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Thursday, August 10th, 2017

    Time Event
    12:00p
    DCK Investor Edge: Here’s How Data Center REITs Did in the First Half of 2017

    The red-hot hyper-scale cloud leasing that drove absorption of data center providers’ inventory in Tier 1 markets last year has taken a breather. However, the backlog of cloud leasing from 2016 continues to fuel rampant construction, and the delivery of new powered shells in Northern Virginia and Dallas-Fort Worth bode well for leasing in this year’s first half in those two markets.

    This past quarter was largely business-as-usual for most of the data center REIT sector. The pending merger of Digital Realty Trust with DuPont Fabros Technology continues to overshadow the sector’s overall solid results for the quarter ended June 30, 2017.

    An Evolving “New Normal”

    Several industry themes were highlighted by the Jones Lang LaSalle North America data center report published last week, mid-way through the REIT quarterly earnings report season. It confirmed hyper-scale cloud leasing is still a key factor in many markets, although it was muted compared with the same period last year.

    Read more: DCK Investor Edge: JLL Says Cloud Data Center Hunger Has Subsided

    But enterprise data center leasing came back with a vengeance in Dallas-Fort Worth, which saw a 50 percent increase in net absorption year-over-year. Looking ahead, the JLL report predicts that absorption of data center space in the second half of 2017 is expected to continue at the same cadence as the first six months of the year.

    There are ample new powered shells being delivered in Northern Virginia during the second half, by DuPont Fabros, CyrusOne, and Digital Realty. If the current leasing trends in the continent’s biggest data center market hold steady, there will be over 80MW of wholesale data center capacity absorbed in fiscal 2017. While this is tracking under the record of 113MW absorbed in Virginia’s Data Center Alley in 2016, it would represent the second-highest amount of wholesale space leased in any US market. Notably, this is net of any Amazon Web Services powered shell space absorbed in Northern Virginia.

    These latest insights into the “new normal” for 2017 bode well for investors. However, much of the good news was baked into the data center sector shares going into Q2 2017 earnings season. The lack of “blow-out” leasing numbers has led to a mild round of profit taking and a bit of healthy price consolidation, prior to the next leg up.

    More M&A in Play?

    The valuation formula of the proposed merger with Digital Realty has boosted the DuPont Fabros share price above its peers since the June 9, 2017 M&A announcement. This all-stock merger was structured to be accretive to Digital shareholders when it closes later this year, due to the fixed ratio of 0.545 DLR shares for each DFT share.

    After closing, Digital Realty’s investment-grade balance sheet will lower the cost of capital for the DuPont Fabros super-wholesale offerings, potentially making them even more attractive as part of the combined entity.

    Read more: DCK Investor Edge: Digital Realty Signs Biggest Hyper-Scale Deal After All

    The Equinix/Verizon North American data center carve-out was also structured to be immediately accretive for Equinix shareholders. It has certainly contributed to the strong recent performance of EQIX shares. During the Equinix Q2 conference call Q&A, CEO Steve Smith shared that Equinix plans to actively compete for “the next wave of hyper-scale customer deployments.” This will be a new Equinix wholesale initiative that industry pros and investors should watch carefully.

    Read more: Equinix Positioning for “Next Wave” of Cloud Data Center Deployments

    CyrusOne CEO Gary Wojtaszek discussed expanding into Western Europe during his Q2 conference call. The immediate focus is on two land parcels near Dublin, Ireland, for developments to serve an existing cloud customer. CyrusOne is also seeking to acquire a local platform company to accelerate development in conjunction with this initiative. London, Amsterdam, and Frankfurt were also mentioned by Wojtaszek as future markets of interest.

    There are also billions of dollars of institutional capital and private-equity also looking to invest in data center operators. Large players active this year included: Digital Bridge/DataBank, GI Partners/Peak 10, and Cyxtera Technologies (Medina Capital, BC Partners, and CenturyLink).

    Frothy Valuations?

    In my view, given the double-digit revenue and FFO/AFFO per share growth put up by the sector in Q2 2017, data center REIT valuations do not appear to be out of line.

    The colocation and interconnection business is far more consistent quarter after quarter than wholesale leasing. So, it is not surprising to discover the highest earnings multiples belong to the two publicly traded REITs primarily focused on retail business models.

