRT) 2022 Q1 法說會逐字稿

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  • Operator

  • Good morning, ladies and gentlemen, and welcome to the Essential Property Realty Trust First Quarter 2022 Earnings Conference Call. A brief question-and-answer session will follow the formal presentation. (Operator Instructions) This conference is being recorded, and a replay of the call will be available 2 hours after the completion of the call for the next 2 weeks. Dial-in details for the replay can be found in today's press release. Additionally, there will be an audio webcast available on Essential Properties' website at www.essentialproperties.com, an archive of which will be available for 90 days.

  • It is now my pleasure to turn the call over to Dan Donlan, Senior Vice President and Head of Capital Markets at Essential Properties. Thank you, Dan. You may begin.

  • Daniel Paul Donlan - Senior VP & Head of Capital Markets

  • Thank you, operator, and good morning, everyone. We appreciate you joining us today for Essential Properties' First Quarter 2022 Conference Call. Here with me today to discuss our operating results are Pete Mavoides, our President and CEO; Gregg Seibert, our COO; and Mark Patten, our CFO.

  • During this call, we will make certain statements that may be considered forward-looking under federal securities law. The company's actual future results may differ significantly from the matters discussed in these forward-looking statements, and we may not release revisions to those forward-looking statements to reflect changes after the statements were made. Factors and risks that could cause actual results to differ materially from expectations are disclosed from time to time in greater detail in the company's filings with the SEC and in yesterday's earnings press release.

  • With that, Pete, please go ahead.

  • Peter M. Mavoides - President, CEO & Director

  • Thank you, Dan, and thank you to everyone who is joining us today for your interest in Essential Properties. The first quarter was another strong quarter for the company as our portfolio experienced same -- solid same-store rent growth, quarterly investment activity above our trailing 8-quarter average, and leverage moved down sequentially.

  • In terms of the portfolio, with no vacant properties at quarter end, and same-store rents growing 2% year-over-year, our granular portfolio of single-tenant net lease properties remained stable, and our tenants are performing well. In terms of investments, during the quarter, we invested $238 million into 105 properties at a weighted average cash yield of 7%. More specifically, 100% of these investments were directly originated on our standard form with 83% containing master lease provisions and 83% being sourced from prior relationships.

  • These positive investment stats, in addition to the stability of our historical cap rates, are a testament to the strength of our relationships and the benefits that accrue to a long-tenured market participant and a reliable capital provider. This has become ever more apparent in the current environment as new market entrants have struggled to execute given the volatility in the debt markets.

  • With that in mind, while we had expected our investment pace to moderate this year, this has not come to pass for a number of reasons. One, there is a growing sense among owner-operators that now is a good time to monetize the real estate given the lagging effect that interest rates have on historical cap rates; two, sale-leaseback financing has become increasingly more attractive relative to alternative financing options; and three, competition for new investments has moderated in the recent months.

  • In terms of the capital markets. Similar to prior quarters, we remained active on the equity front with $158 million of net ATM issuance in the quarter, which helped to lower our leverage to 4.6x. Coupled with our $200 million increase in our amended $600 million unsecured credit facility, we have ample liquidity and balance sheet flexibility to continue to execute on our investment pipeline. We ended the quarter with 1,545 properties that were 100% leased to 323 tenants operating in 16 industries. Our weighted average lease term stood at 13.9 years, with only 4.9% of our ABR expiring over the next 5 years.

  • Our weighted average unit level coverage ratio was 3.8x, which improved versus last quarter's coverage of 3.7x. While our traditional credit statistics, which focuses on implied credit ratings and unit-level coverage, experienced sequential improvements this quarter, these statistics are still negatively skewed by, one, our trailing 12-month reporting convention, which lags our own reporting by 1 or 2 quarters; and two, the fact that certain industries like theaters, early childhood education and health and fitness faced state-level shutdowns and capacity restrictions well into the spring of 2021 in certain areas of the country.

  • With that in mind, we continue to expect these statistics to experience solid sequential improvements in the coming quarter.

  • With that, I'd like to turn the call over to Gregg Seibert, our COO, who will take you through the portfolio and investment activity in greater detail. Gregg?

  • Gregg A. Seibert - Executive VP & COO

  • Thanks, Pete. During the first quarter, we invested $238 million through 23 separate transactions at a weighted average cash yield of 7%. These investments were made in 12 different industries, with 70% of our activity coming from quick service restaurants, car wash, auto service, entertainment and equipment rental and sales. The weighted average lease term of our investments this quarter was 15 years. The weighted average annual rent escalation was 1.4%. The weighted average unit level coverage was 3.3x. And the average investment per property was $2.2 million.

