NYSE:CHCT Community Healthcare Trust Q3 2025 Earnings Report $17.65 +0.48 (+2.77%) Closing price 03:59 PM EasternExtended Trading$17.70 +0.06 (+0.33%) As of 07:56 PM Eastern Extended trading is trading that happens on electronic markets outside of regular trading hours. This is a fair market value extended hours price provided by Massive. Learn more. ProfileEarnings HistoryForecast Community Healthcare Trust EPS ResultsActual EPS$0.56Consensus EPS $0.54Beat/MissBeat by +$0.02One Year Ago EPSN/ACommunity Healthcare Trust Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$31.09 millionExpected Revenue$30.58 millionBeat/MissBeat by +$503.00 thousandYoY Revenue GrowthN/ACommunity Healthcare Trust Announcement DetailsQuarterQ3 2025Date10/28/2025TimeAfter Market ClosesConference Call DateWednesday, October 29, 2025Conference Call Time10:00AM ETUpcoming EarningsCommunity Healthcare Trust's Q1 2026 earnings is estimated for Tuesday, May 5, 2026, based on past reporting schedules, with a conference call scheduled on Wednesday, May 6, 2026 at 10:00 AM ET. Check back for transcripts, audio, and key financial metrics as they become available.Conference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptSlide DeckPress Release (8-K)Quarterly Report (10-Q)SEC FilingEarnings HistoryCompany ProfileSlide DeckFull Screen Slide DeckPowered by Community Healthcare Trust Q3 2025 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrOctober 29, 2025 ShareLink copied to clipboard.Key Takeaways Negative Sentiment: Tenant paid only about $200,000 in Q3 versus roughly $800,000 historically; the tenant signed an LOI to sell operations (buyer would sign new/amended leases) but the transaction is uncertain and likely to close in Q1 2026 or later. Positive Sentiment: Management is active on acquisitions — closed one inpatient rehab for $26.5M with a lease to 2040 and ~9.4% expected return, and signed PSAs for six more properties (~$146M) with projected returns of 9.1%–9.75%, with one expected to close in Q4 and the rest in 2026–27. Positive Sentiment: Capital recycling program will fund growth — an expected disposition should generate an ~$11.5M gain plus other sales (~$6.1M), and management plans to use 1031 exchanges and revolver capacity to fund near-term acquisitions without issuing equity at depressed prices. Positive Sentiment: Q3 operating results improved — revenue +4.9% YoY, FFO of $13.5M (+5.7% YoY, $0.50/share), AFFO $15.1M ($0.56/share), and the board raised the quarterly dividend to $0.475 (annualized $1.90). Negative Sentiment: Interest expense increased to ~$7.1M (up ~ $500k QoQ) after drawing on the revolver to fund acquisitions and with ~ $180M of floating-rate exposure, though management expects some benefit from recent Fed cuts and says it does not intend to materially increase leverage. AI Generated. May Contain Errors.Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallCommunity Healthcare Trust Q3 202500:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2xTranscript SectionsPresentationParticipantsPresentationSkip to Participants Operator00:00:00Welcome to Community Healthcare Trust 2025 third quarter earnings release conference call. On the call today, the company will discuss its 2025 third quarter financial results. It will also discuss progress made in various aspects of its business. Following the remarks, the phone lines will be open for question and answer session. The company's earnings release was distributed last evening and has also been posted on its website, www.chct.reit. The company wants to emphasize that some of the information that may be discussed on this call will be based on information as of today, October 29th, 2025, and may contain forward-looking statements that involve risk and uncertainty. Actual results may differ materially from those set forth in such statements. Operator00:00:54For a discussion of these risks and uncertainties, you should review the company's disclosures regarding forward-looking statements in its earnings release, as well as its Risk Factors and MD&A in its SEC filings. The company undertakes no obligation to update forward-looking statements, whether as the result of new information, future developments, or otherwise, except as may be required by law. During this call, the company will discuss GAAP and non-GAAP financial measures. A reconciliation between the two is available in its earnings release, which is posted on its website. All participants are advised that this conference call is being recorded for playback purposes. An archive of the call will be made available on the company's Investor Relations website for approximately 30 days and is the property of the company. The call may not be recorded or otherwise reproduced or distributed without the company's prior written permission. Operator00:01:56Now, I would like to turn the call over to Dave Dupuy, CEO of Community Healthcare Trust. Dave DupuyCEO at Community Healthcare Trust00:02:04Great. Thank