Scott Brinker
Analyst · Citi
Thank you, Tom. I may kick off with investment activity. Our deep relationships drove $2.2 billion of carefully selected investments last quarter. The vast majority was follow-on activity with our existing partners and was sourced in private negotiations. As a result the blended initial yield has a healthy 6.9% well above our cost of capital. The list of repeat clients was long and included Revera, Benchmark, Avery, Belmont Village, Cascade, Brandywine, Mainstreet, Genesis, Signature, Kelsey-Seybold, and Merrill Gardens. We have a simple but highly disciplined investment strategy, high quality real estate, trusted operating partners and aligned interest. Our partners continue to bring us opportunities that meet these criteria. What is equally exciting is that our network of partners is growing, last quarter we added two new relationships, the first is Oakmont, who develops and operates Class A senior housing properties in California. We acquired two of the new developments which achieved stabilized occupancy and just for in nine months respectively. The second is Aspen, a leading private pay hospital provider in the UK We completed a sale lease back on their four crown jewels, there is a nice presentation about the Aspen investment on our website. The properties are located in extremely affluent densely populated sub markets in London, which is now our number three market. London is joined by New York, Philadelphia, Boston and Los Angles in our top five. We listen to your feedback and included lots of detail about our investments and dispositions in the earnings release. All assets are not created equal; the cap rate tells only part of the story so we're making a major push to tell you more about our investments and our existing portfolio. Our experience is that higher quality real estate reached a superior, more resilient growth. And by virtually any metric and against any benchmark we compare very favorably and a wide growth rental rates, building age, local income and housing values. Scott Estes will you more about our enhanced disclosure. Speaking of high quality real estate earlier this week we agreed to sell our life science interest back to Forest City or $574 million which is a five cap on forward NOI that pricing underscores inherent value of only class A real estate. We will recycle the capital just as we've done one roughly $3 billion of asset sales in the past five years. We saw the benefit last quarter of having built the diversified portfolio; we posted 3% same-store growth in the operating portfolio despite of flu season that significantly impacted occupancy in many of our core markets such as the U.K., Canada, New England and Mid Atlantic. The National Health Departments report that flu related hospitalizations increased over last year by roughly 90% in the U.S., 70% in UK and 50% in Canada. The flu caused in unusual despite and move outs that we estimate reduced occupancy by 100 basis points and reduced NOI growth by at least 150 basis points. Importantly, the spike in move out is a temporary issue. The demand remains strong across the portfolio, moving activity continues to be excellent and rental rates were up 3% versus last year. The Flu season was long this year, so occupancy hit a trough in mid to late April and only recently begin to improve. As a result same-store growth in the operating portfolio will likely to be low single-digit in 2Q then move higher to the second half of the year as occupancy gather momentum. Looking through the unusual circumstances this winter, the fundamentals of the business remains strong. Our operating partners are universally positive about the outlook. Moving to triple net seniors housing, same-store NOI grew 3.4% last quarter. It’s an excellent result that is once again well above inflation. As a reminder we don’t include any fee related income in any of same-store metrics. We think this provide a more accurate picture of underlying performance. Turning to post-acute and long-term care, our rental income is well secured and growing consistently. Same-store NOI grew 3.1% last quarter. Genesis just reported an excellent first quarter particularly in our portfolio with solid expense control and improved occupancy and queue mix. They expect to be headed towards 1.4 times corporate level payment coverage by year end with upside thereafter. Next up is outpatient medical; this business segment continues to turn out predictable steady growth. Same-store NOI increased 2.8% last quarter, a convenience and low cost of outpatient care at in great demand from consumers, payers and providers and our platform is well positioned to capitalize. In summary. our deep relationships best-in-class portfolio continued to deliver shareholder value. Scott Estes will now discuss our financial results.