Earnings call transcript: St Joe Company Q3 2025 sees strong growth, stock surges

Published 30/10/2025, 18:12
Earnings call transcript: St Joe Company Q3 2025 sees strong growth, stock surges

The St. Joe Company (NYSE:JOE) reported robust financial results for the third quarter of 2025, with significant increases in both revenue and net income. The company’s earnings per share (EPS) came in at $0.67, surpassing expectations, while revenue reached $161.1 million. Following the announcement, St. Joe’s stock surged by 14.11%, closing at $51, reflecting investor confidence in the company’s growth trajectory.

Key Takeaways

  • Revenue grew 63% year-over-year, driven by strong real estate and hospitality sectors.
  • Net income soared by 130%, highlighting operational efficiency.
  • Stock price increased by 14.11% in reaction to the earnings announcement.
  • Residential real estate revenue saw a 94% increase, with a rise in average homesite prices.

Company Performance

St. Joe Company demonstrated exceptional performance in Q3 2025, with revenue growing by 63% compared to the same period last year. The company’s strategic focus on residential real estate and hospitality has paid off, as evidenced by the 94% increase in residential revenue and a 9% rise in hospitality income. This growth is supported by the booming real estate market in Bay and Walton Counties, where the company has significant land holdings.

Financial Highlights

  • Revenue: $161.1 million, up 63% year-over-year.
  • Net income: Increased by 130%.
  • Residential real estate revenue: $36.8 million, up 94%.
  • Gross margin: Increased to 53% from 39%.
  • Hospitality revenue: $60.6 million, up 9%.

Earnings vs. Forecast

St. Joe’s EPS of $0.67 exceeded market expectations, although specific forecast figures were not provided. The company’s revenue of $161.1 million also indicates strong performance, contributing to the positive market sentiment.

Market Reaction

Following the earnings announcement, St. Joe’s stock price rose by 14.11%, closing at $51. This surge reflects investor optimism about the company’s growth prospects and strategic initiatives. The stock’s movement places it closer to its 52-week high of $56.69, indicating strong market confidence.

Outlook & Guidance

Looking ahead, St. Joe plans to continue evaluating asset monetization opportunities and expand its hospitality segment. The company aims to double its commercial leasing portfolio and focus on key developments at Watersound Town Center and the FSU Health Campus. These initiatives are expected to drive future growth and enhance shareholder value.

Executive Commentary

CEO Jorge Gonzalez emphasized the company’s strategic focus, stating, "Our strategy to focus on those town centers is very deliberate and very measured." He highlighted the importance of maintaining flexibility in asset monetization, adding, "We’re constantly evaluating all of our assets."

Risks and Challenges

  • Potential market saturation in key regions could impact future growth.
  • Economic fluctuations may affect real estate demand.
  • Execution risks associated with large-scale development projects.
  • Dependence on regional economic conditions and infrastructure developments.

Q&A

During the earnings call, analysts inquired about the company’s capital allocation strategy, pricing approach for home site sales, and share repurchase plans. Executives provided insights into regional market development and reiterated their commitment to strategic growth initiatives.

Full transcript - St Joe Comp (JOE) Q3 2025:

Conference Operator: Good day and thank you for standing by. Welcome to The St. Joe Company’s third quarter 2025 earnings conference call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. After the speaker’s presentation, there will be a question and answer session. If you wish to ask a question via the webcast, please use the Q&A box available on the webcast link. At any time during the conference, please be advised that today’s conference is being recorded. I’d now like to hand the conference over to Mr. Jorge Gonzalez, President, CEO, and Chairman. Please go ahead.

Jorge Gonzalez, President, CEO, and Chairman, The St. Joe Company: Thank you and good morning. I am Jorge Gonzalez, President, CEO, and Chairman of The St. Joe Company. It is my pleasure to welcome you to our quarterly earnings release. I’m joined today by Marek Bakun, our Chief Financial Officer. Yesterday afternoon after the market closed, we issued our third quarter 2025 earnings release, which can be found in the Investor Relations portion of our website. This morning we continue our commitment to quarterly earnings calls to provide our shareholders and the investor community with an opportunity to ask questions about our business and performance. We have always been an open and transparent company that welcomes all feedback and opinions. Because of the types of assets that we own, we encourage shareholders to visit us in person so they can assess the progress of the region and of our company.