  • Consistent with our investment strategy, 100% of our quarterly investments were originated through direct sale leasebacks, which are subject to our lease form with ongoing financial reporting requirements and 83% contained master lease provisions.

  • From an industry perspective, early childhood education is our largest industry at 14.1% of ABR, followed by quick service at 12.9%, car washes at 11.5% and medical/dental at 11.4%. We continue to view these 4 business sectors as Tier 1 industries for essential properties, and therefore, they are likely to remain our highest concentration industries for the foreseeable future.

  • From a tenant concentration perspective, no tenant represented more than 3.3% of our ABR at quarter end, and our top 10 tenants account for just 19.2% of ABR, which was down 50 basis points versus last quarter. Increased tenant diversity is an important risk mitigation tool and differentiator for us, and it is a direct benefit of our focus on middle market operators, which offers an expansive opportunity set.

  • In terms of dispositions, we sold 6 properties this quarter for $18.4 million in net proceeds. When excluding transaction costs and properties sold subject to tenant buyback options, we achieved a 7.1% weighted average cash yield on those dispositions. As we have mentioned in the past, owning liquid properties is an important aspect of our investment discipline as it allows us to proactively manage industries, tenants and unit-level risk within the portfolio.

  • With that, I'd like to turn the call over to Mark Patten, our CFO, who will take you through the financials and balance sheet for the first quarter.

  • Mark E. Patten - Executive VP, CFO, Treasurer & Secretary

  • Thanks, Gregg, and good morning, everyone. As Pete noted, the first quarter was another strong quarter for us. The notable elements of our reported operating results for the first quarter of 2022 are as follows. Total revenue was up $21.6 million or 44.4% versus the same period in 2021, totaling $70.1 million for the quarter, which reflects the benefits of our 2021 investment activity and nearly 85% of our $238 million of Q1 2022 investments closing before March.

  • In addition, I'll note that we brought 2 additional tenants back to accrual status. While not a material impact to revenues, it did result in our having no remaining tenants on nonaccrual or cash basis accounting. Total G&A was just under $8.1 million in Q1 2022 versus $6.4 million for the same period in 2021, which really was a result of higher noncash stock compensation expense which, for the first time, included the vesting of the subjective portion of performance shares awarded in 2019.

  • Our cash G&A did move up sequentially from Q4 2021, but importantly, our cash basis G&A continues to scale favorably as a percentage of total revenue, coming in at just 7.5% for the first quarter of 2022 versus 10% for Q1 2021. Net income was $26.8 million in the quarter. Our FFO totaled $49.4 million for the quarter or $0.39 per fully diluted share. That's a 30% increase over the same period in 2021. Our nominal AFFO totaled $48.9 million for the quarter, up $16.5 million over the same period in 2021, which on a fully diluted per share basis was $0.38, an increase of 27% versus Q1 2021.

  • Turning to our balance sheet, I'll highlight the following. With another great quarter of investments by our team, our income-producing gross assets reached $3.6 billion at quarter end. From an equity perspective, I'll reiterate that we were active on our ATM program, generating approximately $158 million of net proceeds during the first quarter, which effectively utilized the remaining capacity on our $350 million program. As a result, our Board approved a new $500 million ATM program, which we will launch shortly.

  • As Pete also noted, our balance sheet remains strong, with net debt to annualized adjusted EBITDAre at 4.6x at quarter end and total liquidity of $467 million. As a result, our balance sheet and liquidity position continue to provide a strong foundation from which to support our investment pipeline and future growth aspirations.

  • Lastly, I'll also reiterate Pete's important note that our current investment pipeline, outlook for the core portfolio and strong performance this quarter provided us with the basis to increase our 2022 AFFO per share guidance range to $1.50 to $1.53, which implies a 13% year-over-year growth at the midpoint.

  • With that, I'll turn the call back over to Pete.

  • Peter M. Mavoides - President, CEO & Director

  • Thanks, Mark. Before I open the call to questions, Gregg Seibert, the company's COO and my long-time business partner and close friend, has notified the company that after 25 years of net lease investing, he plans to retire, and therefore, will not renew his employment contract that expires near the end of June of this year. Gregg has agreed to consult for the company, at least through the end of the year, to help us manage through this transition. Gregg has been instrumental in crafting our investment strategy, mentoring our credit, closing, underwriting and asset management teams and helping to develop strong relationships between industry participants and our team. Gregg will be sorely missed around the office, but we have incredibly strong bench of professionals that he helped to develop and that are ready to assume his many roles.

  • With that, operator, let's please open the call for questions.

