Q3 2023 Kilroy Realty Corp Earnings Call

In this article:

Participants

A. Robert Paratte; EVP, Chief Leasing Officer & Senior Advisor to the Chairman; Kilroy Realty Corporation

Eliott Trencher; Executive VP, CFO, CIO & Treasurer; Kilroy Realty Corporation

John B. Kilroy; Chairman & CEO; Kilroy Realty Corporation

Justin William Smart; President; Kilroy Realty Corporation

William E. Hutcheson; SVP of IR & Capital Markets; Kilroy Realty Corporation

Blaine Matthew Heck; Senior Equity Analyst; Wells Fargo Securities, LLC, Research Division

Caitlin Burrows; Research Analyst; Goldman Sachs Group, Inc., Research Division

Dylan Robert Burzinski; Analyst; Green Street Advisors, LLC, Research Division

James Poskitt; Equity Research Associate; Evercore ISI Institutional Equities, Research Division

Jing Xian Tan Bonnel; REIT Analyst; BofA Securities, Research Division

John P. Kim; MD & Senior U.S. Real Estate Analyst; BMO Capital Markets Equity Research

Michael Anderson Griffin; Research Analyst; Citigroup Inc., Research Division

Nicholas Philip Yulico; Analyst; Scotiabank Global Banking and Markets, Research Division

Peter Dylan Abramowitz; Equity Analyst; Jefferies LLC, Research Division

Upal Dhananjay Rana; Director; KeyBanc Capital Markets Inc., Research Division

Vikram L. Malhotra; MD; Mizuho Securities USA LLC, Research Division

Presentation

Operator

Good afternoon. Thank you for attending the KRC 3Q '23 Earnings Conference Call. My name is Victoria, and I'll be your moderator today.
(Operator Instructions)
I would now like to pass the call over to your host, Bill Hutcheson, SVP Investor Relations and Capital Markets with KRC. Thank you. You may proceed, Bill.

William E. Hutcheson

Thank you, Victoria. Good morning, everyone. Thanks for joining us. On the call with me today are John Kilroy, Chairman and CEO; Justin Smart, our President; Rob Paratte, Chief Leasing Officer; and Eliott Trencher, our CIO and CFO. At the outset, I need to say that some of the information we will be discussing during this call is forward-looking in nature.
Please refer to our supplemental package for a statement regarding the forward-looking information on this call and in the supplemental.
Our call is being telecast live on our website and will be available for replay for the next 8 days, both by phone and over the Internet. Our earnings release and supplemental package have been filed on a Form 8-K with the SEC and both are available on our website.
John will start the call with our third quarter highlights. Justin will review our in-process development pipeline. And Eliott will discuss our financial results and provide you with updated guidance. Then we'll be happy to take your questions. John?

