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DATE

Friday, April 24, 2026 at 9 a.m. ET

CALL PARTICIPANTS

  • Chief Executive Officer — John P. Albright
  • Chief Financial Officer — Philip R. Mays

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TAKEAWAYS

  • Total Revenue -- $18.4 million for the quarter, consisting of $12.6 million lease income and $5.8 million interest income from commercial loan investments.
  • FFO and AFFO Per Share -- $0.53 per diluted share each, reflecting 20% growth year over year.
  • Portfolio Size -- 125 properties totaling 4.3 million square feet in 31 states, posting 99.5% occupancy and a weighted average lease term (WALT) of 9.3 years.
  • Investment-Grade Tenant Exposure -- 50% of annual base rent (ABR) generated from investment-grade tenants, with Lowe's, Dick's Sporting Goods, Walmart, and Best Buy among the top five tenants.
  • Commercial Loan Portfolio -- $160.4 million at quarter-end with a weighted average current yield, including paid-in-kind (PIK) interest, of 13.5%; portfolio now at targeted 20% of total undepreciated asset value.
  • New Investments -- Acquired a downtown Aspen, Colorado retail property for $10 million at an 8.5% initial cap rate (50-year absolute triple-net, 1.25% annual rent escalators) and originated a $32 million first mortgage loan, with $8.6 million funded at closing at 13% interest stepping down to 11.5% upon condition satisfaction.
  • Dispositions -- Sold 3 non-investment-grade properties for $5.8 million at a 7.4% weighted average exit cap rate.
  • Credit Facility Extension -- Amended unsecured credit facility to include a $250 million revolver (maturing 2030), $100 million term loan (2029), and $100 million term loan (2031), with initial fixed interest rates of approximately 3.5% for term loans and 4.8% for $100 million of the revolver balance via SOFR swaps; next debt maturity in almost three years.
  • Equity Raise -- Raised $36.2 million this quarter via ATM programs, issuing 1.7 million common shares at $19.31 per share for $31.6 million in net proceeds and 186,000 preferred shares at $25.17 per share for $4.6 million in net proceeds.
  • Net Debt and Liquidity -- Ended the quarter with net debt to pro forma adjusted EBITDA of 6.6x and approximately $90 million of liquidity.
  • Dividend Increase -- Board raised quarterly common dividend by 5.3% to $0.30 per share, representing a 57% AFFO payout ratio for the quarter.
  • Investment Guidance Update -- Increased 2026 investment volume guidance by $100 million, setting a new target range of $170 million to $200 million.
  • FFO/AFFO Guidance Update -- Raised 2026 FFO outlook to $2.09-$2.13 and AFFO outlook to $2.11-$2.15 per diluted share, reflecting approximately 12% mid-point growth.
  • Sale-Leaseback Detail -- 11% of ABR, or $5 million, from sale-leaseback properties; GAAP requires current annual cash payments of approximately $3.7 million from these properties to be reflected as interest income, not lease income.

SUMMARY

Management stated that the loan portfolio has reached its targeted maximum at approximately 20% of total undepreciated asset value, with future growth expected primarily from traditional net-lease property acquisitions. During the call, management said that a "highly attractive pipeline of investment opportunities" exists across both properties and loans, supporting confidence in further portfolio growth and quality upgrades. The company reported that it is recycling capital from lower-yielding loans paying off into new, higher-yielding opportunities and continues selective pruning to upgrade tenant credit quality. The amended credit facility pushed all debt maturities out nearly three years, reducing near-term refinancing risk according to management. Management disclosed that the increased quarterly dividend is supported by a 57% AFFO payout ratio and that the 2026 FFO and AFFO guidance raise reflects expectations for increased investment activity and portfolio growth.