  • Operator

  • (Operator Instructions) Our first question comes from the line of Greg McGinniss with Scotiabank.

  • Greg Michael McGinniss - Analyst

  • So Pete, cost of capital has changed fairly dramatically over the last 6 months. The Q1 acquisition cap rates were in line with the historical average. Is there any expectation for expansion there? Have you started to see any at this point? Or how do you expect the cap rates to kind of trend to the balance of this year?

  • Peter M. Mavoides - President, CEO & Director

  • Sure. And as I always say, our cap rates are really driven by our perception of the risk -- the appropriate risk-adjusted return for the individual investments that we make and not really driven by our underlying cost of capital. And we were able to hold our cap rates relatively steady as our cost of capital and rates move down. And I don't expect us to materially change the risk parameters of our underlying investments.

  • And so we're unlikely to see cap rates move materially up. I would also note that cap rates are generally sticky and trail movements in interest rates. All that said, we are seeing a bit less competition and having a little bit more pricing power on the deals we are doing, but I wouldn't anticipate a material movement in our cap rates.

  • Greg Michael McGinniss - Analyst

  • Okay. And I guess kind of along those same lines regarding cost of capital. Do you anticipate needing to raise debt this year? And what rate feels achievable?

  • Peter M. Mavoides - President, CEO & Director

  • Mark, why don't you tackle that?

  • Mark E. Patten - Executive VP, CFO, Treasurer & Secretary

  • Okay. Yes, I think, look, Greg, we've consistently held a major component of our business thesis is to match fund our leverage to our long-dated leases. Since we got our investment-grade rating last year and access to public markets for the first time, our mindset was kind of that, that was going to be a good way to term out the revolver balance. But public unsecured debt markets right now seem a little dislocated, although I would say if we were to access that market, it might be in the high 4s, low 5s possibly. But given that dynamic, we'll continue to evaluate all our leverage options, including using the $70 million recording we've got on the 2027 term loan and maybe looking at the term loan market generally.

  • Greg Michael McGinniss - Analyst

  • So is there any -- within guidance, is there any expectation for kind of an unsecured debt raise? Or should we just assume it's more the term loan and revolver use?

  • Mark E. Patten - Executive VP, CFO, Treasurer & Secretary

  • Yes. I mean, I guess what I'd say is the way we think about our investment activity is that if you are going to term out the revolver would be something we could use given the rate on it. But our expectations have been and we've consistently kind of communicated that we would execute a leverage issuance sometime maybe the back half of the year.

  • Operator

  • Our next question comes from the line of Nicholas Joseph with Citi.

  • Michael Jason Bilerman - MD, Head of the US Real Estate & Lodging Research and Senior Real Estate Analyst

  • It's actually Michael Bilerman here with Nick. It was good seeing you guys down in Florida a couple of months ago. Pete, I was wondering if you can sort of outline a little bit the change in guidance, which went up $0.03 at the midpoint. I assume, as you outlined in your release, the investment activity is a big driver of that. And I wonder if you could unpack a little bit how much of it is due to volume where you talked a little bit about how the pipeline is robust and you thought it would moderate, but it hasn't. How much of it is timing?

  • And I think Gregg talked about 85% of the deals closing by the beginning of March. And then how much of it is rate because you talked a little bit about sort of pricing power, even though cost of capital and rates have moved up. And so each of those seems like it's higher than where it probably was in your guidance. But not knowing what was in your guidance for the 3 items, I don't know how those 3 items have changed relative to your new guidance. And I don't want to jump to any conclusions. So maybe can you outline those 3 for us, please?

  • Peter M. Mavoides - President, CEO & Director

  • Yes. I would say the biggest change in guidance is going to be past events. I would say, clearly, the first quarter was strong for us. Also between when we initially issued guidance, we closed the books and finalized the fourth quarter. And so as we look at full year guidance and we look at our first quarter, clearly, we're off to a strong start of the year.

  • In the back half of the year, I would say our volume expectations have not changed. And as I said earlier in the call, our cap rate expectations have not changed materially, and that I think also embedded in guidance or capital market assumptions and clearly, those have changed as the markets have changed materially, both on the debt and the equity side as we think about the back half of this year. So there's a lot of puts and takes in the business model, and it's hard unpack all of them. And clearly, having 1 quarter of the year done and pretty good visibility into a second quarter gives us the confidence to move guidance up.

