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Spirit Realty Capital, Inc. – ‘8-K’ for 5/5/21 – ‘EX-99.3’

On:  Wednesday, 5/5/21, at 4:02pm ET   ·   For:  5/5/21   ·   Accession #:  1564590-21-24023   ·   File #:  1-36004

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  As Of               Filer                 Filing    For·On·As Docs:Size             Issuer                      Filing Agent

 5/05/21  Spirit Realty Capital, Inc.       8-K:2,9     5/05/21   14:16M                                    ActiveDisclosure/FA

Current Report   —   Form 8-K

Filing Table of Contents

Document/Exhibit                   Description                      Pages   Size 

 1: 8-K         Current Report                                      HTML     36K 
 2: EX-99.1     EX-99.1 Press Release                               HTML     76K 
 3: EX-99.2     Miscellaneous Exhibit                               HTML     23K 
 4: EX-99.3     Miscellaneous Exhibit                               HTML     31K 
10: R1          Document and Entity Information                     HTML     53K 
12: XML         IDEA XML File -- Filing Summary                      XML     13K 
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11: EXCEL       IDEA Workbook of Financial Reports                  XLSX      6K 
 6: EX-101.DEF  XBRL Definitions -- src-20210505_def                 XML     43K 
 7: EX-101.LAB  XBRL Labels -- src-20210505_lab                      XML     71K 
 8: EX-101.PRE  XBRL Presentations -- src-20210505_pre               XML     43K 
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13: JSON        XBRL Instance as JSON Data -- MetaLinks               14±    23K 
14: ZIP         XBRL Zipped Folder -- 0001564590-21-024023-xbrl      Zip     39K 


‘EX-99.3’   —   Miscellaneous Exhibit


This Exhibit is an HTML Document rendered as filed.  [ Alternative Formats ]



Slide 1

May 2021 Q1 2021 Investor Presentation Exhibit 99.3

Slide 2

Q1 2021 Overview Portfolio Data Operational Data Balance Sheet Data $518.1M 37% Top 10 Tenant Concentration1 22% Investment Grade Rated Baa3 Moody’s Annualized Base Rent Top 20 Tenant Concentration1 5.5x / 5.1x2 Adjusted Debt / Annualized Adjusted EBITDAre 4.6x Fixed Charge Coverage Ratio Concepts 260 10.1 yrs WALT 99.8% Rent from Unencumbered Assets1 Unencumbered Assets / Unsecured Debt 2.5x Note: Data is as of or for the quarter ended March 31, 2021. 1As a percentage of ABR. 2Assuming the settlement of the 5.5 million open forward equity contracts. 1.1% / 1.8% Forward 12 Month Lease Escalations / Forward Same Store Sales 99.5% Occupancy 2.1% Property Cost Leakage 2.2% / 0.4% Lost Rent / Lost Rent Excluding Movie Theaters Stable outlook Positive outlook Stable outlook

Slide 3

Top 20 Tenants Asset Types and Tenant Industries1 RETAIL 77.1% INDUSTRIAL Top Tenancy and Portfolio Mix 16.2% 9.7% Distribution 6.5% Manufacturing OFFICE & OTHER 6.7% 2.5% Professional 2.4% Medical 1.2% Data Center 0.6% Hotel 1Percentages based on ABR. Retail industries reflect the underlying Tenant operations and Industrial and Office & Other industries represent the underlying property use.

Slide 4

PORTFOLIO DIVERSIFICATION 1Experential Retail includes Health and Fitness, Restaurants – Casual Dining, Movie Theaters, Entertainment and Early Education. 2Includes 0.8% of total ABR from California. *Represent less than 0.1% of ABR. Southeast Mid-Atlantic Pacific Southwest Pacific Northwest 16.0% of ABR Southwest Midwest Northeast 7.4% of ABR 29.9% of ABR 13.9% of ABR 11.7% of ABR 3.0% of ABR 18.1% of ABR U.S. Virgin Islands % of ABR State

Slide 5

Granular and Liquid Portfolio

Slide 6

LEASE STRUCTURE, EXPIRATIONS AND ESCALATIONS $ in thousands 1.8% Forward Same Store Sales Occupancy Rates Forward 12 Month Lease Escalations 1.1% Lease Structure (% of ABR) 42.6% Master Lease Escalation Types (% of ABR) 1ABR is not adjusted for the impact of abatements provided as relief due to the COVID-19 pandemic. As of the date of this report, SRC has agreed to a total of $0.1 million of abatements for the period from April 1, 2021March 31, 2022. 2Vacant square feet includes unoccupied square footage on multi-tenant properties.

