Categories Earnings Call Transcripts, Other Industries
Prologis Inc (NYSE: PLD) Q1 2020 Earnings Call Transcript
PLD Earnings Call - Final Transcript
Prologis Inc (PLD) Q1 2020 earnings call dated Apr. 21, 2020
Corporate Participants:
Tracy Ward — Senior Vice President, Investor Relations
Eugene F. Reilly — Chief Investment Officer
Thomas S. Olinger — Chief Financial Officer
Michael S. Curless — Chief Customer Officer
Hamid R. Moghadam — Chairman of the Board of Directors and Chief Executive Officer
Chris Caton — Senior Vice President, Global Strategy and Analytics
Analysts:
Robert Jeremy Metz — BMO Capital Markets — Analyst
Emmanuel Korchman — Citigroup Inc — Analyst
James Colin Feldman — Bank of America — Analyst
Vikram Malhotra — Morgan Stanley — Analyst
Blaine Matthew Heck — Wells Fargo Securities — Analyst
Jason Daniel Green — Evercore — Analyst
Craig Allen Mailman — KeyBanc Capital Markets Inc. — Analyst
William Thomas Catherwood — BTIG — Analyst
Jonathan Michael Petersen — Jefferies — Analyst
Sumit Sharma — Scotiabank — Analyst
Ki Bin Kim — SunTrust Robinson Humphrey — Analyst
Eric Joel Frankel — Green Street Advisors — Analyst
Michael Albert Carroll — RBC Capital Markets — Analyst
John William Guinee — Stifel — Analyst
David Bryan Rodgers — Robert W. Baird & Co. — Analyst
Derek Charles Johnston — Deutsche Bank — Analyst
Michael Jason Bilerman — Citigroup — Analyst
Presentation:
Operator
Welcome to the Prologis Q1 Earnings Conference Call. My name is Mariama, and I’ll be your operator for today’s call. [Operator Instructions]
I’d now like to turn the call over to Tracy Ward. Tracy, you may begin.
Tracy Ward — Senior Vice President, Investor Relations
Thanks, Mariama, and good morning, everyone. Welcome to our first quarter 2020 earnings conference call. The supplemental document is available on our website at prologis.com under Investor Relations. I’d like to state that this conference call will contain forward-looking statements under federal securities laws. These statements are based on current expectations, estimates and projections about the market and the industry in which Prologis operates as well as management’s beliefs and assumptions. Forward-looking statements are not guarantees of performance and actual operating results may be affected by a variety of factors. For a list of those factors, please refer to the forward-looking statement notice in our 10-K or SEC filings. Additionally, our first quarter results press release and supplemental do contain financial measures such as FFO and EBITDA that are non-GAAP measures. And in accordance with Reg G, we’ve provided a reconciliation to those measures.
This morning, we’ll hear from Gene Reilly, our Chief Investment Officer, who will comment on real-time market conditions; and Tom Olinger, our CFO, who will cover results and guidance. Hamid Moghadam, Gary Anderson, Chris Caton, Mike Curless, Ed Nekritz, Coleen McEwen and Tim Arndt are also here with us today. With that, I’ll turn the call over to Gene, and, Gene, will you please begin?
Eugene F. Reilly — Chief Investment Officer
Thanks, Tracy. We appreciate everyone joining us today, and we hope you and yours are all well. We’re glad to report that our teams are healthy and working productively on a remote basis. Our first quarter was very strong in all parts of the business, and Tom will cover these details. I’m going to focus on what we are seeing right now and our outlook for the year. While we are just 30 to 90 days into the COVID economy, we are seeing short-term effects play out very differently across our customer industry sectors. At this time, roughly 60% of our customers are growing and 40% are shrinking. Next week, Chris Caton will be issuing his fourth COVID white paper, specifically on this topic of customer demand segmentation. At the extreme ends of the spectrum, categories like food and beverage and consumer staples have sales up significantly, and conversely clothing, sporting goods and home furnishings are all down sharply.
Our customers in contraction are going through a short-term shock, some will recover fairly quickly, others face a longer transition to normalcy, and unfortunately, certain businesses will not survive. At the same time, the pandemic has led to significant growth for the industries I mentioned, serving the stay-at-home economy, and we continue to experience elevated e-commerce demand, a 40% share of new leasing versus 23% pre crisis. With the benefit of customer dialogue and applied research, we factored in tailwinds and headwinds to arrive at our revised 2020 earnings guidance. Our portfolio quality, customer composition and balance sheet strength are mitigating the headwinds, and our disciplined efforts to dispose off $15 billion of nonstrategic assets over the past several years, that is paying dividends today.
Turning to the long term impacts, we believe some of the changes brought on by the pandemic will be durable. COVID is very likely to accelerate a share shift from brick-and-mortar to e-commerce retail. We also believe the growing importance of safety stock will lead to higher global inventory levels over time. These trends will increase demand for logistics real estate in the long term, but will also have a positive effect on 2020 activity, and we’re already seeing this. Chris and his team have updated our forecast for logistics real estate market fundamentals and now expect the following for full year 2020. In the U.S., supply will total 225 million square feet, an 18% year-over-year decline. U.S. net absorption will total 100 million square feet, the lowest level since 2010, and a 55% year-over-year decline, driving the vacancy rate up 90 basis points to 5.4%. Europe will have similar reductions in the supply and demand, resulting in a 130 basis point vacancy rate increase to 5.2%.