  • Michael Jason Bilerman - MD, Head of the US Real Estate & Lodging Research and Senior Real Estate Analyst

  • Yes. I guess I was looking for a little bit more specific details because, obviously, you had earnings in mid-February. At that point, it sounded like most of the deals in the quarter were already underway, with most of them closing by the end of that month. And so I wouldn't imagine that the -- your average quarter was $200 million, right? And I would assume that from a modeling perspective, you would assume mid-quarter convention, which would be mid-Feb, that doing $238 million of deals wouldn't cause a $0.03 positive impact, especially given the things you just talked about, which are negatives, right? Debt rates are up, equity cost is higher. So all of that is dilutive to your future in that back half relative to the acquisition volume.

  • So I would surmise that your volumes and your guidance are up, or the timing of it is earlier because the first quarter wouldn't drive that much given your previous comments that we should look at your 8-quarter running average, which is $200 million, and using mid-quarter convention as a modeling.

  • Peter M. Mavoides - President, CEO & Director

  • Yes. Yes, listen, I would say we've never really given a mid-quarter convention as a guidepost. And quite frankly, we have a more conservative internal modeling convention here. And we beat that materially. And you're also ignoring the base capital assumptions that we had embedded in that initial guidance as well. So as I said, Michael, there's a lot of puts and takes. And as we look at the back half of the year, where our expectations are pretty consistent with what we expected in the first quarter.

  • Michael Jason Bilerman - MD, Head of the US Real Estate & Lodging Research and Senior Real Estate Analyst

  • Even though your pipeline is more robust and things are -- I mean, it just sounds like the transaction activity are back and forth when you say, "Oh, you're more conservative, but we beat that regularly." To me, putting out the actual guidance, just what you're expecting. Hey, we're, like, why not put that out rather than us going back and forth and trying to hone in on what the changes of your guidance. I mean what's the hesitation?

  • Peter M. Mavoides - President, CEO & Director

  • As I've said, and we made this painfully clear on the last call, is we rarely have visibility beyond 90 to 180 days on our pipeline. And so the commentary we give on a very quarter quarterly basis is what we're seeing out in front of us. And you're asking for guidance that goes out for a full year and really ignores the kind of independent quarters. And so we think we have a convention that allows investors to have good visibility on what to expect, and it matches the visibility that we have without going out beyond that.

  • And so on the call is that we've got a good pipeline. It looks good relative to what we're seeing. But I don't know what's going to happen in the fourth quarter.

  • Michael Jason Bilerman - MD, Head of the US Real Estate & Lodging Research and Senior Real Estate Analyst

  • Yes, nor do I, but I just want to know what's in your assumptions, right? So it sounds like the assumptions are beginning -- end of quarter close for your volumes rather than mid-quarter close. I'm just trying to get -- understand what's embedded so that when you change your guidance, I know what to benchmark it to. If you don't tell us what was in there when you say you've updated it, we have to know what changed. And obviously, there's a lot of levers that you can pull to change. So anyways, I'll yield the floor.

  • Peter M. Mavoides - President, CEO & Director

  • There are. And you're asking for 1 data point, and there's a lot of puts and takes in the business plan. So -- but thank you. Appreciate your input.

  • Operator

  • Our next question comes from the line of Sheila McGrath with Evercore.

  • Sheila Kathleen McGrath - Senior MD

  • You have 2 new tenants in the top 10, Festival Foods and [Track Fun Parks]. Just wondered if you could tell us a little bit about those tenants. And my second question is how much of your potentially increasing opportunity set is from existing customers versus new tenant opportunities?

  • Peter M. Mavoides - President, CEO & Director

  • Great. Thanks, Sheila. I would say both of those tenants have been tenants we have been dealing with for quite some time now, and they were in our portfolio and moved into our top 10 through follow-on acquisition activities, repeat business, kind of going to your second question. [Tracks] is a well-capitalized consolidator in the family entertainment center space with about 13 locations, and we were able -- as they roll up, we're able to help finance their consolidation through sale-leasebacks and have been able to continue to invest with them.

  • Festival Foods is a 39-unit grocery chain that operates predominantly in the State of Wisconsin. It's a third-generation family-owned -- ESOP-owned company that's been in business for about 75 years. Great operator, strong credit. And I'm sure anyone up in the Minnesota -- Wisconsin markets knows them well and thinks highly of them.

  • In terms of existing versus new, I think the 80-20, 85-15 mix continues to kind of represent our portfolio. We continue to invest with existing relationships, and we continue to work hard to source new relationships that will bring deals down the road. And so I wouldn't expect a material change in that blend, Sheila.

  • Sheila Kathleen McGrath - Senior MD

  • And one more question. You mentioned that the last two tenants that were on cash accounting went to accrual. Maybe you could comment on the health of your tenants. Are most back to pre-pandemic levels? And maybe who are the laggards. And looking back at the crisis, maybe you could comment on how your portfolio held up.

