Innovative Industrial Properties, Inc. (NYSE:IIPR) Q4 2024 Earnings Call Transcript

Innovative Industrial Properties, Inc. (NYSE:IIPR) Q4 2024 Earnings Call Transcript February 20, 2025

Operator: Good day, and welcome to the Innovative Industrial Properties Inc. Fourth Quarter 2024 Earnings Call. All participants will be in listen-only mode. After today’s presentation, there will be an opportunity to ask questions. To ask a question, you may press star then one on a touch-tone phone. Please note this event is being recorded. I would now like to turn the conference over to Eli Kantor, Associate Finance. Please go ahead.

Eli Kantor: Thank you for joining the call. Presenting today are Alan Gold, Executive Chairman, Paul Smithers, President, Chief Executive Officer, and Ben Regin, Chief Investment Officer. Before we begin, I’d like to remind everyone that statements made during today’s conference call may be deemed forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Safe Harbor of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Actual results may differ materially due to a variety of risks, uncertainties, and other factors. Please refer to the documents filed by the company with the SEC, specifically the most recent reports on Forms 10-K and 10-Q, which identify important risk factors that could cause actual results to differ from those contained in the forward-looking statements.

We are not obligated to publicly update or revise any forward-looking statements, whether as a result of new information, future events, or otherwise. In addition, on today’s call, we will discuss certain non-GAAP financial information such as FFO, normalized FFO, and AFFO. You can find this information together with reconciliations to the most directly comparable GAAP financial measure in our earnings release issued yesterday as well as in our 8-K filed with the SEC. I’ll now hand the call over to Alan. Alan?

Alan Gold: Thanks, Eli. Good morning, everyone, and welcome to our call to discuss our 2024 results and recent activity. The company has continued to execute, generating over $255 million of cash flow from operations, and returning over $210 million to shareholders through dividends, continuing our track record of increasing our annual dividends each year since our inception in 2016. On the investment front, we remain highly selective in evaluating opportunities, deploying over $70 million in capital to acquire two properties, and providing additional building infrastructure allowances to enhance our facility’s capacity for our operators. We also made significant progress in leasing, executing new leases at six properties representing 530,000 square feet, or 6% of our total portfolio.

Additionally, we further strengthened our liquidity position and strong balance sheet with the upsizing of our credit facility to $87.5 million, with four banks now participating. For the year, we generated total revenues of $308.5 million and AFFO of $256.1 million, continuing our success of generating significant revenue from the regulated cannabis industry. The regulated cannabis industry continues to experience headwinds, which we are navigating through with one of the most experienced management teams in the industry. As of year-end, our total available liquidity exceeded $235 million, providing us with ample dry powder to pursue additional strategic investments. We are proud to have strategically positioned ourselves to have one of the lowest levered balance sheets in the REIT industry at 11% debt to total gross assets.

David will provide more detail on our financial results and capital position. Last week, we announced that two of our independent directors, David Stecker and Mary Curran, have made the decision to retire from our board and not stand for reelection as their terms expire. David has served on the board since 2017 and Mary since 2020. We want to thank them both for their service to the company over the years and are in the process of searching for replacement directors. I also want to take a moment to congratulate Tracy Hager and Kelly Spiker, who were both promoted to Senior Vice President in January. Tracy has managed our asset management department since 2021, and Kelly has provided incredible real estate legal support since 2019. Both are seasoned professionals who have added incredible value, and we are truly fortunate to have such dedicated and talented members on our management team.

Before I turn the call over to Paul, I wanted to touch on our resolution with PharmaCann. We are pleased with the outcome announced last month and believe it reflects our management team’s capabilities in navigating challenging situations to the benefit of our shareholders. Paul will provide additional detail on the resolution. Paul?

Paul Smithers: Thanks, Alan. As we noted in our press release last month, we reached a comprehensive resolution to PharmaCann’s default that included, among other things, PharmaCann recommencing rent payments on nine of eleven leases in February, a required capital infusion by PharmaCann investors, and a junior secured note issued to Innovative Industrial Properties, Inc. We are proud of our team’s ability to navigate this situation swiftly and believe this is the best path forward to maximize shareholder value. On the regulatory front, with the election behind us and a unified Congress, there is potential for federal reform including rescheduling and safe banking. Rescheduling efforts to reclassify cannabis from a Schedule I drug to a Schedule III drug were stalled by a DEA administrative law judge canceling the rulemaking hearing that was set to begin in January.