Japan’s vacancy rate will increase from a record low of 1.4% to 2.8%. In summary, occupancies in all geographies will decline, but also in the year at very healthy levels historically. Our proprietary leasing data shows that the spike in leasing activities we witnessed in March and talked to you all about a couple of weeks ago, has settled down. We are now seeing volumes generally in line with historical trends. Forward-looking data continues to be encouraging. During the last 30 days, we’ve signed 198 leases amounting to 17.5 million square feet. That’s up 21% year-over-year and roughly flat adjusted for portfolio size. Our lease proposal generations are up 21% year-over-year. Lease negotiation gestation periods for new leases have declined by about 14 days year-over-year. And retention was just over 80%, a couple of hundred basis points higher than comparable historical periods. After slicing the data in several different ways, we see three clear themes at this point. First, potential consumer product sectors are driving the demand. Second, e-commerce is driving demand across industry sectors; and third, our larger customers are faring much better than smaller customers in this environment.
Now an update on rent relief requests. Growth has slowed here. And to date, we have received requests representing 4.3% of gross annual rent. Of these requests, 70% were not granted, 23% remain under review, and 7% have been granted in the form of rent deferral loans, representing 27 basis points of gross annual rent and an average of about 33 days of rent per customer. As mentioned on our last call, this relief is targeted at our smaller customers with legitimate need stemming from COVID and not for opportunistic requests. We believe the total rent deferral loans granted will eventually amount to about 90 basis points of growth annual rent, with these loans scheduled for repayment over the remainder of 2020. Turning to the strategic capital business, our investors remain very positive on the logistics real estate sector. As noted on our last call, the vast majority of redemptions to date were in progress prior to COVID-19, and there appears to be good secondary market interest for some portion of the redemption activity. But to date, we have seen no trades on the secondary market.
Next, I’d like to provide some context for the updated capital deployment guidance Tom will detail in a moment. This guidance assumes virtually no incremental activity in acquisitions, dispositions, speculative development or contributions. Rather than speculate on future market conditions, we are guiding to volumes that have largely been accomplished already. Most of the volume predicted between now and year-end is build-to-suit activity, where the pipeline remains active with multiple leases signed post COVID actually. We continue to work closely with customers and municipalities on 30 ongoing projects in 14 markets. Construction continues on 22 of these projects with eight having been halted by local authorities. And to date, we have yet to stop a project at the request of a customer.
While our current leasing data is holding up very well, and we see extremely encouraging trends with e-commerce leasing, we are planning on a reduced demand environment through the end of 2020. We will have opportunities to serve our customer segments in expansion mode, and we will need to support others not so fortunate. We expect to serve as a reliable alternative for build-to-suit customers, take advantage of investment opportunities as they emerge and manage our strategic capital vehicles prudently and opportunistically in this environment. And with that, I’ll turn it over to Tom.
Thomas S. Olinger — Chief Financial Officer
Thanks, Gene. First and foremost, I want to echo Gene’s introductory comments and wish you and your families the best of health during these challenging times. I’ll briefly discuss Q1 and then take you through our updated guidance. Starting with results, core FFO for the first quarter was $0.83 a share, which was in line with our pre-COVID expectations. We did recognize an expense of $5 million in the quarter or a little less than $0.01 per share related to our donation to the Prologis Foundation for COVID-19 relief efforts. During the quarter, we completed the acquisition and integration for both the IPT and Liberty portfolios. We hit our synergy targets, and both portfolios are performing well and in line with our expectations. We leased 34.7 million square feet in the quarter with ending a occupancy of 95.5%, down 100 basis points sequentially as expected. Rent change on rollover remained strong at 25% and was led by the U.S. at 31%. Our share of cash same-store NOI growth was 4.6%, which was about 30 basis points above our forecast. Same-store average occupancy for the quarter was 85 basis points lower year-over-year, again, consistent with our expectations.
As of yesterday, we’ve collected 85% of April rent, which is in 1% of our normal pace. Rent due dates vary by country and about 5% of our rent isn’t due until the back half of the month. As Gene noted, we’ve granted $18 million in rent deferrals, $9 billion sic $9 million of which relates to April. All granted deferrals are structured to be repaid in 2020. For deployment, we started $300 million in new development projects, which were 85% pre-leased. Stabilizations were $690 million with an estimated margin of 39% and value creation of $270 million. Additionally, we realized more than $280 million in development gains through early April.
Looking to the balance sheet, we entered this crisis in a position of strength, with significant liquidity and borrowing capacity. Liquidity at quarter end was $4.6 billion, and we have cleared out our debt maturities until 2022. The combined leverage capacity of Prologis and our open-ended vehicles at levels in line with current ratings, is well over $10 billion.
Turning to guidance for 2020. Our approach is two fold: first, to exercise prudence; and second, use a broader range of outcomes given the uncertainty. While the full economic impact is difficult to quantify, our guidance assumes reduced demand into the third quarter with the operating environment beginning to recover towards the end of the year. Here are the key components of our guidance on our share basis. Our cash same-store NOI, we are decreasing the midpoint by 225 basis points and now expect growth to range between 1.75% and 3.25%. The decrease in the midpoint assumes average occupancy will be down 100 basis points and range between 94.5% and 95.5%. We expect retention to increase about 500 basis points and be in the mid-70% range.
We’re estimating bad debt expense to range between 100 and 150 basis points of gross revenues. The midpoint of 125 basis points compares to 20 basis points of bad debt expense embedded in our prior guidance. It’s important to note this bad debt midpoint is on an annual basis, which means we’ve reserved a much higher percentage based on the remaining 2020 revenue, particularly if our positive cash collection trends continue.
As we discussed in our call earlier this month, our bad debt expense peaked at 56 basis points during the GFC. At the midpoint, our annual guidance for bad debt is more than double that historical high and almost three times that level at the upper end of the range, again, on an annualized basis. As Gene mentioned, we believe rent deferrals granted will amount to about 90 basis points, While we expect these deferrals to be repaid, we have factored in the potential for credit loss for the deferrals as well as elsewhere in the portfolio. We have included the impact of downtime resulting from potential bad debt in our occupancy forecast. We’re assuming no rent growth for the remainder of the year. Rents for leases signed since March one have been about 200 basis points ahead of our expectations, while rents for leases signed in the first two months of this year were about 100 basis points better.