Before we begin, I would like to remind everyone that today’s press release and the statements made during this call include forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. These statements are subject to risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from our expectations and projections. Such risks and uncertainties include the factors set forth in the earnings release and in our filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Additionally, during today’s call we will discuss non-GAAP measures, which we believe can be useful in evaluating our performance. A reconciliation of these measures can be found in our earnings release. Let’s go ahead and get started.

We assume everyone has already carefully reviewed our earnings release, which provides comprehensive details about our performance, so I am only going to mention a few key highlights before we move on to your questions. For the third quarter of 2025, we showed solid performance with 63% growth in revenue and 130% growth in net income. When compared to the third quarter of 2024, residential real estate revenue grew by 94% to $36.8 million from $19 million. The average homesite base price increased to $150,000 from $86,000 and the gross margin increased to 53% from 39%. We also continued to grow recurring revenue with leasing revenue increasing by 7% to an all-time quarterly record of $16.7 million and hospitality revenue increasing by 9% to an all-time third quarter record of $60.6 million. Our leasing and residential pipelines are also growing.

For the first nine months of 2025, we executed 40 new commercial leases and renewed 43 existing leases for a total of 83, compared to 26 new leases and 27 renewals for a total of 53 during the same period in 2024. At the end of the third quarter, we had 1,992 residential units under contract compared to 1,381 for the same period in 2024. We have over 24,000 entitled units in our residential pipeline in various stages of planning, engineering, permitting, or development. This pipeline includes a wide range of locations, products, and pricing, which gives us the flexibility to respond to the ebb and flow of market conditions. Included in commercial real estate revenue for the third quarter is the sale of Watercress Senior Living to one of the nation’s largest senior living REITs.

This sale is part of our core business and an example of how we create value by developing successful operating properties. The land encompassed approximately 7.7 acres and was originally appraised in 2019 at approximately $2.7 million. After development and leasing of the property beginning in 2020, Watercress was sold in the third quarter for $41 million, resulting in a gross profit of $19.4 million. Senior living is an asset type that is needed for the regional ecosystem, but it is not an asset type we plan to grow as part of our commercial leasing portfolio. Because these types of assets take longer to lease than multifamily and because they entail considerable operational intensity, the sale of Watercress is an example of how our operating properties generate recurring revenue, but there are also piggy banks that can be monetized with the right set of circumstances.

We anticipate continuing to create asset value by developing operating properties which we may own for recurring revenue or choose to monetize and reinvest capital allocation. We will also continue to evaluate non-strategic timberlands for opportunities to monetize and reinvest for strategic capital allocation. For the third quarter, we continue to execute a measured and multifaceted capital allocation strategy with $20.4 million for capital expenditures, $8.7 million for share repurchase, $8.1 million for cash dividends, and $28.4 million for project debt reduction. It is important to remember that the exact capital allocations will vary from quarter to quarter based on the circumstances of that quarter. For example, in the third quarter, project debt reduction includes $19.2 million for the loan payoff associated with the sale of Watercress Senior Living.

With the $8.7 million in share repurchase for the third quarter, we are at $24.9 million in share repurchases through the first nine months of 2025, compared to $0 share repurchases through the first nine months of 2024, which is a significant year-over-year acceleration. The outstanding share balance is now below 58 million for the first time in nearly 30 years. In the third quarter, we announced a 14% increase in the quarterly dividend to $0.16 per share, payable on December 12 to all shareholders of record as of the close of business on November 13. Since we started this dividend program in 2020, we have increased dividend payments by 129%. Beyond the numbers, we are excited about the new daily nonstop flights between Northwest Florida Beaches International Airport (ECP) and LaGuardia Airport in New York City, which is the largest market pool impact in the country.