Since that postponement, President Trump has recently appointed Terrence Cole to lead the DEA. President Trump has not released any official policy directive related to rescheduling, but Cole has voiced opposition to legalization efforts. However, President Trump has shown public support for cannabis reform, including for both rescheduling and the approval of adult use in Florida, and we remain cautiously optimistic that rescheduling will continue to make progress. We do continue to see growth prospects in the state markets, with four states voting on cannabis legislation in 2024. Pennsylvania is exploring adult use cannabis legalization through legislation earlier this month, Governor Shapiro’s 2025-26 budget proposes a legalization of adult use cannabis effective July 1, 2025, with sales beginning January 1, 2026.

In Florida, the Smart and Safe Florida campaign was relaunched in January to put adult use cannabis back on the ballot for the 2026 election. After the recent measure received majority support from voters, but failed to receive the requisite 60% needed. These two states combined generated approximately $3.8 billion in sales in 2024, and are projected to be two of the largest cannabis markets in the US by 2028 according to BDSA. In Minnesota, while regulations for adult use cannabis have yet to be finalized, the OCM began accepting applications for cannabis businesses earlier this month. Additionally, the public comment period for the regulatory framework concluded earlier this month, and the OCM is expected to publish the final rules by the end of Q1 2025.

Aerial view of a large REIT building complex, its facade reflecting the city skyline.

We look forward to the adult use rollout and are excited for our tenant partners, Green Thumb and Vireo. The growth of the overall cannabis industry in the US continues to remain strong, with 41 states having legalized cannabis for medical or recreational use, accounting for 71% of the US population. BDSA is projecting cannabis sales to increase approximately 10% in 2025 after an estimated 9.8% growth in 2024, with total US cannabis sales of $32.4 billion. Recent data shows that cannabis consumption is also strong, with volumes up 15% in 2024 according to Hoodie Analytics. Additionally, studies have highlighted daily marijuana use surpassed daily alcohol consumption in 2022. These trends reflect the growing acceptance and integration of cannabis, which positions the industry for continued expansion.

However, challenges persist, particularly from illicit and gray markets that undermine the regulated industry. While states like California and New York have made incremental progress in enforcement, the illicit market is estimated to be more than two and a half times the size of the regulated market. Addressing this issue requires further efforts at both the state and federal levels. At the state level, we are encouraged by the continued expansion of the New York and Ohio cannabis markets. As of December, New York’s adult use cannabis sales surpassed $1 billion since launching in December of 2022, and, according to BDSA, is projected to reach $2.4 billion of annual sales by 2028. In Ohio, adult use sales exceeded $300 million within the first six months following their launch in August of 2024, and are projected to grow to over $2 billion of annual sales by 2028.

I’d like to now turn the call over to Ben to discuss our investment and leasing activity. Ben?

Ben Regin: Thanks, Paul. In 2024, we deployed over $70 million across five properties, and in 2025, we have one asset under contract for $7.8 million with closing expected this quarter subject to diligence and closing conditions. Also in 2024, we executed leases totaling approximately 530,000 square feet, including a new lease executed in the fourth quarter with Tri Mountain Pure for 160,000 square feet at our Pittsburgh asset, bringing the property to 100% occupancy. Tri Mountain Pure is led by the prior founder of Purepen, one of the early Pennsylvania grower processors that sold to True Leaf in November of 2020. Additionally, in Q4 of 2024 and the first quarter of this year, we executed two leases totaling 11,000 square feet to non-cannabis tenants in Palm Springs.

Our 2024 leasing efforts brought our operating portfolio to over 98% leased as of year-end. Our three properties under development consist of one pre-leased asset in California, a 192,000 square foot property in San Bernardino, and a 12-acre parcel of land in San Marcos, Texas. With total available liquidity exceeding $235 million, we are well-positioned to pursue strategic investments and capitalize on our pipeline. With that, I’ll hand it over to David. David?