John B. Kilroy

Thanks, Bill. Hello, everybody, and thank you for joining us today. Over the last several months, we have seen long-term outlook for office business to improve.
More companies are committing to and enforcing in-person work. As a result of higher physical occupancy levels, increased foot traffic and commuter activity, studies are heading towards recovery. For example, New York City has been a leader in this regard as large corporations insisted their employees return to the office. This is not only positively impacted physical occupancy levels, but has also restored a sense of urgency and vibrancy back to the city, and I should say, energy and vibrancy.
The West Coast markets and the tech companies that dominate them have followed suit, and we anticipate the West Coast will follow a similar trend. San Diego, which is -- was the first mover amongst our markets, is a prime example of how high physical occupancy translates to leasing activity. Over the course of this year, physical occupancy in San Diego has gone from 20 percentage points -- gone up 20 percentage points and now sits above 80%. The region is 89% leased with our primary cluster in Del Mar, 97% leased.
Leasing activity in San Diego is amongst the best of any of our regions because higher physical occupancy is translating in the tenant demand for space. It's important to note that the green shoots of increased demand are coming in the form of better tour velocity and leasing interest. In times like these, having the newest, most modern assets is the best -- in the best locations is critical to attracting tenants at top of the market rent.
Additionally, in many of the cities in which we operate, things are beginning to change the better from a policy perspective. Specifically, recent data points in San Francisco demonstrate there is self awareness around the challenges the city is facing and the policymakers and voters continued to take steps to correct the issues.
A few notable examples. Within the last 12 months, District Attorney Jenkins on reelection, which is an endorsement from voters of our law and order philosophy. The city is hiring more police officers and increasing their pay. And the Board of Supervisors approved delays to payroll tax increases and provided discounts for new businesses relocating to the city. We have much more work to do, but the train is finally moving in the right direction.
Shifting to the economy. The labor market remains tight, and inflation, while lower is not yet at target levels. The market is suggesting that we are likely to be in a higher rate environment for longer. Any certainty on the trajectory of rates will take time but ultimately will be good for the capital markets even if things stabilize at current levels.
However, from a commercial real estate perspective, the same concerns persist. Higher rates are putting near-term pressure on real estate valuations as loans originated in a low rate environment come due and need to be refinanced. This dynamic, coupled with a pullback in bank lending, following the regional banking crisis earlier this year has created softer conditions in the transaction markets.
We acknowledge there are going to be continued stress and refinancing risk in our sector. However, we believe we are well positioned against these headwinds. As we talked about last quarter, in July, we closed on a $375 million 11-year mortgage for a portion of our One Paseo campus in San Diego. The loan has a fixed interest rate of 5.9%, and the additional liquidity enhances our financial strength and flexibility in this volatile market. The One Paseo campus continues to perform incredibly well. Occupancy is approximately 95% across the entire project, and we have market-leading rents on the office, residential and retail.
Real estate always goes through cycles. I've been through 6 myself. We don't know when the headwinds will come or how long they will last, which is why we prioritize keeping Kilroy well capitalized with robust platform liquidity and conservative leverage. As a result, we can stay patient and make prudent capital allocation decisions when we have conviction. With this in mind and given where financing markets are today, we are not anticipating any asset sales for the balance of the year.
While markets and sentiment change based on where we are in the cycle, the 3 pillars of our strategy has stayed constant, high-quality properties, strategic capital allocation and a fortress balance sheet. This simple approach allows us to play offense in the good times and defense in the challenging times. We believe there will be opportunities in the future, and we are taking the steps to ensure that we are ready when the time comes. As of now, our goal remains the same, own and operate the highest quality portfolio of mixed-use office and life science properties, clustered and innovative and supply-constrained markets.
Turning to the third quarter highlights and which has been a period of continued volatility, I'm happy to report that Kilroy continues to execute. We signed a total of 188,000 square feet of leases during the quarter as well as 117,000 square feet of leases post quarter end. We remain busy and are encouraged by the leasing momentum that we are building across our markets and expect to secure more wins on the leasing front during the balance of this year. And in many of our markets, we're seeing significant increase in demand.
At the platform level, just as we have done in prior down-cycles, we will continue to be opportunistic in sourcing efficient capital as needed, and we are laser-focused on making the right capital allocation decisions.
Lastly, on a personal note, this earnings call marks my 107th quarterly earnings as CEO. We actually have had 108, which is including today as a public company, but I did miss 1 in 2007 due to the lack of wind competing in the TransPac sailing rate from Los Angeles to Hawaii. Reflecting on my time spanning more than 50 years in the real estate industry and almost 3 decades in Kilroy as a public company, we have accomplished quite a bit, including a total transformation of our company coming out of the great financial crisis.
As I look at the company today, I am proud of our tremendous team. We've never been better positioned from an asset quality, tenant base and balance sheet perspective. I want to thank every one of you for your support over the years. And I'm confident that Kilroy will continue to thrive, adeptly handle whatever challenges come next and outperform in the years to come.
With respect to our search for the next CEO, we are entering the home stretch. We have been pleased but not surprised to see that the opportunity at Kilroy has attracted many qualified candidates, both internal and external, and we expect to have an announcement before the end of this year. That completes my remarks.
Now Justin will go through our development pipeline. Justin?

Justin William Smart

Thank you, John. At the end of the third quarter, our in-process development totaled approximately $1.7 billion, down slightly from last quarter due to the delivery of 9514 Towne Center Drive in San Diego, which is 100% leased to an investment-grade credit tenant. There's roughly $490 million left to fund in the development pipeline, most of which is for the second phase of our Kilroy Oyster Point Life Science development in South San Francisco.
As you may recall, KOP Phase 2 includes 3 buildings, and we anticipate they will stabilize in 2025. Indeed Tower, the only other project in our active pipeline remains on track for stabilization in the fourth quarter of this year and is 74% leased.
Regarding our future pipeline, we continue to advance entitlements and design on all projects. As a reminder, the future pipeline consists of 8 projects, diversified across 5 markets and has a mixture of life science, office and residential. Similar to prior cycles, we will only start a new project when market conditions are favorable and currently have no plans to break ground on anything in the near term.
On a related note, new starts remain minimal, both nationally and in our markets. There are several drivers for this, including reduced pre-leasing demand and expensive financing. We anticipate the depressed supply will provide a tailwind for us as a disproportionate amount of the demand continues to favor young, high-quality space. Our development pipeline with significant entitlements in place will provide a competitive advantage for Kilroy as the market improves.
With that, I'll turn the call over to Eliott.