Slide 7

Portfolio Health % of ABR from Reporting Tenants Note: Percentages are weighted by ABR. 1Investment Grade Ratings represent the credit rating of our tenants, their subsidiaries or affiliated companies. Actual ratings based on S&P or Moody’s are used. Equivalent ratings (included in the chart), if available, based on shadow ratings from S&P Capital IQ are used if actuals are not available. 2Publicly owned represents ownership of our tenants or their affiliated companies. 3Represents corporate-level reporting of revenues of our tenants or their affiliated companies, excluding non-reporting tenants.

Slide 8

Spirit tenant credit – top 20 public Tenants Source: FactSet; SNL. Note: Percentages based on ABR. Equity market cap as of 4/30/21. Average equity market cap weighted by ABR. 1Publicly owned represents ownership of our tenants or their affiliated companies. Percentages are weighted by ABR during such period. Top 20 Public Tenants Spirit’s Publicly Owned1 Growth Since Pre-Spin

Slide 9

Movie theater tenant Update Source: IMDbPro as of April 30, 2021. 1Percentage of ABR. The American Rescue Plan Act established the Shuttered Venue Operators Grant (SVOG) program to provide $10M per single grant under the SBA’s Office of Disaster Assistance. Based on estimated grant eligibility and discussion with operators, grants have not been received yet. 2For cash basis tenants subject to percentage rent agreements, collections include estimates based on prior month actuals and could further increase as a result of April performance. 3All rent obligations for accrual basis tenants are recognized in earnings. Approximately half of these obligations are expected to be deferred under percentage rent agreements, with the remainder expected to be collected in cash. 4Spirit has new leases in place on our four former Goodrich theaters, which will be subject to percentage rent arrangements for the remainder of this year. In addition, Spirit is in the process of re-tenanting the three former Studio Movie Grill locations in Southern California, which were rejected in bankruptcy during the first quarter. Improving U.S. Box Office Trends Tenet Released Wonder Woman Released Godzilla vs. Kong Released Movie theater operators have benefited from government programs and accessing capital markets Over $5.6BN of public capital raises since March 2020 Accessing Mainstreet Lending and PPP Loans under the Cares Act 61% of Operators are eligible for the new Shuttered Venue Operators Grant1 Mortal Kombat Released Rent for Theater Tenants April Base Rent = $1.9M April Base Rent does not reflect rent from leases with new theater operators4 Collections from Cash Basis Tenants2 Collections/Deferred Rent from Accrual Basis Tenants3 Uncollected Rent from Cash Basis Tenants Collections for Theater Tenants on a Cash Basis +59% +458% +$656K Uncollected Rent from Cash Basis Tenants

Slide 10

NET INVESTMENT ACTIVITY Asset Type and Tenant Industries2 1Capitalization rates are calculated based only on income producing properties. 2Percentages based on Gross Investment. Retail industries reflect the underlying Tenant operations and Industrial industries represent the underlying property use.

Slide 11

Debt Summary and Market Capitalization Note: Data is as of March 31, 2021, unless otherwise noted. 1As of March 31, 2021, $800.0 million of borrowing capacity was available under the 2019 Credit Facility and borrowings bore interest at LIBOR plus an applicable margin of 0.90% per annum. 2Our secured debt is partially amortizing and requires a balloon payment at maturity. 3Based on the share price of $42.50 as of March 31, 2021 and the total outstanding shares of 114,708,740 as of March 31, 2021, which excludes 0.2 million unvested restricted shares. 4The Fixed Charge Coverage Ratio as defined in the Senior Unsecured Notes indenture includes other adjustments, including the exclusion of preferred stock dividends. Debt Type Fixed / Floating Rate Debt 39.3% Total Debt to Total Assets (Requirement ≤ 60%) Senior Unsecured Note Covenant Compliance 0.1% Total Secured Debt to Total Assets (Requirement ≤ 40%) 4.7x Fixed Charge Coverage Ratio4 (Requirement ≥ 1.5x) 2.5x Total Unencumbered Assets to Unsecured Debt (Requirement ≥ 1.5x) Well-Staggered Maturities $ In Millions