    CoreSite Realty is currently trading at 26x FFO (a REIT earnings per share equivalent), and continues to grow FFO/share at eye-popping rates. Last quarter management reported a 23.6 percent increase year-over-year. CoreSite has a track record of growing its quarterly distribution by at least mid-double digits each year — compiling a 33 percent compounded annual growth rate (CAGR) since 2011. CoreSite shares currently pay an attractive current yield of 3.33 percent. Investors should keep in mind CoreSite has the highest sector FFO payout ratio, which could slow future dividend growth rates.

    Equinix reports adjusted funds from operations (AFFO), and EQIX shares are currently trading at 26.5x AFFO per share. In the abstract, this could be considered a high valuation. However, an impressive AFFO growth rate in the high-teens and an analyst consensus 15 percent dividend increase projected for 2018 are supporting this valuation. The global interconnection moat created by Equinix over the past two decades makes this impressive growth rate possible — despite being one of the five largest REITs with a market capitalization of $34.7 billion. Equinix has the lowest sector dividend payout ratio, now under 50 percent, which is reflected in the 1.8% current yield.

    Digital Realty, CyrusOne, and QTS Realty are currently trading at lower FFO multiples of 19.4x, 20.2x, and 20.2x, respectively. The challenges surrounding earnings predictability — given limited visibility into the wholesale leasing pipelines — are largely responsible for the differential. Notably, the entire data center REIT sector is currently trading at multiples higher than historic averages, based upon the on-going double-digit growth potential.

    Déjà vu? Less Likely

    Last year, data center REITs flew too high, too fast, and prices retreated significantly during late summer and into fall.

    In 2016, data center REITs had powered up to 50 percent average gains during the first half of the year. The optimism over the pace of hyper-scale cloud service providers choosing to lease from third-party wholesale data center companies fueled the irrational exuberance. Data center REIT valuations became frothy and detached from fundamental valuations and dividend yields. The sector had become a basket of six “momentum” stocks peaking in July 2016.

    The YChart above shows the exceptional relative performance last year of data center REITs. However, since all commercial real estate classes were performing well (the MSCI REIT Index was up 14.7 percent), it was less conspicuous.

    Fast-forward to today, and data center REITs have once again shown outstanding performance year-to-date. Notably, the absolute performance of the data center REITs on average is somewhat muted compared with the prior year.

    However, the data center sector’s relative outperformance is even more pronounced in 2017, due to the lackluster performance in asset classes like lodging, self-storage, healthcare, net-lease, shopping centers, and malls, dragging down the broader REIT results.

    The Vanguard REIT Index ETF (VNQ) tracks the performance of the MSCI REIT Index (RMZ) which is barely in positive territory for the year.

    This stark contrast makes the average 23 percent price appreciation of the data center sector year-to-date even more noticeable this year. The publicly traded data centers are providing the Holy Grail for REIT investors: current yield, dividend growth, and price appreciation. Given the tremendous secular tailwinds for the data center sector, it appears that REIT investors are now looking to buy the dips, in contrast to last year’s frenzy and fizzle.

    Investor Takeaway

    Data center REIT outperformance in 2017 has been driven by solid results and healthy supply/demand fundamentals reported in most major markets.

    The share multiples for the data center REITs do not appear to be out of line given the backlog of signed contracts, pre-leasing of new developments, and sales funnels which reportedly are at least as large as last year. (The one exception would be Silicon Valley, where there is a dearth of new supply after record absorption last year.)

    It remains to be seen what the next catalyst will be for the data center REIT shares. However, in addition to the usual suspects of cloud computing and accelerating hybrid IT deployments, the industry tailwinds now include increased focus on potential M&A transactions.

    5:03p
    Docker Is Raising Funding at $1.3B Valuation

    Lizette Chapman and Eric Newcomer (Bloomberg) — Business software company Docker Inc. is raising fresh funds, valuing the company at $1.3 billion, according to people familiar with the matter.The latest influx of $75 million, which is expected to close by the end of the month, will help fuel Docker’s newest push to win business customers and finally monetize its free open-source tools popular with developers worldwide. Part of the funding will go toward building a sales and marketing team for corporate clients, one of the people said, asking not to be identified discussing private matters. The valuation would represent a marginal increase from the $1 billion it was ascribed when it last raised money in 2015.

    The funding follows a springtime management shuffle. Steve Singh, a former chief executive officer of Concur Technologies Inc., took the top job at Docker in May, replacing co-founder Ben Golub. Executive Vice President of Product Marc Verstaen is also leaving the startup. He’s being replaced by another company co-founder and Chief Technology Officer Solomon Hykes.

