National Post

Riocan hits brakes on new projects

- Jacqueline Thorpe

Riocan Real Estate Investment Trust is freezing new and early-stage projects to cut costs during the coronaviru­s pandemic as rent collection slides.

The move will save one of Canada’s largest retail landlords $ 100 million to $150 million in developmen­t spending in 2020, Riocan said in its first-quarter report Tuesday.

The Toronto- based REIT said in a separate investor presentati­on that it collected 55 per cent of its rent in the first quarter. The company expects 28 per cent to still be received and has agreed to deferrals for 17 per cent of its tenants. It has $30 million in security deposits and $5 million of letters of credit available to help offset rents in the event of unresolved defaults.

“We are confident that virtually all of the tenants we are busy serving default notices upon will indeed pay what they owe under the contract,” chief executive Ed Sonshine said on the investor call. “Let’s remember a lease is a contract.”

He added Riocan believes that most of the 15 per cent of its tenant base that are smaller independen­t retailers will survive, helped by Riocan and the government’s rental assistance program.

Riocan reported that funds from operations dipped slightly in the quarter and net income fell 47 per cent. And it withdrew guidance for same- property net operating income growth for 2020 because of the COVID-19 crisis.

“Although the ultimate impact of the health crisis is difficult to predict, Riocan is well-positioned to withstand challenges and adversity with a solid foundation based on its major markets focused portfolio and defensive property and tenant make- up,” Riocan said in the report.

Sonshine threw cold water on the theory that the pandemic will permanentl­y change everything about how people interact, such as reducing restaurant outings or cementing the work-fromhome experiment.

“I’m a great believer in human nature and our basic drives for social interactio­n,” he said.

Net income fell 47.1 per cent to $ 102.8 million from the comparable period due to higher fair value gains on investment properties in the first quarter of 2019.

Funds from operations were $ 0.46 per unit in the first quarter versus $ 0.47 a year ago. Same property net operating income growth of 3.0 per cent versus 1.7 per cent a year ago, with occupancy of 97.3 per cent versus 97.5 per cent

 ??  ?? Ed Sonshine
Ed Sonshine

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