  • Management emphasized that "as these loans pay off, there's something else in the pipeline that they need to accommodate," suggesting a steady flow of reinvestment opportunities.
  • According to management, the company does not anticipate current loans converting to owned properties, with John Albright saying, "most likely, none of these will turn into ownership positions," given prevailing cap rates.
  • Discussion indicated targeted property pruning has corrected prior tenant concentration, and management is currently focused on opportunistic upgrades rather than specific urgent exposure reductions.
  • Regarding potential lease renewals in 2027–2028, management confirmed that renewal discussions are underway and that most tenants have renewal options with "set bump based on the renewal options," which may moderate the mark-to-market upside.
  • Management clarified that restricted cash of about $24 million is primarily related to upfront loan reserves established for underwriting purposes rather than a credit concern.
  • Management stated there are "no concerns right now" about the credit quality of the loan portfolio, and that paid-in-kind (PIK) interest is structured to "accommodate the timing of how long it takes to develop."
  • It was communicated that future capital deployment will balance between free cash flow, dispositions at lower cap rates, and opportunistic equity issuance, depending on market levels.
  • Guidance assumes no incentive fee payout to CTO at this time, although higher management fee run rates have been included following recent equity issuances.
  • Management remarked that small portfolio acquisitions are being evaluated, but there is not an active pursuit of large portfolios, consistent with the company's strategy as a small-cap REIT.
  • For the coming quarter, acquisition cap rates are expected to be closer to 7.5%, potentially rising in subsequent quarters, per management comments.

INDUSTRY GLOSSARY

  • Net Lease: A lease structure where the tenant pays some or all of the property’s operating expenses in addition to rent.
  • Absolute Triple-Net Lease: A type of net lease where the tenant fully assumes property taxes, insurance, and all maintenance expenses with no landlord responsibilities.
  • Annual Base Rent (ABR): The contracted yearly rental income from tenants, commonly used in REIT reporting.
  • Paid-in-Kind (PIK) Interest: Interest that is accrued and added to the outstanding loan principal, not paid in cash until a future period.
  • ATM Program: At-the-market equity offering program enabling a company to issue shares directly into the market at prevailing prices.
  • WALT: Weighted Average Lease Term, indicating the portfolio’s average remaining lease duration.

Full Conference Call Transcript

John Albright: Thank you, Jenna, and good morning, everyone. We are pleased to report a strong first quarter in 2026, building on a record level of investment activity we achieved in 2025. We continue to execute our investment strategy by seeking to assemble a high-quality portfolio of single-tenant net lease properties leased to investment-grade rated tenants in addition to originating commercial loans with attractive risk-adjusted returns secured by high-quality real estate with strong experienced sponsored. During the quarter, we acquired a retail property in downtown Aspen, Colorado, for $10 million. This acquisition was structured as a 50-year absolute triple-net master lease and initial cap rate of 8.5% with 1.25% annual rent escalators.

With regards to the property dispositions, we continue to selectively prune our portfolio, selling 3 non-investment-grade-rated lease properties for $5.8 million and weighted average exit cap of 7.4%. As a result of our combined first quarter property transactions, our property portfolio consists of 125 properties, totaling 4.3 million square feet across 31 states with a 99.5% occupancy and a WALT of 9.3 years. 50% of our ABR is generated from investment-grade rated tenants with Lowe's, Dick's Sporting Goods, Walmart and Best Buy, representing 4 of our top 5 tenants. Additionally, during the quarter, we originated a $32 million first mortgage loan, of which $8.6 million was funded at close.

The loan carries a 24-month term with an initial interest rate of 13% inclusive of a 1.5% paid-in-kind interest, stepping down to an 11.5% current pay rate upon the borrower meeting certain conditions. The loan will fund the development of 101,000 square foot retail center with national investment-grade rated tenants and 3 outparcels. The retail center is located in the Atlanta MSA is shadow anchored by 128,500 square foot Target currently in development and is adjacent to an existing Publix, creating a strong and varied merchandising mix.

Further, with regards to our commercial loan portfolio, we closed and funded the $31.8 million Phase 2 of our first mortgage loan investment secured by a luxury residential development located in Austin, Texas metropolitan area. The A-1 participation that was previously announced contributed an additional $10.8 million towards this funding. Accordingly, net of the A-1 participation, our combined investment in Phase 1 and Phase 2 of this loan was $40 million at quarter end. Reflecting this quarter's loan activity including two loan repayments totaling $7.2 million in January. Our commercial loan portfolio totaled $160.4 million with a weighted average current yield, including PIK interest of 13.5% at quarter end.