you, Danielle. Good morning. Thank you for joining us today for our 2025 third quarter conference call. On the call with me today is Bill Monroe, our Chief Financial Officer, Leigh Ann Stach, our Chief Accounting Officer, and Mark Kearns, our Senior Vice President of Asset Management. Our earnings announcement and supplemental data report were released last night and furnished on Form 8-K, along with our quarterly report on Form 10-Q. In addition, an updated investor presentation was posted to our website last night. During the third quarter, the geriatric behavioral hospital operator, a tenant in six of the company's properties, paid rent of approximately $200,000. On July 17th, 2025, this tenant signed a letter of intent for the sale of the operations of all six of its hospitals to an experienced behavioral healthcare operator and is under exclusivity with that buyer. Dave DupuyCEO at Community Healthcare Trust00:03:05Among other terms and conditions of the sale, the buyer would sign new or amended leases for the six geriatric psych hospitals owned by CHCT. The buyer continues to perform legal and business due diligence on the transaction. While we can't provide certainty that the transaction will close, we will share more information as we move through the process. As it relates to our core business, we had a busy third quarter from an operations perspective and continue to be selective from an acquisition standpoint. Our occupancy decreased from 90.7% to 90.1% during the quarter. However, our leasing team is very busy with a number of new leases signed so far in October. Based on leasing activity across the portfolio, we would expect our leased occupancy to increase by 50 basis points-100 basis points by year-end. Dave DupuyCEO at Community Healthcare Trust00:04:04Our weighted average lease term increased slightly from 6.6 to 6.7 years. We have three properties that are undergoing redevelopment or significant renovations with long-term tenants in place when the renovations and redevelopment are complete. During the third quarter, we acquired one inpatient rehabilitation facility after completion of construction for a purchase price of $26.5 million. We entered into a new lease with a lease expiration in 2040 and anticipated annual return of approximately 9.4%. Also, we have signed definitive purchase and sale agreements for six properties to be acquired after completion and occupancy for an aggregate expected investment of $146 million. The expected return on these investments should range from 9.1%-9.75%. We expect to close on one of these properties in the fourth quarter, with the remaining five properties closing throughout 2026 and 2027. Dave DupuyCEO at Community Healthcare Trust00:05:14As it relates to our capital recycling program, we had one disposition in the third quarter providing approximately $700,000 of proceeds and generating a small loss on the sale. In addition, we have two other dispositions in our program that we expect to close in the fourth quarter with anticipated net proceeds of $6.1 million. Also, as part of this program, we expect to close on the sale of an inpatient rehabilitation facility in the fourth quarter with an expected gain of approximately $11.5 million and net proceeds expected to fund our fourth quarter acquisition through a 1031 like-kind exchange. The indicative cap rate associated with the property sale is in the high 7% range. We have other properties with similar expected cap rate ranges both in market and under review as part of our capital recycling program. Dave DupuyCEO at Community Healthcare Trust00:06:11We would anticipate utilizing a similar 1031 like-kind exchange to accretively reinvest proceeds to fund our pipeline on a leverage-neutral basis. We did not issue any shares under our ATM last quarter. However, we anticipate having sufficient capital from selected asset sales coupled with our revolver capacity to fund near-term acquisitions. Going forward, we will evaluate the best uses of our capital, all while maintaining modest leverage levels. To finish up, we declared our dividend for the third quarter and raised it to $0.4750 per common share. This equates to an annualized dividend of $1.90 per share, and we are proud to have raised our dividend every quarter since our IPO. That takes care of the items I wanted to cover, so I will hand things off to Bill to discuss the numbers. Bill MonroeCFO at Community Healthcare Trust00:07:06Thank you, Dave. I will now provide more details on our third quarter financial performance. I'm pleased to report total revenue grew from $29.6 million in the third quarter of 2024 to $31.1 million in the third quarter of 2025, representing 4.9% annual growth over the same period last year. When compared to our $29.1 million of total revenue in the second quarter of 2025, we need to consider that the second quarter was negatively impacted by the reversal of $1.7 million of interest receivables from the geriatric