Kimco Realty Corporation (NYSE:KIM) Q4 2023 Earnings Conference Call February 8, 2024 8:30 AM ET
Company Participants
David Bujnicki – Senior Vice President of Investor Relations & Strategy
Conor Flynn – Chief Executive Officer
Ross Cooper – President & Chief Investment Officer
Glenn Cohen – Chief Financial Officer
Dave Jamieson – Chief Operating Officer
Conference Call Participants
Michael Goldsmith – UBS
Jeff Spector – Bank of America
Dori Kesten – Wells Fargo
Floris van Dijkum – Compass Point
Alexander Goldfarb – Piper Sandler
Greg McGinniss – Scotiabank
Craig Mailman – Citi
Haendel St. Juste – Mizuho
Samir Khanal – Evercore ISI
R.J. Milligan – Raymond James
Caitlin Burrows – Goldman Sachs
Wes Golladay – Baird
Paulina Rojas – Green Street
Mike Mueller – JPMorgan
Michael Gorman – BTIG
Linda Tsai – Jefferies
Anthony Powell – Barclays
Ronald Kamdem – Morgan Stanley
Floris Van Dijkum – Compass Point
Tayo Okusanya – Deutsche Bank
Jamie Feldman – Wells Fargo
Operator
Good morning and welcome to Kimco Realty’s Fourth Quarter 2023 Earnings Conference Call. [Operator Instructions] Please note, this event is being recorded.
I would now like to turn the conference over to David F. Bujnicki, Senior Vice President, Investor Relations and Strategy. Please go ahead.
David Bujnicki
Good morning and thank you for joining Kimco’s quarterly earnings call. The Kimco management team participating on the call today include Conor Flynn, Kimco’s CEO; Ross Cooper, President and Chief Investment Officer; Glenn Cohen, our CFO; and Dave Jamieson, Kimco’s Chief Operating Officer; as well as other members of our executive team that are also available to answer questions during the call.
As a reminder, statements made during the course of this call may be deemed forward-looking and it is important to note that the company’s actual results could differ materially from those projected in such forward-looking statements due to a variety of risks, uncertainties and other factors. Please refer to the company’s SEC filings that address such factors. During this presentation, management may make reference to certain non-GAAP financial measures that we believe help investors better understand Kimco’s operating results. Reconciliations of these non-GAAP financial measures can be found in our quarterly supplemental financial information on the Kimco Investor Relations website. Also, in the event our call was to incur technical difficulties, we’ll try to resolve as quickly as possible and if the need arises, we’ll post additional information to our IR website.
And with that, I’ll turn the call over to Conor.
Conor Flynn
Good morning and thanks for joining us. I will lead off today with a summary of our stellar Q4 leasing results and then provide some strategic updates on our completed RPT acquisition. Ross will follow with an update on the transaction market, recent activity and plans for 2024. Glenn will then cover our financial metrics and provide 2024 guidance. We concluded 2023 on a high note with record-setting leasing activity and a deeper, broader and more resilient tenant base for our grocery-anchored and mixed-use portfolio. We’ve built on this positive momentum kicking off 2024 by closing our acquisition of RPT on the first business day of the year. I will provide additional perspective on RPT shortly.
Let’s start with our leasing accomplishments. For the quarter, overall occupancy finished up 70 basis points on a sequential basis to 96.2% on a pro rata basis. Importantly, the 70 basis point gain is our highest quarter-over-quarter uptick in occupancy going back more than 15 years. Our year-over-year overall occupancy increased 50 basis points. Anchor occupancy grew a record 80 basis points sequentially to 98% and finished flat year-over-year. Smaller shop occupancy was up 60 basis points to 91.7%, surpassing our previous record high of 91.1% and ended up 170 basis points year-over-year. We signed over 1 million square feet of new lease GLA in the fourth quarter, the highest quarterly level in over 10 years.
We also maintained our strong pricing power as the spread on new leases was 24%, marking our ninth consecutive quarter of double-digit leasing spreads. Our retention levels were equally strong as we signed 321 renewals and options totaling 1.7 million square feet, surpassing our 5-year fourth quarter historical average.
The fourth quarter renewal and option combined spread was 7.8%, with renewals ending at 8.5% and options at 7%. Overall, fourth quarter leasing volume totaled 480 deals for 2.7 million square feet with a combined spread of 11.2%, a phenomenal effort and a tremendous team accomplishment. I’d be remiss to mention that what makes our leasing efforts in 2023 more impressive is that we’ve absorbed the vast majority of our Bed Bath & Beyond spaces at spreads that far exceeded our initial expectations.
Just to recap, we started 2023 with 29 Bed Bath & Beyond locations, representing approximately 70 basis points of pro rata ABR exposure. During the year, we resolved 21 leases with a combined pro rata spread of 43%. Of those 21 leases, 4 were signed in the fourth quarter at a combined spread of 57%, demonstrating the strong demand that remains for these high-quality locations. This includes our remaining 8 boxes which we’re confident that will resolve as we move through the year and believe that our strong overall leasing success in 2023 will continue into 2024. Looking ahead, with the RPT deal closed, we are excited about our new team members who are fully engaged and seeking to add further value to the Kimco platform.
Integration of the new portfolio is well underway and we expect it to have a positive impact on our overall strategic plan throughout the year. Over time, we expect to benefit from the upside in the RPT portfolio as we mark-to-market leases and take advantage of the supply constrained environment using our best-in-class platform to raise occupancy levels.
Glenn will provide additional color on the financing of the transaction and how it has positively impacted our balance sheet. We also see redevelopment and mixed-use opportunities in the RPT portfolio that will complement our existing pipeline and further contribute to our long-term growth. One particular example of incremental value that can be created through redevelopment is Mary Brickell Village, a one-of-a-kind mixed-use property located in Miami.