Slide 12

Fixed income investors have re-rated Spirit’s cost of debt 156 bps Cost of debt improvement Spirit’s Spread to Issue on Ten-Year Debt

Slide 13

Commitment to Environmental Sustainability Environmental Responsibility Social Responsibility Corporate Governance Environmental considerations in our office Committed to reducing our environmental footprint Environmental considerations in our investments Committed to investing responsibly and managing environmental risks

Slide 14

Commitment to social responsibility Environmental Responsibility Social Responsibility Corporate Governance We are “All One Team” Diversity and Inclusion. Diversity, Equity & Inclusion Council formed in 2020 with goals to support Spirit’s leadership in developing strategies to foster a diverse and inclusive workforce, including deployment of mandatory diversity and inclusion training Employee development. Offer leadership training, coaching, and tuition reimbursement to support our employees in their professional development Employee initiatives. Includes annual health and wellness challenge and virtual coffee talks We are committed to being good corporate citizens Spirit One Committee. Dedicated to organizing civic involvement with non-profit organizations, including donations to 28 organizations in 2020 Employee gift matching program. Matches charitable contributions to eligible organizations We are subject to a Code of Business Ethics Labor. Committed to compensating employees at competitive rates Health and safety. “Return to Office” Committee researched best practices and safety measures IT Security. All employees are required to complete Information Technology Security Training

Slide 15

Commitment to strong governance practice 1Represents 2021 Board Nominees. Environmental Responsibility Social Responsibility Corporate Governance Our Board maintains a diversity of perspectives that support the oversight of the Company’s ongoing strategic objectives Best in class board practices 9 of 10 are independent1 Independent Chairman of the Board Annual elections for all directors Majority voting standard Third party annual board evaluations Conduct annual CEO performance reviews All committees are independent Committee chair rotation Opted out of MUTA 50% shareholder threshold to amend bylaws No poison pill Minimum stock ownership requirements Plurality voting standard in contested elections Clawback policy Anti-hedging/pledging policy 40% are women1

Slide 16

Spirit’s Platform

Slide 17

Spirit’s platform Integrated approach optimizing existing portfolio and scalable underwriting systems Harnessing Data Through Technology Proprietary Portfolio Tools Organizational Structure Spirit’s Underwriting Approach

Slide 18

Proprietary portfolio tools Power BI Heat Map Efficient Frontier Return Framework Property Ranking Model Industry relevance Risk framework Economic capitalization rates Sharpe ratio Investment in category Risk return analysis Residual value Level setting capital decisions Research Credit and Underwriting Research Asset Management Asset Management Technology Research Acquisitions Credit and Underwriting What is it solving for Controlling team Tool

Slide 19

Spirit’s Updated Efficient frontier Note: Industry categories exclude multi-tenant properties. Manufacturing, Distribution and Professional Office are classified by asset type while other industries reflect underlying Tenant operations as of March 31, 2021. 1Medical Office comprised of Real Estate Investment of $31M and $141M from the Retail and Office & Other asset type, respectively. Spirit’s Real Estate Investment

Slide 20

Spirit’s heat map Note: Industry categories exclude multi-tenant properties. Manufacturing, Distribution and Professional Office are classified by asset type while other industries reflect underlying Tenant operations. Essential and durable industries matter and are key factors in our investment strategy 100 100 50 0 0 Worse Better Technological Disruption (25% eCommerce penetration, 25% growth trends in eCommerce in industry, 50% historical/forecasted impact to real estate demand) Porter’s Five Forces (25% competition, 25% essential impact, 20% barriers to entry, 10% suppliers, buyers and substitutions) Better Worse 50

Slide 21

property ranking model Asset level ranking of all properties using twelve criteria Contract/Replacement rent Real estate score and 5-mile population Lease term 5-mile household income Pre-overhead Unit Coverage, Pre-overhead Master Lease Coverage, Corporate Coverage, State Rent escalations Lease type Individual weightings applied to each criteria to arrive at overall ranking All rankings updated annually All acquisition candidates ranked; key ingredient in Investment Committee decision process Weightings favor real estate centric criteria Heavier weighting on objective criteria Incorporates Spirit Heat Map via industry criteria Ranking is loss given default oriented vs. expected default frequency Ranking is not a binary decision making metric Lease expirations: informs renewal and re-tenanting strategies Develop consistent view of real estate across organization Benchmarking across industries Acquisitions: benchmark acquisitions against existing assets to ensure accretive portfolio shaping Dispositions: important factor in identifying and pricing target assets Utilizing the Property Ranking Results