behavioral hospital tenant that Dave discussed earlier. Normalizing the second quarter for this, we achieved 1.1% total revenue growth quarter-over-quarter. Moving to expenses, property operating expenses increased by approximately $300,000 quarter-over-quarter to $5.9 million for the third quarter of 2025. Bill MonroeCFO at Community Healthcare Trust00:08:06This quarter-over-quarter increase in the third quarter is typical with a seasonal increase in utility expenses during the summer compared to the milder temperatures in the second quarter. On a year-over-year basis, property operating expenses decreased by approximately $50,000. Total general and administrative expense was $4.7 million in the third quarter of 2025, which was flat quarter-over-quarter once you exclude the $5.9 million of severance and transition-related payments incurred within the second quarter's $10.6 million of G&A expense. On a year-over-year basis, G&A expense decreased by approximately $300,000 in the third quarter of 2025. Bill MonroeCFO at Community Healthcare Trust00:08:52Interest expense increased by approximately $500,000 quarter-over-quarter to $7.1 million in the third quarter of 2025 due to increased borrowings under our revolving credit facility early in the third quarter to fund the $26.5 million property acquisition, as well as one extra day of interest in the third quarter compared to the second quarter. We benefited late in the quarter from the FOMC's 25 basis point reduction to the federal funds rate in mid-September, but the full benefit of that cut will be realized in our fourth quarter financials based on the approximately $180 million of floating rate exposure we have within our revolver borrowings. If there are any additional rate cuts by the FOMC later today or during their December meeting, we expect those cuts will reduce our interest expense further. Bill MonroeCFO at Community Healthcare Trust00:09:46Moving to funds from operations, FFO in the third quarter of 2025 was $13.5 million, a 5.7% increase year over year compared to the $12.8 million of FFO in the third quarter of 2024. On the diluted common share basis, FFO increased from $0.48 in the third quarter of 2024 to $0.50 in the third quarter of 2025. Adjusted funds from operations, or AFFO, which adjusts for straight line rent and stock-based compensation, totaled $15.1 million in the third quarter of 2025, a 3.1% increase year over year compared to the $14.6 million of AFFO in the third quarter of 2024. AFFO on a diluted common share basis was $0.56 in the third quarter of 2025, or $0.01 higher than the $0.55 of AFFO in the third quarter of 2024. I'll note that our third quarter 2025 AFFO dividend payout ratio remains strong at 85%. That concludes our prepared remarks. Bill MonroeCFO at Community Healthcare Trust00:10:58Danielle, we are now ready to begin the question and answer session. Operator00:11:05Thank you. We will now begin the question and answer session. To ask a question, you may press star, then one on your touch-tone phone. If you are using a speakerphone, please pick up your handset before pressing the keys. To withdraw your question, please press star, then two. The first question comes from Alexander Goldfarb from Piper Sandler. Please go ahead. Alexander GoldfarbManaging Director and Senior REIT Equity Research Analyst at Piper Sandler00:11:31Hey, morning down there. Two questions, Dave. The first one, the acquisition pipeline, I guess they're related. The first one is just on the acquisition pipeline, and we'll discuss the funding part on my second question. Is it the same now that it was in the second quarter? Obviously, you guys are balancing where the stock is and your funding needs. As you look at the opportunity set, would you say it's growing, meaning that if you had a more competitive equity source, that pipeline would have increased quarter to quarter, or is the opportunity set basically unchanged, in which case, even if you had a better cost of capital, that acquisition pipeline would not have changed? Dave DupuyCEO at Community Healthcare Trust00:12:23Yeah, what I would say is if we are being highly selective, and hey, Alex, good to talk to you. I appreciate the question. We're being highly selective. We know we have this pipeline of very good quality assets at great returns. We want to make sure that we have the ability to pay for those acquisitions that are coming up over the upcoming quarters, and we don't want to issue shares at these depressed levels. That's why we're doing the capital recycling to pay for them. Yes, I would say we are seeing opportunities that are generally attractive in this market in that 9%-10% cap rate range that if our currency was different, if our share price was different, we'd be looking to make those acquisitions, and they would be very attractive relative to risk return. Yes, we're being highly selective. Dave DupuyCEO at Community Healthcare Trust00:13:20We're very focused on making sure we