  • Peter M. Mavoides - President, CEO & Director

  • Yes. So those last two tenants were -- those two tenants were the last two kind of cash accounting tenants as a result of the COVID pandemic. In general, I always start that question by saying the portfolio is 100% occupied and our collections are 100%, and the deferrals are pretty far in our rearview mirror at this point.

  • As you see in our coverage reporting, there are some guys that are still kind of, on a trailing 12-month basis, recovering. And as we said on the call, that's -- as Gregg said, that's in the fitness, early childhood education and movie theater space where they kind of had a little bit of a lagging effect of COVID. But overall, the health of the portfolio continues to improve. It's in a great spot. And I think we were very proud about how our operators came out of COVID.

  • The modest rent deferrals that we granted as accommodations to help them through were well received and have been largely paid back. And I think our portfolio performance is really something to be proud of and really a testament to great underwriting, but more importantly, just great operators who were able to navigate through that period.

  • Sheila Kathleen McGrath - Senior MD

  • And congrats, Gregg, on your retirement.

  • Gregg A. Seibert - Executive VP & COO

  • Thank you.

  • Operator

  • Our next question comes from the line of Nate Crossett with Berenberg.

  • Nathan Daniel Crossett - Analyst

  • And congrats on the retirement. Maybe just a question on the dispo side, the sales side. If there's less levered players in the market, less bidders for things, does that maybe make you more reluctant to do sales? Or if cap rates are going up, does that make you more reluctant? Or how should we be thinking about that side of the equation?

  • Peter M. Mavoides - President, CEO & Director

  • Yes. I think sales, there's a couple of buckets to our sales, Nate. The opportunistic sales where we see a bidder that offers a price that we think is very compelling and reflective of the underlying risk of that particular investment. And then there's derisking sales where we're looking to get out of a potential problem down the road.

  • I think as the market cools, you'll see us do less opportunistic and continue to focus on the derisking sales and really just getting at assets that we think present a potential long-term issue for the portfolio and managing exposure. All that said, I wouldn't expect our disposition activity to deviate materially from what we've done in the past, kind of that $15 million to $20 million quarterly average would be a good barometer there.

  • Nathan Daniel Crossett - Analyst

  • Okay. That's helpful. And then I think last quarter, there was some discussion about loan payoffs. And I'm just curious, is there any update there? And if rates have gone up, does that make people less likely to kind of repay?

  • Peter M. Mavoides - President, CEO & Director

  • Yes. I think our loans -- our loan book is very small, and there will be periodic repayments from that loan book. Clearly, the fourth quarter was kind of an outlier in that regard with bigger loans coming in. And I do think the capital markets, with rates higher and the availability of alternative financing being more expensive, would create a little more stickiness in our loan book.

  • Operator

  • Our next question comes from the line of Caitlin Burrows with Goldman Sachs.

  • Caitlin Burrows - Research Analyst

  • I had a couple of model ones. First, it looked like operating expenses were particularly low in the quarter. So I was wondering if you could go through what drove that and to what extent we should expect your NOI margin to remain in the mid 97% range like 2019 to '21 versus I think it was above 98% this quarter.

  • Mark E. Patten - Executive VP, CFO, Treasurer & Secretary

  • Caitlin, I think -- sorry, go ahead, Pete.

  • Peter M. Mavoides - President, CEO & Director

  • I was just going to say that's really when you take those tenants off of accrual and put them -- or off of cash and put them on accrual, you stop accruing for their property costs. And then we also had 100% occupancy, so we had no vacancies during the quarter. But go ahead, Mark.

  • Mark E. Patten - Executive VP, CFO, Treasurer & Secretary

  • That's what I was going to say. Those 2 factors were pretty significant.

  • Caitlin Burrows - Research Analyst

  • Okay. So it sounds like that could be sustainable. Is that fair?

  • Mark E. Patten - Executive VP, CFO, Treasurer & Secretary

  • That's fair.

  • Peter M. Mavoides - President, CEO & Director

  • I think that's fair.

  • Caitlin Burrows - Research Analyst

  • Okay. And then you mentioned briefly in the prepared remarks, but G&A was up meaningfully in the quarter on an absolute basis. So could you go through whether there was something in particular that drove that? Or is that just the reality of a growing business maybe plus some inflation?

  • Mark E. Patten - Executive VP, CFO, Treasurer & Secretary

  • I mean, look, I guess the one thing I'd say is we had, in the first quarter, we pulled forward a little bit more of the 401(k) match and the social security taxes that would have been a little bit more leveled out in the second quarter given the size of -- or the difference between really probably incentive comp quarter over -- year-over-year. So it was really a, I'll almost call it, seasonality, if you will.