Eliott Trencher

Thanks, Justin. FFO was $1.12 per share in the third quarter, a $0.07 decline from last quarter. The difference is predominantly due to lower NOI from the previously disclosed Pac-12 and Amazon move out and higher G&A from executive retirement costs. On a same-store basis, third quarter cash NOI was roughly flat as the burn off of free rent was offset by a decline in occupancy.
Cash same-store NOI was down roughly 5%. At the end of the quarter, our stabilized portfolio was approximately 86% occupied and 88% leased. The decrease from the prior quarter was due to the previously discussed move-outs.
Our net debt to third quarter annualized EBITDA multiple was in the low 6s. Liquidity remains robust, with roughly $1.9 billion in total capacity comprised of $1.1 billion from our line of credit and $790 million of cash and marketable securities.
In total, our available cash is sufficient to cover the majority of our near-term development spend and address our next bond maturity in December 2024.
During the quarter, we repurchased roughly $15 million of our December 2024 bonds at a discount, thereby reducing that maturity to roughly $410 million. One modeling note, we drew down the last $170 million from our term loan at the end of the quarter. So the third quarter interest expense needs to be adjusted if you are trying to use it as a starting point for the fourth quarter estimates.
Now let's discuss our 2023 guidance. As always, no acquisitions are forecasted and as John mentioned, we do not anticipate any dispositions this year. Development spend for the fourth quarter is expected to be $100 million to $150 million. When factoring in the roughly $3 million of spend year-to-date, the full year estimate is now $400 million to $450 million, down $25 million from last quarter.
With respect to G&A, we continue to track towards the midpoint of our range, inclusive of the previously discussed executive retirement costs.
We are tightening the range for our full year average occupancy percentage to 87% to 87.5%, with no change to the 87.25% midpoint. As a reminder, the fourth quarter occupancy will include Indeed Tower.
Cash same-store NOI is now projected to be between 2.75% and 3.25%, a 100 basis point increase at the midpoint due to better-than-anticipated parking income and some nonrecurring revenue.
In summary, our prior 2023 FFO guidance was $4.43 to $4.53 with a midpoint of $4.48 per share. Based on our performance to date, we are adjusting and tightening the range to between $4.55 and $4.60. The new midpoint of approximately $4.58 represents a roughly 2% increase from the prior guidance. The biggest drivers behind the increase are better parking income, earlier revenue recognition on a few leases in the operating portfolio, higher interest income and the adjustment to our disposition guidance.
To provide further clarity, our updated midpoint implies a fourth quarter FFO of roughly $1.05 per share or $0.07 lower than the third quarter. To bridge the gap, we back out $0.03 due to lower occupancy, which factors in our move-outs and move-ins and $0.04 for various other items, including higher interest expense.
That completes my remarks. Now we will be happy to take your questions. Victoria?

Question and Answer Session

Operator

(Operator Instructions)
Our first question comes from the line of Nick Yulico with Scotiabank.

Nicholas Philip Yulico

I was hoping you could just start, maybe, Rob, with some commentary on where you're seeing more strengths in terms of leasing in the portfolio, types of tenants, size requirements, markets versus where there's things that are a little bit more challenging, which I assume is more on the large tenant side?

A. Robert Paratte

Sure, Nick. Let me hit on a couple of just global comments about the leasing environment throughout our regions. And actually, I'd say throughout the nation. Tenants right now are seeking -- have a preference for market-ready space, shell condition space is less desirable and going to be harder to move. Tenants are also seeking flexibility looking for 1- to 3-year terms in some cases. But in other cases, you're seeing lease terms as long as 10 years, but the average is falling somewhere around 5 years.
We have a continued flight to quality, which our portfolio benefits from. What we're seeing in every market is that the best sublease space -- every market has sublease space and the best sublease space that's built out in a technology type build-out or fit out is moving first, and we're starting to see some of that space get absorbed.
The last thing I'd say, if you look at our Q3 leasing volume, Q3 is always the slowest time of year because you have summer and people are gone. It's just harder to get things done. So if you look at what we did in Q3 and then look at what we've done in a relatively short amount of time in Q4, I think it points to what John was saying in his comments about velocity and volume.
Let me just -- I'll touch on our markets. With San Francisco, probably the most notable market in our region, maybe in the country, there's been a demand surge. We now -- starting in the Q1 of '23, we had about 2.5 million square feet of demand. It's more than doubled now to about 5.5 million. That's largely being driven by artificial intelligence.
Although the quarter Q3 was a lower leasing volume than we expected, there's about 680,000 square feet of very-close-to-completion transactions with 2 large AI companies that we think will -- we know will close in Q4. And if you take Q4 plus what's already been going on in the market, San Francisco could actually hit close to 1.2 million square feet of leasing velocity for the Q4 quarter which is on par with sort of the average before the pandemic.
Venture capital funding has reached about $27 billion in the Bay Area. The total for San Francisco in 2019 was $34 billion, and we feel like we're on track to meet that this year.
Moving to Seattle, I think we have -- and I'm going to talk about Seattle and Bellevue. We have a tale of 2 cities. On the positive note, Seattle stands to benefit considerably from the AI move because it's got the second largest concentration of AI talent behind the Bay Area in the country. So that's a very positive thing.
Unfortunately, it hasn't resulted in an uptick in significant demand in Seattle. By contrast, Bellevue Big Tech is back. We're seeing a lot of gaming companies with 2 large requirements, particularly, they are both over 400,000 feet. So we think Bellevue is really improving and a lot of that is not going to sublease space, that's going to new development.
Los Angeles is such a fragmented market. I thought this might just give better color. Year-to-date, we've done 35 deals in Los Angeles, totaling 359,000 square feet, 22 of those were renewals, which equates to about 175,000 square feet and 13 of those are about 120,000 square feet. So it's quite a bit of leasing activity that I don't think really gets pointed out when you look at the data.
Lastly, on a very positive note with San Diego, we signed yesterday a 15,000 square foot lease at 2100 Kettner with the MLS San Diego soccer franchise, and we're very excited to have them come to the building, and we know that's going to create more leasing momentum with the discussions we have going on as well as with future prospects.
Austin has -- we have activity. I don't want to get into the structure of it or how much of it, but we are continuing to work on transactions and exchanging paper with tenants. The last thing I'd say with Life Science in South San Francisco is that demand is not where we'd like it, but it is improving.
Several rounds of VC funding have been focused in the South San Francisco market. And we're starting to see some tenants that had requirements on hold come back to the market.
And lastly, I'd say about South San Francisco, one large tenant in the market took sublease space off the market to the tune of about 100,000 feet. So we think that's a positive indicator of where things will go.