As we look to the future on an asset such as this, we believe there’s a lot of upside and opportunity to use our platform to unlock meaningful long-term value and expand Kimco’s Signature Series portfolio.
Ross will discuss our 2024 transaction strategy in more detail. But I did want to highlight our plans to recycle lower growth centers, especially those with high CapEx loads and lower-than-acceptable returns. These anticipated dispositions have already been incorporated into our model and strategic plan which is further supported by improvements in both the transaction and financing markets since we first announced the RPT transaction in the third quarter of 2023.
We believe we are well positioned for 2024 with significant opportunities for both organic and targeted external growth. Our pipeline of leases that have been signed but not yet open shows strength in the quality of our portfolio and visible cash flow growth. Additionally, history has shown that our platform is ideally suited to take advantage of market dislocations and generate growth.
In the end, we pride ourselves as being one of the most efficient operators and are laser-focused on driving total shareholder return. That said, despite improved conditions, the macroeconomic environment remains temperamental. Inflation, interest rates, employment, credit card delinquencies and the election cycle all have the potential to impact our sector over the course of the year and beyond and that is why underlying our overall strategy is an emphasis on building a portfolio that is both resilient and able to generate steady and reliable growth.
Ross?
Ross Cooper
Thank you, Conor and good morning, all. I’d like to quickly reflect on 2023 before sharing some perspective on the year ahead.
As Conor noted, the leasing environment for our asset class was very positive in 2023 but volatility in the capital markets significantly muted transaction activity. Through the first 3 quarters of ’23, underwriting was difficult and lender financing was inconsistent at best. That said, Kimco successfully turned the sluggish environment into opportunity. Using our advantageous liquidity position and balance sheet, we were able to acquire several joint venture partnership interests, a new signature series asset in Stonebridge at Potomac Town Center and an exciting portfolio via the acquisition of RPT Realty.
In our view, these were timely deals that would price more aggressively in the current market. In the fourth quarter, sentiment began to improve with the 10-year treasury dropping more than 100 basis points and currently hovering in the 4% range. This created renewed optimism, a more vibrant financing market, additional deal flow before year-end and a further increase in activity at the start of 2024. We were able to take advantage of the more positive environment, selling 3 challenged joint venture sites in our portfolio in December. We also provided mezzanine financing for a new partner before year-end and now anticipate potentially pursuing additional structured investments with the same group.
Turning to 2024; we are confident that the healthy fundamentals in open-air retail, coupled with a more favorable macroeconomic backdrop will present opportunities that we can leverage to enhance our performance and success. We will continue to primarily focus on sourcing off-market and core grocery-anchored shopping centers that become available.
On the structured investment side, we expect additional investment opportunity for preferred equity and mezzanine financing for high-quality real estate. The stabilizing of interest rates and improvements in the capital markets should lead to more opportunities stemming from acquisition financing of new deals and debt paydowns on maturing loans. We continue to maintain a disciplined approach with these investments and as such, we expect them to be bespoke investments with unique attributes.
On the RPT dispositions, as previously indicated, there are a select group of assets that do not align with Kimco’s long-term geographic and/or growth targets. We have initiated the strategic process of trimming these properties from our portfolio and we are confident that we will successfully execute on this plan, predominantly in the first half of the year.
To provide a bit more context, we aim to sell between $250 million to $350 million of former RPT centers at a blended low to mid-8% cap rate in that timeframe. It’s worth noting that the blended cap rate of the RPT properties being sold matches the cap rate for which we acquired the entire company, further cementing our belief that RPT is and will continue to be an extremely successful acquisition for Kimco.
In 2024, we have already closed on our first RPT disposition in Carmel, Indiana, within this cap rate range. As part of the disposition structure, we retained a piece of the capital stack in the form of mezzanine financing. This not only helps to ensure a successful transaction but also presents an opportunity for Kimco to earn an attractive yield at a safe basis in a passive structure while focusing our team’s efforts on our core properties and markets.
You will likely see us structure additional transactions in a similar manner. And to be clear, this is factored into the 2024 guidance that we’ve provided this morning. We are excited about the prospects for 2024 and look forward to keeping you apprised of our progress.
Now off to Glenn for the financial results and full year outlook.
Glenn Cohen
Thanks, Ross and good morning. We finished 2023 with solid fourth quarter results, highlighted by very strong leasing activity, increased occupancy and improved positive same-site growth. In addition, we bolstered our liquidity position ahead of our upcoming 2024 maturities and the closing of the RPT transaction.
Now for some details on our fourth quarter results, the financing of the RPT transaction and our 2024 outlook. FFO for the fourth quarter was $239.4 million or $0.39 per diluted share. This compares favorably to last year’s fourth quarter FFO of $234.9 million or $0.38 per diluted share. The primary driver of the increase was higher pro rata NOI of $10 million generated by a high-quality operating portfolio. Our pro rata interest expense was up $8 million, resulting from the issuance of a $500 million unsecured bond to prefund our upcoming ’24 maturities. We invested the proceeds in short-term money market-type funds earning $7 million of interest income which mitigated a large portion of the dilution.
In addition, during the fourth quarter, we incurred $1 million of merger-related expenses for the RPT transaction. Our operating portfolio continues to deliver positive results. Same-site NOI growth was positive 3.2%. And if we exclude our redevelopment sites, would have been 3.5%.
For the full year 2023, same-site NOI was positive 2.4%, exceeding the top end of our same-site NOI range of 2.25%. Higher minimum rent was the primary driver of the growth. As a result of our strong leasing production, the spread between leased occupancy and economic occupancy grew to 350 basis points, an increase of 30 basis points sequentially and represents $57 million in future annual base rent. We anticipate approximately 70% of this rent to commence during 2024 providing approximately $15 million to $20 million.
