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| As an [[REIT]], the company must distribute 90% of its annual taxable income to shareholders, a practice which leaves little income for internal reinvestment. This income redistribution forces most other REITs depend on potentially volatile equity markets for reinvestment funds, but Prologis sources a significant portion of its reinvestment cash from its own property funds business and sidesteps some of the risks associated with equity market activity.<ref>[http://ir.prologis.com/investors/index.cfm ''Prologis.com,'' "Investor Relations: Corporate Profile."]</ref> | As an [[REIT]], the company must distribute 90% of its annual taxable income to shareholders, a practice which leaves little income for internal reinvestment. This income redistribution forces most other REITs depend on potentially volatile equity markets for reinvestment funds, but Prologis sources a significant portion of its reinvestment cash from its own property funds business and sidesteps some of the risks associated with equity market activity.<ref>[http://ir.prologis.com/investors/index.cfm ''Prologis.com,'' "Investor Relations: Corporate Profile."]</ref> | ||
| ===Business and Financial Metrics=== | ===Business and Financial Metrics=== | ||
| - | ===Business Segments=== | + | Between 2003 and 2007, PLD more than quadrupled its annual revenue and tripled its operating income. This fast-paced growth derives in large part from PLD's aggressive reinvestments in development and acquisitions. 2007 alone saw an increase of 61.4% from 2006 in new industrial/retail-mixed-use development.<ref>[http://ir.prologis.com/investors/AnnualReport2007/index.html ''PLD 2007 Annual Report,'' p.7.]</ref> |
| - | *'''Property operations''' (__% of 2007 annual revenue) includes revenues PLD earns from leasing its industrial distribution properties to clients, many of them long-term. In December 2007, the company owned 208.5 M sq ft in North America, Europe and Asia--primarily distribution properties located in major ports and trading centers, although 1.2 M sq ft were also included of North American retail properties. Unlike some REITs, PLD has sustained very aggressive development and acquisition activities over the past few years, and many of its properties are not yet leased near to capacity. (In 2007, PLD's percentage of rentable sq ft leased was 84% across three continents--much lower than competitor [[AMB]]'s 94%.)<ref>[http://www.secinfo.com/dvjdn.t2g.htm ''PLD 2007 10K,'' p.24.]</ref> This means that increased tenancy rates are a significant source of potential growth for Prologis<ref>[http://www.secinfo.com/dvjdn.t2g.htm ''PLD 2007 10K,'' p. 32.]</ref>--important, since the high risk of aggressive real estate development and acquisition means that REITs often struggle to maintain grow rates. | + | [[Image:PLD_annrev.png|left|frame|''Source: Compiled from company publications.<ref>[http://www.secinfo.com/dvjdn.t2g.htm "PLD 10K 2007,'' p. 31.]</ref>[[Image:PLD_byseg.png|right|frame|''Source: Company data.<ref>[http://www.secinfo.com/dvjdn.t2g.htm "PLD 10K 2007,'' p. 40.]</ref>]] |
| - | *'''Investment management''' (__% of 2007 annual revenue) includes revenues from both Prologis' management of property funds shared with institutional investors, and its management of the actual properties themselves. PLD takes advantage of this institutional backing to develop and acquire more aggressively than it otherwise would. In 2007, the company took on | + | <br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br> |
| - | *'''Development/[[CDFS]]''' (__% of 2007 annual revenue) includes development/rehabilitation of real estate properties to be contributed PLD's related property funds or sold to third parties. Contributions to property funds in which PLD has minority ownership or managing partner status raises management/development revenue for the company. Contributing new properties to funds also lowers PLD's real estate development risk by relieving much of the pressure to find third-party buyers in an often [[volatile market]]. In 2007, this fund-contribution "safety net" allowed PLD to undertake 4.1 B of new industrial/retail-mixed-use development, an increase of 61.4% from 2006.<ref>[http://ir.prologis.com/investors/AnnualReport2007/index.html ''PLD 2007 Annual Report,'' p.7.]</ref> | + | |
| + | ===Business Segments=== | ||