    See also: Why Docker is So Popular

    Palo Alto, California-based Docker provides virtual work spaces, called containers, so software developers can more efficiently build, distribute and run software programs. The idea is to create software in isolated, independent environments which can then be stored in the cloud, distributed and run anywhere regardless of the operating system and hardware. Although Docker’s technology has won rave developer reviews — there are more than 3,000 community contributors and more than 270 meetup groups devoted to the technology worldwide — monetizing that popularity has proven tricky.

    Docker declined to comment on the funding round and valuation.

    The seven-year-old startup counts ADP LLC and General Electric Co. among its customers and competes against startups including Mesosphere Inc. and open source systems like Google’s Kubernetes.

    Docker will appoint experts in operations and enterprise sales to its board in coming months and slowly phase out other members who represent investors, according to one of the people familiar with the discussions.

     

    5:32p
    AWS No Longer a Holdout, Joins Kubernetes Group

    Brought to you by IT Pro

    It’s only been two weeks since Microsoft made news by signing up as a platinum member of the Cloud Native Computing Foundation, a Linux Foundation project and the organization behind the born-at-Google open source container orchestration platform Kubernetes. At the time, that made Amazon Web Services the only major public cloud provider that wasn’t a member, and it wasn’t expected to sign on anytime soon because it has its own container orchestration platform, Elastic Container Service.

    When it comes to containers orchestrated on AWS with ESC, it’s the cloud equivalent of “what happens in Vegas stays in Vegas.” Amazon’s homegrown platform serves to make its cloud a walled garden where containers are involved but aren’t really portable. (Portability is one of the reasons they’re so popular.)

    AWS has now evidently decided that if you can’t lick ’em, join ’em.

    This week CNCF announced that AWS has agreed to pay $370,000 per year to join Microsoft, Google, Huawei, IBM and 11 others as a top level platinum member. AWS’s vice president of cloud architecture strategy, Adrian Cockcroft, will join CNCF’s governing board — which is one of the perks of having a platinum seat.

    So why the sudden turnaround?

    For starters, Kubernetes might be the most well known and largest project managed by CNCF, but there are others that are officially supported on AWS — most notably containerd, the container runtime that ironically provides consistency between container orchestration platforms, a project on which AWS was an early contributor.

    “Many CNCF projects already run in the AWS Cloud, and we are excited to join the foundation to ensure that customers continue to have a great experience running these workloads on AWS,” Cockcroft said in a statement. “CNCF provides a neutral home for open source projects like Kubernetes, containerd, CNI, and linkerd. With our membership, we look forward to growing our role in these communities and the overall cloud native ecosystem.”

    But Kubernetes is the main draw, a platform that although relatively difficult to use on AWS — especially when compared with tweaked-for-Amazon ECS — is still deployed by a great many of AWS’s users. In a survey taken in March at the joint CloudNativeCon and KubeCon conferences in Copenhagen, 63 percent of respondents said they hosted Kubernetes on Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud, a number that had risen from 44 percent a year earlier.

    It appears that AWS is now seriously interested in having a say in how Kubernetes is developed going forward — if for no other reason than to make sure it works and plays well with its cloud. Indeed, the press release from CNCF mentioned in passing that Amazon would be “contributing to Kubernetes.”

    Does this mean that AWS will phase out ECS in favor of its own officially supported implementation of Kubernetes? It’s too soon to tell, but I wouldn’t dismiss the thought. Remember, as enviable a position as Amazon is in, with a market share that’s greater than all the other big public cloud players combined, the market is AWS’s to lose — and we’ve all seen top-rung companies quickly move down the ladder. If it seems that users are insisting that Kubernetes is the standard — because it is on all the other clouds — then the time might be right to make it the standard for AWS as well.

    That appears to be where AWS is headed. If so, expect them to take their sweet time about it — because saving face seems to be important to those on the top of the heap.

    Meanwhile, CNCF is pleased as punch to have AWS on board — as well they should be.

    “As the largest cloud provider, AWS brings years of experience in enabling enterprises to successfully adopt cloud computing and enormous expertise in cloud-native technologies,” Dan Kohn, executive director of CNCF said in a statement. “We are honored to have AWS join CNCF as a platinum member, and believe that their participation will help shape the future of enterprise computing.”

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