David Smith: Thank you, Ben. For the year ended 2024, we generated total revenues of $308.5 million compared to $309.5 million for the same period in 2023. The less than 1% decrease in our cash revenues collected was primarily due to certain properties we recaptured or sold since 2023, adjustments to rent for certain properties for lease amendments, and partial payment of rent by certain tenants where we fully utilized our security deposit. Our comparability year over year was also impacted, as we have previously disclosed, since the first quarter, by two leases that when amended changed our lease classification from operating leases to sales-type leases starting in January 2024. The decrease was partially offset by the $3.9 million disposition contingent lease termination fee that was received in connection with the sale of our property in Los Angeles, California in the second quarter.

Amendments to leases for additional improvement allowances at existing properties that resulted in adjustments to rent, revenue from the two new properties we acquired in 2024, and contractual rent escalations on our other existing properties. As we noted in our press release yesterday, the fourth quarter’s results also include $5.7 million of security deposits applied for contractually due rent on properties leased to five tenants, of which $4.3 million related to PharmaCann. AFFO for the fourth quarter was $63.4 million, or $2.22 per share, a 3% decrease compared to the fourth quarter of 2023 and a 1% decrease versus the third quarter of 2024, with both decreases driven by reduced rent collections for certain tenants. In addition, as it relates to the PharmaCann amendments, we announced in January, it results in an approximately $0.16 negative quarterly impact to rent going forward, which could improve with any re-tenanting activities at the Michigan and Massachusetts properties.

Our balance sheet remained strong during the quarter with $2.6 billion in total gross assets and our only debt consisting of $300 million in fixed-rate unsecured bonds maturing in May 2026. Furthermore, we continue to maintain REIT industry-leading credit metrics with a net debt to EBITDA of less than one times, debt to gross assets ratio of 11%, and a debt service coverage ratio of nearly 17 times. In the fourth quarter, we added two banks to our revolving credit facility, bringing it to four in total, and expanded capacity on that facility by another $37.5 million. Our total capacity on our revolver now stands at $87.5 million, all of which remains undrawn as of today. With this increased liquidity, we finished the fourth quarter with over $235 million of total liquidity comprised of cash, short-term investments, and availability under a revolving credit facility.

Our dialogue continues with additional banks about increasing our overall credit capacity. We continue to be well-positioned with a conservative balance sheet, strong liquidity, and continued progress on expanding our banking relationships to increase the size of our credit facility. With that, I’ll turn it back to Alan. Alan?

Alan Gold: Thanks, David. I’m proud of what our team accomplished in 2024. We continue to be laser-focused on maximizing the value of each property in our portfolio for the benefit of our stockholders. And I see our company as exceptionally well-positioned to continue to execute on the business while navigating through the regulated cannabis industry headwinds. As long-term owners of our company, thank you as always for your continued support. With that, I’d like to open it up for questions. Operator? Can you please open the call up for questions?

Q&A Session

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Operator: We will now begin the question and answer session. Please pick up your handset before pressing the keys. If at any time your Our first question comes from Tom Catherwood with BTIG. Please go ahead.

Tom Catherwood: Thank you, and good morning, everybody. Good morning, Alan. So first off, kudos on the swift resolution with PharmaCann. That was huge, and I know a very big lift. But if we step back and think more broadly about tenant risks, in the three cases where you’ve had to work through issues, and this includes Parallel and Green Peak, the tenant was also facing issues with their lenders. How are you thinking about risk for your tenant base over the course of the next year given that 2026 is an outsized year for debt maturities across the cannabis industry?

Alan Gold: Well, thanks, Tom. I think that first of all, you’re talking about something that’s going to occur in 2026 and we’re I think this is still February 2025. And we believe that the industry has continued to show green shoots and to mature and perform better. And we believe that the broader markets should be in a much better position to be able to deal with the 2026 maturities that many of these tenants have. But with that, we do acknowledge that the earlier the maturity of debt that occurs with our tenants, the more stress that they are seeing. And that is an issue that we are following and watching very closely.

Tom Catherwood: Appreciate that, Alan. And then maybe if I take the flip side to that, could there also exist a scenario where Innovative Industrial Properties, Inc. plays a role in helping some of those tenants or operators work through their debt issues, whether it’s, you know, sale leasebacks, taking down more real estate, you know, effectively injecting fresh capital through your sale leaseback process.

