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Gaming and Leisure Properties, inc (GLPI 1.05%)
Q2 2021 Earnings Call
Jul 30, 2021, 10:00 a.m. ET

Contents:

  • Prepared Remarks
  • Questions and Answers
  • Call Participants

Prepared Remarks:

Operator

Greetings and welcome to Gaming and Leisure Properties Inc. Second Quarter 2021 Earnings Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. A question-and-answer session will follow the formal presentation. [Operator Instructions] As a reminder, this conference is being recorded.

It is now my pleasure to introduce your host Joe Jaffoni, Investor Relations. Thank you. You may begin.

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Joe Jaffoni -- Investor Relations

Thank you, Doug and good morning everyone and thank you for joining Gaming and Leisure Properties' second quarter 2021 earnings call and webcast. The press release distributed yesterday afternoon is available on the Investor Relations section of the company's website at www.glpropinc.com. On today's call, management's prepared remarks and answers to your questions may contain forward-looking statements as defined in the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. The forward-looking statements address matters that are subject to risks and uncertainties that may cause actual results to differ materially from those discussed today. Forward-looking statements may include those related to revenue, operating income, and financial guidance, as well as non-GAAP financial measures, such as FFO and AFFO. As a reminder, forward-looking statements represent management's current estimates and the company assumes no obligation to update any forward-looking statements in the future.

We encourage listeners to review the more detailed discussions related to its risk factors and forward-looking statements contained in the company's filings with the SEC, including its second quarter 10-Q and in the earnings release, as well as the definitions and reconciliations of non-GAAP financial measures contained in the company's earnings release. On this morning's call, we are joined by Peter Carlino, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Gaming and Leisure Properties. And also joining today's call are Desiree Burke, Senior Vice President and Chief Accounting Officer and Treasurer; Brandon Moore, Executive Vice President, General Counsel and Secretary; Steve Ladany, Senior Vice President and Chief Development Officer; and Matthew Demchyk, Senior Vice President and Chief Investment Officer.

With that, it's my pleasure to turn the call over to Peter Carlino. Peter, please go ahead.

Peter M. Carlino -- Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer

Well, thank you Joe, and good morning to all who have dialed or tuned in this morning. We're very happy to report another excellent quarter here at GLPI. I can tell you having done this for many, many years, a lot more fun to talk about good quarters than disappointing ones. And happily in my career, we've had very few disappointing quarters over many years. So, this is a good one. As usual, I'll make very few comments. I think we have our entire team here as always. And I'm going to ask Desiree Burke to highlight some significant points. And Matt Demchyk will also have a few comments and then we'll open it to your questions. Our release, I'd like to think as always is very, very thorough. So most everything you need to know of course can be found there.

But we're here today to answer your questions. So Des, why don't you take the mic?

Desiree A. Burke -- Senior Vice President, Chief Accounting Officer and Treasurer

Thanks, Peter. Good morning. Our second quarter results were great and we're ahead of the second quarter of 2020 on several metrics. To highlight the second quarter REIT segment results, income from real estate increased by $22 million for the quarter compared to the prior year. That's primarily due to higher percentage rent from Penn's Master Lease of $11 million related to Ohio. Rental income from the new Bally's lease of $3.1 million, Morgantown round of $750,000 related to the lease with Penn that began in the fourth quarter of last year. An increase related to Casino Queen of $3.4 million as a full quarter of rent was collected in 2021, while 2020 over call had a deferral. Escalators on our Pinnacle and Boyd Master Leases that became effective on May 1st of $1.2 million and some non-cash straight-line rent adjustments and revenue growth of $4.5 million.

These positive variances were partially offset by lower percentage rent of $1.8 million due to our amended Pinnacle lease, Boyd lease, Caesars lease, Meadows lease; percentage rent resets that were negatively impacted by the Casino's closures from COVID-19. The REIT segment also had an increase in expenses of $6.4 million compared to the second quarter of 2020 and that's primarily related to an increase in non-cash items, such as our land rights and ground lease expense and depreciation. Our second quarter TRS segment results, continued strong performance with net revenues and adjusted EBITDA exceeding prior year levels by $33.7 million and $14.3 million. I also want to point out that we anticipate achieving a full escalator on the Penn Master Lease effective November 1st of this year, which will increase annualized rent by $5.6 million and that we also expect to collect Casino Queen rent deferral of $2.1 million related to the first quarter of deferral upon the closing of the Baton Rouge transaction.

With that summary, I'll turn it over to Peter.

Peter M. Carlino -- Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer

Thanks, Des very much. And Matt, you've got some points you want to highlight, please do.

Matthew Demchyk -- Chief Investment Officer

As many of you recall, we articulated a theme -- a goal really being offensively postured coming into this year. Balance sheet strength and smooth capital market execution of prudently sourced efficiently priced capital are essential in this effort. To that end, during the quarter we opted to utilize our at-the-market equity issuance program, raising just over $70 million of proceeds, at an average net price of just over $47 a share. Our use of the ATM program took into account, our balance sheet goals, as well as the composition of our investment pipeline. Our balance sheet is officially at fighting weight. Our leverage is trending toward the lower half of our five to 5.5 debt-to-EBITDA target range around year-end. And we look forward to having the ability to comfortably earmark retained cash flow for redeployment into growth-enhancing investments, revenue-enhancing capex for existing tenants or external opportunities. To the extent we're successful, our overall growth rate will enjoy the benefits of compounding cash flows.

As we move forward with the strong and sound financial foundation, our focus is squarely on unearthing opportunities for the prudent deployment of our shareholders' capital. Our objective is to enhance our growth profile in conjunction with the enhancement of long-term intrinsic value per share. Taking a step back, this is a unique, dynamic and very exciting time for the gaming industry and especially, the gaming real estate industry. The combination of higher rent that we're achieving from the escalators Desiree talked about, in combination with the operational strength that Peter alluded to and the stronger tenant base that has resulted ultimately translate to greater value for our portfolio, for our platform and for our shareholders. Pound for pound, regional gaming real estate stands out as incredibly attractive compared to other investment opportunities across the real estate spectrum and beyond. This reality is especially relevant as more and more institutional capital yearns for safe and durable incomes, which are the hallmarks of GLPI's strategy and portfolio.

With that I'll turn the conversation back over to Peter.

Peter M. Carlino -- Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer

Thanks, Matt. That pretty well highlights many of the great points that we'd like to make. We're in a great business, had a great year. It's pretty exciting. So with that let's get to Q&A, Doug if you would.