We have sought to originate loan investments that complement our property portfolio and increase the overall yield earned on our total assets. Notably, our loan portfolio has now grown to our targeted level of approximately 20% of our total undepreciated asset value. However, as noted previously, timing of funding and repayments of loan investments may cause the relative size of loan portfolio to vary quarter-to-quarter. Looking forward, we have a highly attractive pipeline of investment opportunities, including high-quality properties, net lease investment-grade tenants and attractive loan opportunities. Given this robust pipeline and our recently completed investment activity, we utilize both our common and preferred ATM programs this quarter, raising a combined $36.2 million of equity.

Furthermore, we are raising our 2026 outlook for investment volume by $100 million and increasing guidance for FFO and AFFO per diluted share to new ranges that apply approximately 12% growth at the midpoints. And with that, I'll turn the call over to Phil.

Philip Mays: Thanks, John. Beginning with financial results. For the quarter, total revenue was $18.4 million, including lease income of $12.6 million and interest income from commercial loan investments of $5.8 million. FFO and AFFO for the quarter were both $0.53 per diluted share, representing 20% growth over the prior year period. Earnings growth for the quarter was driven by investment activity, in particular, our commercial loan investments as we grew the loan portfolio to approximately 20% of our total undepreciated asset value. Moving to the balance sheet. During the first quarter, we amended and restated our unsecured credit facility.

Our new facility includes a $250 million revolver due February 2030 with two 6-month extension options, a $100 million term loan maturing in 2029 and a $100 million term loan maturing in 2031. At closing, we applied existing SOFR swaps, locking in initial fixed interest rates for both term loans at approximately 3.5% and for $100 million of the outstanding balance under the revolving facility at approximately 4.8%. As the existing stock agreements mature, we have entered into 4 swap agreements, which will result in changes to the current interest rates. I refer you to our prior press release announcing the amended credit facility, which discusses the timing and impact of those changes.

Notably, with the closing of this facility, we now have no debt maturing for almost 3 years. During the quarter, we were also active on both our common and preferred ATM programs. Under our common ATM, we issued approximately 1.7 million shares at a weighted average gross price of $19.31 per share for net proceeds of $31.6 million. And under our preferred ATM, we issued approximately 186,000 shares at a weighted average gross price of $25.17 per share for net proceeds of $4.6 million. Reflecting our investment activity and equity issuance, we ended the quarter with net debt to pro forma adjusted EBITDA of 6.6x and approximately $90 million of liquidity. John provided an update on our property portfolio.

As previously noted, our property portfolio includes properties acquired through sale-leaseback transactions and at quarter end, approximately 11% of our ABR or $5 million is generated from these properties, which include the Aspen property acquired this quarter and 3 previously acquired restaurants. Although these sales leaseback properties constitute real estate for both tax and legal purposes, GAAP requires them to be accounted for as financing. Accordingly, current annual cash payments from these properties of approximately $3.7 million are reflected as interest income rather than lease income. Also, as a reminder, our quarterly earnings press release includes a supplemental table that provides the details for both our commercial loan portfolio and related interest earnings.

With respect to our common dividend, as previously announced in February, the Board increased our quarterly common dividend by 5.3% from $0.285 per share to $0.30 per share beginning this quarter. This new quarterly common dividend rate represents just a 57% AFFO payout ratio for the quarter. Now turning to guidance. For the full year 2026, we are increasing our FFO outlook to a new range of $2.09 to $2.13 per diluted share and our AFFO outlook to a new range of $2.11 to $2.15 per diluted share. Further, as John discussed, we are increasing our investment activity by $100 million to a new range of $170 million to $200 million. With that, operator, please open the call to questions.

Operator: [Operator Instructions] Our first question will be coming from the line of Michael Goldsmith of UBS.

Michael Goldsmith: First question, guys, you've talked about the strategy of high-quality net lease in combination with the commercial loans. So can you just talk a little bit about your acquisitions, your activity in the quarter and then what's in the pipeline and how that fits with that overall strategy.