Nicholas Philip Yulico

Very helpful. Just second question is on Riot Games. I wanted to see if you have any update on the November expiration? And then it sounded like from how you talked about earlier this year, there was -- the tenant was sort of thinking also about the 2024 expiration. And I think they've taken some other space in that market already in West L.A. So any update you can give there?

A. Robert Paratte

Sure. Riot will be downsizing in terms of their '23 expiration. On the flip side, we're in discussions with them on a variety of scenarios for '24. And I just can't go into more color on that, but we know there looking at this as a downsize.

Nicholas Philip Yulico

Okay. Is it possible to get to the downsized amount for this year?

Eliott Trencher

So they, in total, the exploration is about $160,000. We expect that over $100,000 will be given back.

Operator

The next question comes from the line of Vikram Malhotra with Mizuho.

Vikram L. Malhotra

Just wondering if you can dig into the Life Science comments a bit more, just give us a bit more color on prospects at KOP. Some of your peers in that region have said demand has doubled since April, and they're signing leases. So I'm just sort of wondering if you can give us more details on the types of activity or interest you're seeing? And just how should we think about timing and rents?

Justin William Smart

Okay, Vikram. So rents for new development have maintained at the rate they've been at. So there hasn't been an erosion. There is sublease space in the market. And like any office or life science, the sublease space that's high quality will move, and we've seen some of that happen. Other sublease space that's not high quality will remain on the market.
As you may recall, we made a decision about a year ago to multi-tenant one of the 3 buildings at KOP and we expect to have that complete by May of next year. And in that multi-tenant scenario, by doing that, we actually increased the amount of activity that we've been seeing because now we're able to talk to tenants about 40,000 feet, for example, which would be one of our floors.
And the key component of that multi-tenant scenario that I just described is that we're delivering as lab specs. So it's basically ready to move in, and that's also a first-to-market kind of phenomenon that tenants really want. So that has helped our tour activity. There still are bigger requirements out there. They're just -- as I said earlier, things are just taking longer to get done in this environment.
And I'd say, generally, the geopolitical environment doesn't help. It seems to ebb and flow, but right now, it's not great. So that does slow things down, but we haven't seen requirements taken off the market that have been in the market for the last 6 weeks or so.

Vikram L. Malhotra

That's helpful. Just I guess a bigger-picture question. You referenced sort of the market turning policy-wise and San Fran things a little better or socioeconomic-wise, more tours, et cetera. But then at the same time, it feels like you're probably still waiting to deploy capital in opportunities.
I'm just wondering if you can square the two. If you're seeing a turn -- a sustainable turn from here whether it's AI or other reasons, how -- when do you think sort of the time is for you to use the balance sheet that you've sort of preserved for a while now?