  • Caitlin Burrows - Research Analyst

  • Okay. Got it. And then maybe bigger picture. The company has obviously grown significantly in the past 2 years. I was wondering if you could comment on the strategy of granular relationships-based acquisitions and how long do you think that could work for. Like if you end up targeting $1 billion to $1.5 billion of acquisitions in the future, do you think anything has to change with how you guys run your business? Or could you just do more of what you're doing today?

  • Peter M. Mavoides - President, CEO & Director

  • Yes. I think it's more the latter. I think the way we invest is really driven by where we see, in our view, the best risk-adjusted returns in the net lease market by investing in very granular transactions with growing middle market operators through direct sale leasebacks. We feel we're able to compete as a capital provider and provide value to those tenants and get outsized risk-adjusted returns. And that middle market for us is very expansive, and a very important part of what we do is continuing to grow our relationships and expand our network to provide ever-increasing investment opportunities to grow with.

  • And we've grown our quarterly investment activity from $125 million a quarter to close to $200 million a quarter since coming public back in 2018, and there's nothing that would indicate we can't do that going to whatever your scenario is, $300 million or $400 million. And specifically in the fourth quarter last year, we did $340-plus million. So we need to continue to grow our team. We need to continue to grow our relationships and make investments in both, and that's what we're doing.

  • Operator

  • Our next question comes from the line of John Massocca with Ladenburg.

  • John James Massocca - Associate

  • To start off, congratulations on your retirement, Gregg.

  • Gregg A. Seibert - Executive VP & COO

  • Thank you very much.

  • John James Massocca - Associate

  • And then if my back of the envelope math is kind of correct, it seems like you've done about $50 million of acquisitions to date since the start of March. And I guess maybe what kind of caused, if you will, this kind of air pocket in acquisition activity given you seem very positive on the pipeline for the remainder of the year and even maybe in the somewhat near term?

  • Peter M. Mavoides - President, CEO & Director

  • Yes. I mean, listen, it's -- we don't control the timing of our deals. And the -- when you're supporting a sale-leaseback transaction, it's really operator-driven. And there's just natural ebbs and flows. There's natural pressure around the quarter ends where people tend to bunch deals and it's just -- you don't control it. And then when your average deal is $6 million or $8 million or $9 million, and then you have a big deal of $40 million to $50 million, it can be chunky. So don't read too much into that, and it's just the nuances of the business that we don't control.

  • John James Massocca - Associate

  • Okay. That makes sense. And then does the change in the competitive environment you alluded to in the prepared remarks change the dynamics of the acquisitions you're targeting at all? I guess, specifically, could you see more attractive opportunities with sale-leaseback transactions that are not on your lease form?

  • Peter M. Mavoides - President, CEO & Director

  • Well, I mean, listen, a sale-leaseback is, by definition, you're writing the lease at the close, and we're generally going to start with our lease form. And so I think that remains our preference. I think the bigger point is, in the context of the sale-leaseback, you're acting as a capital provider and competing against other providers and based upon your reliability and certainty of execution, you're not competing against a broad audience of investors purely on cap rate and price and proceeds. And so we prefer to compete on the strength of our execution and not on cap rates, and that's going to be the way we continue to invest.

  • John James Massocca - Associate

  • But I mean, I guess, does some of the more maybe broadly marketed sale-leaseback portfolio transactions are going to have more bidders per se, right? Maybe a little less kind of middle market in nature. Do they become more attractive because some of these other competitors have been kind of priced out of the market, given what's happening with interest rates?

  • Peter M. Mavoides - President, CEO & Director

  • Yes. I mean for those bigger, more high-profile deals, it's really not going to impact us if it goes from 10 to 15 bidders to 5 to 8. It's still competitive, and you're still -- it's still likely to be a bloodbath and where you're not getting appropriate risk-adjusted returns.

  • If you're talking about a bigger, more broadly marketed, higher-profile transactions, we prefer avoiding those situations and finding opportunities that just present better risk-adjusted returns in our view. That said, we see them, we're an active market participant. And if the pricing comes in line that makes sense for us, we'd certainly be willing to participate.

  • Operator

  • Our next question comes from the line of Joshua Dennerlein with Bank of America.

  • Joshua Dennerlein - VP

  • Pete, I wanted to touch base. I think it was something you mentioned about maybe the buyer pool seems to be thinning out a little bit. Curious just what your thoughts are on maybe what's driving that.