John Albright: Yes. I mean I think it's pretty straightforward. We have a fair amount of activity in the pipeline right now that we're really trying to bring in some additional investment-grade credits, higher up in our credit profile, and we're finding some good opportunities. So we're actually very optimistic on what we could do in this coming quarter. And then on the loan side, there are a couple of loans still in the pipeline. And as we have some lower-yielding loans burn off -- pay off in the upcoming months. That will be a nice recycle into higher-yielding and high-quality loans. So it's kind of a little bit more of the same.

So everything looks pretty good from our perspective right now.

Michael Goldsmith: And to follow up on your last point, I presume you're referring to this July 2026 loan? And is that just like -- is that only -- I guess you have one more kind of near-term loan expiring off in 2026? I guess you commented in the call how that could add some volatility to kind of like [indiscernible] to the earnings, but do you feel good about the opportunities to redeploy and limit some of that volatility in the near to intermediate term?

John Albright: Yes. We feel very confident on kind of -- as we've expanded the loan program and done multiple loans with these developers, they are getting very used to kind of our -- the way we do business and the bespoke way we can kind of tailor these loans with their development needs. And so as these loans pay off, there's something else in the pipeline that they need to accommodate. So the pipeline is very strong and very high quality and the sponsors are high quality as well.

So feeling good that these lower-yielding loans that are going to be paying off, and some of them are going to be paying off, we think, early, we'll have good opportunities to reinvest.

Operator: Our next question will be coming from the line of Jay Kornreich of VP.

Jay Kornreich: At the end of your comments, you referenced the loan portfolio nearly at the cap of 20% of total assets. So should we expect kind of a shift in strategy from here where the bulk investments are coming more so from more traditional net lease real estate instead of the loans? And if so, I guess, how do you view your cost of capital and deal spreads you could achieve on those types of new investments?

John Albright: Yes. So we do have a larger amount in the pipeline of traditional net lease investments. And as far as some of the additional loans in the pipeline, as I mentioned, those will probably be fulfilling the need that we have with the lower-yielding loans paying off. And so with regards to kind of our cost of capital, as you know, in our 5-plus years, we've always been kind of cost of capital kind of constrained. So we do move out some properties at lower cap rates and recycle. But the yields that we have in front of us on the net lease acquisition side work well with sort of our capital structure right now.

But Phil, do you want to chime in on that sort of end?

Philip Mays: Yes, I think that's right. And then if you just think about it going forward, Jay, kind of we are near that 20% cap kind of an 80-20 blend, 80% properties, 20% loans and you look at the yields we've done in both of those buckets, your cost of capital works nicely with that.

Jay Kornreich: Okay. I appreciate that commentary. And then I guess just maybe on the disposition side, you have done a significant amount of work over the past 18 or so months. Just with rightsizing tenant exposures, shrinking exposure to Walgreens and dollar stores, while I guess also buying higher credit in Walmart. Are there any other specific exposures you're kind of focused on rightsizing at this point?

John Albright: No, not really. I mean, even though I think in the past, we've gotten asked about at home and so forth. But the at homes that we have are very high performing, and we've had interest from other tenants that want to buy the at home and bringing in their concept and at home is not interested in moving. So we have -- so we're in a good spot where we've gotten a high-yielding asset in a great location in Charlotte, and we're pretty confident they're going to be renewing because they're declining people, they want to give them a check. So even though you may see some credits that don't fit.

It's all about the quality of the real estate. And we're -- there's actually one that we're working on right now that you would say would be a very low quality tenant, but we have an investment-grade tenant that wants to take over that space, and it looks like we'll be able to negotiate a buyout. So we're always looking to prune and upgrade, but it's -- again, it's all about the locations that we kind of really specialize in trying to buy that. We know that if these tenants leave, there's going to be a nice replacement opportunity.

Operator: Our next question will come from the line of Matthew Erdner of JonesTrading.

Matthew Erdner: Sticking with the loan portfolio for a little bit, do you guys have any loan to own options that you see yourselves capitalizing on? Or is it just going to be kind of recycled back into new ones?

