Safehold - Earnings Call - Q4 2017
February 15, 2018
Transcript
Speaker 0
Good day and welcome to the Safety Income and Growth Fourth Quarter and Fiscal Year twenty seventeen Earnings Conference Call. At this time, for opening remarks and introductions, I would like to turn the conference over to Jason Foo, Vice President of Investor Relations and Marketing. Please go ahead, sir.
Speaker 1
Thank you. Good afternoon, everyone, and thank you for joining us today to review SAFE's fourth quarter and fiscal year twenty seventeen earnings report. With me today are Jay Sugarman, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer and Jeff Jervis, our Chief Operating Officer and Chief Financial Officer. On this call, we plan to walk through a presentation that details our fourth quarter and full year results. That presentation can be found on our website at safetyincomegrowth.com in the Investor Relations section.
There will be a replay of this conference call beginning at eight p. M. Eastern Time today.
Speaker 2
Before I turn it over
Speaker 1
to Jay, let me point you to our forward looking statements disclaimer on Slide one. I'd like to remind everyone that statements made on our conference call which are not historical facts may be forward looking. Safe's actual results may differ materially from these forward looking statements, and the risk factors that could cause these differences are detailed on this slide as well as in our SEC reports. SAFE disclaims any intent or obligation to update these forward looking statements except as expressly required by law. With that, I'd to turn the call over to our Chairman and CEO, Jay Sugarman.
Jay?
Speaker 3
Thanks, Jason, and thanks to those of you joining us on the call today. We started Safety Income and Growth less than a year ago to completely reinvent the ground lease business and to make ground leases a compelling capital choice for owners, operators and developers of high quality real estate around the country. Having watched and helped the real estate finance and net lease businesses grow and modernize over the past twenty five years, we were struck by the limited size and antiquated nature of the ground lease business in mainstream commercial real estate. And drawing on everything we've learned in the finance and net lease world, we set out to build a company that could change the way people think about ground leases, deliver better capital to owners of real estate and provide a unique mix of principal safety, growing dividends and capital appreciation to shareholders. Since going public in June, we've slowly but surely begun to introduce the market to a new type of ground lease, attractively structured to meet the needs of lenders and capable of unlocking higher returns for building owners.
We have trademarked this new type of transaction friendly ground lease, the SAFE ground lease and have begun working with property owners around the country on ways to maximize their returns with a SAFE ground lease. Over the past six months, we've seen clear examples of why this represents a very large market opportunity, but also why it will take time to help educate the market on how to think about both safe ground leases and safety income and growth as a whole. The good news is we're making real progress and continue to have conviction in our potential to build an exceptional company. The fourth quarter was a reflection of this as we closed the deal early in the quarter, but had a number of promising deals not quite get to the finish line. Each deal process has given us new insight into how best to translate our ground lease structure into a compelling capital choice going forward.
Some of those lessons are already paying dividends in 2018. In particular, we're starting to get real traction in the multifamily space, having closed a solid deal in Washington D. C. Last month and starting to field reverse inquiries from owners in other markets interested in utilizing a safe ground lease to optimize their capital structures. With our regional teams working to plant seeds around the country, we have several deals under LOI and hope to continue gathering momentum as more deals close and the benefits of a safe ground lease become more widely known.
With that, I'll turn it over to Jeff to walk through the quarter and the fiscal year in more detail. Jeff?
Speaker 2
Thank you, Jay, and good afternoon, everyone. Our remarks this afternoon will refer to slides from our earnings release that was posted on our website today. Starting on Slide two, when we evaluate performance at Safety, we look not only at GAAP net income, but also at non GAAP financial measures such as funds from operation or FFO and adjusted funds from operation or AFFO. For the quarter, net income was a loss of $07 per share, FFO was positive $05 per share and AFFO was $06 per share. There are several items worth highlighting that impacted our quarterly earnings.