Questions and Answers:

Operator

Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, at this time we will be conducting a question-and-answer session. [Operator Instructions] Our first question comes from the line of Smedes Rose with Citi. Please proceed with your question.

Smedes Rose -- Citi -- Analyst

Hi, thanks. I guess my first question is you mentioned achieving rent escalators with Penn. I was just wondering do you expect to achieve those escalators with respect to other leases, which have anniversaries later this year based on what you're seeing now?

Peter M. Carlino -- Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer

The quick answer is yes. Des, do you want to comment?

Desiree A. Burke -- Senior Vice President, Chief Accounting Officer and Treasurer

So the Penn escalator because of the performance of the Penn properties, we do expect. The only one that would reset later this year as well as the Meadows Lease, we're not certain to that we expect to get an escalator on that. We'll have to see as their COVID months drop-off and the better performing months come in how they perform. So the only one we are projecting right now is the Penn escalator.

Smedes Rose -- Citi -- Analyst

Okay. Thanks. And then Matt, you just mentioned institutional capital continuing to look at this space. So I was wondering, do you expect more interest in their regional assets? Obviously, you bought other transaction in Las Vegas recently. But I'm just wondering do you think is there something about the structure of regional gaming that makes it may be more difficult for institutional capital to come in?

Matthew Demchyk -- Chief Investment Officer

Yes. I mean, Smedes, as you know, on one hand, we've got a bit of a moat because in a lot of the limited license states, there's a need for licensure and some other things that make it a little less direct for capital to go into our asset class but over the many years I've been in the investment world, that reminds me of that law of physics that water ultimately finds the lowest point. Capital is ultimately going to find the best risk-adjusted returns. And I mean the amount of capital out there now, if you look at some of the private equity platforms and the recurring income that they're focused on in their private REIT vehicles is stunning. And over time, our cash flows fit that return profile incredibly well. To date, we've been very successful with our relationships being the first mover creating the space in finding and sourcing off-market transactions at very nice risk-adjusted spreads. And we've also pointed out as institutionalization continues, we expect to see more cap rate compression. So you've got a few recent comps on the strip that happened. Interestingly, what you've seen in the regional markets year-to-date of anything of scale and our quality has really been off market. Our deal with Bally's and then the transaction that MGP did at Springfield. It's going to be really interesting to see a market clearing high-quality asset in the regional markets and perhaps we'll see when in between now and the end of the year.

Smedes Rose -- Citi -- Analyst

Okay. Thank you, guys.

Operator

Our next question comes from the line of Nick Yulico with Scotiabank. Please proceed with your question.

Nick Yulico -- Scotiabank -- Analyst

Thanks. Good morning, everyone. I guess in terms of first question on Bally's are there any have you discussed any other options or opportunities with them now that that $500 million investment is off the table?

Peter M. Carlino -- Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer

The quick answer is yes but I want to turn to Steven Ladany for that.

Steven L. Ladany -- Senior Vice President, Chief Development Officer

Yes. Look we have a great relationship with Bally's as seen from the various transactions and structures that we've accomplished and achieved with them. Our dialogues with them continue even beyond this commitment. Part of the commitment was necessary for the UK regulations. Clearly, they had the amendment from the Rhode Island statutes to allow them to increase leverage and their outperformance of the properties has been incredible. So they no longer needed that capital earmarked today, but I would not suggest that that means that there's no further dialogue with them. We're always talking with them and always interested in transacting with them.

Nick Yulico -- Scotiabank -- Analyst

Okay. That's helpful. Thanks. Second question is just on the CFO search. Maybe you can give us an update on that. I think it's been a year now. What's -- how should we think about when that could get resolved?

Peter M. Carlino -- Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer

Well, there isn't one. That's the quick answer. There isn't one. We abandoned that quite some time ago. As I've answered in earlier calls, functionally we've decided that among the principles here with Desiree, Steve, Matt that we're perfectly able as you've seen in the interim time to handle everything and anything, including all the financings we've done plus the day-to-day operating stuff that we have reported. They just don't need. Now, somewhere down the line I expect we'll do it. But we're not in any hurry with the great team that we have in place. We just don't need it, quite candidly. And I expect, I'll say it again, somewhere down the line we'll probably designate somebody or bring in somebody. But at moment, we've got no interest and spending no time on that subject.

Nick Yulico -- Scotiabank -- Analyst

Okay. Thanks Peter.

Peter M. Carlino -- Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer

Thank you.

Operator

Our next question comes from the line of Carlo Santarelli with Deutsche Bank. Please proceed with your question.

Carlo Santarelli -- Deutsche Bank -- Analyst

Hey. Good morning everyone.

Peter M. Carlino -- Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer

Good morning.

Carlo Santarelli -- Deutsche Bank -- Analyst

Just somewhat of a modeling question. As you guys get closer here to the sale of the TRS assets, how should we think about kind of the G&A that maybe goes with those assets?

Peter M. Carlino -- Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer

Des, do you want to take that?

Desiree A. Burke -- Senior Vice President, Chief Accounting Officer and Treasurer

Yeah. So, the -- the performance of the properties are pretty much split pretty evenly. So I think you can think about those as half-and-half to do your modeling. And you shouldn't be far off.

Peter M. Carlino -- Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer

I think the G&A also if you look at the breakout in the earnings release the line item that's attributable to the non-corporate piece is related to the TRS. So I think that's the piece that's ultimately going to go away.

Desiree A. Burke -- Senior Vice President, Chief Accounting Officer and Treasurer

So that's what I'm, speaking to. The whole TRS goes away when both properties go away. But if you're modeling for this year, about half of it simply closed on the transaction with Perryville happened on July 1st. You can expect the other half to remain for the -- until such time can conclude on the sale of Baton Rouge.

Carlo Santarelli -- Deutsche Bank -- Analyst

Great. Thank you.

Desiree A. Burke -- Senior Vice President, Chief Accounting Officer and Treasurer

And then, the whole line item obviously goes away.

Carlo Santarelli -- Deutsche Bank -- Analyst

Yes. All right, I appreciate it. Thank you.

Peter M. Carlino -- Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer

Thank you.

Operator

Our next question comes from the line of Todd Thomas with KeyBanc Capital Markets. Please proceed with your question.

Ravi Vaidya -- KeyBanc -- Analyst

Hi. Good morning. This is Ravi Vaidya [Phonetic] on the line, for Todd Thomas. I just wanted to ask here. Are there any regional markets in particular that have surprised you in their strength and resilience coming out of the pandemic?