Alan Gold: Well, we’re always looking at opportunities and as you know, Ben will talk about, you know, we continue to review opportunities and we will do that. And we have the privilege of having a very strong balance sheet with around 11% debt to total gross assets and over $200 million of liquidity giving us that the flexibility to play and to work with tenants that do have interesting opportunities for us and we will look at that. But that’s not what we believe. We believe the broader industry needs to continue to perform better, which as Paul described, there are several green shoots occurring. And we believe that the broader debt industry needs to be there for the industry in general.

Tom Catherwood: Got it. Appreciate that, Alan. Last one for me, Paul, maybe going back to your comments on rescheduling. Do you have a sense of what the next checkpoints are in restarting the hearings that got postponed or delayed? And, you know, at what point in time do we get a better sense of how the DEA may be approaching a rescheduling?

Paul Smithers: Yeah. I mean, you know, that’s a good question, Tom. I think the whole industry is waiting to find out. You know, we’re in the court system to get the scheduling process back on track. There is really no timeline as to when the administrative judge may make a ruling on what the DEA did or didn’t do. It’s kind of guesswork on that timeline. It could be stalled indefinitely or could be as soon as maybe three to six months. But I think really all eyes are on the White House at this point, Tom, because with the appointments of Terrence Cole as DEA, with Pam Bondi as AG, with RFK Jr as HHS, we don’t have a lot of guidance at those hearings where they testified as to what their position will be. Can only look historically as what they’ve said.

I think if we get a statement from the White House, from President Trump, it is consistent with his September postings on his Truth Social where he was very clear that he supported rescheduling safer banking and of course legalization in Florida. If we get direction from him, I think the DEA and HHS will fall in line, I think. We’ll get that process back on. So I think the smart money is to see what happens from the White House and when that might happen.

Tom Catherwood: Understood. Appreciate all the answers. Thanks, everyone.

Alan Gold: Thanks, Tom.

Operator: And the next question comes from Aaron Gray with Alliance Global Partners.

Aaron Gray: Good afternoon. Thank you very much for the questions here. So first question from me. You for the incremental color in terms of the security deposit. So looks like $4.3 million of that $5.7 million from PharmaCann. So regarding the other $1.3 million and four tenants, I know you had mentioned, I believe, three of them in the prior call, so it’d be relating to those and one more. Just anything that you’re doing in terms of, you know, working through that for the partial or nonpayments and just, you know, how we should anticipate security deposits either going forward if that is being resolved or there might be incremental issues there. So just the broader tenant portfolio, on the security deposit’s being applied there. Thanks.

Alan Gold: Yeah. No. I think that the way to look at it is that we were taking each situation as a unique and special situation and drilling down to with the tenants and working with them to get them back to where they agreed to be and where we expect them to be. And so that’s I think the best we can deal we can say with regards to the actual tenants, given how the majority of our tenants are private we have confidentiality agreements with them so we had to be very careful with what we say, but we are working very closely with those. And then, Ben, do you have anything further, Dan?

Ben Regin: I think that’s right, Alan. And I think really, we think about tenant health, we’re really talking about the health of the industry overall. And the green shoots that we’re seeing in the cannabis industry that we are that Paul described. But, you know, as Alan mentioned, we have a lot of private tenants of course, watching each of our tenants and working with them very closely.

Aaron Gray: Appreciate that color there. Second one for me. Just could you provide some color on the pipeline for 2025? You have healthy liquidity, so curious to how you’re currently viewing the pipeline translating to committed capital for the year. The current environment that we stand in today and then also how much that could change either via potential state legalization or federal reform.

Ben Regin: Yes. Aaron, this is Ben. So as we have for the last year or two, we are continuing to be very opportunistic and very disciplined as it relates to the pipeline. We’re seeing a wide variety of opportunities I believe we have a very strong balance sheet very strong liquidity position around $235 million to capitalize on which of those opportunities we think are best.

Aaron Gray: Okay, great. Thanks for your color there. I’ll jump back in the queue.

Operator: Thank you. And the next question comes from Bill Kirk with Roth Capital Partners. Please go ahead. Phil, your line might be on Moving on to Eric D’Elourier with Craig Hallum Capital Group. Please go ahead.