These include percentage rent related to our Park Hotel portfolio, which skews quarterly results because it is only paid once a year management fees and expenses that are waived but still recorded as expenses under GAAP and some additional items specific to Q4 activities. Taking those items into account, our net income and FFO per share would have been impacted by $0.15 for the quarter and AFFO per share would have been impacted by $08 for the quarter. The resulting adjusted AFFO was in line with our expectations and our dividend payout guidance. Other highlights include closing one ground lease during the period and another shortly thereafter. Both are multifamily projects with one in Northern California and one in Washington DC.
These two transactions represent the fruits of our labor over the last few months as we have been planting seeds that are starting to sprout. As of February 13, our pipeline stood at $960,000,000 with $98,000,000 of the pipeline in active negotiation and another $72,000,000 of transactions with signed LOIs. Moving to Slide three. Slide three shows earnings for 2017. And since we were formed in April 2017, we only show partial year results.
Since inception, net income was a loss of $0.25 per share, FFO was positive $0.19 per share and AFFO was $0.28 per share. During the period, the aggregate impact for the adjustments I discussed earlier was $0.42 to net income and FFO and $0.19 to AFFO. Slides four, five and six give further details on our income statement and the adjustments that I just discussed. So I will skip to Slide seven. Slide seven shows our G and A at SAFE.
Last quarter, we had a few questions regarding management fees, and I'd like to take a moment to explain how these fees are treated on our financial statements. As we've discussed, SAFE's management contract waives 100% of the management fee through June 2018. IStar has also agreed to waive reimbursables for the same period. That said, under GAAP, both the management fee and the reimbursables are still recorded as G and A expenses during the waiver period. However, the fees and expenses are never paid and equity is adjusted to eliminate the impact of the phantom charges.
Slide eight shows our dividend history. As we have said, we plan to pay a zero one five dollars per share dividend until we can raise the dividend once we have invested the IPO proceeds. Our target is to pay out a relatively high percentage of distributable cash flow as we have no operating or capital expenses on any of our properties. On to Slide nine. Slide nine gives details on the Great Oaks deal that we closed this period and discussed on the last quarter's call.
The $34,000,000 ground lease is under a three zero one unit luxury multifamily property and has stabilized exposure of 26% of value and rent coverage of more than five times. This transaction is being built and we have committed to purchase the ground lease from iStar in three years after expected completion of construction. This transaction represents a vein of opportunity that we believe could be a rich source of deal flow, the multifamily merchant builder community. Over to Slide 10. Slide 10 gives details on our On X On First ground lease.
This $38,500,000 transaction closed in January and the property is a 14 story, two sixty six unit multifamily project in Washington DC. Our exposure to value is 39 percent and going in coverage is 3.2 times. In this transaction, we worked with the agencies to provide a comprehensive capital solution for the buyer. We are very pleased with this transaction, not only because it represents a solid investment for SAFE, but also because it has opened the doors to the University of Agency funded multifamily. In fact, since closing, have received several reverse inquiries from other multifamily investors.
Slides eleven and twelve contain graphics of our portfolio and demonstrate the diversification that we are endeavoring at SAFE. Slide 13 is a new slide and has some new and valuable statistics. As you will see on the chart on the top of the page, our total GAAP annualized rent is $29,500,000 and cash rent is $23,400,000 Our portfolio cash on cash yield is 4.7 with average fixed bumps of 1.6%, and this does not include the growth in percentage rent or any CPI linked rent bumps. The chart on the bottom of the page shows our weighted average exposure to combined property value of 33%, a rent coverage of 4.7 times and our extended lease term of sixty seven years. It is this set of statistics that we believe sets our brand of ground leases apart from other investment opportunities in terms of safety and relative value.
Moving to Slide 14. Our pipeline remains robust in terms of gross dollars, but has changed in terms of what percentage of transactions are in ongoing negotiations and under LOI. Over $170,000,000 of the $960,000,000 pipeline is in one of these two categories. It is our expectation that these transactions will work towards closing in the near to medium term. It is important to note that as we have done in the past, our pipeline excludes well over 1,000,000,000 point dollars of large transactions for whales.
We are more than aware that our origination pace has been less than we forecasted. That said, we are confident that our volume will ultimately meet or exceed expectations, even if it's a few quarters behind our initially projected pace. On to Slide 15. Slide 15 shows the $989,000,000 of Value Bank embedded in our ground lease portfolio. To remind investors, Value Bank is the difference between the total value of the property and the cost of our ground leases.
