Single Tenant Operational Real Estate, or STORE Properties, is a unique asset
class that inspired the formation of S|T|O|R|E Capital and our company name. STORE Properties
are profit-center real estate locations on which our tenants conduct their businesses and
generate their revenues and profits. What is the defining characteristic of STORE Properties?
Simple: It's the number of payment sources.
STORE Properties have three payment sources, whereas all other commercial real
estate assets have just two.
STORE Properties are distinguished by the primary source
of rent payment, which comes directly from the profits produced by the business operations at
the real estate locations we own, which we refer to as 'unit-level profitability.' While it is a
common perception that the tenant is the primary source of the rent payment (as distinguished
from the business at the unit itself), the historic pattern we have observed of tenants in
corporate insolvencies vacating unprofitable locations and retaining profitable ones is the main
indicator of the payment source. Because tenants historically retain profitable locations and
vacate unprofitable ones in the event of insolvency, it is fundamentally important for S|T|O|R|E
to collect and review the unit-level financial statements of our tenants at our real estate
locations, which is a key component of our business model. Without having access to unit-level
financial reporting for the business activities conducted on the properties we own, we would not
have an accurate assessment of the essential nature of our real estate to our customer's
business; without this, we would be speculating about the quality of the most important, and
primary, payment source.
In addition to the unit-level profitability of the
business on the real estate we own, there are two other payment sources that are common to all
real estate investments. One is tenant credit quality, which serves as an additional, but not
primary, source of payment to unit-level profitability. The tenant's credit can become the
primary payment source if our unit is not profitable and the tenant is required to divert cash
flows from its other units or other resources to pay our rents. However, tenant credit quality
tends to be subject to greater volatility over time than unit-level profitability, because
tenant credit quality is not only a function of the unit-level profitability of the operations
at our locations, but of the profitability of potentially many other existing and new assets
owned and operated by our tenant. Corporate financial health is also a function of many other
decisions, such as capital structure or growth strategies, as well as conditions in the
marketplace for the tenant's products and services, which can change over time and which may
have profound impacts on tenant creditworthiness.
The other payment source that is common to all real
estate investments (and is the third of our three payment sources) is the residual value of the
underlying real estate, which gives us the opportunity to receive rents from other substitute
tenants in the event our asset becomes vacant. For S|T|O|R|E, this means more than just looking
at broad lease rate and transaction comparables. Studies we have done underscore the importance
of investing in properties at or below their as-new replacement costs. We also review the local
markets in which our properties are located and seek to have rents that are at or below
prevailing market rents on a per square foot basis for comparable properties. Taking these steps
protects S|T|O|R|E and our customers by making it easier for us to assign, sell or sublease
properties that our customers may want to sell, reposition or vacate as part of their capital
efficiency strategy.
The following diagram illustrates the three sources of payment that are common
among STORE Properties: