Q2 2025 Kennedy-Wilson Holdings Inc Earnings Call
Speaker #2: After today's presentation, there will be an opportunity to ask questions. To ask a question, you may press star, then one on a touchstone phone.
Speaker #2: To withdraw your estion, please press star, then two. Please note this event is being recorded. I would now like to turn the conference over to Daven Bhavsar, of head of investor relations.
Speaker #2: Please go head.
Speaker #3: Thank you, and good morning. Thank you for joining us today. Today's call will be webcast live and will be archived for replay. The replay will be available by phone for one week and by webcast for three months.
Speaker #3: Please see the investor relations website for more information. With me today are Bill McMorrow, CEO; Matthew isch, president; Justin Enbody, CFO; and Mike Pegler, president of Europe.
Speaker #3: On this call, we will refer to certain non-GAAP financial measures, including adjusted EBITDA and adjusted net income. You can find a description of these items, along with the reconciliation of the most directly comparable GAAP financial measure, in our second quarter 2025 earnings release, which will be posted on the investor relations section of our website.
Speaker #3: Statements made during this call may include forward-looking statements, actual results may materially differ, from forward-looking information discussed on this call due to the number of risks, uncertainties, and other factors indicated in reports and filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission.
Speaker #3: I now like to turn the call over to our chairman and CEO, Bill McMorrow.
Speaker #4: Thank you, Daven. And thank you, everyone, for joining the call today. We're pleased to report solid results for the second quarter 2025, which exceeded our business plan and reflect a continuing strengthening in our operations and in the overall real estate investment market.
Speaker #4: We deployed or committed $1.7 billion of new capital in Q2, driving total capital deployment to $2.6 billion for the first half of 2025. We remain on track this year to exceed the $4.3 billion we deployed in 2024.
Speaker #4: Improving transaction levels within the commercial real estate space allowed us to successfully execute on over $600 million in non-core asset sales generating $250 million in cash proceeds to KW, exceeding the $200 million target we set on our last call.
Speaker #4: We utilized $170 million to reduce our unsecured line of credit and allocated the remaining capital to new investments. We continue to see strong activity across our markets with clear evidence of sustained long-term demand for both rental housing and real estate credit solutions.
Speaker #4: On today's call, I'll review our portfolio and the progress we've made across our 2025 strategic initiatives, and in , our asset sales and unsecured debt reductions.
Speaker #4: Assets under management grew to a record $30 billion and have increased by 70% since the beginning of 2021. At the 100% ownership level, our stabilized investments generate $1.6 billion of revenue and $1.3 billion stabilized NOI.
Speaker #4: KW holds a 37% weighted average ownership interest in these assets. With the remaining $63% managed on behalf of partners, generating fee income for our platform.
Speaker #4: Rental housing, our core focus represents 65% of our assets under management, comprised of approximately 70,000 units that we either have an ownership interest in or are financing in our credit platform.
Speaker #4: We expect this sector to grow to over 80% of our AUM over the next two years. In the second quarter, capital deployment was focused on rental housing equity and credit.
Speaker #4: We originated another $1.3 billion in new rental housing construction loans which is our second largest quarter in originations to date. Since arriving to KW, our credit team is closing in on surpassing $6 billion in new loans which are focused all focused on the development of high-quality market-grade multifamily or student housing communities across the US.
Speaker #4: We also expanded our US multifamily platform, acquiring four communities that significant discounts to replacement cost. Totaling 1,200 units for $387 million. These new investments were completed through our investment management platform, which included adding two new Japanese-based institutions to our growing group of high-quality institutional partners.
Speaker #4: In Europe, we continue to build up our single-family rental platform with CPPIB, one of Canada's largest pension funds. In Q2, we added $100 million in new sites which brings our total portfolio to 13 sites totaling 1,200 planned homes.
Speaker #4: We are under offer on new sites totaling over $200 million, with an additional 500 homes. If closed, this would take our venture to 1,700 homes within 12 months of formation.
Speaker #4: Capital deployment for the first half of the year was 96% directed toward the rental housing sector, with 74% into the construction loan originations and 22% into equity ownership of the Western United States and UK single-family rental investments.
Speaker #4: The higher levels of capital deployment have driven our investment management platform to record levels. Fee-bearing capital reached a record $9.2 billion. Our investment management fees grew by 39% in Q2 to a quarterly record of $36 million.
Speaker #4: Our fees for the first half of 2025 have increased by 30% year-over-year and have already reached the levels we generated in all of 2023, where our fees were $62 million.
Speaker #4: Over the past 15 years, we have expanded our network of strategic partners across North America, Asia, the Middle East, and Europe. These long-standing, well-capitalized partners remain highly engaged in deploying capital alongside KW.
Speaker #4: Both in equity and in credit. Which gives us strong momentum for continued growth in our fee-related earnings. We also made solid progress on our non-core asset sale program in the quarter.
Speaker #4: Our dispositions included the sale of three European office assets, the sale an older Northern California multifamily asset, built in 1988, and the reduction in our ownership interest in our only hotel asset.
Speaker #4: We generated $275 million of cash from asset sales for the year, which keeps us on track to hit our goal of $400 million by year-end.
Speaker #4: The proceeds in the second half of the year will be used to further reduce our unsecured debt, including the final tranche of our KWE bonds, which will be repaid in full in October, as we announced yesterday.
Speaker #4: With the total $350 million KWE repayment, we will have fully retired the original $650 million principal amount of the 2025 bonds. We also plan to continue recycling capital into higher return investment opportunities in our investment management platform.
Speaker #4: Turning to the market, real estate fundamentals continue to strengthen in Q2. We believe there remain compelling risk-adjusted opportunities in the rental housing sector.
Speaker #4: A persistent housing shortage across all our markets, coupled with affordability challenges in the single-family sector, continues to fuel sustained rental demand. In the US apartment sector, the bulk of new supply that began delivering in 2023 has largely been delivered and is being absorbed.
Speaker #4: With new starts falling sharply, the supply pipeline is thinning, setting the stage for strong rental growth going forward. With a portfolio of 40,000 apartment units, we are well-positioned to capitalize on these favorable supply-demand dynamics over the next few years.
Speaker #4: We're confident that as we grow our NAV and scale in our diversified investment management business, the value created will increasingly be recognized in our share price.
Speaker #4: We are entering the second half of the year with an existing portfolio that is well-positioned with a strong pipeline of activity centered around our strategic initiatives.
Speaker #4: Increasing free cash flow by growing our NOI and recurring fees, harvesting realized gains from our asset sales, and increasing our fee income. With our own capital and the support of major global strategic partners, I remain very optimistic that in the remainder of 2025, we will see a record level of new capital deployment and benefit from KW's teams' experience to make sound investment decisions together with our partners.
Speaker #4: With that, I'd like to turn the call over to Justin Enbody.
Speaker #5: Thanks, Bill. I'll begin with a review of our Q2 financial results and then discuss the balance sheet. GAAP EPS for the quarter totaled a loss of $0.05 per share, compared to a loss of $0.43 per share in Q2 of last year.
Speaker #5: Baseline EBITDA for Q2 came in at $117 million, a 12% increase year-over-year. This brings our trailing 12-month baseline EBITDA to $425 million. Adjusted EBITDA totaled $147 million and was up significantly from $79 million in Q2 of last year.
Speaker #5: As Bill mentioned, our asset sale activity picked up significantly in the quarter. Our consolidated asset dispositions in Q2 resulted in $55 million of gains on sale.
Speaker #5: Our co-investment portfolio which now totals $13 billion in assets held at fair value is 75% comprised of rental housing and industrial investments that we own with partners.
Speaker #5: KW's ownership in this portfolio is approximately 32%. During the quarter, this portfolio saw minor net changes in value, with modest increases in real estate values offset by costs related to financing activities.
Speaker #5: Turning to our balance sheet. In Q2, we made solid progress on reducing our unsecured debt through the payoff of $170 million on our line of credit.
Speaker #5: Which stood at $100 million as of the end of the quarter. Our largest upcoming maturity is our KWE unsecured bonds totaling $300 million which we announced we will be paying off by October 3rd.
Speaker #5: Our total debt is 98% fixed or hedged, with a weighted average maturity of 4.6 years and a weighted average effective interest rate of 4.7%. We also have $113 million of consolidated unrestricted cash and $450 million of undrawn availability on our $550 million credit facility.
Speaker #5: Finally, we began utilizing our share repurchase plan in Q2, repurchasing approximately $400,000 shares at an average price of $6.21. We have $100 million remaining on our $500 million share repurchase plan.
Speaker #5: And with that, I'd now like to hand the call over to Matt Windisch for our portfolio update.
Speaker #6: Thanks, Justin. Our stabilized real estate portfolio generates estimated annual NOI of $468 million to KW. With 70% related to rental housing or industrial. This is up from just 58% just three years ago.
Speaker #6: We anticipate that these two sectors will continue to grow as we look to expand within these two asset classes while also disposing of non-core assets.
Speaker #6: Turning to our largest sector, multifamily, which represents 64% of our NOI. In Q2, we saw sustained apartment demand and strong retention from our diversified apartment portfolio.
Speaker #6: Which was 94% occupied as of quarter ends. In total, US same-store NOI grew by 3.3% for our market rate portfolio. Which was driven by blended leasing spreads accelerating from 1.4% in Q1 to 2.1% in Q2.
Speaker #6: Renewal spreads totaled approximately 3.5% and spreads on new leases improved to 75 basis points, the highest level in two years. At quarter end, our loss-to-lease totaled 4.2%.
Speaker #6: I'd like to highlight a few regional stats. Starting with our Pacific Northwest portfolio, once again, we saw the strongest NOI growth across the portfolio, totaling 5.6%.
Speaker #6: The Seattle area continues to benefit from return-to-office mandates from companies like Amazon and Starbucks. We also saw favorable real estate tax savings in the quarter.
Speaker #6: The Mountain West has begun to turn the corner on supply, which is being absorbed. Our largest state in the region is Idaho, which saw an impressive 7.2% NOI growth, benefiting from higher rents, lower real estate taxes, and lower insurance costs.
Speaker #6: We believe the rest of this region is set up well over the next few years as supply decreases and the region continues to benefit from offering a high-quality, outdoor lifestyle that is much more affordable than higher-cost states.
Speaker #6: In Southern California, our low-density, mostly suburban portfolio generated 5% NOI growth and benefited from occupancy growth, rental growth, and lower bad debt. And finally, in our smaller Northern California portfolio, results were largely flat as higher rents were offset by higher delinquency.
Speaker #6: At the end of the quarter, we sold a 90% stake in our largest asset in the region, which will come out of the same-store pool in Q3.
Speaker #6: That sale generated $40 million of cash to KW. Our vintage housing affordable portfolio, which utilizes low-income housing tax credits, saw solid same-property NOI growth of 5%.
Speaker #6: These results were driven as a result of rising area median incomes. We have another 1,900 units under development and lease up, which will require minimum capital from KW and are expected to add $10 million of NOI.
Speaker #6: We are on track to reach 13,000 stabilized units while actively evaluating opportunities to further expand our affordable portfolio. In Ireland, same-property NOI in our apartment portfolio was up 2.4%, driven by occupancy growth.
Speaker #6: We stabilized our final remaining Irish lease-up apartment asset at the cornerstone in Q2, which increased total stabilized units to over $3,500. The other key headline was the Irish government's proposed measures related to existing rent control that is expiring at the end of the year.
Speaker #6: Starting in Q1 of next year, we expect that units leased to new tenants will likely be able to be brought to market rents.
Speaker #6: The implementation of this change is still subject to government approval, which is expected later this year. Moving over to our office portfolio, we sold two Irish office assets in the quarter at attractive cap rates to core buyers who have started to return to the office market.
Speaker #6: We sold these two fully leased properties till their street in Hanover Quay in separate transactions for a combined total of $155 million reflecting a 5.3% weighted average buyer cap rate.
Speaker #6: These are both best-in-class assets that we built our comprehensively redeveloped and subsequently fully leased to prime tenants. Seeing these assets successfully trade to core buyers marks the completion of our business plan and serves as strong validation of the high-quality assets that we've developed.
Speaker #6: We also completed the sale of our largest remaining asset in Italy, combined these sales generated $70 million of cash to KW. Roughly 75% of our stabilized office portfolio sits in Europe, where same-property NOI declined by 3% in the quarter and was impacted by a decline in occupancy at two UK assets.
Speaker #6: In both cases, we have now agreed to lease the space at significantly higher rents, which will positively impact our future results. Our overall European results pro forma for these leases would have resulted in a 2.7% NOI increase.
Speaker #6: Turning to our investment management business, Q2 saw $36 million in fee revenue while fee-bearing capital grew to a record $9.2 billion. Additionally, there was another $5.2 billion in future debt funding that will impact our fee-bearing capital base over the next couple of years.
Speaker #6: Our credit portfolio continues to generate strong returns on invested capital benefiting from favorable spreads and a deep pipeline of high-quality opportunities. Since acquiring the $4.1 billion construction loan portfolio two years ago of which KW bought a 5% stake, as of June 30th, $1.8 billion of the loans have successfully been repaid which has generated a deal-level IRR of 27% to KW including fees.
Speaker #6: We are also making strong progress in our UK single-family rental platform, which we launched in Q4, and which now totals 1,200 planned homes. The initial homes delivered from developers have begun lease-up, with encouraging progress on achieving our planned rents.
Speaker #6: We continue to look for opportunities to expand this portfolio and have been having active conversations with both new and repeat counterparties, which will seek to take the platform beyond 2,000 units.
Speaker #6: In closing, we made significant progress on advancing our key initiatives in Q2. Including monetizing non-core assets reducing our unsecured debt and streamlining our portfolio.
Speaker #6: Additionally, we've en meaningful steps to position our capital light investment management platform for long-term growth. So with that, we'll open it up to Q&A.
Speaker #2: We will now begin the question and answer session. To ask a question, you may press star, then one on your touch tone phone. If you are using a speakerphone, please pick up your headset before pressing the keys.
Speaker #2: If at any time your question has been addressed and you'd like to withdraw your question, please press star, then two. Our first question will come from Anthony Palone with JPMorgan.
Speaker #2: Please go head.
Speaker #7: Great. Thank you. My first question actually will start with the SFR business in the UK. You know, I think I have some familiarity with it in the US and where it is in the evolution here, but maybe can you talk a bit more about just where it is in the UK and whether it's purely a build-to-rent strategy or if there's, you know, single rental homes that could also be purchased? And also maybe a little bit about the returns that you see and why it's so attractive?
Speaker #4: Mike, do you want to go ahead with that?
Speaker #8: Sure. Thanks, Bill. I'll take that one. So the single-family rental housing business is really in its early days in UK. This market has been growing significantly in the past couple of years, but the levels of penetration are way, way, way below what you would expect in the UK, in the US.
Speaker #8: Something like a tenth of the market penetration that used to be in the U.S. market. So, it's really early days. There are a handful of parties creating this institutional model of ownership, which we think will become an established part of the UK rental housing market over the next few years.
Speaker #8: It really is a build-to-rent game at the moment. Or at least that's what we're doing in our strategy with CPPIB, and to get there, we're getting.
Speaker #8: We're looking at buying from house builders at a discount we're trying to buy maybe 100 units in each lot and trying to create these single-family rental communities.
Speaker #8: On existing master plans, house builders are bringing wards. We think there's a huge pipeline. We think this is really scalable and we think it can generate great returns for our partner and for ourselves.
Speaker #8: In s of the returns, we're targeting we're probably looking at, let's , mid-teens at the asset level and then with the fees that we're going to generate on top of that, that's going to push it in terms of asset management fee, you'll probably ush it into the 20s.
Speaker #8: And then, hopefully, we're going to be returning significant promotes on top of that, which will send our returns up even higher over the course of our business plan.
Speaker #8: So this is something that's got a of focus for the European team. As Bill and Matt said, we're pushing towards hopefully being in about 2,000 homes by the end of this year, potentially further.
Speaker #8: And this initial pot of capital committed by CPPIB is going to take us up to 4,000 homes. So we think then we will really be one of the most meaningful players in the UK market.
Speaker #8: And we think there could further growth to go beyond that. So we're excited about the prospect of the returns of this segment of the business can be generating over the short, medium, and long term.
Speaker #7: Okay. Thanks. That's great overview. Just my second one, just relates more broadly. Bill, you've been pretty clear about just the skew towards residential and move in the company in that direction.
Speaker #7: And that's been the case both on your equity and debt investments. But on the debt side, is that business probably getting a bit more competitive?