  • Peter M. Mavoides - President, CEO & Director

  • Yes. I think it's just -- it's the volatility in the debt markets. right? Debt rates, both underlying treasury rates as well as debt spreads have moved pretty rapidly and the availability of that capital is less certain. And so buyers who were participating based upon a levered bid are less certain in the current environment.

  • Joshua Dennerlein - VP

  • Okay. That makes sense. And then are you seeing market participants maybe changing kind of the terms that they might want to put in a sale-leaseback in response to the rising inflation? Is it -- are people trying to push for more kind of inflation-linked bumps or just trying to get higher fixed rent bumps?

  • Peter M. Mavoides - President, CEO & Director

  • Yes. Listen, I think we all try to get the best terms we can in the best economic package that we can, and escalations certainly are part of that. And I think some buyers are particularly sensitive to that. But it's not going to come without a cost or a lower cap rate, or clearly, sellers and sale-leasebacks are sophisticated and they're looking at the total economic package that are offered. And so the market is pretty efficient, and we've been pretty consistent with our escalations, and I don't expect the market to change materially.

  • Operator

  • Our next question comes from the line of Ki Bin Kim with Truist Securities.

  • Ki Bin Kim - MD

  • Congrats, Gregg. Sorry, I jumped on the call a little bit late here. But going back to your credit metrics, it was good to see some improvement quarter-over-quarter, but you still have 8% below 1x coverage. You mentioned it was fitness, toddler education, movie theaters. But my question is, if you looked at more real-time data, not just trailing 12 months, what sort of best indication of what that coverage looks like?

  • Peter M. Mavoides - President, CEO & Director

  • Yes. I guess the most real-time data, Ki Bin, is affected to paying rent and the leases are being honored. We would expect that bucket to normalize back to historical level, which is close to around 2%. And the current data that we have suggests that that's a trend these guys are on. That said, a big chunk of that is movie theaters. And for our AMCs, and anyone's guess on where those things shake out, but clearly, that company has ample liquidity to kind of manage through.

  • Ki Bin Kim - MD

  • And tied to that, your same-store NOI -- or not NOI, same-store rent went up 2%. The outlier was experiential. Any thoughts on what that can look like going forward for the rest of the year, the same-store rent?

  • Peter M. Mavoides - President, CEO & Director

  • Yes. I mean, our contracts are generally written to get 1.6%, and it could be annual or every 5 years, so it creates some lumpiness there. What you see happening there, Ki Bin, is we had some experiential tenants that went through a COVID-related bankruptcy restructuring where there was a discounted rent period that's burning off, and those sites are coming back on at more of a full rent, and that's kind of drove that outsized increase there.

  • Ki Bin Kim - MD

  • Okay. And just going back to the G&A. Can you just give a hard number guidance for 2022 G&A?

  • Peter M. Mavoides - President, CEO & Director

  • Mark?

  • Mark E. Patten - Executive VP, CFO, Treasurer & Secretary

  • Well, yes, I mean, look, we don't really guide to a G&A number. I think what we've consistently held is, right now, we're at 7.5% cash G&A to revenue. We think that's going to continue to go down. But I think if you started there and worked your way down, you'd probably have a pretty good reference point.

  • Ki Bin Kim - MD

  • Okay. But just to clarify, just going back to Caitlin's question, you mentioned -- I mean you had $8 million of G&A on a GAAP basis this quarter. You said there were some expense pull forward. So should we expect that absolute number to move lower for remainder of the year?

  • Mark E. Patten - Executive VP, CFO, Treasurer & Secretary

  • Well, yes, it's -- sequentially, it's not a whole lot, I think. And I think the GAAP G&A is really a function of, as I mentioned in the prepared remarks, we had our 2019 awards that have a subjective component in the TSR. They were granted, and therefore, vested in January. So that was kind of a unique -- well, I shouldn't say unique now, but it was outsized for a year-over-year comparison.

  • That 25% is actually included in each grant that's occurred since 2019. So that's going to start happening every first quarter from here on out to the extent that there's an award and investing. But in terms of this year, I guess what I'd say cash G&A is that it should normalize through the next 3 quarters because, like I said, there was a little bit of pull forward in the first quarter.

  • Operator

  • Our next question is a follow-up question from the line of Nicholas Joseph with Citi.

  • Michael Jason Bilerman - MD, Head of the US Real Estate & Lodging Research and Senior Real Estate Analyst

  • It's Mike Bilerman again. I just had a follow-up on John's question just on the pace. So I think, Gregg -- and congratulations on your retirement. I'm very jealous. But I think you said 85% was done by the beginning of March, which would have left about $35 million in the month of March. And I was wondering if you can share how much was closed in the month of April already.