John Albright: Yes. The cap rates that they'll be able to sell these assets will not work with sort of our investment program. So most likely, none of these will turn into ownership positions. But certainly, as the developers build these tenants out and look to sell them they give us a right or really just come to us and say, do you want to buy it and we'll save a real estate commission. But the cap rates are very strong for these assets. So unfortunately, they just really won't fit. But hopefully, down the road, we'll find some where we can actually fit those into. And if we have a 1031 need, that could be more where that opportunity comes in.

Matthew Erdner: Got it. That's helpful. And then looking out a little bit into '27, '28, it looks like 20% of the leases are rolling over. Could you just kind of walk through the process and if you've started discussions with some of those tenants and just how you envision those discussions going?

John Albright: Yes. I mean, I think that everything that we have coming up, we've been in discussions with these tenants over time. And if we had if we had issues, we would probably be dealing with them early. So feel very strong that these are going to be renewal candidates. And as you know, that's one of the opportunities that -- where we like to buy with a shorter-term leases with a high chance of renewal. And a lot of these things are below market. And so that's why we're -- you're going to probably see a lot of natural renewals happen and usually get a bump up on the leases as well.

Operator: Our next question will come from the line of Gaurav Mehta of AGP, Alliance Global Partners.

Gaurav Mehta: I wanted to ask you on your investment-grade exposure and the lease term. As you look to acquire more properties, should we expect that you would look to increase that exposure and increase the lease term further?

John Albright: Yes, that's -- look, that's always the goal, and there's a little bit of a mix. There's some properties in the acquisition pipeline that are shorter duration. And so there's definitely an opportunity to go in there and do an extend blend. But again, as I just mentioned, a lot of the lease rates are so low that we don't really want to give up that bump because we want higher lease duration. But what we have here in the pipeline is accretive to our lease duration as far as getting it longer term. And so that will look pretty good for us.

But again, we're not in a hurry to kind of just have a higher lease duration and give up economics to our shareholders.

Gaurav Mehta: Second question, on the investment guidance, just to clarify, the $170 million to $200 million, is that what you're deploying? Or is that on the loan side that includes what you're funding or its just originations?

Philip Mays: Yes. So generally, both funding and deploying or if you want to look at the loans on an origination basis, both will fall in that range. I would say probably the funding is going to be just looking at the pipeline, it's a little hard to estimate with future loans and what funds are closing. But right now, I'd say the funding is probably $20 million less than the deployment, including full origination values, but both will fall within that range.

Operator: Our next question will be coming from the line of Wesley Golladay of Baird.

Wesley Golladay: I just want to go back to the question about the lease renewals. Do a lot of those tenants with the below-market leases, do they have options? Can you just mark those to market?

John Albright: They have options. So unfortunately, it's going to be a set bump based on the renewal options.

Wesley Golladay: Okay. Then a quick one on the accounting side. There's a lot of restricted cash around $24 million. Is that mainly tied to the, I guess, the more senior loans that you sold? And does that restricted cash get released throughout the year?

Philip Mays: Wes, it's Phil. Yes, most of the restricted cash at the end of the quarter is related to loan reserves. We take pretty healthy reserves upfront as part of our loan process in closing. So a lot of that restricted cash is related to loan reserves.

Operator: The next question will come from the line of RJ Milligan of Raymond James.

R.J. Milligan: So maybe just a follow-up on that loan reserve comment, Phil. Obviously, with net lease, we can go down the top tenant list and look for people that are on the watch list, we don't have a lot of visibility on the loan book. I'm just curious if there's anything that you guys have on the watch list in terms of the loan book? Obviously, the PIK is a pretty big component. Is there anything that gives you any concern about collecting that as those loans mature?

Philip Mays: Yes. So let me be clear about the loan reserves. So we'll take reserves related to real estate taxes or a certain period of interest upfront. And it's just part of our underwriting. And Steven or John can chime up and provide more details on that. We don't really have any credit concerns about any of the loans. And though those reserves are credit related, it is just part of our underwriting, conservative underwriting and making sure we get nice cash deposits upfront related to like a year of debt service or something like that.

John Albright: Yes. So RJ, we basically want to really have these loans structured pretty tightly. So we forced the reserves, so we don't have to worry about real estate taxes, interest and so forth. And so out of our loan book, there are no concerns right now. The PIK is really done to accommodate the timing of how long it takes to develop. So you have less cash burn while you're developing. But the book is very healthy right now.