With a population of approximately 20 million people, the company is poised to leverage this new opportunity by expanding marketing efforts to promote the quality of the WaterSound lifestyle to this large population base. With this new flight, ECP now has nonstop flights to 7 of the 10 largest Metropolitan Statistical Areas in the country. Now Eric and I are going to answer your questions. As a reminder, in the top right-hand corner of your screen, the words Submit a Question are visible. Clicking that text will take you to the text entry box where you can type your question and click Submit.

Marek Bakun, Chief Financial Officer, The St. Joe Company: Eric, yes, good morning. We have already received a number of questions, so we’ll go ahead and start with the first one. At the current buyback rate, the company is repurchasing around 1% of the company. On an annual basis, we have $126 million of cash, our recurring income continues to increase, our outstanding debt has declined by over $50 million, and the capital intensity of our business continues to decline. Management deserves all of the credit here, but why are we building our cash balance rather than investing? I’m sorry, rather than increasing the pace of our buybacks?

Jorge Gonzalez, President, CEO, and Chairman, The St. Joe Company: That is a great question. Appreciate the question and in many ways it outlines all the positive things that are happening in the company at this moment. Having cash is a high class problem and we have been generating real cash not through gimmicks or short term financial engineering techniques. Many other companies, to be honest with you, wish that they had this same high class problem. We are very happy with the way that the company is generating cash. It is something that we started planning years ago and the execution that we’ve had has essentially created this situation for us. Having said all that, share repurchase is a priority for us, as we have said a number of times as part of our capital allocation strategy. Evidence of how much of a priority it is is something I mentioned in the opening remarks.

Through the first nine months of 2025, we have invested $25 million in share repurchase when compared to $0 for the same nine months in 2024. Even after the third quarter we have continued to repurchase shares and something that’s important to think about is really the largest liquidity or cash event we had in the third quarter. The sale of Watercress Senior Living occurred literally a couple of days at the end of the third quarter. Next question.

Marek Bakun, Chief Financial Officer, The St. Joe Company: Over the last year, there have been several land and real estate transactions. There are several land real estate transactions in Bay and Walton counties at valuations that would support an NAV that is materially higher than the current stock price. It seems there could be several more opportunities to either sell land or additional assets that are either outside of the Bay Walton sector plan or where the major appreciation has already occurred. Why not sell more of these assets at values that are material relative to the current market cap and use the proceeds to meaningfully reduce our share count while we continue to own a century worth of future developable land?

Jorge Gonzalez, President, CEO, and Chairman, The St. Joe Company: As I mentioned, great question. Again, as I mentioned in my opening remarks, we are continuing to evaluate not only our operating properties but timberlands in our portfolio to determine which ones create the best opportunity for us to monetize and reallocate those resources into more strategic capital allocation strategies. What we’re not going to do is sell assets at a discount. We’re going to make sure that we get the value that our shareholders deserve when we monetize our assets, whether they’re operating properties or timberlands.

Marek Bakun, Chief Financial Officer, The St. Joe Company: Next question. Great quarter. Joe continues to shine in a sector that has seen some softness. Where does the company see cash levels 12 to 18 months from now? Also noting that the company has done some heavy lifting with CapEx during previous quarters and we are on a side of reaping revenues from that CapEx. What are the regulatory hurdles, execution restrictions when the company is buying back its own shares? What cash levels does the company feel comfortable with?

Jorge Gonzalez, President, CEO, and Chairman, The St. Joe Company: Great question. That’s certainly a question from somebody who has followed the company for a long time and understands the evolution of the company. Let me make sure I can answer all the subcomponents of the question. If I miss any, Marek can chime in. The first one is where does the company see cash levels 12, 20 months from now? It’s really going to depend on facts and circumstances. Where are we in the evolution of the company? Where are we in our capital allocation strategy? What are the macroeconomic conditions? What are the microeconomic conditions? Certainly, as we have stated many times, we view our capital allocation strategy as being measured and multifaceted. Our capital allocation strategy is not singular to save cash. Certainly capital expenditures are a part of it.