Turning to the balance sheet; we ended the fourth quarter with consolidated net debt-to-EBITDA of 5.6x. And on a look-through basis, including pro rata JV debt and preferred stock outstanding of 6x, maintaining the favorable end of our target range for this metric. As mentioned previously, at the beginning of the fourth quarter, we issued a new 6.4% $500 million unsecured bond which matures in 2034. This issuance addressed our 2024 bond maturities comprised of $246 million at 4.45% with an effective interest rate of 1.1% which was repaid on January 15, 2024 and $400 million at 2.7% due March 1, 2024.
Our year-end liquidity position remained very strong, comprised of over $780 million of cash and the full availability of our $2 billion revolving credit facility. Subsequent to year-end, we monetized our remaining 14.2 million shares of Albertsons, receiving nearly $300 million in proceeds. We will record a $75 million tax provision on the gain in the first quarter which will enable us to retain $224 million for future investments and debt reduction. Similar to last year, our shareholders will be eligible for a pro rata credit of the federal income tax Kimco will pay.
Now for some details of the financing for the $2.2 billion RPT transaction. We issued 53 million common shares to the RPT shareholders and an additional 953,000 OP units for an aggregate value of $1.2 billion. We also converted each share of RPT’s 7.25% convertible preferred shares into newly issued depositary shares representing 1/1,000th of a share of Kimco 7.25% class and convertible preferred stock. The class and convertible preferred stock has a liquidation preference of 92.5 million and is publicly traded on the New York Stock Exchange. Each 7.25% class and depositary share is currently convertible into 2.3071 Kimco shares.
On the debt side, we paid off $130 million outstanding on RPT’s revolver, repaid $514.4 million of RPT’s outstanding private placement notes, including accrued interest and amended and assumed $310 million of RPT term loans.
We funded the repayment of the revolver and private placement notes from cash on the balance sheet and a new $200 million term loan with a final maturity in 2029. The $200 million term loan was swapped to a fixed rate of 4.57%. The $310 million of amended and assumed term loans are comprised of 4 tranches with $50 million maturing in 2026, $150 million in 2027 and $110 million in 2028. Each of the tranches has been swapped to a fixed rate with a blended weighted average rate of 4.77%. Overall, the total debt related to RPT added to our year-end balance sheet is $510 million, with us using $440 million of cash on hand.
Now to our 2024 outlook. Notwithstanding some of the macro factors that Conor mentioned earlier, we remain confident about the growth prospects of our operating portfolio and are enthusiastic about unlocking the potential of the newly added RPT assets.
Our initial 2024 FFO per share guidance range is $1.58 to $1.62 before any RPT merger-related costs which we expect will be in the $25 million range or $0.04 per diluted share. Our guidance range is based on the following assumptions: same-site NOI growth of positive 1.5% to 2.5%, inclusive of the RPT assets. Included in the same-property NOI guidance range is a credit loss assumption of 75 basis points to 100 basis points. This is a similar level to our credit loss experience in 2023.
Lease termination income between $1 million and $3 million. This is compared to $7 million in 2023. Interest income between $2 million and $4 million as compared to $19 million in 2023, as we had significantly higher cash balances during ’23. Acquisitions, including structured investments ranging from $300 million to $350 million, weighted toward the second half of the year. Dispositions ranging from $350 million to $450 million weighted toward the first half of the year, comprised primarily of select RPT assets.
Corporate financing costs ranging from $319 million to $325 million, comprised of consolidated interest expense and preferred stock dividends. Annual G&A expense ranging from $133 million to $139 million. The G&A range is inclusive of the expected cost savings synergies from the RPT transaction ranging from $30 million to $34 million. Our guidance range also assumes no material impact from RPT-related noncash GAAP accounting income comprised of above and below market rent amortization, straight-line rents and fair market value adjustments to debt.
Lastly, the guidance range assumes no redemption charges or prepayment charges associated with callable preferred stock outstanding or early repayment of debt obligations and no planned issuance of additional common equity.
I want to thank all our associates whose tireless effort brought the RPT transaction to a successful closing and drove our strong results to end the year. We look forward to a successful 2024 together.
And with that, we are now ready to take your questions.
Question-and-Answer Session
Operator
[Operator Instructions] The first question comes from Michael Goldsmith with UBS.
Michael Goldsmith
On the acquisitions and dispositions. One, do the dispositions that you have in your guidance, does that represent the entirety of the expected noncore properties that you’re selling from RPT? And then two, are the cap rates of the acquisitions, is that indicative of where you see the market today?
Ross Cooper
Sure. Happy to take that. The dispositions that we’ve outlined in the first half of the year represent, I would say, the vast majority of the dispositions that we have planned. Like we always do, we’ll continue to monitor the assets, see how they perform, see where there’s growth, where there’s risk. And we may look to prune additional assets in the future as we would with any Kimco asset. But once we complete these, we’ll feel like we’ve really taken care of the bulk of the immediate needs on that front. As it relates to the acquisition cap rates, I would say that really is a blend between cap rates on true sort of core grocery acquisitions as well as our structured program. So when you put those 2 together, we’re very confident that we’ll be able to achieve turns that really minimize any sort of dilution and continue to enhance and grow our FFO accretion as we go forward.
Operator
The next question comes from Jeff Spector with Bank of America.
Jeff Spector
I don’t know if there’s a limit of questions but my first question would be, can you break down the 1.5% to 2.5% same-store NOI outlook? I don’t know if you can provide some of the building blocks to that, please?
Glenn Cohen
Sure. Again, like anything else, again, a good portion of it is really driven by increases in minimum rents, that’s the primary driver. And then you’ll have a small amount that’s in there for credit loss. Credit loss for the most part should be pretty similar, as I mentioned, to 2023. And then there is some lease-up that’s built into it as well. So those are really the primary drivers.
Operator
[Operator Instructions] The next question comes from Dori Kesten with Wells Fargo.
Dori Kesten
We appreciate the detailed guidance. Excluding merger costs, it looks like the midpoint of your FFO guide implies around 2% growth. Can you just remind us what your long-term expectations are for either FFO or NOI growth for the company now with RPT?