This value will come back to the company when the leases terminate. We have hired CBRE to appraise all of our properties at closing and to reappraise every asset at least annually. We continue to believe Value Bank, which is $54 per share, represents a significant opportunity for capital appreciation for our shareholders. Flipping to slide 16. The left hand table shows that we continue to be conservatively leveraged at 0.9 times debt to equity, And our debt to equity represents only 21% of the portfolio's combined property value.
The table on the right shows our fixed charge coverage ratio, which stood at 1.6 times and on a look through basis to the underlying properties at 7.4 times. We are very comfortable with our leverage levels and coverage metrics. On to Slide 17. Our debt is very straightforward. A $300,000,000 revolver, of which we've drawn $10,000,000 and a $227,000,000 fixed rate ten year secured financing on our initial portfolio of assets.
In addition, during the quarter, we raised $71,000,000 of five year secured debt against our Hollywood investment at LIBOR plus 133 basis points. Utilizing shorter term prepayable secured debt gives us the flexibility to convert to secured debt once we achieve our objective of an investment grade rating. Over to Slide 18. Our policy is to hedge interest rate exposure for the first ten years of financing for every asset. Since we expect our first investment grade financing to occur in two to three years, we have entered into short term three year LIBOR hedges as well as long term three year forward starting ten year swaps.
As you can see in the graphic, our hedges provide protection in the cases where interest rates rise faster than our rent bumps, a situation we expect could occur on a short term basis, but should not occur on a medium or long term basis. In summary, our hedge strategy is designed for any interest rate environment. However, we have seen extraordinary volatility in rates recently and our hedges have become very valuable. We will continue to enter into these hedges with every acquisition. Turning to Slide 19.
Finally, I'd like to discuss interest rates from another perspective, as we've heard some investors' concerns with respect to how safe and ground leases fare in a rising interest rate environment. First, it is important to remember that ground leases are not fixed rate bonds. We typically have contractual bumps in our rents. You can see it is expressed in the chart on the left side of the page. In fact, more and more of our lease bumps are either tied to inflation or have CPI look backs.
The chart to the right shows how fixed rate leverage magnifies the impact of these bumps. Again, because our rents don't stay flat, but rather have built in escalators, the effective fixed rate leverage magnifies those bumps. It's not just our rent bumps that are growing. Our land also grows in value with inflation. With a bond, the best you can ever get back is your principal, par value.
But we own land and that is an effective inflation hedge. Historically, studies have shown that land's correlation to inflation is approximately 85% and its beta is greater than one. We are very comfortable that over time our land should track or exceed inflation. Turning the page. In addition, the value of our real estate on top of the land or the value bank is also expected to grow with inflation.
As you can see, with 2% inflation, our Value Bank grows almost 250% in 50. If you predict higher inflation, the chart on the right shows 3% inflation, resulting in 500% growth in Value Bank. In summary, our cash flow grows, our land values grow, our value bank grows, all of these components of our portfolio point to the strength of our strategy and create an investment opportunity that has not only multifaceted protection from inflation, but the potential for a leverage return highly correlated to inflation. And with that, I will turn it back to Jay.
Speaker 3
Thanks, Jeff. So we have some pretty straightforward goals for 2018 close more deals, increase our repeat customer business, expand our footprint, and drive value for customers and shareholders as the market leader in our space. We think the fair value of our existing rent streams is well north of today's share price and that's before the sizable value bank of over 50 a share that Jeff mentioned. We believe this large discount will begin shrinking as we begin closing more transactions that demonstrate the innovative power of the safe ground lease. Obviously, we believe in this sizable upside and both iStar and management have purchased additional shares in the market since the IPO to capitalize on this mispriced opportunity.
And with that, operator, let's go ahead and open it up for questions.
Speaker 0
Thank you. Your first question comes from the line of Anthony Paolone from JPMorgan. Please go ahead. Your line is open.
Speaker 4
Okay, thanks and good afternoon. You talked about learning a number of things as you've been out in the market trying to do deals. Can you just talk a little bit more specifically about what maybe some of the impediments to getting things closed has been of late?
