Matt Mercier
Analyst · Truist Securities
Thank you, Andy. As Andy outlined, the first quarter reflected strong demand across our platform, combined with disciplined execution, resulting in record quarterly financial results. In the first quarter, Digital Realty again posted strong double-digit growth in revenue and adjusted EBITDA, reflecting continued momentum in our 0 to 1 megawatt plus interconnection business, commencements from our growing backlog, healthy re-leasing spreads, modest churn and a favorable FX environment. We achieved these strong results while maintaining significant dry powder to expand and invest in our now 6 gigawatt development pipeline and simultaneously reducing our leverage to a multiyear low of 4.7x at quarter end. Overall, the strong environment and our favorable positioning are translating into better-than-anticipated execution and results, and we are continuing to lean into the opportunity we are seeing with discipline. During the first quarter, we signed leases representing $707 million of annualized rent at 100% share, or $423 million at Digital Realty's share. This represented the strongest leasing start to the year in Digital Realty history. And as Andy noted, demand remains robust across our product categories. New leasing was particularly strong in the Americas, which represented over 75% DLR's share of bookings in the quarter, while we also posted a new quarterly leasing record in the APAC region. Our 0-1 megawatt plus interconnection product set continued its strong momentum, posting $98 million of new signings, marking a third quarterly record in the past year and reflecting a 40-plus percent increase in 0-1 bookings versus first quarter 2025. The 0-1 megawatt plus interconnection category was driven by a record pace in the Americas region and a meaningful step-up in the largest capacity band within the product category reflecting an acceleration of larger enterprise deployments. Further highlighting this strength, we also saw a new record level of activity in the 1-3 megawatt leasing band in the quarter. Interconnection bookings remained strong at $18.6 million, 24% higher than a year ago. The APAC and North America regions led this growth, driven by demand for our bulk fiber and ServiceFabric products. The record lease signing in Charlotte was the biggest contributor to the $280 million of Americas leasing performance in our greater than a megawatt category. Pricing in this product segment remained healthy, averaging $181 per kilowatt in the quarter, validating the expansion of our hyperscale product in this market. The total backlog at the end of the first quarter reached a new record of $1.8 billion, reflecting the robust data center fundamentals we are experiencing and our ability to capitalize on this demand. At Digital Realty's share, the backlog reached a new record of $1 billion at quarter end as $423 million of new bookings exceeded the strong $204 million of commencements in the quarter. Looking ahead, we have $544 million of leases scheduled to commence somewhat ratably throughout this year with $247 million of leases to commence in 2027 and another $242 million commencing in 2028 and beyond. While the successful execution of our 0-1 megawatt plus interconnection segment is helping to accelerate near-term growth our scaling backlog is improving our visibility over the long term, helping to support strong, sustainable growth. During the first quarter, we signed $193 million of renewal leases at a blended 5% increase on a cash basis. Renewals were heavily weighted toward our shorter-term 0-1 megawatt leases, which represented over 80% of our total renewal activity with $157 million of colocation renewals at 4.3% uplift. Greater than a megawatt renewals dipped to just $32 million in the quarter at a 74% cash re-leasing spread, driven by deals in Vienna, London and Silicon Valley. As for earnings, we reported Core FFO of $2.04 per share for the first quarter, up 15% year-over-year, reflecting the ongoing benefit of strong data center leasing and development-related lease commencements, along with increased fee income associated with our growth in our strategic private capital platform. Same capital cash NOI growth continued to be strong in the first quarter, increasing by 7.9% year-over-year, as strong data center rental revenue growth was balanced by elevated operating expense growth. On a constant currency basis, same capital cash NOI rose 2.5% in the quarter, largely reflecting the above-trend operating expense growth versus the prior year period. Given the conflict in the Middle East, energy costs and supply chain risks are once again in the spotlight. While Digital Realty does not maintain a meaningful presence in the Middle East and has limited direct economic exposure, we recognize that many of our customers may be directly or indirectly impacted by rising input costs. In terms of direct exposure, approximately 90% of our utility expense is reimbursed by customers, meaning fluctuations in energy prices largely flow through rather than directly impacting our bottom line. For the remaining 10%, primarily consisting of smaller colocation deployments, a large majority of our electricity is hedged forward through 2026 and beyond, while most of our contracts provide the ability to adjust pricing, giving us flexibility to respond to changing market conditions. As a result, while energy is critical