John B. Kilroy

This is John, Vikram. We're looking at everything. We always do. We always have, even some things that we know are not particularly of interest, just to make sure that we are reading the market correctly. And that helps inform us when it's time to make decisions. I don't believe right now is we're seeing anything that -- we're seeing some things we like in various -- in all of our markets in terms of quality and location.
We're not seeing the pricing that we would like yet. And whether we'll get there or not, I don't know. As loans get closer to becoming due and refinancing becomes a reality that people must go through, if they have low interest rate debt that can't be replaced with regard to the rate or with regard to the size of the loan, I think we'll see some opportunities loosen up. So we're going to remain very agile. There is no pressure on us with regard to having to do anything, and we are going to behave like we did back probably in 2010, it will be a little different.
But when we see things we like, we'll act with conviction, but it's not yet. It's not appropriate right now, in our view, given so much volatility globally and in our industry.

Operator

The next question comes from the line of Blaine Heck with Wells Fargo.

Blaine Matthew Heck

John, just a follow-up on that last question and answer. You mentioned how pricing hasn't gotten to the level that's kind of attractive to you guys yet. Can you give us any sense of how far off that pricing is to where it might be interesting? Is it 10%, 25%? And then just generally, how have your targeted returns changed with the increase in rates?

John B. Kilroy

Well, there are buildings that are being sold at what appears to be good prices. When you look at the base number per square foot, but when you look at the repositioning cost and the retenant improvement costs and so forth, it gets up to a pretty high number. So in terms of where things have to move, I'm not going to go there, Blaine, because it's asset-dependent for sure. All assets have benefits and flaws.
Many of the things that are being traded are to have more flaws and benefits in our opinion. And obviously, we've got to be able to feel comfortable that we're buying into a market that we think is going to be improving, not going sideways. What was the second question? Forgive me.

Blaine Matthew Heck

Just how your returns targets have changed with the increase in rates and what you guys are looking for as far as IRRs?

John B. Kilroy

Yes. I'm not really going to go down that route right now because we're not really looking at buying anything. And it's again, it's going to be obviously north of where it's been. If you look at sort of what we've developed over the last 10, 12 years, we've sort of averaged around 8% going in returns for brand-new product with built-in significant increases, and that's on an unleveraged basis.
So that's sort of where we were which was beating the market. And if we're going to buy something, we're going to want to feel very comfortable that we've got a best-in-class asset or we can make it such. And then we're going to end up with a strong double-digit return. So that's what our thinking is right now.

Blaine Matthew Heck

Great. And then just along those same lines, can you talk about your thoughts on share repurchases given where the stock is trading and whether they might look as attractive or more attractive than acquisitions or development at this point?

John B. Kilroy

Yes. Eliott, do you want to handle that?

Eliott Trencher

Yes. Blaine, we obviously look at everything. Our priority right now is to, one, make sure the development is fully funded; and two, make sure the balance sheet is in tiptop shape. We do not have interest in repurchasing shares at the expense of leverage. I don't think that's a good trade-off. So we're going to continue to evaluate it, but that's sort of where we stand today.

Operator

The next question comes from the line of Caitlin Burrows with Goldman Sachs.

Caitlin Burrows

Maybe regarding the CEO transition, John. I know there's only so much you can say, but I guess at a high level, can you describe how much thoughts being given to finding or interviewing qualified external candidates? And how the process is set up to reduce any potential maybe bias of selecting an internal candidate over a qualified external candidate that maybe doesn't have the same tight current relationship with yourself or the Board?

John B. Kilroy

Yes. I can't, as you know, speak very much about that, but there is no bias whatsoever. We sought out as we, I think, communicated pretty clearly that we are opening up to the outside and inside, and there are strong candidates from both camps. With regard to the outside, there is no bias against with regard to the process. We're sort of entering the home stretch. Our hope is to be able to make an announcement by the year-end. It's been a vigorous process. The whole Board has been very engaged in it, and that's about what I can tell you.

Caitlin Burrows

Okay. Got it. And maybe you guys had a large tenant move-out in the quarter at 360 Third Street. And now there's some vacancy in the San Francisco CBD larger than it was. So could you talk maybe some more detail on what exactly you're seeing in San Francisco from a leasing activity perspective?

A. Robert Paratte

Yes, sure. So as I said, demand has doubled -- and more than doubled in San Francisco, and that's resulting in more tours throughout our portfolio as well. Three of our assets are undergoing, what I would call refreshes, upgrading lobbies and amenities and that sort of thing because we want to be ahead of the demand increase, meaning we want tenants to be able to walk in and see the improvements that have been done because it is a very competitive market.
We're also in a really good position because of our balance sheet where we can actually pick and choose who we're going to do business with. And I think there's other competitors of ours that may be desperate, may be the wrong word to use, but very eager to do something that we may take a look at and say, we'll let that go to sublease space and wait for the right tenant to come along.
So we've seen -- the way I'd look at the San Francisco market is that there's about 800,000 feet of AI demand right now. And what's interesting about that is probably Q2 earnings call, I said the average tenant size was 5,000 feet per AI. It's now 15,000 feet. So it's tripled. And what we're seeing in our portfolio is sort of a mix of AI interest as well as there's a lot of law firm activity in San Francisco and we're also seeing some professional services.
So I want to be -- I want to caution you, though, I mean, we still -- there's a long road here. We've got a lot of space in the market. Some of it's good, some of it's not. So we think, overall, the trend is positive. It's just going to take time to sort out.