Speaker 3
Yes, sure, Tony. I think a couple of things we've learned is we're introducing a fairly new and reinvented type of structure that is a lot different than what people have seen in the past. And oftentimes we'll meet with a principal and we'll make great progress and then we'll have to do it again with another party in that deal and then another party and then another party. So we figured out we need to get them all in a room early in the transaction so they can all understand why this is so powerful together rather than having this daisy chain of questions between the leasehold lender and then other parties to the deal. So we've been able to start and shorten these timeframes where the entire concept goes from beginning to end.
I think the deal in DC, you know, took under a month to go from start to finish and that's a new record for us. So we're really starting to see how to present it, how to show its power and then how to quickly put it together with all three components, the equity, the leasehold lender and the ground lease all working quickly and efficiently together. Documents are getting a little more streamlined. We're figuring out what questions we need to answer upfront to make this work. And it's something we've lived through before in our past.
When you introduce a new concept, it does take some time to get to the most efficient place and we're starting to see that.
Speaker 4
Okay. Why do you think apartments seem to be landing in your strike zone so frequently? Don't know if it's counterintuitive or not just given it's a lower yielding property type to begin with. So it seems like you all would have to go even inside of that to provide leverage to the leaseholders. Just trying to think of how that's emerged as a key area.
Speaker 3
Well, again, I think it's this idea of efficiency. That's a market that is relatively liquid and fluid. So we've been able to craft a lease that is structured to meet the needs of the largest lenders to that sector. And so we've shortened the timeframe, made it simpler. And it's one of those businesses where if you can do it once or twice, you're not going to have to change a lot of variables to do a lot more.
So it's one of the reasons we're optimistic given what we saw in D. C. And some other markets we're working in that once we have a smooth efficient process, people are finding the cash on cash returns they can earn as owners are better and it's a compelling proposition for them.
Speaker 4
Can you remind us of the yield on the forward and then maybe give us the yield on the deal that closed post 4Q?
Speaker 3
Are you talking about the DC multi deal?
Speaker 2
Yes,
Speaker 3
both of those were in the 3.7%, 3.8% range on initial caps. Both included bumps, you know, in the 2% range. And I know at least the DC deal has a CPI catch up after a certain period of time.
Speaker 4
Okay, great. Thank you.
Speaker 0
Your next question comes from the line of Rich Anderson of Mizuho Securities. Please go ahead. Your line is open.
Speaker 5
Thanks. Good afternoon. So when I think about this the safe ground lease as describe it, I'm not sure if you're if that's copyrightable or whatever, but I'm curious if a part of that kind of sort of moniker or whatever you want to call it includes when you're out kind discussing your product, the relative lack of restrictions that you have when you're doing business relative to what is maybe the common fear of ground leases, which is the lease owner is going to restrict what I can do as a leasehold owner. Is that something that's part of the conversation in your meetings?
Speaker 3
Yes. No, it's a great question. I mean, one of the reasons we're trademarking this is to really distinguish it from a lot of the ground leases that are still around. Unfortunately, they've created a bit of a bad reputation for the industry. But they were set up long before the current finance and modern real estate investment markets that we see today were in place.
So they are inefficient and they are problematic. Many of them were written in fairly ambiguous terms on a typewriter fifty years ago. And there's no question why those are struggling in today's market to help owners create value. We want to distinguish a safe ground lease as absolutely attuned to both the leasehold lending market, the cap rate sale market and the ongoing business environment we find ourselves in. IStar is a lender.
IStar is an owner operator of real estate. We are sensitive across the spectrum to what makes a transaction a win win win. So we can very quickly get to the heart of the matter and figure out a way to unlock value as opposed to what I think some of the old style ground leases that are still hanging around which are again ambiguous, uncertain and have provisions that by no means unlock value. They actually create problems. So we want to be really clear with the marketplace that this is a different structure.
It is a different way to approach the business. And much like iStar's background in finance and net lease, we're trying to find solutions where one plus one equals more than two. And we think a modern safe ground lease combined with what we know about the leasehold lending world and the ownership world, we can achieve that with owners across multiple property types in multiple markets.
