2022 First Quarter Investor Presentation
22
STORE
capital
2022 first quarter investor presentation
supplemental reporting measures
Funds from Operations, or FFO, and Adjusted Funds from Operations, or AFFO
Our reported results are presented in accordance with U.S. generally accepted
accounting principles, or GAAP. We also disclose Funds from Operations, or
FFO, and Adjusted Funds from Operations, or AFFO, both of which are
non-GAAP measures. We believe these two non-GAAP financial measures are
useful to investors because they are widely accepted industry measures used by
analysts and investors to compare the operating performance of REITs. FFO and
AFFO do not represent cash generated from operating activities and are not
necessarily indicative of cash available to fund cash requirements; accordingly,
they should not be considered alternatives to net income as a performance
measure or to cash flows from operations as reported on a statement of cash
flows as a liquidity measure and should be considered in addition to, and not in
lieu of, GAAP financial measures.
We compute FFO in accordance with the definition adopted by the Board of
Governors of the National Association of Real Estate Investment Trusts, or
NAREIT. NAREIT defines FFO as GAAP net income, excluding gains (or losses)
from extraordinary items and sales of depreciable property, real estate
impairment losses, and depreciation and amortization expense from real estate
assets, including the pro rata share of such adjustments of unconsolidated
subsidiaries.
To derive AFFO, we modify the NAREIT computation of FFO to include other
adjustments to GAAP net income related to certain revenues and expenses that
have no impact on our long-term operating performance, such as straight-line
rents, amortization of deferred financing costs and stock-based compensation. In
addition, in deriving AFFO, we exclude certain other costs not related to our
ongoing operations, such as the amortization of lease-related intangibles and
executive severance and transition costs.
FFO is used by management, investors and analysts to facilitate meaningful
comparisons of operating performance between periods and among our peers
primarily because it excludes the effect of real estate depreciation and
amortization and net gains (or losses) on sales, which are based on historical
costs and implicitly assume that the value of real estate diminishes predictably
over time, rather than fluctuating based on existing market conditions.
Management believes that AFFO provides more useful information to investors
and analysts because it modifies FFO to exclude certain additional revenues and
expenses such as, as applicable, straight-line rents, including construction period
rent deferrals, and the amortization of deferred financing costs, stock-based
compensation, lease-related intangibles, and executive severance and transition
costs as such items have no impact on long-term operating performance. As a
result, we believe AFFO to be a more meaningful measurement of ongoing
performance that allows for greater performance comparability. Therefore, we
disclose both FFO and AFFO and reconcile them to the most appropriate GAAP
performance metric, which is net income. STORE Capital's FFO and AFFO may
not be comparable to similarly titled measures employed by other companies.View entire presentation