Operator

The next question comes from the line of Michael Griffin with Citi.

Michael Anderson Griffin

Just wanted to touch on retention briefly. I know it increased quarter-over-quarter. I'm wondering if we should think about the current rate of retention as how it relates on kind of a go-forward basis to 40% or so level kind of how we should think about it?

Eliott Trencher

So Michael, this is Eliott. I mean historically, we've sort of been in that 50-ish percent range, plus or minus. This year, we've been a little bit lower.
Earlier in the year, as I said, it was a little bit better this quarter. It's going to be very choppy. In particular, in '23, it was very choppy given some of the larger move-outs that we've discussed but we think, over time, our long-term trend is sort of that -- the right number where we'll ultimately settle.

Michael Anderson Griffin

Great. And then maybe just a higher-level question, just on the return-to-work mandates. John, I appreciate your commentary in the opening remarks. But how much forceful do you think these mandates need to be in order to see a turnaround in a lot of fundamentals in these markets? And then if you could just remind us what the utilization rate kind of across your portfolio, that would be helpful.

John B. Kilroy

Yes. I'm going to double-team this. I'm going to ask Rob to jump in, in a second on the second part of that question. Return to office has been fundamentally important.
It's foundationally important to office, obviously. We've all had our concerns over the last couple of years and rightfully so. Some companies are very vigorously enforcing. Others are increasing their enforcement. And there's some companies that are -- that we -- a very few that I know that are basically saying, you can still work from home. There are very, very few in that category.
There's been a little resistance, some, as we've said over the course of this year as the economy has deteriorated, it's likely that people are going to get out of their homes and back into the office or find that they're permanently in their homes and no longer employed and that's happened. So more to come on that. But in terms of what we're seeing in our buildings in our cities is there's been significant increases in activity. We've talked about in previous calls how the public transportation systems have had significant increases in volume.
Our parking garage has a significant increase in volume. We're seeing the utilization rates in our buildings significantly increase.
And Rob, I'm going to pitch that to you to add a little bit more color on that aspect.

A. Robert Paratte

Sure. And Michael, we're going to triple-team this because Eliott will take part of this, too. But to add on to what John said, he's absolutely right. And with the companies that we're talking to, most, if not all of them, have factored into their performance reviews physical presence in the office. And that results in your pay being affected if you're not coming into the office. And that's sort of across the Board with the tech companies that we deal with. And that's the kind of meat they're putting into it.
And I think some of the others, I won't name names, but some of the others have basically said, if you're not in, you're not working here. So it's -- it definitely is forceful and it's definitely -- if you use San Francisco again as a proxy, as John said, parking revenues up, the streets are busy now, literally Monday through Thursday, Friday's lighter, but it's busy most of the day -- throughout the day in the financial district. And then I'll let Eliott talk.

Eliott Trencher

In terms of our portfolio, we have a range across our markets. Bay Area sort of in the 40s, which is the lower end of our spectrum. And as we talked about San Diego is at the high end of our spectrum over 80%.

Operator

The next question comes from the line of Camille Bonnel with Bank of America.

Jing Xian Tan Bonnel

Just following up on that last question since there's still a lot of skepticism around the return-to-office mandates. And like you pointed out, there's evidence of this through your parking revenue.
Can you elaborate on what assumptions are built into your Q4? Has guidance been updated to reflect the run rate of how parking has outperformed your budget? Or is it still based on your initial projection set up at the beginning of the year?

Eliott Trencher

Yes. So Camille, this is Eliott. We're sort of somewhere in between. We obviously have 3 quarters of evidence. So we have a little bit more conviction on where things are going, but there's always some uncertainty and some seasonality to it also. Right now, we're kind of in between where we were in the beginning of the year and our third quarter run rate.

Jing Xian Tan Bonnel

Okay. And separately, can you talk to the increase in marketable securities this quarter?

Eliott Trencher

Sure. So that's a function of the capital that we raised during the quarter, both the One Paseo secured loan and then the $170 million term loan, and some of that cash we had invested in short-term CDs, the way the accounting rules work, if there's anything over 3 months, it gets classified as a marketable security. And that's what is in that number.

Operator

Our next question comes from the line of Jay Poskitt with Evercore.

James Poskitt

I was wondering if you could provide a little bit of color just on any known move-outs in '24. Appreciate the color on how retention will be choppy, but do you have any known move-out in '24 that you've highlighted?