get this pipeline of high-quality assets paid for and do that without increasing our leverage. Yes, you're reading that right. Alexander GoldfarbManaging Director and Senior REIT Equity Research Analyst at Piper Sandler00:13:34Okay. Then just the second question when it goes to funding, you know, if you're doing asset sales, I get it that it sounds like there's maybe 150 bps, maybe 200 bps of positive spread between what you're selling and what you're buying. If you're basically trading one asset for another and taking on additional debt to help fund, isn't that raising leverage just by taking on more debt? You know, because you're swapping one asset for another and then you're incrementally taking on more debt, your leverage is naturally going to rise. My question is, is there a limit to how much debt you'll take on, you know, as long as you're still in this current depressed equity situation or your view is you're fine running leverage higher than normal with the hope that once the geriatric situation is resolved, hopefully you have a better currency? Dave DupuyCEO at Community Healthcare Trust00:14:30We really feel like based on the pipeline of opportunities from a capital recycling that we have, that we are not going to increase leverage over the upcoming quarters. Yes, you know, we did not have any capital recycling to do ahead of the, you know, the current acquisition that we did in the third quarter. Future acquisitions, we are very focused on matching up dispositions with acquisitions that are accretive to the company. We do not expect to meaningfully increase leverage. Bill, I don't know if you want to jump in. Bill MonroeCFO at Community Healthcare Trust00:15:12Yeah, Alex, just to clarify, the property that we have held for sale and will recognize $11.5 million capital gain, we expect that will fully pay for the next acquisition such that there will not be any incremental debt associated with that next acquisition. It'll be completely paid for with the proceeds of this larger upcoming disposition. Alexander GoldfarbManaging Director and Senior REIT Equity Research Analyst at Piper Sandler00:15:38Okay, great. Thank you very much. Dave DupuyCEO at Community Healthcare Trust00:15:42Thanks, Alex. Operator00:15:45As a reminder, if you have a question, please press star one. The next question comes from Rob Stevenson from Janney. Please go ahead. Rob StevensonManaging Director and Head of Real Estate Research at Janney00:15:55Good morning, guys. In terms of the behavioral health tenant, $200,000 paid in the quarter, can you remind us what that tenant was previously paying per quarter before they hit the wall? Dave DupuyCEO at Community Healthcare Trust00:16:07Yeah, they were paying in rent approximately $800,000 per quarter. Rob StevensonManaging Director and Head of Real Estate Research at Janney00:16:13Okay, that's helpful. You know, what's the expectations for our timing in terms of the closing of the acquisition if it occurs? Is that something that occurs before year-end if it happens given that the deal was signed in July, or could that stretch into 2026 from your understanding at this point? Dave DupuyCEO at Community Healthcare Trust00:16:35We're very, we'd love for it, and hey, Rob, good to talk to you, but we'd love for it to close by year-end. Some of the due diligence process has taken a little bit longer than we would have expected. It's probably more realistic to expect something to close in the first quarter. I think there's still a chance that it gets done by the end of the fourth quarter, but it's probably more likely to happen in the first quarter. We certainly would love to provide additional detail as soon as we have that. Rob StevensonManaging Director and Head of Real Estate Research at Janney00:17:14Okay. To what extent are you guys actively pursuing plan B just in case the deal falls through? Dave DupuyCEO at Community Healthcare Trust00:17:29You should expect that we are going down multiple paths simultaneously, as we always have. Yes, we're looking at multiple plans, multiple ways that we can move forward with the goal of ultimately getting paid more rent associated with this tenant. I think all of this is upside, right, relative to our performance. The portfolio has been stable. We're growing. I think we're certainly motivated to get this resolved as soon as possible. We think that it will. Yes, we are looking at all options. Rob StevensonManaging Director and Head of Real Estate Research at Janney00:18:13Okay. Last one on this topic, when you sit there and think about where they are in their life cycle, etc., what's the likelihood today of getting back any of the unpaid interest or rents, back rents going forward, or is a similar couple hundred thousand in the fourth quarter and a new lease with the buyer of these assets the best case scenario for you guys today? Dave DupuyCEO at Community Healthcare Trust00:18:40I would call that, you know, that's probably consistent with