Slide 22

Spirit’s underwriting approach Industry Relevance SWOT Analysis Porter’s 5 Forces Total addressable market Industry lifecycle Revenue & profit volatility through lifecycles Tenant Underwriting Operation analysis: earnings potential, cash flow, historical trends, coverage Balance sheet analysis: leverage, FCCR, tangible net worth Other: comparison to industry average/ownership, regulatory exposure, ESG Real Estate Residual value analysis Replacement rent Real estate ranking Property ranking model

Slide 23

Financial Presentation and Non-GAAP Reconciliations

Slide 24

Net Asset Value (NAV) Components Market Value of Real Estate $3.1B Debt and Equity $292.5M Other Assets $132.3M Other Liabilities $518.1M Annualized Base Rent $69.4M Net Book Value for Vacant Assets $2.9B Debt Principal1 $172.5M Preferred Equity Liquidation Value $261.9M Cash and Cash Equivalents $30.6M Tangible Other Assets $73.4M Dividends Payable $58.9M Accounts Payable, Accrued Expenses, and Other Tangible Liabilities $502.9M Annualized Adjusted Cash NOI Note: Data is as of March 31, 2021. 1Debt principal outstanding of $2,946.1 million comprised of: $190.4 million of Convertible Notes, $2,750.0 million of Senior Unsecured Notes and $5.7 million of mortgages payable. 2Total outstanding shares as of March 31, 2021, less 0.2 million unvested restricted shares. Excludes 5.5 million shares of common stock issuable under open forward contracts.

Slide 25

CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF OPERATIONS $ IN THOUSANDS 1For the three months ended March 31, 2021, rental income included $125.2 million of Base Cash Rent and $2.8 million of tenant reimbursable income. Base Cash Rent for the three months ended March 31, 2021 includes $2.7 million of deferred rental income recognized in conjunction with the FASB’s relief for deferral agreements extended as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic. For the three months ended March 31, 2020, rental income included $116.5 million of Base Cash Rent and $3.1 million of tenant reimbursable income.

Slide 26

CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEETS $ IN THOUSANDS, EXCEPT SHARE AND PER SHARE AMOUNTS

Slide 27

FUNDS AND ADJUSTED FUNDS FROM OPERATIONS $ IN THOUSANDS, EXCEPT PER SHARE AMOUNTS 1Costs related to COVID-19 are included in general and administrative expense and primarily relate to legal fees for executing rent deferral or abatement agreements. 2AFFO for the three months ended March 31, 2021 includes $2.7 million of deferred rental income recognized in conjunction with the FASB’s relief for deferral agreements extended as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic. 3Weighted average shares of common stock for non-GAAP measures includes unvested market-based awards, which are dilutive for the non-GAAP calculations. Dividends paid and undistributed earnings allocated, if any, to unvested restricted stockholders are deducted from FFO and AFFO for the computation of the per share amounts. The following amounts were deducted:

Slide 28

Other NON-GAAP RECONCILIATIONS $ in thousands 1Costs related to COVID-19 are included in general and administrative expense and primarily relate to legal fees for executing rent deferral or abatement agreements. 2Non-cash compensation expense was not included as an adjustment to EBITDAre in previous periods. 3Adjustment relates to net straight-line rent receivable balances recognized in prior periods deemed not probable of collection in the current period. 4Adjustment for amounts where annualization would not be appropriate is comprised of previously deferred revenue recognized in the current period and net recoveries related to prior period rent deemed not probable of collection and property costs. 5Adjusted Debt / Annualized Adjusted EBITDAre would be 5.1x and Adjusted Debt + Preferred / Annualized Adjusted EBITDAre would be 5.4x if all 5.5 million shares under open forward sales agreements had been settled on March 31, 2021. 6Excludes costs related to COVID-19 and non-cash compensation expense, which are already included as add-backs to Adjusted EBITDAre. 7Adjusted Cash NOI includes $2.7 million of deferred rental income recognized in conjunction with the FASB’s relief for deferral agreements extended as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Slide 29