Share repurchases are a part of it, dividends are a part of it, and project debt reduction are a part of it. The next question or sub question is what are the regulatory hurdles, execution restrictions when companies are buying back their own shares? There are a series of requirements that we have to abide by and navigate, and obviously a lot of that depends on the open and closed periods and when we can purchase in the open and closed periods. There are different requirements for each one. That’s part of something that we consider in our capital allocation strategy, and that’s one of the reasons why we mentioned and I mentioned in my opening remarks that quarter to quarter capital allocation may be different, but again, share repurchase is a priority for us as part of our capital allocation strategy.

The last part of the question is what cash levels does the company feel comfortable with? The answer to that is similar to the answer to the first question. It just depends on facts and circumstances. What’s happening at macroeconomic levels, micro, where we are in the seeding and harvesting process of our residential home sites. As anybody who has managed a diversified real estate operating company knows, liquidity is important. It’s important for many reasons. We obviously want to maintain liquidity, but we also want to make sure that we continue to execute our capital allocation strategy in a way that creates the best returns for our shareholders.

Marek Bakun, Chief Financial Officer, The St. Joe Company: Yeah, and Jorge talks about seeding and harvesting. It is definitely great to see the harvesting, and what you saw in this quarter is the growth in cash from some of the harvesting, and it also allowed for us to accelerate repurchases and increase dividends to our shareholders. Moving on to the next question. Great execution and appreciate the caller and philosophy around Watercress. Any progress update on the talks with a large scale builder interested in entire Pigeon Creek DSAP?

Jorge Gonzalez, President, CEO, and Chairman, The St. Joe Company: Those talks are ongoing. We don’t have anything specific to report at this moment, but we are encouraged with the progress that has been made in those talks.

Marek Bakun, Chief Financial Officer, The St. Joe Company: Next question. We have stayed in one of your beautiful twin beachfront vacation homes in Panama City Beach. Great place for the family, by the way. We love them. Just wondering if there are any plans for the beachfront lots about a block east, which also includes several acres across the street. I think it’s called Waverunner, but the project is actually called Wavecrest internally. Close on that stuff. It is a well-located property, very close, including frontage on the beach just east of those two homes that are mentioned in this question. If you look at the map, directly to the north is a lot of our land holdings on the other side of 98, which, if you look at the presentation we did at the shareholder meeting, had a couple DSAPs. That is a future growth area.

Clearly, having that growth to the north will continue to add value to this property that we have right at the beach directly south of there.

Jorge Gonzalez, President, CEO, and Chairman, The St. Joe Company: If I could just quickly add to that, the Watercress Senior Living property that we’re talking about has a pretty significant amount of frontage on the Gulf of Mexico. That frontage doesn’t get created every day. We’ve been very thoughtful about what are the highest and best uses for that property. We have been evaluating it for quite some time because it’s a property that’s unique by fronting the Gulf of Mexico. When we reach a conclusion of what the highest and best use is for that property, that can create synergy, like Marek mentioned, with potentially other more inland land holdings. We’ll execute that strategy.

Marek Bakun, Chief Financial Officer, The St. Joe Company: Next question, has management identified or received interest on additional opportunities to monetize some of the assets within the hospitality or leasing segments?

Jorge Gonzalez, President, CEO, and Chairman, The St. Joe Company: Like I mentioned in my opening remarks, we’re constantly evaluating all of our assets, whether they’re operating properties or timberlands, to determine what is the best strategy, hold and continue to receive recurring revenue or monetize like we did with Watercress. Yes, it’s dialogue that we have and it’s an evaluation that’s ongoing.