We expect rent change to be in the mid-20% range. And keep in mind, our in-place-to-market rent spread is currently approximately 15%. Our strategic capital, we expect revenue, excluding promotes, to range between $345 million and $355 million, down $5 million due to lower forecasted deployment by our funds. We are maintaining our net promote income for the full year of $0.15 per share based on quarter end valuations. The vast majority of the 2020 promote revenue will be recognized in the second quarter. For net G&A, we’re forecasting a range between $270 million and $280 million, down $5 million at the midpoint. Our G&A for the year is down about $10 million due primarily to lower T&E, offset by the $5 million contribution to the foundation.
From a foreign currency standpoint, we continue to be extremely well insulated from FX movements through the next three years, and our U.S. dollar net equity is over 95%. As Gene mentioned, we stopped all new speculate development and have halted construction on many spec projects that had recently started. We now expect development starts for the year to range between $500 million and $800 million, with build-to-suits comprising more than 70% of this volume. The cost to complete our active development pipeline is currently $1.6 billion.
For acquisitions, dispositions and contributions guidance, while not our expectation, we are simply forecasting no incremental activity other than a few transactions currently under contract. Our net deployment uses, we’re now projecting $200 million at the midpoint, down $450 million from our prior guidance. The net deployment changes had a minimal impact on earnings given the timing of that activity. Taking these assumptions into account, we are lowering our 2020 core FFO guidance midpoint by $0.11.
We now expect a range between $3.55 and $3.65 per share, which includes $0.15 of net promote income. We believe we’ve approached the forecast quite conservatively with no assumption reasonably made more severe given what we know today. We have limited role, dramatically reduced deployment and a reserve for bad debt and multiples of the GFC.
And even with that, year-over-year growth at the midpoint, excluding promotes, remained strong at over 10%, all while keeping leverage flat. We continue to maintain significant dividend coverage at 1.5 times, and our 2020 guidance implies a payout ratio in the mid-60% range. Longer term, we feel more positive about our business given the emergence of two new structural demand drivers. First, there will be a need for more inventory of supply chain to emphasize resiliency over efficiency; and second, an acceleration of e-commerce adoption. In closing, 2020 will be a tough year for many. However, despite the uncertainty, Prologis is very well prepared. We enter this unprecedented time with the healthiest fundamentals on record, an extremely well positioned portfolio, a significant in-place to market rent spread and a strong balance sheet.
And with that, I’ll turn it back to the operator for your questions.
Questions and Answers:
Operator
[Operator Instructions] Your first question comes from Jeremy Metz with BMO. Your line is open.
Robert Jeremy Metz — BMO Capital Markets — Analyst
Hey, thanks. Gene, you gave some good high-level color here at the start. I was just wondering if you could break it down a little further here in terms of what you’re seeing or if you foresee any outside impact from any particular region or city, big box or small box, infill or secondary markets. Maybe just a little color what you’re seeing across those channels, what your expectations are? And then as a follow-up question, outside the same-store pool, are your occupancy and bad debt assumptions similar for the recent portfolios you closed, Liberty, in particular? Thanks.
Eugene F. Reilly — Chief Investment Officer
Okay. I’ll Jeremy, I may have Tom comment on the last question. But in terms of the sort of the composition of what’s happening on the demand front, I mean, I’ll tell you, it’s really more industry segment and size segment than any particular geography. Obviously, our Houston operation is facing headwinds from both COVID and plummeting oil prices. So that’s our toughest market right now. But otherwise, the industry segments, I mentioned, are strongest. And clearly, in this environment, smaller customers are having a tougher time than larger. And with respect to the one of the market, I’d probably throw in there is Atlanta, which, in Atlanta, we actually have a fairly high percentage of our smaller customers as well. So Tom, I don’t know if you want to take the…
Thomas S. Olinger — Chief Financial Officer
Yes, Jeremy. On the from a bad debt perspective, we looked at the portfolio across the entire stack. We look by industry, the customer composition, and we looked at it consistently across the entire portfolio. So we don’t see anything unique about any of our recently acquired portfolios.
Operator
Your next question comes from Manny Korchman with Citi. Your line is open.
Emmanuel Korchman — Citigroup Inc — Analyst
Hi, everyone. Good morning. It might be too early to be asking about 2021, but just given the sort of slowdown in pace or trajectory in 2020, how do we think about your 2021 growth and how that’s going to sort of either slow or maybe rebound quicker as we sit today?
Eugene F. Reilly — Chief Investment Officer
I think our business is going to be somewhat slower before the vaccine and much higher after the vaccine. So you tell me when the vaccine is going to come through, which is the real permanent solution, and I’ll tell you how that mix is going to work for the year.
Operator
Your next question comes from Jamie Feldman with Bank of America. Your line is open.
James Colin Feldman — Bank of America — Analyst
Thank you. I was hoping you could focus a little bit more on the smaller tenant discussion. I mean, what have you seen in terms of government stimulus being able to actually help out those tenants? Just maybe some more color in terms of how bad is it really for small versus large? And what are the factors you guys are watching to see if they can get help or they’re not going to get help or just as much color as you can provide would be great?
Eugene F. Reilly — Chief Investment Officer
So Jamie, let me first make a distinction. Smaller tenants don’t necessarily mean smaller companies that occupy those spaces. So you’ve got to distinguish between the mom-and-pops and smaller locations for creditworthy company. So not all small tenants are under pressure. Secondly, the if you’re a contractor or a supplier to residential construction or some kind of an auto-related use, for sure, your business is down, and you’re going to be struggling in this environment. Too soon to tell how the government support is going to help. But at least on the levels of support that we’ve talked about so far, I don’t think it fully replaces the revenue and the margins that they’ve lost during this period. But I can tell you, a lot of the demand for their products is deferred demand. And if they can make it through this crisis, I think they’ll be the beneficiary of the spring back on the other side of this. So tough to tell.