Conor Flynn
Yes, happy to take that one and I appreciate the question. That is the targeted FFO growth for the year ahead. Clearly, that’s below the longer-term growth rate that we’re anticipating for the company of between 3% to 5%. And when you look at the components of the FFO growth for this year, we do have a few onetime headwind items impacting us this year. But overall, the strength of the portfolio, the strength of the platform continues to shine. I mean, obviously, everyone’s dealing with headwinds from increased interest expense but we’ve prefunded and taken out all the maturities for this year and believe if the momentum continues, the growth rate should continue to accelerate. Obviously, that growth rate for this year is above last year and we think that, that should continue to accelerate in this environment.
Glenn Cohen
I can just add just a little bit in terms of some of those headwinds that Conor was mentioning. We’re still dealing a little bit with the fair market value amortization related to the Weingarten bonds. That’s about another $8 million difference for this year. So that’s a little over $0.01. So that’s 1 thing that’s certainly impacting us. Again, as I mentioned, if you look at the lease termination income, again, it’s pretty modest in terms of what’s built into the guidance versus the $7 million that we had last year.
And again, we were benefiting also from a pretty significant amount of interest income, that’s going to come off. So if you put all together, you have somewhere around $0.02 or $0.03 of headwind. But again, the portfolio is in great shape and we expect to be able to grow here.
Operator
The next question comes from Floris Van Dijkum with Compass Point.
Floris van Dijkum
So you — obviously, incredibly robust retailer leasing demand here. You talk about the best environment in 15 years or something like that. You’ve got this very significant SNO pipeline, $57 million. It’s, call it, 4% of NOI in that neighborhood. Your guidance only implies 2% growth. What is the timing? Maybe if you can walk us through when that income is going to come online? And is that going to be back and weighted for this year or is that going to impact ’25 going forward?
David Jamieson
Yes, all great question, Floris. Thanks. Yes, as Glenn mentioned, about 70% of that pipeline, we anticipate commencing this year. It’s representing about $15 million to $20 million, it’s obviously less than that $70 million on the total ABR. So it is back half weighted. And the team, based on last year’s performance, did an incredible job meaning exceeding those targets and we’ll continue to push the envelope and get those stores open as quickly as possible and get the cash flow going. So you will see it towards the back half. And then as you alluded to, you will see that benefit come in ’25 as well.
Operator
The next question comes from Alexander Goldfarb with Piper Sandler.
Alexander Goldfarb
So a question on cap rates. In the guidance, you have dispo cap rates sort of in the mid 8s, acquisitions in the mid 7s. One of your peers has been quite active in selling, has been selling in the mid-6s. So how should we interpret the different cap rates that we hear the different REITs talking about? And presumably, the asset quality is all fairly similar, although maybe there’s some debt or something specific. But how should we interpret the different cap rates we’re seeing to understand sort of what the “real” cap rate where shopping centers are trading today?
Ross Cooper
Yes, sure. Happy to take that. I think when you look at our disposition guidance for this year in the cap rate, it is on a very select portfolio of assets geographically as we’ve talked about, are primarily in the Midwest. More boxy, lower growth, potentially higher CapEx in the future. So when you look at the specifics, I don’t necessarily think it’s indicative of where cap rates are trading for a product across the board. It’s clearly selective to geography, format type, whether or not there’s a grocery component. So from that perspective, this is sort of a one-off unique year for us. And frankly, it was all baked into the plan and the underwriting with the RPT transaction. So this is very much on target and expectation for us.
Operator
The next question comes from Greg McGinniss with Scotiabank.
Greg McGinniss
I’m looking at the pretty substantial sequential lease improvement, could you just provide us some details in terms of the types of tenants that are taking that space, whether or not you expect that level of demand to continue into 2024 and if maybe that will result in some wider lease spreads as occupancy continues to tick up?
David Jamieson
Yes. Thanks for the question. We’ve continued to see activity across a really broad set of categories, start with grocery first. We signed a lease at Natural Grocers this last quarter. Several other specialty grocers are extremely active on the mainstream side. Those grocers are pushing as well. Formats, vary. You are starting to see a lot of flexibility with retailers willing to expand and contract the size of their square footage in which they operate to penetrate the supply-constrained market.
And so when you look at the forward-looking forecasts, let’s start with supply-demand imbalance. That continues at record low supply development. So you’ll have nothing new coming online. You’ll have basically second-generation space to backfill. And as Conor mentioned earlier in his comments, our Bed Bath absorption was quite robust this last year with 21 to 29 being occupied. Then you have the demand on the retailer side appreciating the efficiencies, the margin improvements and the gains that they’re seeing by utilizing brick-and-mortar to service their customer both on the last mile side and as well as some form of distribution.
So you have that demand side continuing to push through. And then you have the consumer side that obviously sees a great utility in the brick-and-mortar format as well. So when you mix that all together, when you look at the ’24 forecast, you’re continuing to see that those demand factors work in our favor. So we’ve been encouraged by the pipeline that we currently have and we’ll continue to push as hard as we can as we move through this coming year.
Operator
The next question comes from Craig Mailman with Citi.
Craig Mailman
Just looking at the guidance and Glenn, I appreciate the calling out to $0.02 to $0.03 for onetimers. But just as we look at that top end of the range, what gets you there? Is it just the timing on the capital recycling kind of maybe not happening so early in the year on the dispos? Do you have potential upside from leasing that you can actually get open in time for it to hit number? Just trying to get a sense of — I know it’s early in the year and there’s some macro uncertainty out there. So just trying to see where there is some potential conservatism in the numbers or just mass delusions that timing would kind of take care of?