Eric Des Lauriers: Great. Thank you for taking my questions. First one, just a bit of follow-up on Aaron’s question there. So you mentioned strategic investments a couple times on the call. Just for a clarification, should we be thinking of these as your typical acquisitions and investments that you’ve been making, or are you perhaps looking at perhaps other non-cannabis or other types of investments.

Ben Regin: I think that we have broadened our investment opportunities but we are primarily focused on the cannabis industry. We think that there are unique opportunities to invest within the financial side of the cannabis industry obviously generating real estate related income. And so we’re looking at a variety of ways to enhance the revenue producing aspect of the company using our balance sheet our very strong balance sheet and our available liquidity.

Eric Des Lauriers: I appreciate that. And could you elaborate on some of the green shoots they even referring to in the industry, and I guess you know, overall level of competition in cannabis markets. You know, they’ve obviously challenging for some time here. Wondering if you’re seeing a plateauing of sorts or sort of continuing to get perhaps increasingly challenging. Just overall kind of elaboration on the green shoots that you’re seeing.

Paul Smithers: Yeah. Hey, Eric. This is Paul. I think we gave some specifics in our prepared remarks. But start with the projection of a 10% growth for 2025, which is not insignificant. Then we look at some of the state by state analysis. For example, Tennessee, just introduced the bills for both medical and rec. That’s Tennessee. We haven’t seen that. We talked about Illinois breaking a record, a $2 billion record. That’s substantial. We look at Governor Shapiro Pennsylvania who again calls for adult use as part of his budget for 2025. We just saw a recent poll in Florida if the REAC vote was held today, it would get 67% support which, of course, is over the 60% threshold. So that would pass if today it was held. We look at other things.

You know, we look at with more border enforcement do we see the possibility of with enforcement we have a decrease in illegal supply crossing the border. Do we see a decrease in in unlock and and aliens working in the black market perhaps on the grows. So that may be in effect. Know, then again, state by state, we look at good records in New York and Ohio. Ohio did $300 million in its first six months. That was very impressive. And we see New York hit the $1 billion mark. So, you know, these are all very state specific, but viewed in the aggregate, it supports what we think is still a pretty robust industry and along with the 10% growth, we’re pretty optimistic. That this industry will continue to grow. It’s going to have some headwinds as we discussed, primarily the black market in some of the larger states.

And you talked about competition. We are seeing the states and the larger states certainly. We’re seeing some of the less growers, dropout. And that’s market dynamics that we’ve always talked about for years that we do believe there will be a consolidation in these larger states. And that’s coming to pass. So we’ve always well, we’ve tried to put our dollars with the MSOs that we see as the larger growers in these states, and the ones that we support. So we think they will continue to do well as the markets grow.

Eric Des Lauriers: I appreciate that color. And then last one for me. Regarding the PharmaCann resolution, which I’ll also echo my congratulations on a swift resolution there. So, you know, part of that did come with a certainly modest reduction in rents. I’m just wondering if you’re getting calls from existing tenants to sort of you know, follow on with that, I would imagine of them are looking to do so and just, you know, if so, how are you handling those discussions? Is that something that we should perhaps, you know, be on the lookout for of of you know, some of this minor or modest, rent reductions to other tenants?

Alan Gold: It’s an interesting question. It’s very difficult one for us to answer because if we were receiving calls, we wouldn’t want to talk about that. And if we but we have said that we are monitoring all of our tenants and we are monitoring all of our tenants. And but the thing that we wanna make very, very clear is that that this company relies on our leases, that we do what we say we’re gonna do, and we expect our tenants to live to their agreements. And that’s our what we should be focused on.

Paul Smithers: I might also add, I think as we described in the past that the resolution we reached with PharmaCann was just not you know, a reduction in rent and taking back properties. PharmaCann has committed to some substantial policy changes and some financial commitments by their investors of course, the note that we take and other commitments such as not taking any more debt. So the fact that you know, it was a fair question, you know, are other tenants gonna try and get a rent reduction? But if they do, gonna be met if they default we will meet them with the same swiftness that we did with PharmaCann immediately filing default notices on all those properties proceeding to eviction. And if there’s a way to work something out, we will get something to compensate us for the loss of rent.

So that’s an important point that needs to be stressed, I think, and to have any potential tenants to realize that we’re not open for business just to cut rents. If there is a rent reduction, will be something on the back end.