operationally, Digital Realty's direct earnings exposure remains limited and manageable. As we previewed on this call last quarter, we enhanced our supplemental report this quarter to align with how we manage the business. We have now fully transitioned the occupancy metrics of our operating portfolio toward power-based metrics, removing legacy metrics focused on square feet from our supplemental earnings disclosure. Now the operating portfolio KPIs are consistent with the metrics we use to report new leasing and data center development. We also made some other enhancements to our quarterly supplemental by streamlining our debt reporting metrics, the new and renewal leasing pages and occupancy analysis page. The objective was to continue to provide industry-leading transparency while making our disclosures easier to digest. Moving on to our investment activity. We spent $910 million on development CapEx in the quarter, net of our partner share. During the quarter, we delivered 63 megawatts of new capacity, 84% of which was pre-leased, while we started about 464 megawatts of new data center capacity that was nearly 50% pre-leased, increasing our total development to 1.2 gigawatts under construction. At quarter end, our gross data center pipeline under construction stood at approximately $16.5 billion, up more than 60% from year-end, reflecting the strong leasing activity executed by our team and the momentum we continue to see in our sales funnel. Consistent with last quarter, nearly 80% of this volume is situated in the Americas region, reflecting the demand for AI-oriented workloads from our largest customers. Notably, while Northern Virginia remains our largest development market for the moment, the Dallas and Chicago markets were eclipsed by both Charlotte and Atlanta as we activated multi-hundred megawatt developments in each of these markets. Accordingly, we continue to invest in our platform through organic new market entries that enhance our global productivity offering as well as meaningful existing market expansions that are designed to meet our customers' long-term capacity and connectivity requirements. Along these lines, in the first quarter, we bolstered our hyperscale capacity with the acquisition of 873-acre strategic land parcel in the Greater Atlanta Metro that is expected to support a gigawatt data center campus and a 30-acre land parcel in Hillsboro that is expected to support 160 megawatts of IT capacity, adding to the 85 megawatts assemblage that we announced in this market last quarter. In addition, we have previously announced, during the first quarter, we made 3 strategic market entrances in Milan, Italy, Sofia, Bulgaria and Cyberjaya, Malaysia, each of which bolsters our global connectivity footprint. Year-to-date, we've also sold small noncore facilities in Boston and Atlanta. Turning to the balance sheet. The first quarter was highlighted by a multiyear low in our leverage as debt to adjusted EBITDA dipped to 4.7x at quarter end, supported by meaningful adjusted EBITDA growth and a further ramp-up in retained capital as our AFFO payout ratio fell to 64%. This decline in leverage, despite the continued ramp in our development pipeline is intentional and deliberate, consistent with our key strategic priority of bolstering and diversifying our capital sources that we laid out 3 years ago. In March, we put the finishing touches on our USD 3.25 billion hyperscale data center fund, leaving us with approximately $10 billion to support hyperscale data center development and investment. And we continue to bolster our strategic private capital platform as we build investment capacity to support the massive hyperscale data center opportunity that we continue to see before us. In addition, we maintain substantial incremental dry powder within our $8-plus billion hyperscale development joint venture, which has been highly successful to date and remains ahead of plan. Our balance sheet is positioned to fuel growth opportunities for our customers around the globe, consistent with our long-term financing strategy. Let me conclude with guidance. We are raising our 2026 core FFO per share guidance range by $0.10 to $8 to $8.10 per share, principally reflecting better-than-expected execution across our data center portfolio early in the year. The midpoint of the updated guide represents 9% growth over 2025, reflecting underlying strength in our 0-1 megawatt plus interconnection business, balanced by the continued ramp in our investment spending that is geared towards supporting our hyperscale customers and extending our runway for growth. We also expect cash renewal spreads of 6.5% to 8.5%, up 50 basis points from last quarter. The stronger greater than the megawatt renewal prospects are balanced by the larger contribution from 0 to 1 megawatt leases renewing. Power-based occupancy is still expected to improve by 50 to 100 basis points from year-end 2025. Same capital cash NOI growth of 4% to 5% on a constant currency basis. CapEx net of partner contributions are poised to increase by another $250 million at the midpoint to a range of $3.5 billion to $4 billion. And we also continue to expect to recycle capital with $500 million to $1 billion of dispositions and JV capital slated for later this year. This concludes our prepared remarks. Now we'll be pleased to take your questions. Operator, would you please begin the Q&A session?