Glenn Cohen
Sure, Craig. I would say, again, things that can get you to the upper end of the range, we have a credit loss range, that 75 to 100 basis points. So if credit loss comes in better than that, that’s definitely a help. That 75 to 100 basis point range is between $16 million and $22 million. So again, improved credit loss is an opportunity to help get there. Clearly, the timing of the acquisitions and dispositions plays into this as well. As we mentioned, the dispositions are more front loaded where the redeployment of that capital is more back-end loaded. If the timing of that shift is clearly an opportunity to further improve towards the upper end of the guidance.
Unidentified Company Representative
The other aspect, Craig, is also the timing of getting leases to start cash flowing as Dave Jamieson said, there’s about $15 million to $20 million that will be coming in this year that we anticipate. But if we have better execution and we could see that some of those rents could start sooner, that will also help us achieve the high end of the guidance range.
Operator
The next question comes from Haendel St. Juste with Mizuho.
Haendel St. Juste
I wanted to ask a question on new lease rents here. Leasing spread has certainly been on a steady upward trajectory the last couple of years but new lease rents and new lease spreads this past quarter were down versus the prior quarter, while TIs were up. So I’m curious if there’s anything unique that’s worth calling out here or maybe if there’s a broader read that perhaps rents could be at or close to peaking and where do you think new lease spreads can be over the near term?
David Jamieson
Yes. I mean as I mentioned, quarter-over-quarter, spreads are really indicative of just the population of that given quarter and what qualifies as a comp spreads, so it can be volatile at times. But when you look at the overall ABR growth, we continue to see us moving upwards in that trajectory from quarter-over-quarter where it was year-over-year. So we’re encouraged, obviously, by that direction, I think we’re at $20.32 at this point. And in terms of the TI allocation, we look at the all-in cost, so landlord and TIs collectively. The distribution between those 2 categories is dependent on the type of deal structure you cut. So when you combine those and you look at the trailing 4, we’re right in line there. And there were a couple of deals this quarter that were more as-is structure, so higher TI allowances were given to those tenants.
If you strip those out, you’re around $26 versus that $33 that we posted. So you’re pretty much in line, slightly better than what we’ve seen in the past. And as we look forward into ’24, we do have 29 anchor boxes, I think, that are naked with no options. They do have the highest rent per square foot at $18. We’ve executed 6 of those in the last quarter and those were as-is rents above that and we still had a high double-digit mark-to-market adjustment on that. So you’re seeing room for opportunity to grow in the coming year as well.
Operator
The next question comes from Samir Khanal with Evercore.
Samir Khanal
I guess, Conor, you had a very strong 4Q operationally. And clearly, occupancy continues to move up, both on the anchor and shop side. I guess what’s the potential upside from RPT as we think about maybe the shop space or even occupancy pickup in ’24?
Conor Flynn
Yes, happy to take that. Thanks, Samir. So the small shop, I think, is the real upside there on the RPT portfolio. They’re about 30 basis points below the Kimco portfolio. And when you look at the momentum we’re experiencing in the small shop side, we’re very confident that we should bring that up to the Kimco portfolio relatively quickly over the next 1 to 2 years. We’ve done the same with the Weingarten portfolio and we feel very confident in the team that we have on the ground and the leasing the momentum that we’re continuing to experience today. RPT has a number of upside opportunities. We’re obviously digging in right now and getting very excited. Mary Brickwell Village is one that I mentioned earlier in the call.
The mark-to-market spread there is significant on deals that roll to market as well as some leasing upside and some potential future redevelopment density plays. But it’s not just that site; we have a number of assets in Florida and Boston and other great trade areas that have significant leasing momentum that we think we can execute on. And if the dispositions come across the tape at the time, we think we’re going to be able to showcase RPT dispositions with — once you take those out of the combined portfolio, both the Kimco grocery percentage increases as well as the Kimco’s mixed-use percentage increases. So two strategic accomplishments very early on, hopefully, this year. So we’re excited, obviously, about that opportunity.
David Jamieson
I’d also just add that their lease economic spread is currently 570 basis points relative to their portfolio which is about $12 million of annualized base rent. So we’ll get the benefit of some of that coming online this year as well to complement what we currently have in our SNO pipeline. And then the ABR per square foot relative to ours is a little bit lower. So I think there’s room to run there and benefits to be had. And based on their the spreads that they posted in their Q4 filings, we’re encouraged by the direction of the real estate.
Operator
The next question comes from R.J. Milligan with Raymond James.
R.J. Milligan
Two-part question here on CapEx and I’ll try and get it all in. First, for the Bed Bath & Beyond spaces, you resolved 21 leases. Spreads much better, I think, than anyone expected but I’m curious what the average TI package was per foot and how did that shake out relative to expectations? And then second part, more broadly, I think you’re expecting an increase in CapEx spend in 2024 and I’m just curious what’s driving that? Is that Bed Bath & Beyond? And how much of that is RPT?
David Jamieson
Yes, sure. On the Bed Bath, we’ve been pretty consistent around $55, $60 a foot on the backfills dependent on the structure. Most of these have been single-tenant backfills but if you do look at some slip boxes in the future or a different type of operator, it could be lower or slightly higher but it’s been fairly consistent. Yes, on the CapEx load for ’24, obviously, we have one of the largest pipelines in the sector and one of our largest that we’ve had. So it’s primarily driven by deal cost and execution there. It’s our highest return on capital in terms of any investment we can really make. So we see it’s a great use of funds. And RPT will be — with their SNO pipeline, as I just mentioned, at 570 basis points in their lease economic, obviously, there will be a contribution there as well.
Operator
The next question comes from Caitlin Burrows with Goldman Sachs.
Caitlin Burrows
Maybe kind of on the watchlist side, Michaels, Jo-Ann’s and AMC are top 50 tenants of Kimco, each with a credit rating in the CCC range. So I was wondering if you could go through your outlook for the 3 companies? Or if you don’t want to talk about specific names, just broadly, the lower credit quality tenants, kind of how they’re performing in your portfolio and how that factored into the credit loss expectation in guidance?