The stimulus has been in place for a little less than two weeks. But also, the other thing I would say is that there is a ton of monetary stimulate on top of the fiscal stimulus that’s come in. So and the attitude that I see with the banking system this time around, because the banks are and you guys, by the way, would know better than I would because you work for a lot of banks, but the banks are often times well, they’re certainly better capitalized. And people seem to be much more cooperative in terms of working with their customers by accommodating them because everybody realizes that this is not anybody’s problem. It’s something that happened differently. This is a definite change in attitude with the government, fiscal, monetary, and with the banking system that’s distributing the fund. So I think they’re going to work with their customers, including the smaller ones, but some of them, unfortunately, won’t make it.
Operator
Your next question comes from Vikram Malhotra with Morgan Stanley. Your line is open.
Vikram Malhotra — Morgan Stanley — Analyst
Thanks for the question. Two quick ones really. Just one on the bad debt that you’ve baked in. Can you just clarify, have you seen any bad debt in the first quarter? And can you talk about the second quarter? And then just second question on market rent growth. You referenced baking in no rent growth. I just want to clarify, was are you referring to market rent growth in 2020? And just give us a little bit more color maybe by major regions?
Eugene F. Reilly — Chief Investment Officer
Let me pick up on the rent growth question, and then I’ll pitch it over to Tom for the first part of your question on credit loss. Let me give you the facts on rent growth. Rent growth in January and February were 100 basis points higher than what we had projected for those specific spaces. Rent growth for March, surprisingly, was 200 basis points higher than what we had projected for those spaces. So, so far, we haven’t seen evidence of rental decline or deceleration in growth. However, we’ve assumed that in the forecast that Tom shared with you because absent perfect information, you got to be conservative with respect to rental growth forecast. So those are two specific data points. The third data point I’ll give you is that we have projected certain grants for the two acquired portfolios, IPT and LPT. And in both cases, the spaces that we’ve rolled over have been on the range of 4% to 5% higher rents than we had forecast for those portfolios late last year when we underwrote them. Tom, you want to talk about the credit loss?
Thomas S. Olinger — Chief Financial Officer
Yes. So on bad debt experience in the first quarter, we saw write-offs of 25 basis points. And in April, we’ve seen nothing unusual. As I talked about, our April collections are trending normally, as did March. And as I mentioned, we’re conservative here by almost any measure you can look at on the bad debt. And we’re reserved appropriately to cover a really severe downside on the AR side.
Operator
Your next question comes from Blaine Heck with Wells Fargo. Your line is open.
Blaine Matthew Heck — Wells Fargo Securities — Analyst
Great, thanks. So you guys mentioned that you guys are moving forward with the 30 build-to-suits under construction. Are there other build-to-suits that might have been in the plan to start construction later this year? And if so, can you talk about the probability of those continuing as planned as well? And whether there are any kind of renegotiations happening on those with respect to the rent side of the equation?
Michael S. Curless — Chief Customer Officer
Blaine, it’s Mike Curless. Yes, the 30 build-to-suits are well underway. We haven’t heard anything from any customers to say differently. So that is a very good sign. And in terms of the prospect list, I would say it’s a bit shorter in number, but the people on that list are as active as ever. E-commerce is a big driver of those. You’ve read a lot about Amazon’s activity across the board. We’ve seen signed leases this year in order of magnitude. We’ve signed 10 leases this year compared to seven this time last year. And three of those, as Gene mentioned, came in the last several weeks. So there’s a bunch of good signs with respect to the underpinning of e-commerce relative to build-to-suit. There is I’m not seeing any renegotiations underway. And we have really good opportunities for tailwind here given the lack of spec that you’re going to see in the marketplace. So I’d say the prospect list is naturally a bit shorter, but pretty robust, and we’re optimistic about the build-to-suit activity this year.
Operator
Your next question comes from Jason Green with Evercore. Your line is open.
Jason Daniel Green — Evercore — Analyst
Good morning. Just a question on bad debt guidance. On the business update call, you mentioned that bad debt could trend as high as 100 basis points and now guidance incorporates 125 basis points at the midpoint. I know those are similar figures, but just curious if you saw anything in the last few weeks that made that estimate trend higher.
Michael S. Curless — Chief Customer Officer
No. Just let me clarify. We did not actually guide on bad debt in any way, and we were very careful to drive the distinction between operating performance and any kind of financial guidance. The number that we talked about that 100 basis points on that call, is the equivalent of the 90 basis points that Gene talked about. That is the forecast amount of total rent that is going to be subject to deferral. That is related, but just but not the same concept as a write-off because we fully expect, obviously, the ones that we have deferred to make good on that deferral. Now a portion of them will probably default and a portion of the ones that didn’t ask for a deferment could default. So the 90 basis points of deferral is very different than the 125 basis points on average of credit loss. The other thing I want to make sure you understand is that the 125 basis points is applied across the year. And certainly, as you heard from Tom, the first quarter was 20 basis points, and we know what that was. So we’re carrying another 100 basis points of room from the first quarter into future quarters, and we’ve got 125 basis points to start with across the whole year. So the amount that we have reserved for anything that could default is significantly higher than what appears on the surface. Let me be even more specific. Not all tenants are going to default. That are going to default, are going to evolve on April 1. If they default, they’re likely to default during the course of the year. So on average, they’re going to default in July. If you just ratably divide it, which means, on that basis alone, we’re almost three times the actual number covered for default risk and default outcomes. And another way you can get at it is that in the global financial crisis, the total written off debt averaged 56 basis points annually. And the midpoint this time around is 125 basis points for the remaining more than 125 basis points for the remaining three quarters, significantly higher. So we’ve got a scenario multiples of times of the global financial crisis factored in.