where we're headed and part of the reason, you know, we did the additional note write-off that we did is because we did not deem that it was likely to be collected. I think we're operating under that expectation, but we're certainly very focused on, to the extent we do have the ability to get any back rent or back interest, we will. We do not put a high likelihood on that. Rob StevensonManaging Director and Head of Real Estate Research at Janney00:19:10Okay. Just switching topics here, the three properties that are under redevelopment, how material is that? When do those leases expect it to kick in and impact earnings? Dave DupuyCEO at Community Healthcare Trust00:19:25Yeah, so I think one is very significant in a lease that was signed a while ago for a behavioral residential treatment facility. That's a large investment by us with a very recognizable operator. My guess is that lease won't commence until sometime after mid-year next year. That's a meaningful one. We don't provide specifics as to what those numbers are, but wouldn't start seeing any tailwind associated with the rent until after, probably after second quarter. The other one is probably a late 2026 opportunity as well. There's one smaller one that will happen first part of 2026, again, that should start contributing additional rent. These vary in terms of their impact, and we haven't provided details relative to that, but it's just an example of how we're reinvesting in buildings and with strong tenants based on signed leases. Anyway. Rob StevensonManaging Director and Head of Real Estate Research at Janney00:20:43Okay. Just trying to figure out just what type of earnings tailwind, because it sounds like you said that you're expecting to see 50 basis points-100 basis points increase in occupancy in the near term, plus this. Just wanted to figure out when that was going to start all hitting in terms of the earnings. Thanks, guys. Appreciate the time. Dave DupuyCEO at Community Healthcare Trust00:21:03Yeah, as far as the 50 basis points-100 basis points, we're seeing great leasing activity across the portfolio. There's always a delay between signing leases and having those leases commence, but I think it sort of speaks to the strong activity we're seeing across the portfolio, and I think it will be a tailwind for 2026 in terms of our ability to grow. Rob StevensonManaging Director and Head of Real Estate Research at Janney00:21:27Okay, thanks. Appreciate the time, guys. Dave DupuyCEO at Community Healthcare Trust00:21:30Thank you. Thanks, Rob. Operator00:21:34The next question comes from Jim Kammert from Evercore. Please go ahead. Jim KammertManaging Director and REIT Analyst at Evercore00:21:39Thank you. Good morning. Obviously, I think the capital recycling shift is well received. I was just curious, how are you sort of identifying which assets you would like to or most likely to dispose? Is it a geographic concentration, tenant concentration? Just trying to understand the mix or how you're lighting upon the candidates. Dave DupuyCEO at Community Healthcare Trust00:22:00Hey, Jim. Thanks for the question. Yeah, as you sort of hit on, you would, you know, think about it around tenant concentration, weighted average lease term, size profile, markets. We're looking at all of those criteria as we evaluate what we want to do from a capital recycling perspective. Obviously, with the key components associated with that of paying for this pipeline in a way that's accretive. Those are all the areas that we're focused on. What I'd also remind everybody of is, we sort of looked at our capital recycling program in two buckets. One is the bucket of smaller properties that are non-core that aren't going to drive a substantial amount of proceeds, but they are going to get us focused on our better buildings and better markets. Dave DupuyCEO at Community Healthcare Trust00:22:57You're seeing a few of those sales occur, and those sales we expect to conclude at the end of the fourth quarter. The larger opportunities are where we can have a very accretive cap rate sale to then reinvest in new very attractive buildings. Yeah, you're thinking about it in the right way. We're looking at tenant concentration, weighted average lease term, size profile, etc., as we look to push forward with our capital recycling. Jim KammertManaging Director and REIT Analyst at Evercore00:23:26That's helpful. The derivative question, then I'll be done, is, you mentioned that one of the large transactions pending is a 1031, but I'm just trying to assess the depth of buyer interest. You're not restricting your capital recycling to just 1031 exchanges. There is a depth of buyers presumably for, you know, stand-up, just traditional sales as well. Dave DupuyCEO at Community Healthcare Trust00:23:49Yeah, good question, Jim. The 1031 is more, you know, on our side than on the potential buyer's side as far as, you know, we don't want, you know, we're deferring that capital gain associated