Peter M. Carlino -- Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer

It's kind of everything. And dare I say without being smart. The whole industry is a surprise and kind of a shock. I don't think anybody, and not even us, who know this industry well expected the kind of turnaround that we've had. In many cases setting record top line numbers which is the shocking part, I understand the bottom line and margin improvement and all the things we know with the cost cutting that occurred but it is incredibly shocking to consider that many of our properties our tenants' properties are hitting record numbers. And doing it by the way over these last months, with limits on occupancy, I think it's been pretty judicious and who they allow to sit in a seat and have carefully controlled their marketing toward the better of their customers.

Obviously in our industry we have a high degree of knowledge of who -- the value of every customer who, comes to our facilities. But on balance the answer is the whole thing is kind of shocking. But it demonstrates to Matt's earlier point what we said all along, that there is an enormous strength in gaming generally. Many have heard me say, in one-on-ones over these years that if you look at Maslow's hierarchy of needs its food, it's shelter and it's gambling. It's very high. People don't give up their entertainments. They just don't. And that's been my experience for many decades, as a matter of fact. So there is resilience. It's incredible. People just won't be denied their entertainment.

Ravi Vaidya -- KeyBanc -- Analyst

Perfect. Thanks. Just one more here, are you looking to expand any non-gaming experiential real estate either via debt or equity?

Peter M. Carlino -- Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer

The quick answer is yes and yes. But -- and we've been doing -- we've been looking as I try to point out since the day we spun seven almost eight years ago at a variety of things. The problem is we're in such a strong category. Our revenues as we finally demonstrated are bulletproof knocking on wood as I say that there's always the atomic attack that is possible, I suppose. But we're pretty bulletproof finding, its equivalent or anything close there to is very, very difficult. We are looking at things. And if I were a betting person and I'm basically not. I would say somewhere down the road we might find something that kind of grabs us but -- and it's our responsibility looking for shareholder value overtime. But until we see it you won't see us pulling the trigger.

Ravi Vaidya -- KeyBanc -- Analyst

Got it. Thanks so much. I appreciate it.

Peter M. Carlino -- Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer

Thank you.

Operator

Our next question comes from the line of Barry Jonas with Truist Securities. Please proceed with your question.

Barry Jonas -- Truist Securities -- Analyst

Hey, guys. Good morning. As you've talked with operators, do you think more are willing to move to a complete asset-light model under the right circumstances? Or is there still some hesitancy to go all the way?

Peter M. Carlino -- Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer

Look, I'll look at Matt for an opinion. My sense is that there's still those who are taking it cautiously that want a balance, that are willing to do some and consider others. But I think -- I think, generally people have recognized the value that REITs bring to the industry and you're going to see more and more people saying or frankly, just wanting to cash in and take advantage of the kind of multiples that their cash flow can generate.

Matthew Demchyk -- Chief Investment Officer

Yes. I think you put it well, Peter. I mean, I think, it's a learning curve for the operators. I think the fact that we had COVID and we saw the valuable benefits of having leases in place that are permanent capital, that have no bullet maturity, resonates with folks. And ultimately, I think, it's going to be conversations between them and folks like you around what valuation they might get under one structure or another. And as we move forward, things could likely line up for that, but it may take some time.

Barry Jonas -- Truist Securities -- Analyst

Got it. And then, just to be clear, as we're seeing rising COVID cases out there, curious, if that's influenced, or you see it influencing discussions or timelines in any way? Thanks.

Peter M. Carlino -- Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer

Not yet. And so, the quick answer is, no. As I said, there's always a threat of an atomic attack down the road I suppose, or the equivalent thereof. But at the moment, no, I think we're a good bit from that.

Matthew Demchyk -- Chief Investment Officer

Yes. I think, it's widely accepted, Barry, that the operators have now been battle tested. There's protocols in place. There's a lot of people who are inoculated. There's masks, there's a lot of steps that could be take and going to the draconian knee-jerk. We're just going to close things down, is certainly not the first step for anyone. And if the doors are open, we know how resilient things can be.

Barry Jonas -- Truist Securities -- Analyst

Perfect. Thanks so much guys.

Peter M. Carlino -- Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer

Thank you.

Operator

Our next question comes from the line of David Balaguer with Green Street. Please proceed with your question.

David Balaguer -- Green Street -- Analyst

Good morning. Wanted to discuss the institutional capital once again and just thinking about that from a long-term perspective. Obviously, it seems like it'd be advantageous if we saw cap rate compression in the regional markets from the standpoint that street NAVs would go up. But at the same time you've been able to attractively source deals at attractive pricing immediately accretive to AFFO. Could you stand to benefit somewhat from this moat lasting for a bit longer to continue to grow at attractive pricing before we see pricing reset like that?

Peter M. Carlino -- Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer

I mean, I think, we've seen some of that this year. I mean, I'd argue if the assets that traded this year were totally marketed, they would have been at tighter cap rates on all fronts. I really look at it as a win-win. I mean, on one side, we continue to look at all the deals we've done to get really good returns for our shareholders. At the same time, if the wave comes up and goes over the shore and there's rerating, I mean, we can -- we have, remember, the largest most diversified portfolio of these kinds of cash flows in existence. And the ability to then harness that, whether it's a joint venture or some other structure, to source capital at far better pricing, to enable us to go back out and redeploy it. We're ready for all paths that might play out. And do recall, I mean, to the earlier question, one of the gating factors for us doing things outside of gaming since day one is also the spread between where our assets are priced and where everything else is priced. And to the extent your scenario plays out and maybe our whole portfolio rerates dramatically from here, which, arguably it should, we're in just as good or better positioned to start looking more aggressively to some of the other stuff. So our job is to have a playbook that's ready for each eventuality and that's what we spend our time doing.

David Balaguer -- Green Street -- Analyst

Got it. That's helpful. And just a quick follow-up on that, as you mentioned JVs and considering that the moat in this business is quite real. Is that a potential avenue to help potential institutional capital overcome some of the gating issues from a regulatory standpoint?

Peter M. Carlino -- Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer

Totally. I mean, at the end of the day, when someone decides how to deploy capital, especially, if there is a moat, finding a platform and a seasoned management team is key. And you can look back, especially, nuanced real estate asset classes over time. That's been a -- I mean that's kind of box one you need to check to make sense. So I think that totally makes sense. And I think it's one way to monetize our skill set here, if and when the world plays out the way you're suggesting it might.