Operator
Our next question comes from Craig Mailman with KeyBanc Capital Market. Your line is open.
Craig Allen Mailman — KeyBanc Capital Markets Inc. — Analyst
Hey, everyone, just two quick ones here. Just curious, any of the rent deferral requests from tenants that paid April, but are worried about being able to pay May? And then just separately, maybe for Chris, you kind of put out 100 or you put out your net absorption figures and construction figures this year. Just as we think about 2021, I know you’re giving guidance, but do you think the slowdown in deliveries in 2021 and maybe the rebound in absorption could result in a better-than-expected snapback in 2021?
Eugene F. Reilly — Chief Investment Officer
I do. I don’t know what Chris thinks. But again, snapback is not going to happen until everybody’s got the all clear signal on the health front. And by the way, everybody talks about the government, when are they going to put the people back to work and open up the country for business and all these demonstrations that we see, that’s got nothing to do with it. Even if they open up the place for business, a lot of people will have to go back to work and will, but a lot of people who don’t have to go-to-work, won’t. So I don’t think the government action is going to be the trigger for that. I think the all clear is going to have to come from the health front.
Chris Caton — Senior Vice President, Global Strategy and Analytics
Exactly right. And I think let me just finish up the answer here, which is Gene has already given you a view on the demand, but it also important to remember a view on supply. Right now, in the marketplace, we are seeing projects delayed or not started, and that can have a material impact on the outlook for deliveries in 2021.
Operator
Your next question comes from Tom Catherwood with BTIG. Your line is open.
William Thomas Catherwood — BTIG — Analyst
Excellent. Thank you and good morning, everybody. Tom, you mentioned that customers are focusing on resiliency over efficiency now. How do you see this playing out? And kind of how are you positioning your portfolio and investments or build-to-suit activity to assist either with the shift or in order to take part in this shift?
Thomas S. Olinger — Chief Financial Officer
Tom, so I think our portfolio is already positioned to capture that activity, number one, just given the proximity of portfolio to the consumption base. And as we see the acceleration further acceleration long-term of e-commerce trends, I think we are right there to capture that. And then on the resiliency versus efficiency comment, it’s clear customers will carry more inventory to protect themselves against future shocks. We’ll see that, and they’re going to want that inventory close to their consumption base, right, to meet consumer demands for delivery times. So I think our portfolio today is positioned, and we’re going to continue to build out our land bank and further solidify our portfolio.
Operator
Your next question comes from Jon Peterson with Jefferies. Your line is open.
Jonathan Michael Petersen — Jefferies — Analyst
Great, thanks. I think about six weeks ago or so, you guys announced a share buyback program. Just curious, given public perception around share backs and landlords for that matter, do you think it makes sense to buy back even if the stock price does fall substantially? And then if I could sneak in a second unrelated question. I’m just curious what social distancing might mean for some of the different industries in your space. Obviously, some users have very few people in the facilities at any one time, while maybe….
Eugene F. Reilly — Chief Investment Officer
I’m sorry, I think you cut off, but I get the gist of your question. On social distancing, I think there are certain categories of our customers that their businesses will continue to suffer like the people servicing the convention trade and hospitality, I think or airlines. I think those businesses will continue to suffer. If you mean what does it mean in terms of the actual occupants of our buildings, the people who work in our buildings? The most people-intensive operations that we have are the e-commerce players. And you have read the same things I have about Amazon and other e-commerce players and some of the controversy that’s been out there. But I think those companies have been very responsible, actually, in terms of, not only providing a lot of employment during this difficult time, but also having a lot of controls in terms of checking people’s temperature. And now I understand they’re going to go to some pretty regular testing, serology testing. So I think they’re doing the best they can to actually get people back to business. So you and I can actually get our groceries and other things. And I actually commend them for that. With respect to the share buyback program, we did buy back $35 million of stock when the stock got into the 60s. And we felt that, that was a very, very significant discount to NAV, and it was a compelling opportunity. And to be honest with you, after doing that, I changed my mind, and I thought the perception of that is not going to be great. So we took all the profits that we made there, and our intention is to put all those profits back into the Prologis Foundation. And it was a pretty substantial amount of profit. So I think, actually, we’re going to do some good with it going forward. But we hadn’t I hadn’t fully thought through the perception of it and but we made some money, and we’re going to spend it for a good cause.
Operator
Your next question comes from Nick Yulico with Scotiabank. Your line is open.
Sumit Sharma — Scotiabank — Analyst
This is Sumit for Nick. Just a quick question on short-term leasing and lease terminations, actually. So lease terminations, while still small, have almost doubled as a percent of revenue this quarter versus Q1 last year and versus the last quarter, that is Q4 2019. So just trying to understand, besides the bad debt and all that, just trying to understand what you are kind of what are you seeing in terms of tenant or markets that are seeing elevated levels of terminations? Any color would be useful.
Thomas S. Olinger — Chief Financial Officer
Yes, this is Tom, Sumit. On the lease termination, there’s nothing unique. They’re episodic. And what we saw in Q1 was not particularly unusual. It was just related to a tenant’s needs, and we help them out in another space as well. There were a couple like that. So it’s episodic. There’s no trending that we see with termination fees being foreshadowing any other type of activity. I just don’t see it.
Eugene F. Reilly — Chief Investment Officer
So the only thing I would add to Tom’s answer is that it’s a one billion square foot portfolio. And in our business, unlike the office business, there’s not a lot of lease termination fee anyway. So it’s one of those things where a very small number could have increased by a large percentage, and it’s still a very small number. And those things move around by very specific decisions. Keep in mind, we have 15% spread to market. And that spread, if anything, is still there and maybe has expanded a little bit. So sometimes the lease terminations are an opportunity for us to make some money on buying out a tenant and actually make some more money by releasing the space. So lease terminations are not necessarily bad in our business and they’re miniscule in the scale of the portfolio. And I apologize if we don’t remember every single one of them. We have over 8,000 leases.
