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CyrusOne Shares Just Spiked On Good News – Here’s Why It would not have been newsworthy during the first half of this year for Carrollton, Texas-based data center REIT CyrusOne (CONE) to post a 3.6 percent share price gain in a single trading session. It simply would have been chalked up as business as usual. On Tuesday, it was a welcome respite after many weeks of bearish trading. CyrusOne shares closed Monday at $44.78, and were up as high as $48.78 intraday, prior to closing at $46.56. Prior to the opening bell CyrusOne announced a leasing win in Texas, which appeared to be the reason behind the sharp move higher. However, good news hasn’t been a sufficient catalyst for data center REIT shares for quite some time. When Good News Doesn’t MatterIt has been rough sledding for REITs and data centers in particular for the past few months. In fact, as recently as two weeks ago, good news was ignored by investors. On Dec. 1, 2016 shares of CoreSite Realty sold off ~4 percent after announcing a 51 percent dividend increase. Seriously, that really happened. All REIT asset classes sold off heavily on December 1, on rising rate fears when money flowed out of the entire sector. The exceptional good news for CoreSite shareholders was totally ignored. Last week an SEC filing revealed that CoreSite’s new CEO, Paul Szurek, bought 7,000 shares on the open market on December 5th at $68.92 per share. As of this writing CoreSite shares are now trading at $77.82 per share. Earlier this week Citi analysts upgraded CoreSite, Digital Realty, and DuPont Fabros from Neutral to Buy. In hindsight, the irrational CoreSite trading after announcing a huge dividend hike may have been the inflection point that signaled a near-term bottom for the entire data center sector. CyrusOne’s Good NewsData Canopy is a CyrusOne “ecosystem partner” that leases wholesale space and provides managed services to its own customers from locations in six US cities. On Tuesday, before the opening bell, the companies jointly announced that Data Canopy was providing “comprehensive disaster recovery services” for an unnamed $2 billion national insurance company at a CyrusOne data center facility in Austin, TX. Source: Data Canopy facility footprint According to the joint release,
Data Canopy currently leases data center space in three facilities in Ashburn, VA owned by RagingWire, Zayo, and Equinix. Notably, this insurer has contracted for a 100 percent uptime SLA to ensure zero interruption for employees located across 48 states who work around the clock. No other lease terms were revealed in the announcement. CyrusOne also leases space to Data Canopy at its flagship 670,000 square foot Carrollton, TX campus north of Dallas. The Bigger PictureIt has been a bipolar year for shares of the six publicly traded data center REITs. Massive deployments by Amazon, Microsoft, Oracle and other planet-scale cloud service providers have driven several consecutive quarters of record net absorption in many US Tier 1 data center markets. Read more: How Long Will the Cloud Data Center Land Grab Last? During 2016, most data center REITs reported record leasing and booked-not-billed backlog, and analysts listened to management discuss large sales funnels and deal pipelines on quarterly earnings calls. These positive reports led to some irrational exuberance on the part of investors during the summer of 2016, driving up share prices to frothy FFO/AFFO multiples. Read more: Another Huge Quarter for Data Center REITs: What’s Next? Eventually, concerns regarding a rising interest rate environment began to chip away at the 50 percent average gains chalked up by data center REITs during the first half of the year. Analysts and investors began to voice concerns regarding how long this leasing windfall could last, and wondering about what levels will actually become the “new normal” in various markets. CyrusOne – Specific Issues
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