Jennifer Francis
Analyst · Baird
Thank you, Michael. Good morning, everyone. On our fourth quarter earnings call, we commented that we believe 2019 was going to be a transitional year for SNH, and we still believe that is the case. Since then, we have announced the restructuring of our business arrangements with Five Star, reset the dividend and are laser focused on executing on our disposition strategy to both reduce our financial leverage and transform our portfolio to best position SNH for the future. To an aggressive disposition plan and active asset management of our senior living, medical office and life science real estate. We are excited to improve SNH's portfolio into one that will produce value, strong returns and growth for our shareholders as the demand in the U.S. for healthcare services and healthcare-related products grows. The first quarter's results represent a mix of stability from our MOB portfolio and transition in our senior living triple-net lease portfolio. Earlier this morning, we reported an 8.6% decrease in consolidated same-property cash basis NOI in the first quarter compared to the same quarter last year. This decrease was primarily the result of the $12.8 million reduction in rent from Five Star for February and March discussed on our April 2 call. Excluding the triple-net leased senior living communities, same-property cash basis NOI was flat compared to the same quarter last year. Same-property cash basis NOI in our MOB segment increased 80 basis points in the first quarter compared to the same quarter last year, driven by a 4.2% increase in our life science properties, mainly the result of the base rent increase in our triple-net leased 1 million square foot property in the Seaport District of Boston. This 15-year lease that commenced in 2013 has an 8% increase every 5 years, one of which took effect on January 1, 2019. This increase was offset by a tenant vacating a 94,000 square-foot building located in Fremont, California at the year-end. The property is located in the San Francisco Bay Area, a strong life science R&D market. We have had good leasing activity at the property and believe that we will lease the building with a meaningful roll up in rent. Our 2.7% decrease in same-property cash basis NOI in our medical office portfolio and the corresponding 190 basis point decrease in same-property medical office occupancy is the result of a 140,000 square-foot tenant vacating the property in the Minneapolis market in the fourth quarter. This building has been repositioned into a multitenant building, and we are currently in discussions with several prospects. We generated strong leasing results during the quarter with close to 500,000 square feet of new and renewal leases executed with a weighted average lease term of 8.5 years and tenant improvements and leasing costs of $3.40 per square foot per lease year. We have a very strong leasing team that does a great job getting ahead of renewals and leasing vacancies when we get the space back. Last quarter, I mentioned that we would be marketing for sales, the 13 buildings containing 360,000 square feet in Central Massachusetts leased to the Reliant Medical Group, whose lease expires at end of May. In March, we sold one of these buildings and the remaining 12 are under agreement for sale, scheduled to close following the expiration of the lease. We've also previously discussed the rebuilding 160,000 square foot life science property located in the Torrey Pines submarket of San Diego that has been vacated at the end of next month. We're excited about our prospects for these buildings as they sit in one of the top life science markets in the country. We are now nearing completion of planning and permitting for the buildings potential redevelopment and are actively marketing them for lease. Our managed senior living portfolio same-property occupancy increased 50 basis points and residence fees and service revenue increased $1.3 million or 1.2% compared to the same quarter last year. Same-property cash basis NOI was down, however, due to increased operating expenses. The main contributor to the increase was salaries and wages, which were up 3.2% on a same-property basis. As we've said, one of the biggest challenges in senior living is wage pressure across all employee types and fierce competition for quality leadership. To address this, Five Star has increased its commitment to the company's team members. Part of this commitment focuses on recognition through both promotion and compensation, which contributed to the senior living salaries and wage expense increase in the first quarter. This commitment, which we see as a much-needed strategic move, is already having a noticeable impact. Yesterday, Five Star reported that employee turnover companywide was 35% in March, down from 68% a year ago and 57% in January. High employee turnover in the past led to the increased use of costly contract labor. Five Star hopes to eliminate third-party labor entirely and replace it with a higher quality permanent workforce. We support Five Star's investment and its workforce and believe this will lead to better services to residents and ultimately increased occupancy and rent growth. Our triple-net leased senior living portfolio had rent coverage of 1.06x for the year ended December 31, 2018. This includes 0.99x coverage from the Five Star leases, which would have been 1.55x coverage based on the new reduced rent resulting from the transaction agreement announced in April. We will continue to report the coverage of these leases until they are transitioned to the new management agreements, which we expect to happen on January 1, 2020. Excluding Five Star, the rent coverage was 1.42x. Finally, I'd like to give an update on our dispositions. On our April 2 conference call, we mentioned that we expect to sell properties valued at up to $900 million by the end of 2019 to reach our target leverage. We have a list of disposition properties finalized, the makeup of which is weighted toward underperforming senior living communities and noncore properties in our MOB segment, and are in the process of engaging brokers on each property or portfolio. There is abundant capital in both the medical office and senior living acquisitions markets, and we feel comfortable that our pricing and timing goals are obtainable. In the first quarter, we sold two MOBs. And at the end of the quarter, we had 10 MOBs and 20 skilled nursing facilities under agreement to sell. Subsequent to the end of the quarter, we sold three of those skilled nursing facilities, and we entered into agreements to sell an additional three MOBs. I will now turn the call over to Rick to provide further discussion on our financial results for the quarter.