David Jamieson
Sure. Yes. We can start with Rite Aid. So last year, we had 21 locations. At the end of the year, we ended with 16. We do anticipate another 5 coming back this quarter. The leasing activity and LOIs that we currently have on those locations are very encouraging and we’re seeing mark-to-markets in the double digits. So again, second-generation inventory is really where the opportunity is to push rents today and that’s what retailers see it. And so that’s — to my earlier comments, you’re starting to see retailers flex on their format to try to work themselves into some of these boxes.
As it relates to Jo-Ann’s, that has been another topic of the day. We have 21 locations. And currently, they’re looking at just rightsizing their operating business. They obviously had a great COVID run. Top line revenues were growing fairly significantly and I think they’re seeing a bit of a reset back to pre-COVID and trying to stabilize their business there. So it’s something that we’re closely watching. Limited rollover in ’24. But again, when we stay close with those operators as well. As it relates to the broader pipeline, it really hasn’t expanded all that much. I think the general health of retailers has been fairly significant. We are active in the pre-leasing side of that equation to get out in front of any opportunities to recapture space.
And in some cases, we’re really pushing it to upgrade the quality of the tenancy. Because you do have on the other side of the spectrum, high-quality investment-grade tenants that are looking to grab space. So they’re also becoming more aggressive in that regard. So right now, we feel pretty good.
Operator
The next question comes from Wes Golladay with Baird.
Wes Golladay
I just want to maybe talk about Mary Brickell Village. I know RPT has some big plans there, they’re already starting to do a lot of work there. Are you changing any of those plans?
David Jamieson
Yes, great question. Appreciate it. I know there’s been a lot of focus in the first part of the year on Mary Brickell. We’re just over a month of ownership. So we’ve got deep into the investigation of both short-term and long-term planning. And right now, the real focus is the upgrading of the quality of the tenancy. There is a tremendous upside potential there and some of the existing rents we’re in the 40s and 50s. And prior to close, you’re getting rents in the high 100 or 120-plus range. So you’re seeing a huge mark-to-market adjustment just on the retail side alone. As we look at forward-looking longer-term plans, we’re still in the early stages of the investigation of what we want to do. But if you’ve been down there, you realize it’s the hole in the donut, right at the heart of Brickell with $20 million visitors walking past that site on an annualized basis. So there is tremendous opportunity long term at that site and we’re very excited about it.
Operator
The next question comes from Paulina Rojas with Green Street.
Paulina Rojas
The lack of new supply is a key driver of the positive background in the sector. And if demand continues strong, rent should continue to rise. My question is how much rents would have to go up for development to start to pencil for you? I’m not sure if you have looked at this from this perspective but I think it would be an interesting way to frame the risk of new supply coming.
Ross Cooper
Yes, I’m happy to take that. I think when you look at the fundamentals of our business and why we’re so bullish, it is because the challenges of penciling on new development are significant. We estimate, based upon what we’ve seen in costs and land values, that to develop a new shopping center today, you’re well north of $400 a square foot. In many cases, $450 to $500 square foot. So when you think about the yields that any developer would reasonably require, your ABRs really need to be $35 to $40 a foot on average to pencil a new development. When you think about the replacement cost of the shopping centers that we own and the rents that we have, in many cases, we could be half of where replacement cost is today.
So from that perspective, it’s hard to envision that there’s going to be any meaningful new development in the near term and it makes you very comfortable with the rents that we have in place today and our opportunity to continue to push that.
Operator
The next question comes from Mike Mueller with JPMorgan.
Mike Mueller
What are you expecting for overall redevelopment spend in 2024? And are you close to activating any major projects that could cause that number to accelerate materially in ’25 and ’26?
Glenn Cohen
Michael, the redevelopment spend is somewhere between $100 million and $150 million. It’s pretty similar to where it’s been running really for the last few years and we continue to look for any place we can because that’s — it’s really an area of great return for us. We wind up in high single digits, sometimes low double digits on those redevelopments. But that’s the range right now.
Conor Flynn
Michael, I will add that we’ve been prioritizing the retail redevelopments because clearly, the returns there are much stronger and that’s where we see significant returns and upside in the portfolio. So if we’re going to activate new projects going forward, that is still a priority for us and continue to mine the portfolio for upside.
Operator
The next question comes from Michael Gorman with BTIG.
Michael Gorman
Just wanted to circle back to the growth potential within the RPT portfolio. And I just wanted to clarify, when we think about the 1.5% to 2.5% that’s inclusive of RPT, what is the impact of the portfolio you’re having on that? And how does that break out between kind of legacy Kimco and RPT as we think about 2024?
Glenn Cohen
Yes. I mean it has a minor impact. Remember, the overall part of the portfolio, 92% of the portfolio is all the Kimco assets. So it doesn’t have a major impact to it. Really, the bulk of the growth is really coming from the legacy Kimco assets today. It does have some impact. Again, as Dave mentioned, their SNO pipeline is 570 basis points, it’s about $12 million. So there is some of that $12 million that we’re expecting to come online during the year as well.
Operator
The next question comes from Linda Tsai with Jefferies.
Linda Tsai
Any thoughts on where occupancy ends up year-end between anchor and in-line? And would you expect the remaining 8 Bed Bath & Beyond boxes to be leased up by then?
David Jamieson
Yes. I mean that’s our goal is obviously to resolve the Bed Bath boxes in ’24 based on the demand that we’re seeing, we feel encouraged by that. I also want to note that we’re inheriting 3 additional boxes a result of RPT, so on a go-forward now, we’ll have 11. And again, we’re encouraged by the activity there. As it relates to occupancy, I’m always challenged to push the envelope higher and push the mark higher. I mean, exceeding 91.1 and getting to 91.7 on the small shop side was a great milestone at the end of the year. And I do just want to like put into context, this was all in the midst of merging another company into Kimco.