  • And then separately, how much you have under contract and under LOI, just to really understand, going back to, Pete, where you've talked about just not having clarity in the future, which I get. So maybe you can share with us a little bit more details about the here and now size of the overall pipeline, how much is under contract, how much is under LOI and how much has closed so far in the quarter already.

  • Peter M. Mavoides - President, CEO & Director

  • Well, let's say, the subsequent events in our Q would have what's closed in the quarter -- what's the number, Dan?

  • Daniel Paul Donlan - Senior VP & Head of Capital Markets

  • $17 million.

  • Mark E. Patten - Executive VP, CFO, Treasurer & Secretary

  • Yes.

  • Peter M. Mavoides - President, CEO & Director

  • $17 million. So we got $17 million. And I won't break out PSA or LOI because it's not really relevant to the pipeline. But our current pipeline sits around $200 million.

  • Michael Jason Bilerman - MD, Head of the US Real Estate & Lodging Research and Senior Real Estate Analyst

  • $200 million. And does that include the stuff that -- the $17 million that was closed in the first month of the quarter? Or that's separate?

  • Peter M. Mavoides - President, CEO & Director

  • That would be material, the $17 million, certainly with the variability, because all that $200 million may or may not close as again, to that timing question, we don't control the timing and our sellers do. But that's exclusive of the quarter-to-date activity.

  • Mark E. Patten - Executive VP, CFO, Treasurer & Secretary

  • Michael, if you dug deep into the Q, you'd discover that we've got $25 million -- about $25 million under PSA right now.

  • Michael Jason Bilerman - MD, Head of the US Real Estate & Lodging Research and Senior Real Estate Analyst

  • Okay. So I haven't been able to review the Q as of yet, given all the earnings overnight. But does that pace, I guess, $55 million in 2 months relative to what had been much more aggressive. And Pete, I take your comments about average size of $6 million, $7 million, and you do a portfolio deal and it dramatically increases that. But I'm just trying to reconcile some of the robustness and this real confidence in a growing pipeline, but yet, the last 2 months have been well below what that pace would have been previously, right? You had been on, call it, a $70 million to $80 million monthly pace, and now that's down pretty meaningfully in March and April.

  • Peter M. Mavoides - President, CEO & Director

  • Yes, Michael, I think you get way too granular on a business that's -- we -- there's -- it's not a science, right? And I'm giving you a general feel about the market and my pipeline. And I gave you a very specific number and a sense of what are ongoing dialogues with our operators and the feeling that they're conveying to us about their businesses and about their prospects. And it's not -- this business is not a model. This business is not a month-to-month model where I can predict. It's not an assembly line. I'm not cranking out trucks or cars. We're doing deals with middle market operators to the tune of 20 to 40 a quarter that may or may not close.

  • These deals involve negotiations, diligence, environmental issues. And so my feel for our pipeline is that it's robust and it's very consistent with our past quarters and we're feeling good about the things. To drive down deeper than that is trying to create a level of precision and understanding that's just not attainable.

  • Michael Jason Bilerman - MD, Head of the US Real Estate & Lodging Research and Senior Real Estate Analyst

  • Yes. I'm not trying to get to that. It's -- obviously, external growth is a key component for the net lease REITs. And obviously, there's 2 sides to that, your own cost of capital and then the deals that you're able to complete in terms of volumes, right? The core business is a pretty stable net lease business that we can model pretty well. And so these questions are not to get precision on estimates. They're questions about the direction overall of growth of your cash flow driven by the key part of your business, which is to go out and acquire assets.

  • So that's the reason, Pete, for the questions. And just looking at the numbers, there appear to be a pretty material decline in volumes in March and in April. And so I was just trying to dig in a little bit deeper just to understand some of the variables that may be impacting that and your views going forward. That's the intent. I'm not trying to model down to the $0.001, it's more so just trying to understand the business, and you had focused me on more of the near term rather than the long term. And so that's what I was digging in on.

  • Peter M. Mavoides - President, CEO & Director

  • We gave you very specific metrics around the near term. So hopefully, it works you.

  • Operator

  • Are no further questions at this time. I'd like to turn the floor back over to Pete for closing comments.

  • Peter M. Mavoides - President, CEO & Director

  • Great. Thank you all for your time today, and more importantly, Gregg, thanks for being my partner for the past 10-plus years. And I want to wish you the best going forward. Certainly, I know you'll be around with us for the coming months as we navigate through this transition. But this is a very appropriate forum to thank you for all you've done for this company. And -- but thank you. And everyone, have a great day.

  • Operator

  • This concludes today's teleconference. You may disconnect your lines at this time. Thank you for your participation, and have a wonderful day.