David Balaguer -- Green Street -- Analyst

Got it. Thank you.

Operator

Our next question comes from the line of Jay Kornreich with SMBC. Please proceed with your question.

Jay Kornreich -- SMBC -- Analyst

Hey. Thanks. Good morning. It's great that you're planning on hitting all your Master Lease rent escalators this year. And I'm curious if you can just break out if that was achieved largely due to margin expansion the regional gaming operators saw, or it's more from strong revenue surpassing 2019 levels?

Desiree A. Burke -- Senior Vice President, Chief Accounting Officer and Treasurer

So the answer -- the one that we told you we're going to hit was only the Penn lease, just to be clear, the $5.6 million is just the Penn Master Lease. But the reason that they're hitting it is their own performance. I mean, they have had record earnings. They've had record EBITDA. They've had record revenues, all of the above. But the adjusted revenue to rent ratio is calculated as disclosed in our earnings release in the table and they're just really performing extremely well, which is why we are able to achieve the rent escalators.

Jay Kornreich -- SMBC -- Analyst

Okay. And then do you foresee any opportunities with your current tenants for either to fund expansions or redevelopment opportunities?

Peter M. Carlino -- Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer

Yes. The answer is, yes. That's part of an ongoing discussion with a number of our tenants. We're hopeful that over the next 12 months that we might be able to announce some significant expansion, a hotel or things of that sort to be illustrative. Nothing certain right now but there are things that we're talking about. And, of course, we would welcome that opportunity to put some capital to work. We -- as Matt pointed out earlier are well positioned to do that.

Jay Kornreich -- SMBC -- Analyst

Got it. Okay. Thanks so much. That's it.

Peter M. Carlino -- Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer

Thank you.

Operator

Our next question comes from the line of Robin Farley with UBS. Please proceed with your question.

Robin Farley -- UBS -- Analyst

Great. Sort of, going back to an earlier topic and I know that Vegas assets are not your strategy. But I'm just curious for your take Peter in some of the transactions where the public gaming REITs having maybe more leverage constraints than others out there. Just that in some way put the public gaming REITs at a disadvantage in terms of bidding for assets? Or is the answer well it doesn't matter because those other buyers aren't going to go after the type of assets that you're going after which are not the big Vegas assets?

Peter M. Carlino -- Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer

Look I don't think you can assume either. I mean we do look at Vegas assets. It's part of an everyday discussion here. So it's not like they have leprosy or that we're frightened we may or may not be able to get to the kind of number that is competitive. And we don't presume that others are not looking at the same kind of assets that we do. So look it's a competitive world. There's a number of players in it and many more seeing how successful this industry is who would like to be in it. So it's dynamic right now. We like what we see in front of us. We've got a good year expect a good year next year and we think there's an adequate runway for us. But I wouldn't close any doors Robin. We're -- we look at everything. We really, really do. And as Matt points out we are becoming ever more competitive across a broader range of industries.

Robin Farley -- UBS -- Analyst

But, I guess, in terms of not taking on the kind of leverage that maybe some other buyers are how do you ultimately compete with that?

Matthew Demchyk -- Chief Investment Officer

Well, I think, Robin if our strategy was only to buy assets on the Strip. And we've now in the last two years seen the development of the CMBS market to support Strip and drive Strip asset valuations it might be a little more challenging. But to-date there hasn't been much formation of CMBS capital in regional markets. So that is part of the explanation behind the moat that exists over time. It certainly could evolve. But right now we get the benefit of that. I mean we get better returns on equity because there's not as much debt jumping up and taking lower returns as part of the capital stack. But you're also right as a public company. I mean we do have legitimate kind of a sweet spot for our leverage that might be different than a private operator -- private owner like a private equity fund that levers up to 70%, 75%. But there's a place for both. I mean that's been the case. If you look at other asset classes in real estate there's been a developed CMBS market. I mean in apartments there's a developed GSE market where the government actually loans the apartment to extraordinarily low rates. That hasn't precluded the public companies from building enormous portfolios. So there's room for all to coexist.

Peter M. Carlino -- Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer

Yes. Let me say, that if we did not value our investment-grade ratings and we were a private company we'd lever the living stuffings out of these assets because as we've said time and time again our revenue streams in both grew. I could sleep at night forever looking at the portfolio that we have knowing that we're going to get paid this year, next year and 10 years from now with absolute confidence. Of course we'd take more leverage. But look we're a public company with a different set of goals and a different financial structure that we want to protect and maintain. So we're much more cautious and we play within the sandbox if you will that we have.

Robin Farley -- UBS -- Analyst

Okay. Great. Thanks for your thoughts.

Operator

Our next question comes from the line of Haendel St. Juste with Mizuho. Please proceed with your question.

Haendel St. Juste -- Mizuho -- Analyst

Hi, there. Good morning.

Peter M. Carlino -- Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer

Good morning.

Haendel St. Juste -- Mizuho -- Analyst

So going back to the comments on the balance sheet for a second. I guess, I was intrigued by the comments on the Bally's games sys-packs that no longer needed and you're back to fighting waiting and getting more offensive. And so it sounds like you're clearly gearing up to be more offensive in near-term. And, I guess, I'm more curious if you're thinking about investments outside of gaming as one of your peers has done here recently. If there's been any change in thinking on that or anything on the table and how you think about required returns there versus your more core regional gaming assets? Thanks.

Peter M. Carlino -- Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer

Yes. Good morning, Haendel. So, yes, we continue to -- as we mentioned a little bit earlier think about things outside of gaming. I mean required returns are a function of a spread to our cost of capital given the risk of whatever the investment might be. And I mean I will point out not just in our cost of equity which is decent. But in our cost of debt which we're sector leading among our gaming peers, we are again in fighting weight. I mean we're ready both from a cost of capital perspective and balance sheet perspective to do things. And that said yes things outside of gaming are part of that opportunity set. I mean I'll just say our goal is not to let great be the enemy of good. We've got great opportunities in gaming, but could there be something good outside? Perhaps and we've spent many years doing R&D to find what that thing or those things might be. And all I'll say there is stay tuned.

Haendel St. Juste -- Mizuho -- Analyst

Okay, fair enough. We will. I guess back to the CFO search for a second and not to beat the dead horse, but I think many of us were under the impression that research was ongoing. It wasn't maybe the highest priority even it would just take a bit of time. And if it's that you're comfortable with players internally who can fill the role do the responsibilities why not designate one of those persons as CFO? It's a bit unique for a company of your size did not have a CFO. But my real question is more on guidance. I guess we're pretty far into the new year here. And I'm curious why not the comfort level to provide some annual guidance here but just not going to happen? You have a lot more visibility obviously than back in April. I'm just curious on some thoughts there as well. Thanks.