So I can’t thank our broader team enough on the execution that they’ve done in executing over 1 million square feet of leasing. So we’ll continue to push as hard as we can on the anchor side. We’re at 98%. Our all-time high was 98.9%. And so we have room to run there, too which is encouraging. And then bringing on RPT, as Conor mentioned, there is additional upside to on a relative basis from where our occupancy in theirs is. So we’ll have our work cut out for us in ’24 but we feel encouraged.
Conor Flynn
Linda, if you remember, Q1 typically obviously has the holiday hangover from some of the tenants that close after the holidays. So resetting the occupancy with RPT and the holiday impact and then growing the occupancy through the year is typically how the year commences. And obviously, with the momentum we’re experiencing, the diversity of demand, we’re confident that we should be able to grow the occupancy throughout the year after Q1.
David Jamieson
Yes. And just one last note on that. It’s not only just the new lease side but it’s also the retention side which is so important in terms of preserving and then growing your occupancy. And right now, when you look at the first half of the year, we’re tracking around 70% of our rollover right now getting resolved. So we feel pretty encouraged by the momentum as well.
Operator
[Operator Instructions] The next question comes from Anthony Powell with Barclays.
Anthony Powell
Just a question on the rent bumps signed on your leases in the fourth quarter. Where were they? And where do you think — and when do you think this effort to increase your contractual rent bumps will start to have results in higher minimum rent growth for you in the future?
David Jamieson
Yes. Our — we continue to push bumps obviously on the anchor in the small shop side. I think you’re seeing different opportunities in different parts of the market. In some areas, you can push north of 3% or in the 4% range in other markets might be a little bit different. But we’re challenged to grow as much as we can on an annualized basis. And we’re seeing, again, a good response because of the supply-demand imbalance right now and the multiple bidders at the table.
Conor Flynn
I would say just the small shop side continues to improve quarter-over-quarter. I think we’ve been tracking that diligently and pushing that hard. The anchor side is still aware there’s some friction and we’re trying to improve that if we can. But again, there’s still, I would say, some modest improvement there but not as significant as the small shop side.
Operator
The next question comes from Ronald Kamdem with Morgan Stanley.
Ronald Kamdem
Just two quick ones for me. The first is just on the dispositions guidance, is that all RPT, number one? And number two, is that — should we be expect — is that everything that you wanted to sell? Or should we be expecting sort of more as you get through this first batch?
Ross Cooper
Yes, the guidance is the vast majority of RPT dispositions. We always have some smaller land parcels and clean-up items but it’s primarily in a meaningful way RPT. As I mentioned before, once we complete these dispositions in the first half of the year, we believe that we’ve successfully executed on the plan. And then on a go-forward basis, we’ll just look at pruning as we do any Kimco asset that reaches the end of its life cycle.
Operator
We have a follow-up from Floris Van Dijkum with Compass Point.
Floris Van Dijkum
Just a quick follow-up question. Shop occupancy, Conor, you’ve talked about this and this is one of your biggest opportunities here. And clearly, there’s upside you talked about in the RPT portfolio, in particular. Maybe if you could also give a little bit of flavor on why your mixed-use presents an opportunity for your shop. And is your shop occupancy higher in your mixed-use assets versus your stand-alone retail assets?
Conor Flynn
Sure. Happy to, Floris. I think when you look at the small shop occupancy upside, it’s significant because that’s really where if you look at sort of the anchor occupancy reaching like, in essence, relatively full, that’s where we see a lot of upside on the small shop side. I like the diversity of demand that we’re experiencing as well right now in small shops. If you think about our percentages of small shops, restaurants and entertainment are still pretty sizable. They’re about 1/3. Personal care services are up to about 15%. We’re seeing the service industry really come back.
Other services outside of personal care, that’s another 12%. And then medical has really picked up as well at close to 6%. So when you look at like the components of really what’s driving the occupancy on the small shop side, it’s pretty diverse because each of those categories have a number of names that are out doing hundreds of stores. And I think with our platform, we’re able to actually give retailers the ability to hit their growth potential numbers because right now, they’re challenged to find high-quality retail and you can come to Kimco and get it in space. And so that’s where I think we have a real opportunity with the platform to get more market share on these new growth small shop openings. On the spread between the grocery-anchor portfolio and the mixed-use portfolio, there’s really not a sizable spread there between the 2 to say that one is significantly higher than the other.
Right now, clearly, the rents we’re getting on the mixed-use portfolio are higher but most of those mixed use or apartment towers that have retail and the base of it are high-dense areas, high-growth markets with significant demand. And so we have been able to push rents and those rents are significantly higher than the grocery-anchored portfolio. Hopefully, that helps.
Operator
Next question comes from Tayo Okusanya with Deutsche Bank.
Tayo Okusanya
Thanks for your earlier comments on Mary Brickell. Just curious in general around redevelopment. How you guys are kind of thinking about that as a potential use of capital. A lot of your peers seem to be ramping up that business. And I’m just kind of curious within your portfolio, how you’re kind of thinking about redev.
David Jamieson
Yes. As we mentioned earlier, our big focus right now is more on the retail redevelopment side and which is leasing driven. You’re looking to build a better mouse trap and work with high-quality tenants to reposition parts of the center. So we’ll continue to pursue that strategy as the yields and the returns on the are fairly accretive. More broadly speaking, when you look at the multifamily opportunities that we have with all of our entitlements, those are lower-yielding investments and we’re very selective and strategic about activating those.
In our case, we’re constantly watching the capital markets, the supply demand as there is known to be a lot of new supply that will be coming on the multifamily side. So we want to be very strategic and cautious about that. But we’re always assessing what the best use of our capital is. There’s great investment opportunities with Ross and what he’s looking at right now as well. So we really look at the holistic plan and how we utilize our capital in any given year to make sure we’re driving the most accretive returns.
