Philip Grosse
Analyst · Morgan Stanley
Thanks, Luka, and also a very warm welcome from my side. As Luka covered already our Rental and Value-Add segments, let me turn directly to Recurring Sales, and I'm on Page 3. As you can see, we recorded a very high margin of 42% in first quarter in Recurring Sales. And while disposal volume was lower than the previous year, we still delivered a very comparable EBITDA contribution. What you need to bear in mind when you compare the volumes year-over-year is that last year, we had an unusually high number of transactions because of spillovers of signings, which we made in Q4 2024 that only closed in early 2025. And if I take the delta for the respective years, it's roughly 250 units and explains most of the differential between those numbers. In any case, Q1, as you will recall, is traditionally lighter in terms of volume, and we clearly anticipate a ramp-up as the year progresses. For 2026 as a whole, we are confident to grow our performance compared to last year. And as you know, we are targeting 3,000 to 3,500 units in volume overall for the entire year of 2026. Moving to the fourth segment, Development. Optics are not exactly pretty at a first glance, but you have to remember that of the EUR 75 million EBITDA for the entire year of 2026, EUR 53 million, and that is 70% came in Q1, and that was because of the closing -- the very profitable closing of a large land sale. So last year was very, very Q1 heavy, whereas for 2026, again, we expect a progression as the year goes on. For the full year 2026, we are confident in our ability to deliver strong growth from the disposals of development projects, plus also still opportunistic land sales later in the year. When we roll it all up to adjusted EBITDA total, we see 1.4% growth to EUR 712 million. Adjusted for the phasing effect related to Q1, I've just explained, adjusted EBITDA total grew by almost 10%. And I'm happy to echo what Luka said, we feel very much on track towards our 2026 guidance and our 2028 growth and deleveraging objectives. Moving on to adjusted EBT and adjusted shareholder earnings. Main driver between EBITDA and EBT, of course, are interest expenses, and they were around EUR 20 million higher in Q1. 2026. The reported adjusted EBT per share number is 7% below the prior year. But again, to allow for better comparability, EBT per share was up almost 4% when adjust for the Q1 2025 land sale. Adjusted shareholder earnings are different from adjusted EBT because of, as you know, 2 line items, taxes and minorities on which we now provide full transparency also our outlook. Taxes were EUR 8 million lower in Q1 2026. And here, you can see the link between lower sales volume and lower tax expenses. As we have discussed in our last call, minorities increased as expected because of Q1 2026 includes the JV that we set up with Deutsche Wohnen nomination agreement, whereas last year did not include that. Similar to EBITDA and EBT reported numbers for adjusted shareholder earnings are a bit skewed in so far as the lighter EBITDA contribution from our sales-related segment distorts the underlying growth momentum overall. Here again, if you were to do the adjustment, you would come out at 3% growth year-on-year. Bottom line, we are very happy with the start into this year. The growth momentum is clearly there and evident in Rental and Value-Add, as Luka explained, for Recurring Sales, Development, the phasing of last year versus this year might make it a bit harder to see. But here again, we are confident that as the year progresses, the growth in these 2 segments will become more evident as well. A quick word also on operating free cash flow. When you compare first quarter last year with this quarter, there are 2 key differences. One is lower recurring sales volume that made up about EUR 50 million less contribution from that. And the other is around EUR 200 million less working capital, which is related to our investments in future growth by ramping up the portfolio investments and the acquisition of our Manage to Green portfolio. We said it all along, this very nice piece of business will require an initial capital ramp-up. EPRA NTA in Q1 is traditionally less eventful in the absence of a portfolio valuation. That is why EPRA NTA per share was up only 60 basis points -- sorry, EUR 0.60 to -- 60 basis points, sorry, to EUR 46.57. We will, as usual, do a full revaluation of our portfolio with H1 numbers. And here, the positive development of fair values that we have observed during the last 18 months should also continue in H1 2026 as well. Finally, on the debt KPIs, here, we saw equally a continued trend in the right direction. Net debt to EBITDA down 1 -- 0.1 turns to 13.7x and LTV down 30 basis points, standing now at 45.1%. ICR declined by 0.1x, but is and will remain an absolutely safe territory. Next 4 pages are dedicated to our 4 segments. But since I already mentioned the main points, I will be quite brief and only add a few remarks regarding our Rental segment, and that is on Page 4. All operating KPIs are very much in line with what one would expect, and they highlight the rock solid robustness of our largest segment. When you look at the rent growth, I wouldn't put too much emphasis from 1 year to the next when we talk about the general trajectory towards approximately 5% by 2028. First of all, the challenge with comparing 1 year to the next is that the Mietspiegel, the rent index are always every 2 years. So you're not comparing the same underlying asset base. Second, 20 or 30 basis points one way or the other is nothing that changes the general direction of travel and our expectation is for that non-investment-driven rental growth that it sits between 2.5% and 3%, which is the case. In terms of growth trajectory, you need also to bear in mind that we call -- or what we call irrevocable rent increase claim where the rent growth is already reliably in the pipeline, but we have to wait for a 3-year period to lapse before we can implement additional rental increases. This should always be seen in connection with the reported market rent growth. The Berlin rent index will be a good case point as we are still very much within those caps in Berlin. So whatever the outcome is going to be, we continue to expect some mid to higher single-digit growth. We will see rent growth from the rent index only in the subsequent years. I think I made that point also very clear previously. And finally, one key driver is investments. And here, we are still in the phase of ramping up, so no surprise that this is progressing over time. And with that, Luka, back to you.