Marek Bakun, Chief Financial Officer, The St. Joe Company: Given the look through implied piggy banks, would you consider increasing the pace of the measured capital allocation via share repurchases? We continue to, as Jorge mentioned in his press release, look at our assets, the piggy banks. As Jorge mentioned, we also look at the cash and look at the forward cash to see what opportunities to continue to adjust to our measured capital allocation. As Jorge mentioned in his opening statement, we have increased this year’s repurchases compared to prior years because we always look and evaluate our overall capital allocation strategy. The company has 46 completed townhomes at Waterstone Origins Crossings with only 14 leased. Are all of the currently unleased townhomes up for sale? We are no longer executing long term leases. It is our intent over time to go ahead and sell the remaining 46 townhomes that we have in there.

The 14 that you mentioned have already transacted. We are managing the leases in order to be able to manage sales.

Jorge Gonzalez, President, CEO, and Chairman, The St. Joe Company: Yeah. If I could add, we made a decision because we thought it would create the best value to sell the townhouses one at a time as opposed to selling the townhouses as a portfolio. That has proven out to be true. We’ve had good success in selling the townhouses at the price levels that we anticipated and we’re going to continue doing that. As Marek mentioned, that’s an asset that we are gradually transitioning from a commercial leasing asset into residential real estate sales. Okay.

Marek Bakun, Chief Financial Officer, The St. Joe Company: Seems like there have been a significant uptick in lot sales at Windmark Beach. The community has expanded quite a bit over the past five years. Can you talk about what is going on there? Is there an area maybe hitting an inflection point? Is there an ability to expand the scale of the community in the future?

Jorge Gonzalez, President, CEO, and Chairman, The St. Joe Company: We have been very pleased when we executed a new strategy for Windmark several years ago. In Windmark, we were selling originally lots or home sites on a retail basis. We made a decision that that was a very difficult strategy to execute in that location. I believe at the time we were selling two or three lots per year. It’s a location that it’s challenging for folks who are not from that area to purchase a home site, find a builder. What we decided when we changed the strategy in Windmark was that we would get volume and absorption if we transitioned Windmark into a builder program, and particularly a builder that would initially build a lot of spec homes because we thought keys would sell a lot better for consumers than going through the mechanics of buying a lot and finding a custom home builder.

That strategy has turned out to be true. It has been very successful. We have been selling a lot of home sites in. Our builder in Windmark has been selling a lot of homes. We still have quite a few to go in Windmark and we also own surrounding properties that if the trend continues, we’ll have opportunities to expand the program.

Marek Bakun, Chief Financial Officer, The St. Joe Company: Jorge, just to add to that, there’s about 800 developed lots. Most of them are now homes, and there’s a couple hundred more lots currently under development in there. It will be very close to 1,000 units in the Windmark community within a reasonable period of time.

Jorge Gonzalez, President, CEO, and Chairman, The St. Joe Company: Absolutely. Just a quick follow up. In the original Windmark master plan, there was a plan for a golf course. That’s a potential area that we can look at transitioning into other higher and best uses.

Marek Bakun, Chief Financial Officer, The St. Joe Company: Next question. Early reads commentary from Discover WaterSound weekend. Nice concept. Again, it’s just a comment. It’s one of the events. There were a lot of good events put out to really showcase the beautiful assets that are developing in that area. There was also a 5K, 10K run which was nicely attended. It is really a fun event and the weather was magnificent for us, so it really was a great weekend. Encourage everybody to come out next time. You saw a big jump in average home site prices this quarter, roughly $150,000 versus around $86,000 last year. Could you help us understand how much of that was driven by mix versus genuine like-to-like pricing strength and whether you think these margins are sustainable into 2026?

Jorge Gonzalez, President, CEO, and Chairman, The St. Joe Company: We, in our Q.S. and earnings releases, often say that our residential home site numbers quarter to quarter are based on the mix that we have in that particular quarter. We have a lot of active residential communities. Those communities offer a wide range of pricing, product, lifestyles. We have a wide range of margins. We always caution shareholders when they look at our residential home site figures to look beyond quarter to quarter and look at the trends, particularly over a 12-month or 24-month period. One of the reasons why we have deliberately diversified our residential segment with residential communities that offer a wide range of price points and product is because each community behaves differently in different economic times, which is a great portfolio to have.

