What's in Store for Federal Realty Stock in Q1 Earnings Season?

In This Article:

Federal Realty Investment Trust FRT, a leading real estate investment trust (REIT) focused on retail properties, is set to report its first-quarter 2025 results on May 8, after market close. In anticipation of the announcement, industry analysts and investors are eager to assess the company's performance and prospects in the current economic climate.

In the last reported quarter, this retail REIT met the Zacks Consensus Estimate for FFO of $1.73 per share. Results reflected healthy leasing activity and significant occupancy gains at its properties.

Over the last four quarters, Federal Realty surpassed estimates on one occasion, met on another and missed on the other two, the average miss being 0.15%. The graph below depicts the surprise history of the company:

Federal Realty Investment Trust Price and EPS Surprise

Federal Realty Investment Trust Price and EPS Surprise
Federal Realty Investment Trust Price and EPS Surprise

Federal Realty Investment Trust price-eps-surprise | Federal Realty Investment Trust Quote

In this article, we will dive deep into the U.S. retail real estate market environment and the company's fundamentals and analyze the factors that may have contributed to its first-quarter 2025 performance.

US Retail Real Estate Market in Q1 2025

Per a Cushman & Wakefield CWK report, there has been a pullback in net absorption for the U.S. shopping center market, resulting in a negative shift in the first quarter. Although the national vacancy rate increased 20 basis points (bps) to 5.5% year over year, it remains near a historical low, with minimal new construction and most tenants having already right-sized their real estate needs. Asking rents for the U.S. shopping center market grew from the year-ago quarter.

The first quarter witnessed negative net absorption in the U.S. shopping center market, totaling 5.9 million square feet (msf). This represents the largest single-quarter decline since the third quarter of 2020. The decrease was due to negative net absorption observed in all four regions of the country. Neighborhood centers accounted for 75% of the pullback in demand.

The lack of new construction is also contributing to the scarcity, as only 2.2 msf of new shopping center space was delivered from the beginning of the year through April 14, 2025. As of the first quarter of 2025, there are only 10.6 msf under construction, with an inventory of 4.32 billion square feet.

The reversal in net demand is easing pressure on asking rents. The asking rents for U.S. shopping centers increased 2.3% year over year to $24.76 per square foot in the first quarter.

Factors to Consider Ahead of FRT’s Q1 Results

In the first quarter, Federal Realty is likely to have gained from its premium retail assets in affluent communities with favorable demographics, mainly situated in major coastal markets from Washington, D.C. to Boston, San Francisco and Los Angeles, along with a diverse tenant base.