R.J. Milligan: Great. That's helpful. And then Phil, maybe just on the capital raising side, you guys had a little preferred and some equity this year. How do you think about the more attractive capital sources going forward as we move through the year?

Philip Mays: Yes. I mean just for -- so we ended the quarter with about $90 million of liquidity. At this point, we're generating probably close to $15 million of cash flow on an annual run rate. So that's obviously a great use for us on the free cash flow. Then John spoke earlier about dispositions at a lower cap rate. So that would be another use and then after that, RJ, we could look to be opportunistic on common or preferred, if it's trading at a good level.

Operator: Our next question comes from the line of John Massocca of B. Riley Securities.

John Massocca: I know we've talked a lot about the loan book over the call, but maybe kind of going to the one new loan originated in 1Q, there's a step down in there if they meet certain conditions. What are kind of -- maybe some color around the conditions that they would need to hit to get down to that 11.5%?

John Albright: Yes. So basically, they've been negotiating leases and waiting for tenants to go through their signing process. And so if the -- some of the leases hadn't been signed by the time we closed it, so we said the rate needs to be higher until you kind of get those finalized. So it should be relatively short duration, unfortunately, but that's what that's about.

John Massocca: Okay. And then I know the Austin loan was kind of contingent on them kind of selling some of the homes in that piece of property. So I mean how is that progressing? I guess how does that impact maybe interest income from that particularly large loan investment you've made?

John Albright: Yes. So I'll answer kind of the cadence on the lot sales. So they're selling lots. So as you know, as the lots are sold, it goes through our A-1 participant first. And given that it's obviously late spring, the activity is stronger, but the asset has a large amenity that won't be open until the fall. So we expect that in the fall is really where the lot sales are going to pick up as people kind of going to get a lot more excited about it when it's closer to having the large amenity open.

John Massocca: Okay. I mean, I guess, maybe the anticipation there is that your portion of the loan won't start getting paid down until towards the end of the year?

John Albright: Correct.

John Massocca: And then last one, Phil, maybe on guidance. In terms of G&A assumptions in the guidance, are you assuming any incentive fee payout to CTO at this point? I know it's kind of early in the year, but just kind of thoughts around how that could maybe impact your guidance outlook.

Philip Mays: Yes. So the guidance doesn't assume any incentive fee. What is in there, right, is a little bit higher of a management fee run rate given the equity that we issued. So for the quarter, the management fee was about $1.25 million just based on the equity that was issued during the quarter, the go-forward run rate is about $100,000 higher a quarter, so $1.350 million, assuming no additional equity. But other than adjusting the management fee for our expectations, there's no incentive fee in the guidance.

Operator: Our next question will come from the line of Craig Kucera of Lucid Capital Markets.

Craig Kucera: We've been hearing from some of your competitors that there are an increasing number of portfolios coming to the market basically from like family offices that got into the space in 2021 and issued 5-year debt at rock bottom rates. Maybe they don't want to refinance. Are you seeing any small portfolios that might be attractive as acquisition candidates?

John Albright: We're seeing a little bit of owners of assets that are coming up on a duration or they want to lower their exposure in a larger portfolio. But we're not seeing bigger portfolio sort of opportunities. The ones that we're looking at are really nice size for us and luckily being a small-cap company is that these assets can really move the needle versus the very large companies that really need to do those portfolio acquisitions. So we'll let the large tankers take on those. And as we just add these one and twos, they all add up very nicely for us, but we're not really chasing any sort of portfolio opportunities.

Craig Kucera: Okay. Got it. Just one more for me. I think you were buying at about a 7.4% cash cap rate last year. This quarter, you closed at 8.5%. Just curious to hear your overall viewpoint on the acquisition environment. Has there been any move in pricing? Or should we expect something closer to, call it, 7.5% this year?

John Albright: Yes, you're going to be closer to 7.5% of this coming quarter, at least, and maybe might see some opportunities in a quarter or two that are higher.

Operator: And I'm showing no further questions. This concludes today's program. Thank you for participating. You may now disconnect.