For example, our higher end communities like Camp Creek tend to be more agnostic to interest rates, mortgage interest rates, because the type of consumer that is purchasing that product is probably more focused on how, for example, the stock market is doing. It has more to do with mix of what closings we had at any particular moment than anything else.

Marek Bakun, Chief Financial Officer, The St. Joe Company: Yes. Just to add, in our shareholder presentation that we did in May, we did provide some history on margins on our residential and they have been around that 50% mark for a number of years. As Jorge just mentioned, different communities with different price points do have different margins. We also place lots under contract that sometimes, in most cases, span longer than 12-month periods. You have to look at the community, the contract, how phasing works to kind of get the more specific numbers. If you look back historically, we’ve been closer to that 50% margins on our residential lots. Could you estimate cumulative capital spending over the next three to five years? Assuming it doesn’t grow very significantly, I would echo the sentiment in favor of repurchasing more shares.

Jorge Gonzalez, President, CEO, and Chairman, The St. Joe Company: Like I mentioned in answering one of the earlier questions, we have the high-class problem of our operations generating actual cash and generating actual cash in executing the strategy that we have been consistently executing for many years now. Capital allocation, again, we view it as a multifaceted strategy, and share repurchase is a priority for us.

Marek Bakun, Chief Financial Officer, The St. Joe Company: What is The St. Joe Company’s estimate of the current value of its land inventory at the end of Q3 2025? What is The St. Joe Company’s estimate of its recurring revenue at the end of Q3 2025?

Jorge Gonzalez, President, CEO, and Chairman, The St. Joe Company: I’ll start with the last part. I think the recurring revenue, that’s an easy calculation to make and I think Marek can maybe give you some high level number of that because really our hospitality revenue and our leasing revenue are the two traditional recurring revenue types. In terms of the land valuation, we in our annual meeting we did provide for the first time ever a snapshot of the valuation range done by a third party of our operating properties. We mentioned at that meeting that we were going to be over time working on a similar approach for our timberlands, our land holdings. That’s something that is currently in process.

Marek Bakun, Chief Financial Officer, The St. Joe Company: Yeah, Jorge, you’re exactly right. We do disclose both the growth in recurring revenue, which we consider hospitality and leasing. Just like you mentioned in your opening, both the commercial at $16.7 million was the biggest single quarter that we’ve had in leasing in the history of the company, and then the $60.6 million in hospitality for the quarter was the biggest third quarter. We have seasonality, so usually quarter two is a little bit bigger than that, but for Q3, this was the biggest. For recurring, just to answer the question, it’s $169 million in hospitality for nine months compared to $157 million last year, and then in leasing was $49.4 million versus $44.7 million. Who is going to be the builder for LLP 3? I think that’s Longleaf Park 3.

Jorge Gonzalez, President, CEO, and Chairman, The St. Joe Company: That phase of WaterSound Origins is what we call WaterSound Origins West. We have several different phases at various stages in our pipeline, from engineering to permitting to development. Our plan in Origins West is to continue the same strategy we had in Origins, which is to have a group of builders that are semi custom builders, custom builders that will create a product that’s unique in our region by offering different floor plans, different approaches to elevations. We don’t intend to change the strategy that we’ve had at WaterSound Origins by just having one builder. We intend to continue the same strategy by having multiple builders just like Origins. Our intent is for WaterSound Origins West, after it’s completed and the homes are built, for it to look and feel like a custom or semi custom neighborhood. Okay.

Marek Bakun, Chief Financial Officer, The St. Joe Company: Average home site sale price of $150,000 versus $86,000 is a significant jump. How can you help me understand that increase, and how should we be thinking about this going forward?

Jorge Gonzalez, President, CEO, and Chairman, The St. Joe Company: Yeah, I think the answer is similar to the previous couple of answers I’ve given, and we have consistently mentioned this in all of our disclosures. Our residential home site numbers are primarily driven by timing and mixture of communities.