Speaker 5
Great. So looking at how your stock has performed so far this year, down 4% would probably put you in the top five of all REITs. Maybe not a big surprise to you, Jeff, for what you described, land as inflation hedge and rent escalators, how they compare to fixed rate debt.
Speaker 2
Is do you does
Speaker 5
it come as a bit of a surprise to you that you're not doing better if the REITs are underperforming mostly as a function of rising interest rates?
Speaker 3
Yes. I think there's two things to point out. One, yes, we are disappointed where our share price is. Again relative to our value both the rent stream and the value bank, we think there's a deep discount to what we believe value is. But we have to demonstrate how big this market opportunity is to get people excited.
So I think once the deals start coming in, once we can sit down and really show people how we think the valuation of each individual deal, the portfolio fit together into a very compelling investment opportunity, we think the market will begin to respond. It's on us to get these deals done to be able to show people across multiple product types all over the country why owners are attracted to it and why investors should be equally attracted to it. And that's the we're six months in. That's the work we have to put in and we think the market will respond to that success.
Speaker 5
At least the market is showing some amount of appreciation for the product I suppose in this environment. And then the last question. Jeff, you mentioned first IG financing in two or three years. What are some of the is just having enough of a portfolio that the main drag on getting there if you don't grow by some amount of activity per year, two to three might become four to five. So ultimately, it again comes down to being big enough to deserve that or are there other considerations the rating agencies are having to wrestle with to grant you that wish?
Speaker 2
So we have been in contact and in dialogue with all three of the major rating agencies. And typically the impediment is the duration of your business model and the scale of your business model. We're getting credit for having been invested in this space since 1995, so we don't have the duration of the business model concern. But you're spot on with respect to size. We need to be bigger in order to be rated or at least to be in order to be rated efficiently.
And I think that that is hopefully something we'll be able to solve this year, but the bogey is somewhere over $1,000,000,000 of assets.
Speaker 5
Over $1,000,000,000 in assets. Okay. So market cap wise, a number less than that?
Speaker 2
Well, cap would be somewhere in the 300 to $500,000,000 range depending upon how we're leveraged.
Speaker 5
Thanks very much.
Speaker 0
Your next question comes from the line of Collin Mings of Raymond James. Please go ahead. Your line is open.
Speaker 6
Thanks. Good afternoon, guys. Few questions for me. First, just maybe given the delayed timeline and ramping up the external growth, which you guys talked about some of the issues you run into there. Maybe just give us can you give us a sense of maybe the deal volume you're hoping to close here in 2018?
I recognize you're not providing maybe formal guidance, but just should we think about still the doubling of the portfolio by midyear this year? Or can you give us some more guardrails and guideposts to think about that?
Speaker 3
Yes. Look, I think a fair goal is to have $1,000,000,000 of assets by year end. As Jeff said, it's a key milestone for some of the constituents that are important to our future. So that would be a great goal. You And can work backwards knowing we started with three forty of assets.
We're up to about 500 now and we'd like to be at $1,000,000,000 by year end.
Speaker 6
Okay. That's helpful. And then as we think about kind of what's under LOI, can you maybe just talk about the cap rate on kind of the range under that's under LOI? And then just more broadly, just talk about as you're having these origination discussions, how is kind of the move in interest rates impacting that in terms of initial cap rate discussions?
Speaker 3
Yes. The pipeline remains this mix between some fairly large urban, typically office and some stuff that we're seeing in good markets outside the gateway cities in the multifamily space and some other residential type assets. I think the clearly there's a premium for assets in the gateway cities and there's a little bit more spread on those assets that are outside the gateway cities. But try to stay in the top 25 markets. We're trying to stay in product types that we have some knowledge and history in and we continue to believe there's a mix of both in the pipeline that we'll be able to close throughout the year.
Speaker 6
Okay. And then just maybe in terms of pricing on those and how that's been impacted by So
Speaker 3
our Matrix, as I think we said when we went public, was 3.5% to 5%. But obviously, the umbrella for creating compelling capital for investors is to beat on the land component some benchmark that the CMBS world or the insurance company finance world is putting out there, the agency world. So as interest rates move, all of those prices move up. We can stay under that umbrella and move up as well. But we still want to create an advantageous capital structure for our clients, our owners, operators, developers of real estate.