| + | *'''Property operations''' (__% of 2007 annual revenue) includes revenues PLD earns from leasing its industrial distribution properties to clients, many of them long-term. In December 2007, the company owned 208.5 M sq ft in North America, Europe and Asia--primarily distribution properties located in major ports and trading centers, although 1.2 M sq ft were also included of North American retail properties. Unlike some REITs, PLD has sustained very aggressive development and acquisition activities over the past few years, and many of its properties are not yet leased near to capacity. (In 2007, PLD's percentage of rentable sq ft leased was 84% across three continents--much lower than competitor [[AMB]]'s 94%.)<ref>[http://www.secinfo.com/dvjdn.t2g.htm ''PLD 2007 10K,'' p.24. ]</ref> This means that increased tenancy rates are a significant source of potential growth for Prologis<ref>[http://www.secinfo.com/dvjdn.t2g.htm ''PLD 2007 10K,'' p. 32.]</ref>--important, since the high risk of aggressive real estate development and acquisition means that REITs often struggle to maintain grow rates. | ||
| + | *'''Investment management''' (__% of 2007 annual revenue) includes revenues from both Prologis' ownership of property funds shared with institutional investors, and its management of the actual properties themselves (in addition to any interest generated on advances to the property funds). PLD takes advantage of this institutional backing to develop and acquire more aggressively than it otherwise would be able to. PLD's most profitable property funds are its European funds, which in 2005 generated 44 M USD in operating income (second after the North America funds, 56 M), but in 2007 contributed 105 M (compare to 64 M North America, and 30 M Asia).<ref>[http://www.secinfo.com/dvjdn.t2g.htm#_125 ''PLD 10K 2007,'' pp. 40-41.]</ref> | ||
| + | *'''Development/[[CDFS]]''' (__% of 2007 annual revenue) includes development/rehabilitation of real estate properties to be contributed PLD's related property funds or sold to third parties. Contributions to property funds in which PLD has minority ownership or managing partner status raises management/development revenue for the company. Contributing new properties to funds also lowers PLD's real estate development risk by relieving much of the pressure to find third-party buyers in an often [[volatile market]]. In 2007, this fund-contribution "safety net" allowed PLD to undertake 4.1 B of new industrial/retail-mixed-use development.<ref>[http://ir.prologis.com/investors/AnnualReport2007/index.html ''PLD 2007 Annual Report,'' p.7.]</ref> | ||
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Prologis is the benchmark REIT owner and developer in the industrial distribution sector, and is poised to benefit most as the sector continues its broad recovery. The company had an exceptionally good 3rd quarter gross proceeds from CDFS dispositions increased to $3.1 billion in the 3rd quarter of 2007. Most of the CDFS sales were from a $2.1 billion sale of shares of Macquarie Prologis Trust to a property fund. Total FFO contribution during the quarter from CDFS sales was $230.1 million versus $92.8 million recorded in 3Q 2006. The CDFS segment develops and or rehabs industrial properties and sells these assets either to one of the company's funds or a third party. The company's current CDFS development pipeline now stands at $6.2 billion, up 16.1% over December 31, 2006. Of this amount, about $2.8 billion of projects are currently under construction, while the remaining $3.4 billion of completed developments and repositioned properties were 65% leased at the end of the quarter. CDFS generated total income of $2.4 billion from acquired property portfolios. While CDFS income is not as predictable as recurring rents, we feel this is a viable business that will continue to be profitable throughout the first part of 2008 as we do not predict a material rise in cap rates in class A properties next quarter.
All segments reported good operating results during the quarter, reflecting continued strong global industrial market demand. While North American markets could be slowing, the company is well diversified internationally, and most of the company's growth going forward will be outside of North America. In the 3rd quarter FFO came in at $1.41 per diluted share, up 78.5% from $0.79 in the same period in 2006. The substantial rise in FFO can be attributed to CFDS sales, high occupancy levels, growth in rental rates, and expansion of the investment management business. PLD increased its full year FFO guidance to $4.40 - $4.50 per share. The increase is primarily due to the 3rd quarter recognition in FFO of $0.36 per share related to PLD's acquisition of the shares of Macquarie ProLogis Trust (MPR) and subsequent contribution to a new property fund. Without this sale, FFO the 3rd quarter would have been $1.05 per share, still a 33% increase from the prior year quarter.