Marek Bakun, Chief Financial Officer, The St. Joe Company: Okay, can you highlight with respect to the ebb and flow of the development cycle where hospitality and leasing is? For context, it seems the heavy load of investment from 2018 through 2024 period is concluded, and the hyper growth is waning. People continue to view abating growth numbers in these segments as a sign of slowdown rather than simply development cycle. Is there any color on when you expect growth to accelerate there?

Jorge Gonzalez, President, CEO, and Chairman, The St. Joe Company: Yes, we went through an exponential growth period, particularly in hospitality. As an example, we opened five new hotels in a 12-month calendar period, which is pretty amazing when you consider that hospitality assets are operating assets and not real estate assets. We continue to believe that there are market opportunities for us to continue to expand the hospitality segment. We have different concepts at different stages of planning, engineering, design, and permitting. As to whether we’ll exactly match the same pace that we had in that one year, it’s hard to say. It’s really a function of where we are in evaluating those projects. We still have plans to continue to expand the hospitality segment at the right time and with the right product and right locations.

In terms of commercial leasing, we have, as we’ve been mentioning in all of our disclosures for a couple of years now, we are particularly focused in our Watersound Town Center, in our West Bay Town Center, and in our Florida State University Health Campus. Just those three areas alone have the potential to more than double our commercial leasing portfolio. The way that you create valuable leasing assets is not by just looking up and down a road like 98 and doing a series of strict commercial centers. You’re never going to get the high leasing rates and create the value in those portfolios that we’re trying to create. Our strategy to focus on those town centers is very deliberate and very measured because we believe if we focus in those town centers, we’re going to create portfolios with the highest leasing rates in our region.

Marek Bakun, Chief Financial Officer, The St. Joe Company: Jorge, I’m going to just add a little bit to it too. West Bay, specifically, one of the three places that you mentioned, is really just beginning. Latitude has now over 2,200 homes built and occupied in that area. This is a really great location, and we’re just beginning the development because the market conditions are right for that in that area with so much growth in residential.

Jorge Gonzalez, President, CEO, and Chairman, The St. Joe Company: One last quick thing in the Watersound Town Center, we mentioned this. In the last couple quarters we’ve had a particular focus on attracting national apparel brands to the Watersound Town Center, particularly in the building that we have under construction. We’ve been pretty pleased with the progress we have made in attracting those brands to the Watersound Town Center, and we plan on making some announcements about our progress in the near future.

Marek Bakun, Chief Financial Officer, The St. Joe Company: Can you talk generally about pricing and the level of discounting versus a year ago? Kudos on a great performance.

Jorge Gonzalez, President, CEO, and Chairman, The St. Joe Company: Not sure if that pricing in terms of home sites? We really haven’t been discounting any of our pricing. From a residential home site perspective, across all of our residential communities, we don’t discount pricing. We have a pretty good feel for what pricing we want to achieve to achieve our margins in every residential community. When we negotiate with our home builders and our builder programs, pricing pace, number of takedowns per quarter, product type, because we want to make sure we don’t have two builders in the same community building the exact same product to capitalize each other. Those are all the things that we discuss when we negotiate builder take down agreements with our builders. Again, if the individual who asked the question meant home site pricing, we really have not been discounting home site pricing.

Marek Bakun, Chief Financial Officer, The St. Joe Company: Jorge, just to add exactly what you just said, we transact with home builders and we have not been discussing, we have not been reducing any or discounting any of our prices. In your view, how far away are we from the area becoming less of a secondary or tertiary market for both national builders and institutional real estate firms? What else besides the hospital and direct flights is needed to get there? Are there any new signs emerging that you could share with us in terms of the area getting closer to that point?