Operator
Your next question comes from Ki Bin Kim with SunTrust. Your line is open.
Ki Bin Kim — SunTrust Robinson Humphrey — Analyst
Thanks. Good morning. So first question, can you just talk about your risk to or your exposure to at risk tenant’s fee or industries? And the second, just taking a step back, if I put your comments about rent spreads and market rents being flat, putting it all together, it kind of seems a little bit optimistic given what’s going on on the macro front. So what am I missing from your views, is it really the kind of tenant by tenant leasing that you’re doing that gives you confidence in that or something else?
Eugene F. Reilly — Chief Investment Officer
Well, first of all, I don’t think I gave you a forecast for market ramp. I was very careful to tell you Let me tell you actually what has happened. And I distinguished between the activity in January and February, which was up 1% compared to our expectations versus March, that was up 2%. But our forecast don’t incorporate rent going up, we basically pushed that out for the balance of this year. And as someone else pointed out, we haven’t issued guidance for next year. But we do think there’s going to be a snapback next year that’s going to result in rent growth. If you were going to ask me right now, it’s not a fully baked idea. So our official view on rent growth is that it’s flat for the year, and we’ve already had some rent growth. So you can think of it as a slight decline or something. But we’re not smart enough to be able to forecast those things with precision. The good news is that market rent growth has very little to do with our numbers in the near future. We have only 8% of the space that rolls over, and we have a 15% mark-to-market and a greater amount on the ones that rolled over this year. So really what drives rent and operating results is the mark-to-market and the small percentage of rollover. So I don’t think it’s going to be a big deal.
Operator
And your next question comes from Eric Frankel with Green Street Advisor. Your line is open.
Eric Joel Frankel — Green Street Advisors — Analyst
Thank you. Just two quick questions. Do you have an economic forecast that underlies your operating guidance this year? And then just regarding kind of the safety stock, safety stock and inventory resilience team, have you talked with any customers in specific industries that have brought this up? Or just is this kind of your assumption just based on your experience or your internal data?
Eugene F. Reilly — Chief Investment Officer
Eric, honestly, I’m really surprised with your question. Have we talked to any customers? That just really blows me away. We are very customer centric. We do we have a Chief Customer Officer, who, in addition, as part of the executive team, who spends all his time and a dedicated team talking to our major customers, and we have over 500 customers-facing people in the field that are in constant dialogue with our customers. So yes, we do speak to our customers quite a bit. As to economic forecast, I don’t spend a lot of time looking at economic forecast because I’ve seen much smarter people than Prologis have forecasts that are down 5% a year and some that have down 40% this year. So I don’t know what it is. I just look at customer behavior when we forecast our business. And yes, in the long term, our business is completely correlated with consumption, which is highly correlated with economic growth or a decline. But in the short term, the dynamics of e-commerce, the stay-at-home economy, and the need to carry more inventory overwhelm those kinds of longer-term considerations.
Operator
Your next question comes from Michael Carroll with RBC Capital Markets. Your line is open.
Michael Albert Carroll — RBC Capital Markets — Analyst
Yeah, thanks. I was hoping you could provide some more color on the rent deference. The 33 days of average rent that is being deferred on those specific tenants, is that enough for them to survive this type of market turmoil? I mean I’m assuming you’ve done that type of analysis. And I guess the second part, what percentage of these smaller tenants qualify for the stimulus package? And does that give you more confidence that you’re going to be able to collect these deferments by the end of the year?
Michael S. Curless — Chief Customer Officer
It’s Mike, I will address that. Second question, yes, there’s a high percentage of our customers that we’ve been interacting with and that we think will qualify for the stimulus. And we’re seeing evidence of that already in the U.S. We’ve had several examples where customers initially contacted us only to call us two weeks later and say, “Hey, look, the stimulus kicked in.” So May, it will be a little bit of a wait and see, but we expect a high percentage of those customers receiving that activity. And then with respect to the 33 days, again, as Hamid mentioned, we know our customers very well. We’ve had a very thorough process. We’ve looked at their financials. We’ve they fill out the questionnaires. And that’s been our best estimate of what’s going to be necessary to bridge them to the next opportunity for them. So that’s where we are.
Eugene F. Reilly — Chief Investment Officer
Yes. And tying this to the last question. As you heard in our update call, and I think you heard somewhere today, about 20% to 25% of our customer base at some point has had a discussion with respect to some kind of rent deferral. And of course, on those, we’ve granted a very small portion of it. We expect to, ultimately, maybe grant 30% and today it’s more like 5%. But so that alone means we’ve had direct discussion with 25% of the customer base. Well, on a one billion square foot portfolio, that’s 250 million square feet. So we’ve had conversations, multiple sizes of many, many big companies in the sector with our customers just about that topic during this period of time. So yes, we’re really talking to customers all the time.
Operator
Your next question comes from John Guinee with Stifel. Your line is open.
John William Guinee — Stifel — Analyst
Great, thank you. I might have missed this and if I did, just tell me, but I was I don’t think you mentioned anything about near-shoring or onshoring as a effect on your business? And then second, Tom, it looks to me like back of the envelope, your midpoint of your guidance is a pretty strong ramp, $0.85, $0.87, $0.89. Can you talk a little bit about how GAAP accounting plays into your rent deferrals?
