ES
Empire State Realty OP, L.P. (ESBA)·Q1 2024 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q1 2024 delivered solid operational momentum: total revenues were $181.2M, diluted EPS $0.03, and Core FFO per share $0.21, with same-store property cash NOI up 12.3% YoY, driven by cash rent commencements and strong leasing absorption .
- Leasing trends strengthened: 248K RSF signed in the quarter; Manhattan office percent leased rose 60bps QoQ and 200bps YoY to 92.7%, marking the 11th consecutive quarter of positive leasing spreads and 9th of positive absorption .
- Observatory performance was a bright spot: revenue $24.6M, expenses $8.4M, with NOI of $16.2M up 13% YoY, supported by improved per-capita revenue and visitation; management reiterated Observatory NOI guidance of $94–$102M for 2024 .
- Balance sheet actions reduced near-term maturities and preserved flexibility: new $715M credit facility closed in March; agreement to issue $225M green senior notes; anticipated cooperative consensual foreclosure of First Stamford Place to eliminate a $176M liability; no floating rate debt and $834M liquidity as of 3/31/24 .
- Guidance reaffirmed: 2024 Core FFO $0.90–$0.94 per share; commercial year-end occupancy 87–89%; same-store cash NOI -1% to +2%; Observatory NOI $94–$102M. Balance sheet and transaction activities are expected to be ~$0.02 dilutive to 2024 FFO, still within guidance range — a potential stock narrative catalyst around improved leverage, maturity profile, and leasing execution .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
- What Went Well
- Consistent leasing momentum: 248K RSF signed, Manhattan office percent leased reached 92.7%, and blended leasing spreads were +5.4%; notable deals include Burlington’s 68K RSF expansion and Sol de Janeiro’s 57K RSF new lease .
- Observatory strength: NOI rose 13% YoY to $16.2M; management highlighted resilient demand through cycles and brand partnerships (e.g., Disney/Star Wars) as drivers of sustained performance .
- Balance sheet fortification: $715M credit facility maturing in 2029, $225M green notes at 7.25% WA rate scheduled to fund mid-June, and proactive disposition plans to eliminate a $176M 2027 liability; no floating rate exposure and 5.3x net debt to adjusted EBITDA .
- What Went Wrong
- Same-store NOI comp dynamics: Q1 benefited from ~$1.5M one-time items and easier comps vs. 1Q’23; management expects tougher comps from 2Q–4Q given 2023 nonrecurring positives, limiting full-year same-store growth to -1% to +2% .
- Submarket softness: Management noted weaker leasing traction in certain submarkets (e.g., Columbus Circle/250 West 57th) versus stronger Penn Station-adjacent assets, underscoring uneven market recovery .
- Diluted EPS declined sequentially: diluted EPS was $0.03 in Q1 vs. $0.06 in Q4, reflecting seasonal observatory patterns and higher OpEx; management held guidance citing visibility but acknowledged modest $0.02 dilution from balance sheet/transactions .
Financial Results
Segment/KPIs
Note on estimates: S&P Global consensus data for Q1 2024 was unavailable at time of request due to API limit; thus “vs. estimates” comparisons cannot be provided in this section .
Guidance Changes
Management noted balance sheet/transaction activities are ~$0.02 dilutive to 2024 FFO but remain within the guidance range .
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “We delivered our ninth consecutive quarter of leased percentage growth and our 11th consecutive quarter of positive mark-to-market lease spreads.” — Anthony Malkin .
- “We have $47 million in incremental cash revenue from signed leases not commenced and free rent burn off.” — Thomas Durels .
- “We generated net operating income of $16 million in the first quarter, an increase of 13% year-over-year… revenue per capita remains high.” — Stephen Horn (Observatory) .
- “We closed on a new $715 million credit facility… and entered into a note purchase agreement to issue $225 million of green senior unsecured notes… we have strong liquidity, no floating rate debt exposure.” — Christina Chiu .
- “The crisis created by capital dislocation… will create a once-in-a-generation opportunity to buy into certain New York City assets… we are extremely disciplined.” — Anthony Malkin .
Q&A Highlights
- Tenant demand and pipeline: Management sees broad-based tenant categories (consumer brands, tech, financial/professional services) and little “tire kicking,” with 200K+ RSF in negotiation and rising tour volumes .
- Transactions/JV capital: Inbound interest from large private investors focused on long-duration MOIC rather than high-leverage IRR; CMBS likely to drive asset sales faster than banks .
- Same-store NOI cadence: Strong Q1 boosted by one-time items and easier comps; comps get tougher in 2Q–4Q due to 2023 nonrecurring positives; full-year guidance maintained .
- Submarket commentary: Columbus Circle area showing less activity; Penn Station-adjacent assets have good showings and pipeline .
- Observatory demand visibility: Reservations mostly near-term; performance tracking in line with expectations .
Estimates Context
- S&P Global Wall Street consensus data (EPS, revenue, EBITDA, # of estimates) for Q1 2024 was unavailable at time of request due to API limit; management commentary suggests results were “above expectations,” but formal vs-consensus comparisons cannot be shown here .
- Given strong leasing and Observatory performance, estimate revisions may focus on 2024 occupancy trajectory and Observatory NOI range confidence; however, management held FFO guidance given tougher comps ahead and modest (~$0.02) dilution from capital actions .
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Leasing momentum and pricing power remain intact, evidenced by 11 straight quarters of positive spreads and higher leased rates; this supports stabilized cash flows into 2H 2024 despite uneven submarkets .
- Observatory resilience and brand activations bolster non-office income diversification; Q1 NOI +13% YoY and per-capita revenue strength underpin high-quality earnings mix .
- Balance sheet de-risking is a core catalyst: extended maturities, elimination of a $176M 2027 liability, and no floating rate exposure should reduce equity risk premiums in a higher-rate environment .
- Full-year guidance reaffirmation signals confidence in pipeline and cash generation, while acknowledging tougher comps; watch for leasing commencements/free-rent burn-off translating into same-store cash NOI later in the year .
- Capital dislocation may unlock attractive NYC acquisition/JV opportunities; disciplined basis selection and priority structures could create value without stressing the balance sheet .
- Near-term narrative drivers: execution on pending transactions, continued leasing absorption, and Observatory performance consistency; medium-term thesis anchored on portfolio modernization, sustainability leadership, and MOIC-focused capital partnerships .
- Dividend maintained at $0.035 per quarter; ongoing Core FAD discipline and liquidity provide coverage while reinvestment priorities target higher-return NYC assets .