Eliott Trencher

So Jay, this is Eliott, Rob and I will tag team this. But as we've talked about, only 2 expirations next year, over 100,000, one in the Bay Area, one in Seattle. And so as far as the...

A. Robert Paratte

Just a little color, we're -- I guess the term I'll use is we're chipping away at that. We have some transactions we're working on and more to come.

James Poskitt

Okay. And then just one other quick question. Indeed Tower is 74% leased, but the occupancy is lower at 60%. So is it being added to the operating portfolio in the fourth quarter? Do you expect that gap to narrow in the fourth quarter? Or would you expect that same occupancy to lease percentage gap to persist?

Eliott Trencher

It's going to persist until the move-ins fully occur, which is going to take time. So anticipate we'll be closer to the occupancy and then the occupancy and the percentage lease will merge, but that will be mainly over 2024.

Operator

The next question comes from the line of Upal Rana with KeyBanc.

Upal Dhananjay Rana

So you've highlighted a few moving pieces around Riot Games, Indeed Tower and some of the known move-outs to '24. Do you feel that 4Q will likely be sort of the floor occupancy and maybe you can start to begin to grow in '24?

Eliott Trencher

So this is Eliott. We're certainly not going to give 2024 guidance at this point. What we can say is that as we look at the backdrop for 2024 as compared to 2023, '23, we had about 1.5 million expiring going into the year, 5 companies, 100,000 or larger, which actually comprised almost 2/3 of that 1.5 million. Going into next year, we have about 1 million square feet expiring. And as we said, 2 tenants over 100,000. They're closer to about 30% of the total.
So we anticipate it being much less binary in 2024 versus 2023. And then if we want to look at 2025, it's about 700,000 expiring with no tenants above 100,000. So again, I can't say how everything plays out, but it should be less binary.

Upal Dhananjay Rana

Okay. Great. And your decision to reduce the disposition guidance to 0, is that timing related? Or was that sort of related to some kind of like lack of interest? And if you can maybe give some color on some of the buyers and the buyer pool? That would be helpful.

Eliott Trencher

John, do you want me to handle that?

John B. Kilroy

Yes, Eliott, please.

Eliott Trencher

Yes. So it's a function of a few different things. One, as we came into the year, we gave a range that had 0 at the low end than in part, it was because we sort of knew that the market was a little tough to project, and we had no interest in playing into a weak market as a seller.
Two, we did not project having raised $375 million via the One Paseo mortgage in the beginning of the year. So from a liquidity perspective, we had done much better than what we anticipated. And because of that and because of the financing dynamics that John discussed, we didn't anticipate seeing much interest at pricing that we deemed acceptable. And that's why we decided not to pursue anything.

Upal Dhananjay Rana

Okay. Great. And could you give us any color on the buyer pool? What kind of buyers are sort of there and any kind of financing that they're kind of looking at?

Eliott Trencher

Speaking generically... Go ahead, John.

John B. Kilroy

No. You go ahead it. I'll follow up.

Eliott Trencher

Generically speaking, the capital that seems to be out there in Greatest Forest is the opportunistic capital. And you can see that by some of the properties that have traded at a pretty low per square foot numbers.
Now as we evaluate that, we don't think the quality is commensurate with our portfolio, which is why we don't pursue it. But that's where we've seen the deepest pool of capital. Those aren't the types of groups that we want to be selling to, and it kind of plays into the decision we just talked about.

John B. Kilroy

Yes, I have nothing to further add. I think that's a good summary.

Operator

The next question comes from the line of Dylan Burzinski with Green Street.

Dylan Robert Burzinski

I guess just going back to your comments, and I appreciate you're not going to comment on how far pricing has to fall for you guys to get interested in deploying capital. But are there certain markets where you're sort of getting closer or more eager to deploying capital than others, given where pricing is?

John B. Kilroy

Well, it's -- yes, we're not getting closer to deploying capital, but there are some signs of a few buildings that we like at pricing that would make sense and that qualitatively meet our desires. And I'm not going to tell you which markets because I just don't feel that we, from a competitive standpoint, want to let other -- as I say, competitors know what we're thinking. But you should -- I'm going to say what I said in Arizona NAREIT in 2009, and that was, you'll see us in many different markets and in this case, the markets that we're already in, looking, and when we think the time is right, we will strike. We don't think the time is right yet, but there are some assets that are in need of being recapitalized. So we'll play our cards very carefully, and we're in no hurry.

Operator

The next question comes from the line of Peter Abramowitz with Jefferies.

Peter Dylan Abramowitz

Could you just talk a little bit about discussions for the rest of the space and Indeed Tower, and specifically new supply in Austin and how that's potentially impacting those discussions?

A. Robert Paratte

Sure. This is Rob.

John B. Kilroy

Go ahead, Rob.

