Christopher Bilotto
Analyst · RBC Capital Markets
Thank you, Matt. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining our call today. DHC delivered a strong first quarter, demonstrating the powerful combination of our active asset management and the deep expertise of our expanded operating partners. The strategic changes we made within our SHOP portfolio in 2025 continue yielding results with the first quarter aligning with our outlook focus on driving revenue, expense synergies and overall margin improvement. Looking ahead, we are well positioned to capitalize on powerful tailwinds, including the burgeoning demand from an aging population and a historically low new supply pipeline for senior housing. We are confident that our best-in-class operators and strengthened balance sheet will continue to drive superior performance and create significant long-term value for our shareholders. Turning to the quarter. After the market closed yesterday, DHC issued first quarter results that reflect continued progress across our business. We reported normalized FFO of $33.1 million or $0.14 per share and adjusted EBITDAre of $74 million, both well ahead of the analyst consensus estimate. Consolidated NOI increased 4.7% year-over-year to $75.9 million. Our same-property SHOP portfolio delivered a robust 13.5% increase in NOI year-over-year, reaching $44.3 million. This was driven by same-property occupancy growth of 110 basis points and average monthly rate growth of 5.9%. Our sequential performance reflects the benefits of our active asset management strategy with contributions from new operator partnerships becoming even more apparent. Our same-property NOI margin expanded by 160 basis points to 14.9%, with occupancy holding at 82.4%. This margin improvement was driven by progress on both the top and bottom line. On the revenue side, growth was largely supported by an average annual rate increase of 4.5% across 70% of the portfolio in January, complemented by a favorable shift in resident levels of care. On the expense side, our progress has been equally impressive and demonstrates the immediate impact of our new operating partners. For example, during the quarter, we secured new dietary and food and beverage contracts that simultaneously enhance the resident experience while locking in significant cost savings for the year. Furthermore, a key area of focus, labor costs continues to moderate with reduced contract labor and the rightsizing of regional and community labor costs. These early results are a direct testament to the enhanced discipline and tighter cost controls our operators are bringing to the portfolio, and we remain optimistic about our ability to capture further efficiencies. Building on our operational momentum, we are increasingly focused on selectively deploying capital into high-return ROI projects to drive organic growth. Our strategy targets the repositioning of underutilized or closed skilled nursing wings and converting them into independent living, assisted living or memory care. We have identified a pipeline of opportunities across 16 communities, including 6 communities as part of the first phase. These 6 initial projects are expected to cost approximately $20 million and will add roughly 150 units to the portfolio, representing a significantly lower cost per unit relative to our view of the replacement cost and creating immediate embedded value. Because we currently absorb carrying costs on these vacant wings, these projects are expected to be immediately accretive to earnings upon completion with expected returns starting in the mid-teens. Beyond the direct financial returns, these conversions enhance the marketability of the entire community, improving the sales cycle and expected length of stay for residents. We believe these projects represent a compelling and disciplined use of DHC's capital, and we expect these repositionings to begin over the coming quarters. Turning to our medical office and life science portfolio. During the first quarter, we delivered solid results as same-property occupancy increased 60 basis points year-over-year to 95.3%, generating $25.4 million of NOI, a 3.7% increase over last year and a 4.8% increase sequentially. Leasing activity was healthy with 169,000 square feet of new and renewal leasing at rents that were 12% above prior rents with a 9.5-year weighted average lease term. Looking ahead, just over 9% of annualized rental income in our Medical Office and Life Science portfolio is scheduled to expire through 2026, of which 304,000 square feet or approximately 4.9% of annualized rental income is expected to vacate. Subsequent to the quarter, we signed leases totaling 390,000 square feet, which primarily include renewals representing 29% of our 2027 expirations. Turning to our capital markets and balance sheet initiatives. In March, we sold 13 unencumbered non-core SHOP communities for aggregate proceeds of $23 million. And in April, we also exercised land lease purchase options on 2 of our properties for an aggregate purchase price of $14.5 million. By eliminating ground rent on these well-performing communities, we are able to capture the full economics of the assets and expect to generate low to mid-teen returns on this investment. With DHC's large-scale capital recycling program now complete, we have transitioned from portfolio transformation to value creation. Given our current capital structure, including relatively low-cost debt and no maturities until 2028, we believe that one of the best uses of our capital today is reinvesting in our own assets. In conclusion, our strong first quarter results validate our strategy and reinforce our confidence for the remainder of 2026. Demand fundamentals in senior housing remain compelling, supported by favorable demographic trends and limited new supply growth. We believe these actions we have taken to enhance operations, reduce leverage and empower our best-in-class operators have positioned DHC for continued earnings and cash flow growth, and we remain committed to delivering attractive total returns to our shareholders. With that, I will turn the call over to Anthony.