Peter M. Carlino -- Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer

I think we've said before that we'll have the guidance in all likelihood as we get into next year. We decided with all the variables this year things known maybe a couple of things not known that -- not negative, I don't want to suggest for a moment, but that we just may not have a perfect handle or a perfect sight on where this year is going. So, it's going to play it out get through this year look ahead to next year where I think we probably will get back to guidance. On the CFO thing, it's an interesting problem if you want to consider it that way. We've got a very talented financial team here. And I'm looking at just part of it sitting across from me at this table. So, I am -- I'll speak as the CEO of this company, I am blissfully happy with the workings of this team and indeed it is a team we could designate an office of CFO. We've talked about that. And my suspicion is look there will be a day when we'll do that. But we're going to play this out longer to no disadvantage to shareholders or to this company. I can't underscore that or not. We have a great team of finance people here in this company. As I say present and elsewhere in the building. So, for the moment at least, we're going to continue down the road we're on.

Haendel St. Juste -- Mizuho -- Analyst

Fair enough. Thank you.

Peter M. Carlino -- Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer

Thank you.

Operator

Our next question comes from the line of David Katz with Jefferies. Please proceed with your question.

David Katz -- Jefferies -- Analyst

Hi, good morning everyone. Thanks for taking my questions. I wanted to just delve in a little bit to Tropicana, Las Vegas, which obviously, you've transacted already, but there remains I believe some excess land if I'm correct that you own, which for as far back as I can recall, had some development potential. Is there anything potentially afoot or prospectively there that where you could maybe activate that asset just a little bit?

Peter M. Carlino -- Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer

David are you referring to excess land at the Trop site or more broadly in that portfolio?

David Balaguer -- Green Street -- Analyst

Yes. I was specifically referring to the Trop site, but I'm happy to have you elaborate elsewhere as well if you feel would be supportive.

Peter M. Carlino -- Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer

David, there is potential for more at that site. I don't think we or even Bally's knows what more is right now. Frankly, we're working cooperatively with them to figure out how we can maximize whatever occurs there. And I'm just here to say that we are considering the maximization of every inch of that property. So, that's as much as I can say for the moment. But I wouldn't assume that the deal that we've announced is all that you may see coming out of it. Time will tell. Time will tell. I mean look we're very anxious to build our relationship with Bally's. They've been terrific to work with to-date. But I don't think they've refined what they want to do but we're helping in that process to figure out how we can get the best use from that site. So, I think Matt used the term stay tuned. I would stay tuned on that one as well.

David Katz -- Jefferies -- Analyst

Got it. And then if I can just tap into one chronological experience Peter; and two, just the fact that your team is much closer to regional properties than we are. I'd love an opinion or a perspective around just the profitability levels that we have been seeing for the past two quarters. Obviously, people in our position are actively debating the sustainability of some of those profitability levels. And I would just think that your experience and information flow how sustainable are these -- is it realistic to assume?

Peter M. Carlino -- Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer

At the current levels, I'm going to say not at the current levels. However, to -- however, a good bit of that will definitely remain. I think every company has said holy smokes, there's a different way we can operate this business to maximize. I think Penn has said they expect to keep about half. They publicly said that. So -- and by the way, had they not, I would have taken a guess at about that level. And I think with many of our investors, I've offered that very thought that I expect about half of what has been gained to be retained for the long haul. This industry has changed, and it's going to -- isn't going to go back any too quickly.

David Katz -- Jefferies -- Analyst

Okay. Neighborhood half is?

Peter M. Carlino -- Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer

Yes.

David Katz -- Jefferies -- Analyst

Sort of the takeaway.

Peter M. Carlino -- Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer

I'll stick by that. Yes, I think so. Which David, I'll add is a beautiful outcome for us. I mean just look at our four-wall coverage pre-COVID add in that piece and all of a sudden we have an even more robust portfolio, more a potential for escalator achievement. I mean that really gives our business model some octane.

David Katz -- Jefferies -- Analyst

Yes. Sure. And if we were to drop it in the context of digital proliferation, which is only supportive in most cases, it's all good.

Peter M. Carlino -- Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer

More relevance, more durability and more cash.

David Katz -- Jefferies -- Analyst

Perfect. Okay. Thank you very much.

Peter M. Carlino -- Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer

Thank you.

Operator

Our next question comes from the line of Daniel Adam with Loop Capital Markets. Please proceed with your question.

Daniel Adam -- Loop Capital Markets -- Analyst

Hi. Good morning, everyone. Thanks for taking the question. Peter, what do you see driving the record top line results in gaming that you alluded to earlier? Is it pent-up demand? Is retail sports betting contributing -- understanding of course that it's not GLPI's core business by any means.

Peter M. Carlino -- Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer

Desperation is the word that comes to mind. I actually mean that. You've got my priority on the Maslow illustration, the hierarchy of needs. I can tell you, look, I've been around the gaming business or the gambling business with certainly with thoroughbreds grazing in Penn National where I was President of that company in 1972 when we opened, and been through a lot of recessions, fuel crises, all matter of things. And I can tell you absolutely that in every one of those situations, except the 2008 downturn, except that, we saw an increase in business. Business always went up when things -- when the world went down. I'm not sure that's logical or sensible, but that is a lifetime of experience over 50 years, I can tell you that's the case. And look, we've all seen it. The people are desperate. I mean they've been cooped up for a long period of time. They want to get out of masks. They want to get back to having fun living their lives doing those things. You see it in airports. You see it everywhere today. People are just anxious to get out and do stuff. And I think we're the lucky beneficiary of just that.And I will say also one other thing companies have gotten pretty good, as I said earlier, of knowing their customers. And clearly marketing has been curtailed, but targeted to those people who can produce the most revenue. They've been pretty skillful at doing that. That will remain.

Remember the two biggest expenses in any gaming business are marketing and people. So if you don't blow your brains out doing stupid marketing, which I think used to be the case some decades ago in the gaming business in the early days, when it was expanding around the US, and people finally have wised up and decided to keep a little of that to the bottom line. So, we're looking at a very different time, but I think the simple answer is people don't give up their entertainments, people are desperate to get out, and I think that you'll find that pattern will continue.