The company also provided guidance for 2008, and expects FFO to fall in the range of $4.65 to $4.85 per share. At the high end of guidance, this would represent over 10% y/y growth from our 2007 estimates.
During the 3rd quarter same store net operating income increased 5.4% vs. 3Q 2006. The increase in net operating income can be attributed to 9.6% growth in same store rents and 2.7% growth in average same store occupancy. YTD same store rents are up 8.4%. In the company's stabilized portfolio overall occupancy stood at 95.5% in the 3rd quarter. In Asia SS occupancy finished the quarter at 98.9%, Europe 93.7% and North America 95.6%. Leasing activity was strong during the 3rd quarter. The company signed 493 new leases representing 29 million square feet in the 3rd quarter. 3Q retention was 79%. The company has posted positive same store revenue, NOI, and occupancy growth over the past several quarters and we expect this trend to continue throughout the year. The company expects occupancies to remain stable and rental rate growth on lease turnovers to continue into 2008.
The property fund business continues to grow at a healthy clip. During the quarter, the company announced four new property funds, in addition to ProLogis North American Industrial Fund II (NAIF II), with a combined capitalization of over $14 billion. The funds will own distribution centers in Europe, the United States, Mexico and South Korea. The total fund business has now grown to $33 billion of assets, which will result in significant increases in management fees when these funds are fully invested.
Prologis currently has a large International development pipeline. The company had $777 million of development starts in the 3rd quarter of 2007 $232.3 million in North America, $357.2 million in Europe, and $187.4 million in Asia. The company expects global trade to continue growing at a brisk pace, and increased projections for total global development starts to $4 billion at the high end in 2007, up from a high end estimate of $3.6 billion last quarter. In the 3rd quarter, the company completed developments (including joint ventures) worth $509.7 million. At the quarter end, PLD had projects worth nearly $2.8 billion under development, led by Europe ($1.1 billion, 17.2% leased), Asia ($970.9 million, 20.1% leased) and North America ($617.1 million, 24.2% leased). In Asia, net absorption remains healthy, and leasing activity in the company's new inventory development is brisk. In North America, net absorption in the top 30 logistics markets remained healthy at over 32 million square feet during the 3rd quarter. In Germany, PLD signed agreements for roughly 1.8 million square feet of new development on a pre-committed basis. Nearly 80% of the company's starts this year are outside North America.
ProLogis' share of FFO from property funds increased by 105.7% in the 3rd quarter to $39.9 million, up from $19.4 million in 3Q 2006. Fee income from property funds for the quarter increased 32.8% to $27.1 million, compared with $20.4 million in the same quarter of 2006. During the quarter, total assets owned and under management increased to $34.4 billion, from $26.7 billion at December 31, 2006, a year-to-date increase of 28.8%.
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Prologis operates in three segments: property operations, investment management, and development/CDFS (see Business Segments below). As an REIT, the company must distribute 90% of its annual taxable income to shareholders, a practice which leaves little income for internal reinvestment. This income redistribution forces most other REITs depend on potentially volatile equity markets for reinvestment funds, but Prologis sources a significant portion of its reinvestment cash from its own property funds business and sidesteps some of the risks associated with equity market activity.[1]
Between 2003 and 2007, PLD more than quadrupled its annual revenue and tripled its operating income. This fast-paced growth derives in large part from PLD's aggressive reinvestments in development and acquisitions. 2007 alone saw an increase of 61.4% from 2006 in new industrial/retail-mixed-use development.[2]
[[Image:PLD_annrev.png|left|frame|Source: Compiled from company publications.[3]
| Real estate location | 2007 rev. | % total rev. | Assets | USD invested, Jan-June 2007 |
| Americas | - | - | - | 226.3 |
| US | 462.5 | 72.5 | 3763.5 | - |
| (California) | (200.1) | (31.4) | (1703.8) | - |
| Europe | 24.4 | 3.8 | 254.7 | 0 |
| Asia | - | - | - | 229.6 |
| Japan | 4.5 | 0.7 | 717.6 | - |
| Other | 146.3 | 22.9 | 1891 | - |
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