Speaker #7: Do you think that moves to other property types and beyond development? Or how are you thinking about the debt platform, maybe for Matt?
Speaker #4: Yeah, thanks, Tony. Good question. So look, we've continued to focus on residential construction lending, and I think our track record in terms of deployment and success on the realizations would demonstrate that we're best in class in that space.
Speaker #4: So we are going to continue to have that be the primary focus for what we do. I think I may have alluded to this on previous calls, but I think we have an opportunity to expand our lending capabilities within the residential sector to cover bridge lending and potentially some permanent lending solutions over the short to medium term.
Speaker #4: And so we see the opportunity expand in that space. We did announce a partnership with Tokyo a couple of quarters ago where we're going to focus as well primarily on residential investing within preferred equity and mezzanine solutions.
Speaker #4: That being said, I think there are we have the expertise and knowledge of other product types and the team that we brought over from Pacific Western Bank a uple of years ago historically has been a lender to other sectors including hospitality and industrial.
Speaker #4: So I think over time, you know, depending on where we are in the capital structure, we certainly have the capabilities and the knowledge to deploy capital outside of housing within the credit space.
Speaker #4: I do think that housing will continue to remain the vast majority of what we do going forward, though.
Speaker #7: Okay, thanks. And just last one for me. You've been pretty active in selling non-core assets and producing cash back to KW.
Speaker #7: Just any order of magnitude of what might be planned for the balance of year?
Speaker #4: Well, Tony, what I said in my remarks is that we had laid out $400 million at the beginning of the year as our goal, and we've done $275 million so far.
Speaker #4: And you know, we're well on track now to do the last $125 million. We may exceed that by some amount, but for sure, we'll finish the year at over $400 million.
Speaker #7: Okay. Great. So I may miss that. Thank ou.
Speaker #2: Our next question will come from Yana Gallen with Bank of America. Please go ahead.
Speaker #9: Thank you. Good morning.
Speaker #2: Morning.
Speaker #9: Bill, on your plan to further increase the multifamily exposure, can you get into a little detail of your preferences between affordable versus market rate and U.S. versus Europe?
Speaker #9: And kind of what are maybe where the cap rates most attractive right?
Speaker #4: Sure. Yeah. This is Matt. So I'll answer that. Look, I think we're interested in expanding our exposure to that sector through both our credit business as well as the equity business.
Speaker #4: We've certainly been more active geographically in the US. Although depending on, you know, some changes in policy in Ireland, there could be an additional attraction to Irish assets going forward.
Speaker #4: But I would say, look, our credit business for the past year or so has been the majority of the capital deployment within the residential space.
Speaker #4: That did start to shift a bit in Q2. You saw that we bought four apartment communities in the quarter, and there are several more that we're looking at here in the second half of the year for our investment management platforms.
Speaker #4: So, you know, it all depends on the opportunity set, who the seller is, and what the circumstances are. But we're actively pursuing residential opportunities across geographies and across the capital stack.
Speaker #7: Yeah, Matt, I could add on a little bit to that. I mean, one of the metrics that I mentioned that we really focus on is the total number of units that we either have an ownership interest in or that we're financing.
Speaker #7: And we're now up to 70,000 units that we either have an ownership interest in, 40,000, or that we're financing, 30,000. And so as I mentioned, the shift in our total portfolio where we're at 65% now up to going to 80 will mean that some of the other asset classes, particularly office, will decrease.
Speaker #7: But over the next, I'd say, three to four years, we hope to move that 70,000 up to, you know, somewhere between 90,000 to 100,000 units.
Speaker #7: Depending on what the opportunities are.
Speaker #9: Thank you. And then maybe just for Justin, I'm curious about the $300 million loan repayment. Is October 3rd just when there's no longer a prepayment penalty?
Speaker #9: Or I'm just curious about the timing.
Speaker #4: So the timing for us is correct. There's no prepayment penalty, as well as just building the cash position to pay it down effectively. So we're in a great spot, and we're looking forward to putting that behind us.
Speaker #9: Great. Thank you.
Speaker #2: Again, if you have a question, please press star, then one. Our next question will come from Omo Tayo Okosanya with Deutsche Bank. Please go head.
Speaker #10: Hi. Yes. Good morning, everyone. In terms of the credit business, again, everywhere you turn there seems to be a new kind of private credit platform.