So it's not a one for one correlation, but it is definitely directionally moving with rates.
Speaker 6
Okay. And then as we think about it and you touched on this a little bit in the prepared remarks talking about over $1,000,000,000 as it relates to maybe some larger opportunities. But anything as you're having some of those discussions with GIC, anything that you think stands out that might be near term over the next quarter or two? Or is there going to be a longer gestation period for some of those larger deals still?
Speaker 3
We're working on that stuff every day. There's an active pipeline, but I'll also tell you those deals take longer to pull together. So we're not going to go out over our skis and tell you we've got something that we're sure is going to get done. But I like the tenor of the dialogue. I think the people who are talking to us see the merits of why this is a better solution, why it gives them another arrow in their quiver in terms of how they think about capitalizing the properties they're looking at or own.
So good tenor, but I'm not going to tell you we know we can knock down one of these big urban deals that we've been working on until we're a little bit closer to the finish line.
Speaker 6
Okay. And then just one last one for me, just going back to again some of the comments about iStar has obviously been active in purchasing some shares. Just maybe given the value that you guys see, maybe just talk about how you think about the runway for iStar to make additional share purchases and or maybe allocating some of your guys' own capital to buying back stock here down at least a degree below the IPO price.
Speaker 3
Yes. Believe me, we think this is unusually attractive. We thought it was unusually attractive frankly at the IPO price. We've continued to buy as the share price has underperformed. I think the we do want an active and vibrant marketplace out there.
But to the extent the marketplace is not going to recognize value, we've got some pretty large appetites in the existing shareholder base. But we're hoping with some of the volume coming down the pike here with some of the deals we'll be able to announce hopefully over the next two quarters that we'll see a lot of investors who might have been on the sideline waiting to see the kind of deal flow we were able to knock off knock down. We're hoping to bring them in. Again, we want to create more liquidity, bigger capitalization, bigger asset base and really start to make this part of the mainstream conversation.
Speaker 2
I would just add that our General Counsel I think is very happy that the blackout is about to be lifted because the number of questions that he has fielded from senior management is very high in volume. People are very eager here to take advantage of purchasing this investment.
Speaker 6
Great. I appreciate the color guys. I'll turn it over.
Speaker 0
Your next question comes from the line of John Massocca of Ladenburg Thalmann. Please go ahead. Your line is open.
Speaker 7
Good evening, everyone.
Speaker 3
Hey, John.
Speaker 7
So first question, I noticed the pipeline the dynamics of pipeline changed a little bit, kind of directly acquirable G and Ls went from 20% at 3Q twenty seventeen end to 7% now. What was kind of the driver of that? Was there a big deal that fell out or has there just been a shift in what you guys are going towards in terms of investments? Just any color there would be helpful.
Speaker 3
Yes. We were trying to shake loose a portfolio of ground leases that we thought was in fact, it was in the market. Nothing has happened on that. And so we're not out of it. We're probably the only one who got the dialogue advanced as far as it did, but no trade has taken place.
And as we've said, the existing ground lease market, sales market is pretty thin. So we can't really rely on that. We try to pick our spots for things that we try to shake loose that maybe there's a reason why we should be best bid. But in terms of the amount of time and effort and frankly the traction we're getting, we've redirected some of those resources to the things that appear actionable in the near term. It's not to say we're giving up on these longer term, longer lead time type conversations, but we're not going to sit and wait either.
So I think Tim Dougherty and his teams are all working actively on things that look like they're real. And some of the things that are just simmering and percolating, we'll check-in on, but they just seem to not have the same momentum.
Speaker 7
Okay. And then kind of outside of the pipeline, those potential whale type transactions you guys alluded to, would those more likely be something that you originate? Or would those more likely be a large portfolio that comes to market? I mean, you trying to originate these kind of very sizable deals or is this just you have to kind of wait for those to kind of hit the marketplace?