Operator
The next question comes from Jamie Feldman with Wells Fargo.
Jamie Feldman
I was hoping to get some more color on the acquisition and structured finance investment — or structured investments guidance. Just can you talk more about what you’re seeing in the market today? Or is anything loosening up now, maybe that you didn’t see a couple of months ago, given what’s going on with some of the banks? And then, kind of what gives you confidence on your numbers? You have — first half, you’ve got $100 million to $150 million, is that something that’s kind of in the bag and you’re working on? Maybe just more color around what gives you confidence on those numbers? And do you think it could be higher or even lower by year-end?
Glenn Cohen
Sure. Yes. As I mentioned, there’s definitely more optimism in the marketplace as the rate volatility has come down a little bit. There have been an uptick of assets that have been introduced to the market. We’re seeing it each day. And anecdotally, speaking with brokers, they’re seeing more activity. They’re doing a lot more ELVs, broker opinions of value. So it’s indicative that there are a lot of groups that are out there that are contemplating, bringing assets to the market if they haven’t already. From our perspective, what we’ve seen that’s interesting. There are several larger assets that are on the market that tend to have fewer viable all-cash buyers. So any time we’re looking at making acquisitions or investments, we try to think about where is our strategic advantage. And there is a lot of capital that is bidding on grocery-anchored neighborhood shopping centers.
There are fewer buyers that are capable of taking down a larger asset like the Stonebridge deal that we bought last summer that the team is extremely excited about as long-term redevelopment opportunity but it’s a larger size that makes it more difficult for an all-cash buyer. So that’s a lot of what we’re looking to do. It’s a similar playbook that we’ve taken on in the last couple of years. As it relates to the structured investments, we have seen an increase in conversations. We have a couple of deals that are currently in the pipeline, hopefully, a few more that are behind it. So we’re very confident in the guidance that we put out and now it’s our job to execute on that.
Operator
We have a follow-up from Alexander Goldfarb from Piper Sandler.
Alexander Goldfarb
Just Conor, big picture, a lot of the questions on the call are clearly around guidance and trying to understand growth. As we think about this year and I’m not asking for ’25 guidance, so don’t worry. But as we think about the company this year is the sort of slower growth, is that more a function of a lot of the puts and takes with RPT and a lot of, I don’t want to call them one-timers but benefits last year, lower interest rates, et cetera. And therefore, this year is really subpar relative to where the company is going? Or are those of us who are sort of bullish on retail a bit too optimistic about the growth potential and that, in fact, it will take longer for the leverage that you guys are getting certainly in your re-leasing spreads to manifest in earnings growth? I’m just trying to balance which this year is being more impacted by?
Conor Flynn
Sure. So if you think about this year, specifically, we did try to outline some of the onetime items or the initial headwinds that we’re facing that will not repeat going forward. Glenn outlined the amortization of the Weingarten bond, that’s just this year and will not repeat going forward after this year. We do have a lot of SNO pipeline, signed but not opened. ABR coming online that’s back-half weighted. So again, obviously, that will benefit the ’25 and going forward from there. There’s a lot of, I think, embedded growth in the portfolio that has yet to be unlocked. And getting those tenants open and operating is sort of the significant fuel for the growth of the platform going forward.
Obviously, interest expense headwinds have been significant for everyone in any commercial real estate sector. I think we’ve done a nice job in terms of pushing maturities out. What will that look like going forward? I know a lot of people have different opinions on when the Fed might change and start to cut but we’re not running the business on banking on when they’re going to do that, we’re running a long-term business and trying to match fund the long-term debt with that.
So I think we’re well positioned to see an acceleration of growth going forward. Obviously, this year is an acceleration of growth from last year and we continue to believe that if we execute, we should see the building blocks continue to improve going forward.
Operator
We have a follow-up from Linda Tsai with Jefferies.
Linda Tsai
What was the rationale behind selling that last bit of Albertson shares post 4Q? And then also the rationale in a provision for taxes rather than a special dividend?
Glenn Cohen
Sure. I mean it’s always been part of our capital plan and our strategy to monetize Albertsons. It’s part of our overall capital plan and we feel we can obviously redeploy those proceeds better than what that current dividend is. So that’s part of it. And really, for us, we’d rather retain the capital. We think we can make good use of $225 million, again towards additional investment and a combination of additional investment and debt reduction.
Operator
And we have a follow-up from Caitlin Burrows from Goldman Sachs.
Caitlin Burrows
Again, I feel like occupancy has been asked about a number of times but just 1 other way to ask. You guys show that at year-end economic occupancy for your portfolio was 92.7%. And in an earlier question, when you were talking about the occupancy trend for this year, you pointed out there could be post-holiday fallout and then there’s also bringing in RPT portfolio. So I was wondering that 92.7 that you showed that just Kimco, if you knew what that would have been had the RPT properties been included, if that makes sense?
Glenn Cohen
Yes, it would have been lower by 10 basis points in total, when you include the RPT. When you include RPT, the overall impact of RPT on occupancy starting the year is about negative 10 basis points.
Conor Flynn
Caitlin, as you know, Q1 is typically when you get the holiday hangover, you get some spaces back and then you start to build occupancy back throughout the year. So we anticipate the seasonality to continue. Clearly, we’re off to a good start here and that’s why we’re cautiously optimistic about the year ahead, continuing to build on the momentum from Q4 because that was a record quarter for us. And obviously, if we can stack quarter on top of quarter like that, we’ll be in very good shape to hopefully meet and exceed expectations for the year.
Operator
This concludes our question-and-answer session. I would like to turn the conference back over to David Bujnicki for any closing remarks.
David Bujnicki
We’d just like to thank everybody that participated on the call today. We hope you enjoy the rest of your day. Thanks so much.
Operator
The conference has now concluded. Thank you for attending today’s presentation. You may now disconnect.
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