Daniel Adam -- Loop Capital Markets -- Analyst

Got it. Thanks for that. And one more for you Peter. Earlier this year, you made a very timely sale in Penn stock. And I guess, at this point as Chairman Emeritus of the company, what is your involvement if at all in Penn? Thanks.

Peter M. Carlino -- Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer

Very little. I no longer get daily reports as I used to. So I have no special insight into the company at all, didn't at that time, don't now. And I'll tell you this. The price at which I sold, was purely lucky, if I can use that expression. I sold for one reason only and that is the moron in the White House. I'll say it flatly. So, if political leanings go elsewhere with the kind of pronouncements coming out of the Biden White House threats to capital gains and so forth. Biden frankly, representing my family and a responsibility in the family trust to do the right thing. I thought boy, we're going to get some of that out of there. And it just happened to be at that price. It could have been at the current price and I would have done the same thing. So I'm being very candid about that. Very candid about that. I still have probably well over $100 and some million of family money invested. We didn't bail out entirely. But that was the driver. And by the way, on a personal net level, if the capital gains tax goes up to the ordinary income raise in my lifetime, I'll never sell another share of stock. So now you get into my politics, but that I'm so angry that an investment, at which I've been involved with for 50 years, would be forced to be taxed at that level. It's -- so now you got my personal view, but that believe me that's what drove it nothing else.

Daniel Adam -- Loop Capital Markets -- Analyst

I appreciate the candor. Thanks.

Operator

Our next question comes from the line of John Massocca with Ladenburg Thalmann. Please proceed with your question.

John Massocca -- Ladenburg Thalmann -- Analyst

Good morning.

Peter M. Carlino -- Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer

Good morning.

John Massocca -- Ladenburg Thalmann -- Analyst

So quick -- so, one of your peers, I think even some of your more broader peers in the net lease space as well have been using kind of construction financing as maybe kind of a toehold into kind of, potentially the toehold in the kind of new transaction deal flow. Is that something that you would potentially look to do? Or are there just too many kind of risks involved with that kind of a structure?

Matthew Demchyk -- Chief Investment Officer

Yeah, John, it's something we certainly have thought about, especially, I mean, when you think about within the gaming space, opportunities where we can have a really good insight in underwriting of pro forma. If we see mispriced risk there we certainly could put capital there into the structure, ideally that transforms into a sale leaseback. But you said the right thing. I mean, the goal is to get the talent in, to what's ultimately going to be a recurring attractively priced durable income stream. And the other fact is, we don't lend our balance sheet out for free. I mean, you look at the deal we did with Bally's, the equity backstop, we've got $150 million of real estate at an off-market eight cap rate that we're going to have for many years, its very different than doing a fully pre-payable mezz loan on a construction project. I mean, our goal is to maybe do something strategic, but ultimately to get recurring cash flow. So we're open to everything and anything that we can that makes our platform more valuable for shareholders. We're also cautious and prudent in that application.

John Massocca -- Ladenburg Thalmann -- Analyst

Are you seeing opportunities for those types of transactions today? I mean, there's a couple of state markets, where there's some greenfield or brownfield development? I mean, is that a potential vertical for investment?

Peter M. Carlino -- Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer

Let me answer it this way. Look, we are talking with a couple of tenants about significant expansion at their properties. I'd love to put capital to work in that way, because it would fall under the Master Lease illustratively. But we have said, look, we'd love to see some greenfield opportunity in some of the states that are talking about going to gaming. We need to be there with a partner, whatever fashion we can get there. And I can tell you that, where there is that activity we are engaged. That's all, I'll say about it. But look, the opportunity so long as you don't overspend to develop in a limited license state is about as bulletproof as you can get. You kind of can't go wrong, if you just don't overspend. That's the only discipline. I'd point to the properties the last that, I built well we would have been Plainridge in Massachusetts, and of course the Ohio properties, that I was totally involved with all the design and the building and development, those things were built to tight budgets. They're spectacular in every way and the performance has been astoundingly good. So would we pass up an opportunity like that at GLPI? I don't think so. So, I mean, it's what we do. And yes, we would be there.

Steven L. Ladany -- Senior Vice President, Chief Development Officer

Yeah. I guess, just to add to Peter's comment. I mean, most recently, we've had discussions with folks in states such as Nebraska, Virginia and Illinois, which are already permitted locations, but we're on the ground and having discussions with people in jurisdictions which are not yet legal as well. So yeah, we are we are scampering around looking for opportunities to deploy capital. And as Matt said, get a foothold to ultimately own the land and building of those properties.

Peter M. Carlino -- Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer

I like that Steve scampering.

John Massocca -- Ladenburg Thalmann -- Analyst

And then maybe changing gears just a little bit on the balance sheet, where do you see your cost of debt capital today? And I'm just thinking particularly in the context of some of the pieces of debt on the balance sheet that have kind of shorter remaining maturity or some of the higher coupon pieces. I mean, is there potential there for pre-payment? I know, there's kind of an equation in math you all will go through, but just the opportunity there maybe?

Matthew Demchyk -- Chief Investment Officer

I have a sense you're looking at our 2023 and the five-plus coupon on those. So you can look out and see our current 10-year papers trading just around 3% in the public market. And believe it or not, I mean, we've talked historically about conceptually looking even at the 30-year market and breaking the sound barrier for our asset class there. And those rates believe it or not are very close to, if not at 4%. So we're not in a rush to pre-finance or prepay the 2023s, the NPV is still negative to do so, but it's certainly something we've got in our back pocket. Between now and then, and we'll do something if and when it makes sense.

John Massocca -- Ladenburg Thalmann -- Analyst

Okay. That's it for me. Thank you very much for answering my question.

Matthew Demchyk -- Chief Investment Officer

And John, I'll just add with the goal of continuing to increase the term of our debt on our balance sheet given the long life of our assets in the long life of our existing leases.

Operator

Our next question comes from the line of John DeCree with CBRE. Please proceed with your question.

John DeCree -- CBRE -- Analyst

Good morning, everyone. Thank you for taking my questions. Maybe to get your views on the current M&A landscape or outlook a little bit Peter and revisit your response to an earlier question about the current levels of record profitability and how much of that is sustainable, obviously, a lot of different views on the investment and analyst community. I'm sure, your counterparts and peers as well. Has that influenced buyers and sellers? Do you think that's made it more difficult to get some regional gaming stuff over the finish line? Just wanted to get your thoughts on, how the M&A market might be considering that debate?