Eugene F. Reilly — Chief Investment Officer
Yes. On the onshoring, so most of the stuff is going to get on-shored from China to and possibly from Mexico to the U.S., at least with respect to the U.S. And with respect to Europe, I don’t think that much is going to change. It’s probably going to be China shifting to European production. So and as you know, our Chinese strategy first of all, it’s a very, very small part of our portfolio. It’s about 1.5% of our income is in China. And secondly, it’s totally focused towards domestic consumption. We learned very quickly that the export business doesn’t generate a lot of industrial demand because containers are at the warehouse. So to the extent that there’s more onshoring in the consumption markets, the U.S. and Europe, I’m not counting on it, but by definition, that’s incremental demand on top of the consumption demand. So it should help on the margin. And the reason we haven’t really factored in it is that those are likely to go to really lower cost locations where real estate is cheap and labor is cheap. And we are really well positioned for the infill, large urban market. So likely, you’re not going to put a plant to onshore in Downtown, San Francisco, or any place like that, or L.A., you got to go to a cheaper environment. So I think it will be an important positive for U.S. and European demand. But I’m not sure we, because of our geographies, are going to be the biggest beneficiaries of that. I think people who are in more remote locations will probably benefit from that. Tom, do you want to take the other part of the question?
Thomas S. Olinger — Chief Financial Officer
Yes, John, yes, your other question on the rent deferrals and the accounting analysis of that. So the way we’re structuring our rent deferrals is extending the payment term. And as we mentioned, the payment term, we are the due dates are within 2020. We certainly expect them to be paid. But we will the whole analysis on it’s the collectibility. When you book that revenue, do you deem that, that revenue to be collectible, and that’s the assessment. So this is relating to April revenue that’s being deferred, and you make the assessment in April as to the collectibility of the revenue and you either book that revenue or you book a reserve or a portion of reserve against that based on your assessment of collectibility. And then regarding the ramping of or what is our earnings look like from a quarterly perspective? Clearly, Q2 will be heavily influenced by the promote, because that’s when the bulk of that will land. And then it’s really a function of what we see, quite frankly, from a bad debt experience. As we said, we’ve got a lot of bad debt reserve that’s sitting there for the rest of the year. And I think our results are going to move relative to what happens there.
Eugene F. Reilly — Chief Investment Officer
The only thing that I would add, John, to that is that our prior to these adjustments, downward adjustments, our year-over-year growth was on the order of, I think, 13%, 14% FFO growth 14% FFO growth, actually. And that’s a big number, right? So it’s come down 4%. So maybe another way of asking your question is, how come your guidance previously was so high and still is high? And the reason for that is primarily that the volume of development starts in prior years that were just having a capitalized interest in them, are now coming on, and there are a lot of build-to-suits in those, and those are now fully income producing. So we had been in the denominator as the capital expenditures where we weren’t earning a whole lot on them. And as they stabilize and they’re leased, that those extra earnings are coming online. So it had nothing to do with this changed environment. It was just high to start with because of that and remains pretty healthy. I mean, I think 10% growth year-over-year, even in the strongest environment without increasing leverage.
Operator
Your next question comes from Dave Rogers with Baird. Your line is open.
David Bryan Rodgers — Robert W. Baird & Co. — Analyst
Yes, maybe for Tom and Hamid, just about asset values. I know, Tom, you talked about the promote being consistent in the guidance. And the reason why is the pricing at the end of the first quarter? I guess I just wanted to drill on that, if I could, and the idea that you guys have taken market rents to more of a neutral stance this year. You’ve taken market vacancy outlook higher. I guess, maybe why wouldn’t that impact the valuation of assets as you sit here in a very point in time? And is there any risk to that promote? And then maybe just a follow-up to that. Gene, you had said something earlier that the number of leases that you were doing, I think, was flat on a portfolio size adjusted basis. Did you give the square footage for those? And are they smaller deals in the pipeline or larger ones? Any color there would be helpful as well. Yes. On the appraisals, we what we’ve seen in the first quarter appraisals is that generally, the numbers are up very slightly, but the appraiser like 1% or 2% quarterly. And appraisers have basically stickered the appraisals as they normally do in markets with turmoil that talk about that there are no comps, etc, etc. But the real answer on that is that because promotes are such a sensitive calculation to the terminal value, these are generally three year promotes. And if you move around the terminal value a little bit, the promotes can move around. We’re generally very conservative in projecting and guiding promotes. And we feel like we’ve got sufficient room to absorb any kind of a downside there. The other thing I would say is that more than half of the projected promote is a holdback of the promote from three years ago, which and the amount of which was determined and calculated and is known and that number will not change. So a big portion of that number, we know exactly what it is, more than 50%. So to the extent there is variabilities on that last, I would say, 40% of it, 60% of it is baked.
Hamid R. Moghadam — Chairman of the Board of Directors and Chief Executive Officer
Yes. On the appraisals, we what we’ve seen in the first quarter appraisals is that generally, the numbers are up very slightly, but the appraiser like 1% or 2% quarterly. And appraisers have basically stickered the appraisals as they normally do in markets with turmoil that talk about that there are no comps, etc, etc. But the real answer on that is that because promotes are such a sensitive calculation to the terminal value, these are generally three year promotes. And if you move around the terminal value a little bit, the promotes can move around. We’re generally very conservative in projecting and guiding promotes. And we feel like we’ve got sufficient room to absorb any kind of a downside there. The other thing I would say is that more than half of the projected promote is a holdback of the promote from three years ago, which and the amount of which was determined and calculated and is known and that number will not change. So a big portion of that number, we know exactly what it is, more than 50%. So to the extent there is variabilities on that last, I would say, 40% of it, 60% of it is baked.
Operator
Your next…
Eugene F. Reilly — Chief Investment Officer
Yeah, and the second, let me just answer the second part of the question, which is the experience in the last 30 days of leasing. We have seen more leasing in the bigger size segments, and we’ll happy to quantify that for you later on, but definitely bigger customers.
Operator
Your next question comes from Derek Johnston with Deutsche Bank. Your line is open.