Eric Des Lauriers: That’s very helpful. Thank you for the color.

Operator: And the next question comes from Bill Kirk with Roth Capital Partners. Please go ahead.

Bill Kirk: Hey, good afternoon, everyone. Sorry for my tech difficulties earlier. I kinda have, like, a two-part, you know, question. The portfolio today is primarily cultivation properties. How do you see the mix of forward opportunities between cultivation and retail assets? And then related to kind of the second part, is most of the business today is multistate operators. How do you see kind of the opportunities with the multistate operators going forward versus maybe some smaller single state operators?

Alan Gold: So first of all, we’ve been very, very clear that we’re focused on the cultivation assets and highly focused on that. We will look at retail assets. And our opportunities are primarily focused within the same percentage of our portfolio. Prime again, the cultivation assets. And then your second part of your question had to do with I’m sorry, what?

Bill Kirk: Multistate tenants versus single state.

Alan Gold: Yeah. We’ve made a our underwriting criteria has continued to be one of looking at the best whether they’re multistate or single state but highly focused on the multistate operators and we’re going to continue to do that.

Bill Kirk: Thank you.

Operator: And the next question comes from Alexander Goldfarb with Piper Sandler. Please go ahead.

Alexander Goldfarb: Hey, good morning, Alan. And, Paul, appreciate your warning to other tenants trying to pull a PharmaCann. So I like the public, award address. Two questions here. First, you commented on the growth of the industry and certainly in your slide deck, you talk about 9% CAGR. And yet investment since 2020 has declined despite twenty plus states, you know, legalizing some sort of medical or recreational, etcetera. So how much over do you think is out there? Like, when do you think that this growth translates to commensurate renewed interest in investments such that we’d see, like, 9% investment growth in the space. So when do you think this turns?

Alan Gold: You know, I think that the industry still has headwinds as we’ve described. And those headwinds come from the illicit market and the illicit growers. And as that and, you know, as Paul alluded to, is that is reduced whether through, you know, border enforcement or other types of enforcement. I think that’s gonna allow the industry to have to be able to continue the capital growth within the industry. That’s number one. Number the other the other real factor is really the safer banking type provision. Which will allow capital providers to feel more more comfortable in providing capital to the to the industry. And that’s something that’s been talked about and something that everybody has been looking for for a long period of time. So you know, do we see that in the short term not particularly, but we do believe that it is coming and it will be something very important for the industry.

Alexander Goldfarb: Okay. And then the second question is, again, you guys have always been very vocal about MSO exposure and, you know, credit improvement that that provides. Yet, obviously, PharmaCann was an MSO. Had issues. King’s Garden, is another. So my question is, is MSO really a good metric of credit? Or are there other things as the businesses evolve that you guys are starting to look more towards that provide greater comfort to you on the credit side. That the operator is money good. The MSO, the multistate operator Sorry. MSO. MSO not MCO. Sorry. MSO. Sorry.

Alan Gold: That is an aspect is why we have single state operators that we’re very excited about. But it is it does show the ability for a company to raise significant amount of capital and to be able to to operate in in multiple states does provide a diverse a form of diversification that we looked at. And why why we have have focused on that. We really are looking at the operators themselves and their ability to raise capital and their ability to to have the experience and expertise to grow product and sell product in a very challenging environment, and that’s what we’re looking.

Alexander Goldfarb: So have you had any reassessments of credit of tenants that before you would have ranked highly, and now you’re looking at them going, jeez. You know, they’re current and they’re fine, but you know, we may wanna reduce exposure going forward.

Alan Gold: I think we’re as I said, we’re watching all of our tenants. We’re doing deep dives into every single one of our tenants, including the strongest ones and the single state operators.

Alexander Goldfarb: Okay. Thank you very much.

Alan Gold: Thank you. Thanks, Alex.

Operator: This concludes our question and answer session. I would like to turn the conference back over to Alan Gold for any closing remarks.

Alan Gold: Thank you. And once again, thank you all for joining. I want to say thank you to the team for all the hard, smart work we’ve done over the last year in this last quarter. And with that, we conclude.

Operator: The conference is now concluded. Thank you for attending today’s presentation. You may now disconnect.

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