Peter M. Carlino -- Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer

Get out in the regional world. I mean, there is not I'd like to think -- there's not an opportunity tree with stuff falling to the ground where we get out there with a blanket and catch it all is so varied and profound. The reality is as I've used before, I mean we're not catching stuff. We actually have to mine for opportunity because it's just not -- there's not a lot of stuff for sale at any given moment. There's -- there were a number of properties that we've looked at significant properties that we'd like to own where we're engaged with the seller. But the seller says, if you buy this from me, I got no use for the proceeds. Where am I going to put them. I mean it sounds like it's a nice problem. It sounds silly. But in other words, the seller is not ready to sell until the seller is ready to sell. There's got to be some reason. Much of the stuff that we've purchased has come because of some need strategic or otherwise for the seller to offload properties or lighten up or just get out of the business. But until that happens, we can't make it happen.

One of our former employees used to say it's like somebody coming up to your house and is driving down the street sees your property and say wow that's kind of cool, jams on the brakes runs up your front door bangs on the door. And says, I love your house I want to have it. And then we say, well it's not for sale. But I really like it and I really want to have it. Well, it's not for sale. Now that debate could go back and forth for a while. But until the seller decides or the price gets to a point where it's yours, it's not going to happen. So our job is to hang around the hoop proactively there, banging the boards to be there if and when that occurs. That's a vague answer, but that's pretty well characterized as what's out there. There are not hundreds of properties for sale tomorrow morning at 9:00.

John DeCree -- CBRE -- Analyst

That's helpful color Peter. And to ask a follow-up on part of your answer there, given maybe some of the reluctancy. As we see cash flows from casinos increase and cap rates compress. Are we heading to a point, if you had to pull out your crystal ball where valuation or just absolute dollar price, given where cap rates are going and where EBITDA is going at these properties. Do you think we're getting close to where there's going to be folks that are willing to let stuff go, if we're seeing record levels of EBITDA and record cap rates as well?

Peter M. Carlino -- Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer

The answer is to my view is yes but I'm looking around the table. Other comments?

Matthew Demchyk -- Chief Investment Officer

Yes John I think -- I just think of Zillow and that make me move price. I think in Peter's analogy that guy may or woman may have an idea and, well if I ever got x, I'd consider. And you're right robust results right now, give capital providers like us a little more license to get close to that and make me move numbers, if it exists. But again, it's really driven by what are they going to do with the money. I mean we do have the capacity to help with that a little bit, if we were to give units or something to someone try and structure something. But at the end of the day, if they don't need to or want to do something with that capital, we still can't pry it out of their hands. And remember everything we do in those scenarios, I mean if we don't know where EBITDA is going to be and we have a decent sense from our -- with our experience where it could be we need a margin of safety built in. And remember the last few deals you saw us do given the, uncertainty we can solve for price with still a decent 4-wall coverage ratio. And that's been important to us and will continue to be.

John DeCree -- CBRE -- Analyst

Very helpful, guys. I appreciate the color and all the stuff.

Matthew Demchyk -- Chief Investment Officer

Thank you.

Operator

Our next question comes from the line of Jordan Bender with Macquarie. Please proceed with your question.

Jordan Bender -- Macquarie -- Analyst

Everyone, good morning. This hasn't been touched on in a while or at least since before COVID, but you once talked about doing $500 million in transactions on an annualized basis. I know that you don't have a crystal ball into future years here but can we kind of expect this $500 million as a benchmark moving forward?

Peter M. Carlino -- Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer

I haven't given up on that yet and I don't think we will. Now it's never going to be a straight line. It just isn't. But that's certainly our internal goal that we believe should be achievable. And it's -- we've far exceeded that to date. But what's the how do they do ads on television today past performance is not predictive of the future. Something to that effect whatever that exculpatory phrase is that it is pretty popular with financial projections.

Jordan Bender -- Macquarie -- Analyst

Awesome. Thanks. I mean understanding the COVID uncertainties today your dividend payout ratio is still below historical levels in 2021. And you've kind of talked about possibly reimplementing guidance as we enter '22. Should we expect that payout ratio to go back into your 78% to 80%-ish range?

Peter M. Carlino -- Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer

The answer is yes. Des do you want to make a comment?

Desiree A. Burke -- Senior Vice President, Chief Accounting Officer and Treasurer

Yes. What we -- our payout ratio is very close to what it had been historically and we do shoot for 80% of AFFO. The struggle for 2021 was coming into the year what would our AFFO be, how would our TRS properties perform, what would happen with those -- the escalators and whatnot? So yes you-we've always had the same goal and the goal will continue into 2022.

Peter M. Carlino -- Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer

Yes. Look and I'll say it just as an investor in this company myself that dividend growth is critically important to me within responsible levels. So you can bet that we're going to continue to move it to the best of our ability and keep it going forward.

Jordan Bender -- Macquarie -- Analyst

Awesome. Thanks guys.

Operator

Our next question is a follow-up question from the line of Smedes Rose with Citi. Please proceed with your question.

Michael Bilerman -- Citi -- Analyst

Hi, yes. Thank you. It's Michael Bilerman [Phonetic] here with Smedes. Matt, I wanted to come back to capital raising and Peter you can feel free to answer this as well. Matt, you talked about raising $70 million of equity on the ATM in the quarter. I think execution about 46.67 [Phonetic]. You obviously have a lot more you can raise on the ATM. But I want to see like how eager would you be to reload the balance sheet today to position you to do something down the road where you can know your cost of capital today not knowing where you may be able to transact and buy something in the future? It would appear as though the institutional interest in your asset class is so high and you've made a ton of comments on this call describing that. So wouldn't it be easier today to go out and do a joint venture, raise a significant amount of proceeds and be at the ready to capitalize on the numerous opportunities that you've been talking about that could come to fruition?

Peter M. Carlino -- Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer

Yeah. Michael, I mean we have at our disposal a whole toll chest of things. One is the ATM, which we've used for a net price, a little close to 47. But at the same time we still remain open to joint ventures and other things. I mean remember there's a few things. One, we don't have a predictable cadence of acquisitions. So, we don't want to overshoot in the other direction and delever to a point where we're not getting the benefits of leverage at their maximum ability to kick-in. And there's also large transactions out there. So if we did something of significant size that's where we're making a decision between the benefits of using equity and debt versus the benefits of the JV partner. So I mean I think it's going to be nuanced, it's going to be case by case. What you saw us do this quarter was do that call it last piece of positioning ourselves to be in fighting weight to take advantage of especially small and mid-priced opportunities out there not having equity overhang or any kind of headwinds to our ability to raise capital. But from here going forward, I think everything you said is going to be part of our business plan on an opportunistic basis.