Derek Charles Johnston — Deutsche Bank — Analyst
Hi, hi. Everyone, you’ve covered a lot. So let’s do this. So PLD is growing rapidly and I will say accretively over the past few years, and in 2019, had additional large acquisitions. Meanwhile, investor’s sentiment has so far remained positive on industrial REITS. However, amid this serious pause and probable tenant shakeout, what is it about the larger portfolio and positioning, which makes you most optimistic in these uncertain times?
Eugene F. Reilly — Chief Investment Officer
Well, we’ve had a half of experience on the two latest acquisitions. And Tom, last time we talked about this a couple of days ago. We were up about 5% on our underwriting of those portfolios based on activity that’s already taking place. So we feel really good about it. Oh, sure. Houston, energy is worse than we thought and Liberty had a pretty significant presence in Houston. And we did, too. But again, it’s a one billion square foot portfolio. And on the other hand, Pennsylvania has done a lot better than we thought previously because a lot of the New York adjacent demand and the big boxes have, for some strange reason, taken up a lot of space in Pennsylvania. So that’s looking better, and that’s actually a bigger portfolio. So net-net, all the reasons for which we did those investments that we articulated before stand, and on top of that, they’ve just performed better than we expected. So that’s a really good start. I don’t know whether that will continue for the next 10 years, but it’s better to be 5% ahead of the game than behind the game when you’re getting off the blocks. Does that answer your question? Let’s give him an opportunity to ask it again because it was complicated question. So if we didn’t answer it, ask it again.
Operator
Your next question comes from Manny Korchman with Citi. Your line is open.
Michael Jason Bilerman — Citigroup — Analyst
Hey, it’s Michael Bilerman here with Manny. I was wondering if you can address a little bit on the capital deployment of what you’ve changed? And looking at the press release, you’ve brought down your acquisition volumes, both building as well as land by $1.25 billion. And commensurately, you brought down your disposition volumes as well. And you’ve, obviously, made a big cut to the development side in terms of starts, which obviously have capital commitments out in the future. And I want to know two things. One, why not take advantage of the marketplace and continue to sell and build liquidity and continue to reshape the portfolio, which you’ve done over the number of years to improve its quality and location, so why not sell more? And then the second part is on the development side where you’ve taken a much more conservative approach and ramp down your development. What are you seeing from the industry at large in terms of development? So two separate sort of topics, somewhat connected. If you can address that, that would be great.
Eugene F. Reilly — Chief Investment Officer
Great, Michael. We are chickens and chickens live longer. I mean, when the world is going or falling off the cliff, and everybody is talking about the GDP going down 40% this quarter or whatever, look, we had some spec developments. We can start them any time. They’re entitled. They’re ready to go. And if we see the demand, we’ll start them two months later. We don’t think that, that’s our forecast. We’re saying, every quarter, we’ve got to get in front of you guys and give you some assessment of what we think is going to happen. And this is a very turbulent time. I think the fact that we’ve even put out a guidance, and by the way, we don’t have an advantage of looking at all the other people and figuring out what they’re doing to sort of tailor our message accordingly. We’re going first, and we’ve got to stick our neck out. And we have, and we’ve given a range, but we have taken a conservative approach saying that we’re not going to deploy any new capital on discretionary starts of speculative projects, and we’re not going to buy anything at yesterday’s prices. If prices become different, for sure, we’re going to use our resources. We have over $10 billion, $11 billion of capacity between the funds and the balance sheet. And we will certainly start those developments once there is leasing that we feel really comfortable about going forward. But we can’t predict that. There’s no cost to waiting. There’s only upside in waiting. So we’ve covered the downside. We’re still well positioned for the upside. And it’s not intended to be a forecast, it’s just the prudent thing to do. And I hope we are wrong about that, and we’ll do closer to what we have planned on doing before. But we’re not going to get over our skis.
Operator
Our next question comes from Jamie Feldman with Bank of America. Your line is open.
James Colin Feldman — Bank of America — Analyst
Great. I guess and along the same lines, a quick follow-up and then a question. One is if you could just talk about when you do see occupancy bottoming in the portfolio? I know you guys said kind of towards year-end things improve, but I’m curious more detailed how you see things, what the trajectory is for occupancy? And then bigger picture, as you think about potential cracks, obviously, there’s a lot of cracks, but are you seeing distress among competitors or just versus prior downturns that you’ve seen? Where do you think where is the most risk that maybe people aren’t thinking about?
Thomas S. Olinger — Chief Financial Officer
Yes. I think we will get a significant increase in occupancy the quarter or the quarter after the vaccine is widely available. Maybe even when it’s announced and it’s definite that it’s coming based on the anticipation of it coming. So you tell me again the date, and I’ll tell you when that will be. From everything I hear, it’s going to be more like next summer-ish, although there’s some really positive developments that I’ve been hearing about from the scientific community. I mean, we’ve got a couple of really big medical centers here, and I’m in constant dialogue with them. And on the therapeutic side, there’s some really good stuff happening that we may even hear about in the August, September time frame. So I think that’s when the occupancies will turn around. In terms of the cracks, I would say as I guess Warren Buffett says, we’ll find out who’s been swimming naked as the tide recedes. There are some people that have been mostly on the private side, by the way. I’m pretty proud of my public brethren, by and large, they’ve really behaved well throughout the cycle and I think everybody is kind of pretty disciplined in the sector. But there are a couple of private players, particularly in parts of Europe, Central and Eastern Europe being a good example, that have really gotten out there on their skis, and we’ll see what happens. Maybe they’re really good skiers. But I would say of all the cycles I have seen, whether it’s the ’87 collapse or the SNL crisis or the dot-com or the GFC, I would say there’s less of that around, much less of that around than any one of those cycles. I think we are over our time allotment. So and we’ve taken way too much of your time this quarter with two calls. So let me thank you for your interest in the company and invite you to our next quarterly huddle and hopefully, we’ll all be much more optimistic than we are in this environment. And everyone stay healthy. Take care.
Operator
[Operator Closing Remarks]
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