Appendix

Slide 30

NON-GAAP DEFINITIONS AND EXPLANATIONS

Slide 31

OTHER DEFINITIONS AND EXPLANATIONS

Slide 32

FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS AND RISK FACTORS The information in this presentation should be read in conjunction with the accompanying earnings press release, as well as the Company's Annual Report on Form 10-K and other information filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission. This presentation is not incorporated into such filings. This document is not an offer to sell or a solicitation to buy securities of Spirit Realty Capital, Inc. Any offer or solicitation shall be made only by means of a prospectus approved for that purpose. This presentation contains forward-looking statements within the meaning of Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and Section 21E of the Exchange Act of 1934, as amended. When used in this presentation, the words “estimate,” “anticipate,” “expect,” “believe,” “intend,” “may,” “will,” “should,” “seek,” “approximately” or “plan,” or the negative of these words or similar words or phrases that are predictions of or indicate future events or trends and which do not relate solely to historical matters are intended to identify forward-looking statements. You can also identify forward-looking statements by discussions of strategy, plans or intentions of management. Forward-looking statements involve numerous risks and uncertainties and you should not rely on them as predictions of future events. Forward-looking statements depend on assumptions, data or methods that may be incorrect or imprecise, and Spirit may not be able to realize them. Spirit does not guarantee that the transactions and events described will happen as described (or that they will happen at all). The following risks and uncertainties, among others, could cause actual results and future events to differ materially from those set forth or contemplated in the forward-looking statements: industry and economic conditions; volatility and uncertainty in the financial markets, including potential fluctuations in the CPI; Spirit's success in implementing its business strategy and its ability to identify, underwrite, finance, consummate, integrate and manage diversifying acquisitions or investments; the financial performance of Spirit's retail tenants and the demand for retail space; Spirit's ability to diversify its tenant base; the nature and extent of future competition; increases in Spirit's costs of borrowing as a result of changes in interest rates and other factors; Spirit's ability to access debt and equity capital markets; Spirit's ability to pay down, refinance, restructure and/or extend its indebtedness as it becomes due; Spirit's ability and willingness to renew its leases upon expiration and to reposition its properties on the same or better terms upon expiration in the event such properties are not renewed by tenants or Spirit exercises its rights to replace existing tenants upon default; the impact of any financial, accounting, legal or regulatory issues or litigation that may affect Spirit or its major tenants; Spirit's ability to manage its expanded operations; Spirit's ability and willingness to maintain its qualification as a REIT under the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended; the impact on Spirit’s business and those of its tenants from epidemics, pandemics or other outbreaks of illness, disease or virus (such as the strain of coronavirus known as COVID-19); and other risks inherent in the real estate business, including tenant defaults, potential liability relating to environmental matters, illiquidity of real estate investments and potential damages from natural disasters discussed in Spirit's most recent filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission, including its Annual Report on Form 10-K and subsequent Quarterly Reports on Form 10-Q. You are cautioned not to place undue reliance on forward-looking statements, which speak only as of the date of this presentation. While forward-looking statements reflect Spirit's good faith beliefs, they are not guarantees of future performance. Spirit disclaims any obligation to publicly update or revise any forward-looking statement to reflect changes in underlying assumptions or factors, new information, data or methods, future events or other changes, except as required by law. In addition to U.S. GAAP financial measures, this presentation contains and may refer to certain non-GAAP financial measures. These non-GAAP financial measures are in addition to, not a substitute for or superior to, measures of financial performance prepared in accordance with GAAP. These non-GAAP financial measures should not be considered replacements for, and should be read together with, the most comparable GAAP financial measures. Reconciliations to the most directly comparable GAAP financial measures and statements of why management believes these measures are useful to investors are included in this Appendix if the reconciliation is not presented on the page in which the measure is published.


Dates Referenced Herein   and   Documents Incorporated by Reference

This ‘8-K’ Filing    Date    Other Filings
3/31/2210-Q
Filed on / For Period end:5/5/2110-Q
4/30/21
4/1/214
3/31/2110-Q
3/31/2010-Q
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