Speaker 3
No. The primary goal is to originate them. Again, we think the numbers are compelling. We think owners, operators have come to us and said, would they want to do it with us? In some cases, it's in bid situations where our bidder has not won.
Some of those deals haven't traded. With the move in interest rates, I think sellers are having to rethink their sales price and we think we're still in the hunt on a number of them.
Speaker 7
Okay. And then shifting gears a little bit, the cash G and A portion or I should say the G and A portion that isn't kind of forgiven by the manager ticked up a little bit this quarter. What was driving that?
Speaker 2
Two things. One, there were some if you look on Page six of the or Slide six, you can see that there were some additional legal expenses associated with a registration statement that we did. Those are, you know, I would call them non recurring. And then there's also inside that number sorry, I said six, the right number is actually
Speaker 7
the other expense items line, I think it's six, isn't it?
Speaker 2
No, it's seven. And you can see under the description in public company costs on Page seven at the bottom, there were some auditor legal and listing fees that were all non recurring one time period specific events.
Speaker 7
Okay. But will those be kind of annual? It's just they hit at this time of year that's kind of part of the annual G and A, but maybe not a quarterly run rate? Or is this kind of purely onetime?
Speaker 2
It was about of that $1,039,000 $250,000 $300,000 of it was expenses that we don't believe will occur again.
Speaker 7
Okay. That makes sense. And that's it for me. Thank you guys very much.
Speaker 0
Your next question comes from the line of Joshua Dennerlein of Bank of America Merrill Lynch. Please go ahead. Your line is open.
Speaker 8
Hey, guys. For deals where you've gotten letter of intent out there before, how what was kind of the hit rate for getting it closed? Just trying to figure out those four deals you have under letter of intent, how likely you are to close on them?
Speaker 3
Yes. Most of those are things we expect to get to the finish line. Something has to knock it off course. So we would expect well north of 50% of those would get to the finish line. I think again some of the education process we're going through both in terms of how get people through the pipeline quickly, their partners, their leasehold lenders.
We're getting better at, so we'd expect to close more and more of those things that make it to LOI. But Larry, we are educating in many transactions most of the players at the table just to make sure they understand how this all works, why it works, why it's better capital ultimately. And again, we're trying to overcome a lot of the outdated and frankly harmful types of ground leases that everybody's got a horror story about. So it does take a couple of swipes at it to make sure everybody's comfortable. But now once we feel like we're getting in the groove on deals, we can see the path to finish.
I'd expect once it gets under LOI to be a pretty high hit rate.
Speaker 8
Okay. And just to confirm, is there any issues with like the GSEs financing a multifamily property when you have a ground lease on them? Or is it pretty does it make it any more complicated for the borrower?
Speaker 3
No. As I said, I think the DC deal was a great example. That deal, start to finish with the GSEs, was eleven days. So once we get the form, the lease form down, which took us a pretty good amount of time over the last quarter to figure out how to check the box on the key criteria and then fashion a, we'll call it a GSE friendly ground lease. We think that one's a stamp and repeat with the agencies because, again, we know what they're sensitive to.
We know what our customers and our owners need. And we think we've cracked that code and can now provide the capital quickly, efficiently together with a GSA financing and to the equity owner.
Speaker 8
That's it for me. Thanks.
Speaker 3
Thank you.
Speaker 0
Your next question comes from the line of Anthony Paolone of JPMorgan. Please go ahead. Your line is open.
Speaker 4
Thanks. Just on the GSE subject, do you all have the ability to use GSE financing against your ground positions at this point?
Speaker 2
Great question. We certainly knocked on that door and the answer is not yet. Not sure if we'll get there, but obviously very attractive capital. We have to date our understanding is that they have not been willing to finance ground leases, but we're going to keep trying.
Speaker 4
Okay. Thanks. And then just last question here. Any update, I know it's still a little bit further out, but you talked about it around the IPO and stuff on potentially doing something with the hotel lease. Any update there?
Speaker 3
We've had some friendly conversations, but no real business update to give you.
Speaker 4
Thanks.
Speaker 0
Mr. Fuchs, we have no further questions.
Speaker 1
Thank you. And thanks everyone for joining us this