National Post

Retail landlords in talks on rent relief due to Canada shutdown

- Jacqueline Thorpe

Landlords to major retailers including the Loblaws grocery chain and Canadian Tire stores have begun discussion­s on rent amid the COVID-19 shutdowns.

Choice Properties Real Estate Investment Trust, whose principal tenant is the Loblaw Cos. Ltd., said Monday it is prepared to assist qualifying small businesses and independen­t tenants on a “case- by- case basis” with a temporary rent deferral for 60 days. Canadian Tire Corp. landlord CT Real Estate Investment Trust also said discussion­s had begun with tenants for whom paying rent would mean “a significan­t challenge to their ongoing viability.”

“Many of these small businesses are facing extraordin­ary drops in revenues and are rightfully focused on taking care of their families and their communitie­s,” Galen G. Weston, chairman of Toronto- based Choice Properties, said in a statement. “We intend to continue working with our tenants on an individual basis to find solutions in the short term.” Weston is also the executive chairman of Loblaw.

Non- essential shopping has been closed through much of the country in an effort to stem the spread of the coronaviru­s and REITS have taken a heavy hit. CT REIT has lost 26 per cent since the beginning of the year, though Choice Properties’ focus on grocery stores makes it the best-performing in the S& P/ TSX Capped REIT Index with a 7 per cent loss.

Choice, which owns 724 properties totalling 65.6 million square feet, primarily of stores, industrial, office and residentia­l assets, said it was withdrawin­g its 2020 outlook. The REIT plans to release 2020 first quarter results on or about April 22.

The company said it’s well- positioned to weather the market volatility, having strengthen­ed its balance sheet since the beginning of 2019, including refinancin­g its unsecured debt.

CT REIT, which owns 350 properties covering 28 million square feet, said tenants representi­ng about 6.2 per cent its annual base minimum rent are currently not open or operating and about 2.8 per cent did not pay rent April 1. Another 33.5 per cent, including 132 Canadian Tire stores in Ontario, are now operating on a limited basis, the REIT said in a statement.

“We came into this crisis with a strong balance sheet, a portfolio that was 99.1 per cent occupied and a conservati­ve 75 per cent payout ratio,” CT REIT chief executive Ken Silver said in the statement. “We are committed to working with those of our tenants who need our support during these challengin­g times.”

The company said it is in a strong liquidity position with a debt- to- gross book value of approximat­ely 43 per cent and approximat­ely $ 300 million of undrawn credit facilities and cash on hand as of Dec. 31. CT REIT’S assets, with an IFRS value of approximat­ely $6 billion, are 98 per cent unencumber­ed.

 ?? Cole Burston / Bloomb
erg files ?? Choice Properties REIT, whose principal tenant is Loblaws, said Monday it is prepared to assist qualifying
small businesses and independen­t tenants.
Cole Burston / Bloomb erg files Choice Properties REIT, whose principal tenant is Loblaws, said Monday it is prepared to assist qualifying small businesses and independen­t tenants.

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