Speaker #10: Just curious how competition is shaping up there and how that may potentially be impacting pricing in any way, shape, or form, if at all.
Speaker #4: Yeah. Good question, Tayo. I'd say you're correct. There's obviously a lot of private credit capital out there. I think what's unique about our platform, you know, and what we've been doing the past couple of years and in the last couple of quarters is we have been, as we've mentioned, focused really on residential construction lending.
Speaker #4: Within multifamily and student housing sectors. You know, we don't use any back leverage currently in our portfolio. So a lot the private credit vehicles that have been raised are utilizing a lot back leverage and they're generally looking to do non-construction lending.
Speaker #4: So, we're not seeing a ton of impact within our specific area right where we're seeing a lot of private credit solutions coming in competing.
Speaker #4: That being said, you know, the banks have definitely become more active in the market. So we are seeing a bit more competition there. And I'd say if you look over the past year or so, spreads have probably come in, you know, between 30 and 50 basis points on construction lending.
Speaker #4: But we still think it’s a pretty attractive space, and we’re continuing to deploy capital there at really attractive risk-adjusted returns for ourselves and for our capital partners.
Speaker #10: That's helpful.
Speaker #4: No. The only other thing, Tayo, that I would add to what Matt just said is that, you know, we're not doing any unsecured financing.
Speaker #4: We're doing all secured financing at, you ow, generally 55% to 65% loans to cost with some of the best names in the country. And so even though the private credit market has grown, you know, substantially in these other asset classes, everything that we're doing is, you know, real estate secured financing.
Speaker #4: And the combination of our equity ownership business and the debt business gives us an incredible base of information across the entire country and relationships.
Speaker #4: When you look at our credit business, many of the loans that we're doing are multiple borrowers that we've had, you know, multiple loans to.
Speaker #4: And, as Matt pointed out in his remarks, close to 50% of the loans that we bought in the PAC Western portfolio here a couple of years ago have already been paid off.
Speaker #10: Gotcha. That's helpful. Second question again, you know, great success on the asset sales side. I know your number one goal is to use proceeds to kind of pay down debt and deliver.
Speaker #10: But just curious again, as you kind of take a look at the stock still trading at this very large discount to NAV, how you think about stock buybacks as part of your overall capital allocation decisions?
Speaker #4: Yeah. Well, we started in a small way in the second quarter, and I think you're making the right point. These are all just capital allocation decisions.
Speaker #4: We have $100 million left in the existing buyback program. And to the once we get past the, you know, the bond payoff, which is, you ow, slightly over $300 million, then we'll making decisions about, you know, where we want to deploy capital.
Speaker #4: But clearly, one of the opportunities that we have is that we see a big opportunity in our own stock.
Speaker #10: Gotcha. That's helpful. And then one for Justin. Again, as we start to think beyond 2025, just kind of talk to us a little about 2026 debt maturities and swap maturities and how you start thinking through addressing those.
Speaker #4: Yeah, I mean, I think similar to what we've done this year, we will continue to dispose of non-core assets to free up capital.
Speaker #4: To allow us to handle some of our debt maturities, in some instances, whether, you know, secured maturities, we're going to obviously go to the market and refinance them.
Speaker #4: But we'll continue to, you know, execute on our plan of non-core asset sales to deliver. Yeah. I would just add to that that, you know, a handful of the larger maturities, are on assets that we have at our disposition plans either for this year or next year.
Speaker #4: And so we feel, you know, feel very, very good about the prospects for refinancing the loans we have. And the average rate on what we're aturing is it's close to 6%.
Speaker #4: So it's actually well above our average borrowing cost. And so the incremental cost to refinance is we don't expect to be significantly higher. In fact, we think it'll be close to in line with the current rate we're bringing in.
Speaker #10: Okay. So you're not expecting a lot of earnings dilution as a result of that?
Speaker #4: Correct.
Speaker #10: Great! Thank you very much. Great momentum here.
Speaker #4: Thank you.
Speaker #2: With no further questions, this will conclude our question-and-answer session. I would like to turn the conference back over to William McMorrow for any closing remarks.
Speaker #4: Thank you, everybody, for joining the call. And as always, we're available to answer any other questions that might come up. So, thank you.
Speaker #4: Have great day.