Michael Bilerman -- Citi -- Analyst

Well, I guess why make it opportunistic? Why not go down the road and try to do something where you can get an attractive cost of capital and tap into that amount of interest that's out there and you run a little bit lower leverage for a period of time, but you've been able to take advantage of the situation. Why wouldn't you be aggressively trying to do it?

Peter M. Carlino -- Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer

We do aggressively have conversations to position ourselves for things like that but it's the sources and uses equation. Like we're not -- if you're asking should we delever to 4.5 or four times with a large JV and then wait for the next thing. We don't know when the next thing will be or what scale the next thing will be or what pricing it might have. So, yes, we're positioning and thoughtful about being ready for that scenario, but I don't think we would force it if we didn't have a good use of the proceeds.

Matthew Demchyk -- Chief Investment Officer

I mean, we're moving in that direction. I think the ATM demonstrates that we're headed down that road. But we have a lot of borrowing capacity, or undrawn lines and so forth. And yes we are talking about equity as we raised it opportunistically. But I think we're pleased with where we are right now. And we'd like to pair the concept you have with the use of funds with the transaction with something else.

Peter M. Carlino -- Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer

We're not willing to sit on it. We were -- just -- Michael if we were private, we didn't have the public markets which were totally respectful of and appreciative of, our cash flows would lend themselves to much higher leverage. And you've seen in the last couple of years us get it down to a range that's very, very I mean arguably maybe low for what our assets could support, but we think prudent for our business model. To force it well beyond that though in the hope that something may arise, I mean are you giving up more than you're gaining? It's a balancing act. It's an art, but we think we're close to the efficient frontier. We don't want to -- one way or the other by a lot on the hope of redeploying.

Michael Bilerman -- Citi -- Analyst

Well, I think the -- I mean, look I think there's going to be opportunities right? As you think about the acquisition [Phonetic] of the asset class to think that it's going to just stop here is probably unwarranted especially given the confidence that you have in the long-term performance of the asset class. These joint ventures don't -- you can't just snap your fingers and execute them right? These are long-term relationships that you have to document and let alone all the financing. So if you find an opportunity it's not like you can just snap your fingers and create a joint venture with an institutional partner or partners or a fund get all the leverage and deleverage and take advantage of that. So I was just trying to push to see whether and it doesn't seem as though based on your comments an appetite to fully reload and take advantage today of the extraordinary debt markets and equity markets to monetize some part of your portfolio? Doesn't sound like you have any interest to do that actively today?

Peter M. Carlino -- Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer

We have interest to actively do it for the right reasons. I mean, in your scenario if we were to do that and cap rates continue to compress, we could lock in a cost of capital and now have a negative spread to where we redeploy it if things compressed another 100 basis points in the next 12 months. I mean again the REIT business especially triple-net and healthcare as you know is a match funding business. And I don't want to call -- in your scenario if I'm doing that I'm calling the cost of my capital now and with an uncertain use of proceeds again, and I'd rather put them together. But we're totally appreciative of the effort and the timeline. And that's why we put effort into that channel to make sure if and when it's appropriate we're well positioned.

Michael Bilerman -- Citi -- Analyst

And then just finally just Peter mentioned some uncertainties to not wanting to give guidance even though it's a lot more clear today in terms of the performance of your assets. And Peter you mentioned there are a couple of things not known. Are those with your existing assets that are not known? Or is that external opportunities probably more so on the buy than the sell given the conversation we just had?

Peter M. Carlino -- Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer

It's kind of -- Des, you want to say, yes, it's.

Desiree A. Burke -- Senior Vice President, Chief Accounting Officer and Treasurer

Yes. It's just the timing still on the sale of our taxable REIT subsidiaries. We just want to clean all of that up and then begin forecasting once we have all of the unknowns out of our that we -- things we can better control.

Peter M. Carlino -- Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer

We're halfway there with the sale of Perryville.

Michael Bilerman -- Citi -- Analyst

So it's all -- so the unknowns are all due to the TRS. There's nothing else transaction or at your existing assets it's all to the TRS. And why couldn't you just sort of bracket the TRS income and things and give us the rest?

Peter M. Carlino -- Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer

There are potentially other things as well. We're just not going to go down that road we can't. So, I mean, yes, there are other things we're looking at doing could happen, might happen that negative I'm looking at the positive side, it's mostly good. TRS performance by the way has been terrific. And -- go ahead, Des. Do you want to?

Desiree A. Burke -- Senior Vice President, Chief Accounting Officer and Treasurer

I mean, honestly the flip side of that is if everything is known it's pretty easy for everybody to project, right? So it doesn't -- you don't necessarily need company guidance for that, but I mean, I think we will look at providing guidance and determine the right time for the company to begin doing so.

Peter M. Carlino -- Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer

Yes.

Operator

That is all the time we have for questions. I'd like to hand it back to management for closing remarks.

Peter M. Carlino -- Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer

Well, yes, let me thank all who have dialed in this morning. Obviously, we appreciate that. It's to say, this is a lot more fun when the news is good, which it is. You find us in a very optimistic mood about where we're going through the balance of this year, and looking into next year we feel very good. So if we've left that impression, which I hope we have then we've had a successful call and we thank you for joining us. Thanks again. See you next quarter.

Operator

[Operator Closing Remarks]

Duration: 63 minutes

Call participants:

Joe Jaffoni -- Investor Relations

Peter M. Carlino -- Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer

Desiree A. Burke -- Senior Vice President, Chief Accounting Officer and Treasurer

Matthew Demchyk -- Chief Investment Officer

Steven L. Ladany -- Senior Vice President, Chief Development Officer

Smedes Rose -- Citi -- Analyst

Nick Yulico -- Scotiabank -- Analyst

Carlo Santarelli -- Deutsche Bank -- Analyst

Ravi Vaidya -- KeyBanc -- Analyst

Barry Jonas -- Truist Securities -- Analyst

David Balaguer -- Green Street -- Analyst

Jay Kornreich -- SMBC -- Analyst

Robin Farley -- UBS -- Analyst

Haendel St. Juste -- Mizuho -- Analyst

David Katz -- Jefferies -- Analyst

Daniel Adam -- Loop Capital Markets -- Analyst

John Massocca -- Ladenburg Thalmann -- Analyst

John DeCree -- CBRE -- Analyst

Jordan Bender -- Macquarie -- Analyst

Michael Bilerman -- Citi -- Analyst

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