A. Robert Paratte

Yes. Just collecting my thoughts. So I guess, with the new supply, some of the -- there's new supply in the market in terms of sublease space. But one thing I would say is that we've seen relatively large chunk of sublease space taken off the market by the tenant in the last quarter. So again, things are in flux right now in Austin. Another tech company actually took 100,000 feet fairly recently because they undershot their headcount and how much space they need. So things are really dynamic right now. We do have activity. We are the best building in the CBD bar none, and we attract -- any tenant looking in the market is looking at us.
And so it runs the gamut. As you've seen, financial services, law firms, we've had tech interest, but I can't go into -- I just -- I'm not going to get into like specific transaction and where we are, whether we're in LOI or in leases or what have you. But we have more news that will be forthcoming.

John B. Kilroy

This is John speaking with regard to Austin Indeed and the marketplace in general. I was in Austin 2 weeks ago with our local (inaudible) and so forth and going through kind of a segmentation evaluation of where Indeed sits amongst buildings that are either available today or that will be completed over the next couple of years. I'm very happy with where we're positioned with regard to quality and location and availability and so forth.
There are some buildings that are being built in locations that befuddle us. I don't think they'll do well at all. There are some buildings that have been up. They've tried to compete with us that we've never lost a deal to. And we're not pollyannish about any marker or any -- there's no god given right that Kilroy is going to do better than everybody else. We work hard at it.
But we, I think, are extremely well positioned, and I like where we are with regard -- vis-a-vis product that's coming on stream and so forth. So we've not been -- we've achieved really good rental rates in good terms with very high credit tenants, and we've got quite a few tenants that we're working with for the project. And I think we'll -- I think we're going to do very well this next year.

Peter Dylan Abramowitz

And one more. Could you -- I appreciate the comments earlier about return to office. I think you said you're in the 40s in the Bay Area. Wondering if you could dig in and just talk about how it's return to office been in the Southeast market -- submarket in San Francisco, kind of what you're seeing on the ground there? How successful companies are and getting people back to the office in that part of the city?

John B. Kilroy

Well, I'll start off with -- yes, Rob, let me just start off on that. As you can tell, we're in different locations. So we have to play a little bit of a delayed phone tagger. The office tenant -- the big office tenant that's in Phase 1 of KOP, which was the initial 700,000 feet that's fully leased. They have been -- their occupancy has been very high. They've been hosting in their atrium with that several hundred people multiple times per week.
It's my understanding, mostly AI people, and they're really active in that building as are the folks in the Life Science portion of that phase. As far as the rest of the market goes, perhaps you could respond to that, Rob?

A. Robert Paratte

Sure. Yes. I mean I agree with John, the only thing I would add is that in our Southeast market portfolio, it somewhat depends on companies. But if you look at Adobe or Cruise, I mean they're back to work. And so those are both south of market. Our non-tech companies are more back, I guess, than our tech companies, but we're not monitoring company by company. But I would say that South of market is visibly busier than it was, and it's equivalent to what I was saying about the financial district as a whole. And when these 2 deals that I mentioned earlier happened in the fourth quarter, the 680,000 feet between 2 deals, both of those are locating south of market. And there office...

John B. Kilroy

This is John, again. I apologize there. I thought you had said South San Francisco. I happen to have a new speaker phone in the office here in San Diego that this is our first time using it and it's cutting in and out. So I apologize.

Operator

Next question comes from the line of John Kim with BMO.

John P. Kim

On your cash and marketable securities, can I just ask what interest rate you're earning on that?

Eliott Trencher

So it depends on the duration, but right now, call it, in the 5.

John P. Kim

And is there anything in the marketable securities other than the CDs that you mentioned?

Eliott Trencher

No.

John P. Kim

Do you foresee -- I know you talked about having a high balance for development spend and to retire debt in December of next year. But do you foresee maintaining a high cash balance in the short term just to provide some liquidity for any opportunistic acquisitions?

Eliott Trencher

Well, in the short term, that cash is going to go to effectively fund the development pipeline. So it's reasonable to assume that it gets smaller over subsequent quarters because we're going to continue to fund it.

John P. Kim

Okay. My last question is on the termination income that you had this quarter, which is pretty modest. But I was wondering if you could provide some color on that and what you're expecting for the remainder of the year.

Eliott Trencher

So there's really just one small lease that pay determination fee in San Francisco for retail space is what really drove it. And we are not projecting any other termination income for the balance of the year.

Operator

There are no additional questions waiting at this time. I would now like to pass the conference over to the management team for further remarks.

William E. Hutcheson

Thank you, Victoria, and thank you, everyone, for joining us today. We appreciate your continued interest in Kilroy. Have a good day.

Operator

That concludes today's call. Thank you for your participation, and enjoy the rest of your day.

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