Jorge Gonzalez, President, CEO, and Chairman, The St. Joe Company: Every area goes through a cycle of growth and obviously our area has been going through that growth. We have chronicled the growth rates in Bay and Walton County several times in our annual meetings. That growth continues. As we have often said, in order for the growth to continue, the ecosystem needs a series of assets. The hospital is one of those. I’m not sure everybody fully understands it’s an academic health center model with teaching, research, clinical delivery. When you look at the healthcare landscape across the country, arguably academic health centers are the most successful healthcare delivery systems in the country. Everywhere you look at one of those facilities, they are a significant economic engine in that market. We feel very optimistic about what the academic health center with FSU Health is going to create in our market.

The medical campus happens to be almost literally in the middle of our land holdings, so we’re excited about that. The question also referenced more direct flights. We strongly believe that the flights that are starting to the largest metropolitan statistical area in the country, to New York City, are also a big part of that because what it does is it creates more exposure to our area with a larger population base. The short answer to the question is we believe that we’re trending in that direction. We certainly are growing. We’re certainly exposing the area, both consumers and businesses, to a broader range of individuals and companies. We get phone calls from businesses who have an interest in being in our region that we used to not get a couple years ago.

In fact, probably a couple years ago we had a hard time getting them to return our phone calls. Now they’re calling us. We certainly see that trend evolving.

Marek Bakun, Chief Financial Officer, The St. Joe Company: Now that the business is more on a run rate, when will you show more midterm and long term financial frameworks, KPIs, long term revenue, cash flows, and cash flows per share, etc.? I think it’s fair that we have always considered the importance of providing good information to our shareholders. We will continue to look at options that we have and how we can present information that will, we hope, our shareholders appreciate and use. We’ve added a number of schedules to our MD&A disclosure on a quarterly basis that allows for hopefully consistent and recurring information that can be used to analyze our business.

Jorge Gonzalez, President, CEO, and Chairman, The St. Joe Company: Yeah, just to add to that. The question is spot on. This was all by design and deliberate by growing our recurring revenue and certainly that has grown. When you look at that quarter to quarter, that run rate, a cadence is emerging and with that cadence that’s going to allow the investor community as well as the company to have more consistency in evaluating everything that was mentioned in the question, particularly cash flow.

Marek Bakun, Chief Financial Officer, The St. Joe Company: Is it accurate to conclude that there is progress accelerating for home site pricing as older builder contracts conclude and new ones kick in? College Station, for instance, seems to see about a 50% increase on lot prices from 2022.

Jorge Gonzalez, President, CEO, and Chairman, The St. Joe Company: Yes, we always.

Marek Bakun, Chief Financial Officer, The St. Joe Company: When we.

Jorge Gonzalez, President, CEO, and Chairman, The St. Joe Company: It’s obviously all based on market conditions, but our market here has been growing as migration has been occurring. Every time we look at a new phase of one of our existing residential communities, whether it’s with a new builder that we’re bringing to the market or one of our existing builders, we obviously always try to increase the pricing of the home sites. Again, it is based on market conditions and it varies from project to project and location to location. That is a goal of ours.

Marek Bakun, Chief Financial Officer, The St. Joe Company: Jorge, these were great questions from informed shareholders. There are no more in the queue.

Jorge Gonzalez, President, CEO, and Chairman, The St. Joe Company: Okay, maybe let’s wait just a couple seconds to see if there’s any more questions that come in.

Marek Bakun, Chief Financial Officer, The St. Joe Company: It looks like last one here. This call is an incredible and highly unique example of shareholder transparency engagement. On behalf of shareholders, thank you both for the continued opportunity to learn more about the company and engage with management.

Jorge Gonzalez, President, CEO, and Chairman, The St. Joe Company: We greatly appreciate the comment. We feel that we are transparent and we’re going to continue to be transparent in every way we can with our disclosures and our earnings calls. Again, thank you for joining us today. We appreciate your interest. We appreciate the great questions that were asked today, and we look forward to speaking with you again next quarter. Thank you.

Conference Operator: This concludes today’s conference call. Thank you for participating. You may now disconnect.

This article was generated with the support of AI and reviewed by an editor. For more information see our T&C.

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