with that sale by putting it into a 1031. We have within our acquisition pipeline other properties, you know, that we have identified that will then be the replacement property as part of that 1031 like-kind exchange transaction. No, we're going to a very, you know, wide set of potential buyers to make sure that, you know, we're maximizing proceeds to us. Jim KammertManaging Director and REIT Analyst at Evercore00:24:22Okay, great clarification. Thank you, guys. Dave DupuyCEO at Community Healthcare Trust00:24:26Thanks, Jim. Operator00:24:28This concludes our question and answer session. I would like to turn the conference back over to Mr. Dupuy for closing remarks. Dave DupuyCEO at Community Healthcare Trust00:24:38Thanks, Danielle. Thank you, everybody, for dialing in. Of course, call if you have any questions. I hope everyone has a good rest of the day. Thank you. Operator00:25:03The conference is now concluded. Thank you for attending today's presentation.Read moreParticipantsExecutivesBill MonroeCFODave DupuyCEOAnalystsJim KammertManaging Director and REIT Analyst at EvercoreAlexander GoldfarbManaging Director and Senior REIT Equity Research Analyst at Piper SandlerRob StevensonManaging Director and Head of Real Estate Research at JanneyPowered by Earnings DocumentsSlide DeckEarnings Release(8-K)Quarterly Report(10-Q) Community Healthcare Trust Earnings HeadlinesCommunity Healthcare Trust Announces Results for the Three Months Ended March 31, 2026May 5 at 4:15 PM | prnewswire.comCommunity Healthcare Trust Incorporated Announces Increased First Quarter DividendApril 30, 2026 | prnewswire.comThe REAL Reason Trump is Invading IranFor a moment… Forget about Trump’s ties to Israel. Forget about reports of Iran’s nuclear program. Because my research has led me to believe we’re risking World War 3 with Iran for a completely different reason.May 5 at 1:00 AM | Banyan Hill Publishing (Ad)REIT To Avoid: 11% Yielding Community Healthcare TrustApril 29, 2026 | seekingalpha.comCommunity Healthcare Trust Announces First Quarter Earnings Release Date And Conference CallApril 13, 2026 | prnewswire.comCommunity Healthcare Trust: High Yield, No Growth, Limited CushionApril 9, 2026 | seekingalpha.comSee More Community Healthcare Trust Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like Community Healthcare Trust? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on Community Healthcare Trust and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About Community Healthcare TrustCommunity Healthcare Trust (NYSE:CHCT) (NYSE:CHCT) is a real estate investment trust that specializes in owning and leasing healthcare-related properties. The company’s portfolio is focused primarily on senior housing and care facilities, including skilled nursing centers, assisted living communities, memory care units, independent living apartments and continuing care retirement communities. Through long‐term, triple‐net leases, Community Healthcare Trust seeks stable, predictable cash flows by partnering with experienced operators that manage day-to-day resident care and property operations. As of the latest reporting, Community Healthcare Trust’s holdings span multiple regions across the United States, with properties located in both urban and suburban markets. The trust’s diversified tenant base includes a mix of national, regional and local operators, providing exposure to varying market dynamics while maintaining occupancy levels through established lease agreements. This geographic and operator diversification is designed to mitigate risks associated with individual markets and enhance the portfolio’s overall resilience. Founded in 2013 and headquartered in Bethesda, Maryland, Community Healthcare Trust conducts its public equity trading on the New York Stock Exchange under the ticker “CHCT.” The company is led by President and Chief Executive Officer Anthony Rogers, who brings extensive experience in healthcare real estate and capital markets. Under Rogers’s leadership, the trust has pursued disciplined portfolio growth and maintains a focus on properties that cater to aging demographics and the increasing demand for senior care services.View Community Healthcare Trust ProfileRead more More Earnings Resources from MarketBeat Earnings Tools Today's Earnings Tomorrow's Earnings Next Week's Earnings Upcoming Earnings Calls Earnings Newsletter Earnings Call Transcripts Earnings Beats & Misses Corporate Guidance Earnings Screener Latest Articles Palantir Drops After a Blowout Q1—What Investors Should KnowShopify’s Valuation Crisis Creates Opportunity in 2026onsemi Stock Dips After Earnings: Why the Dip Is BuyableTSLA: 3 Reasons the Stock Could Hit $400 in MayNebius Breaks Out to All-Time Highs—Here's What's Driving It.3 Reasons Analysts Love DexComMonolithic Power Systems: AI Stock Beat, Raised and Upgraded Post-Earnings Upcoming Earnings AppLovin (5/6/2026)ARM (5/6/2026)DoorDash (5/6/2026)Fortinet (5/6/2026)Marriott International (5/6/2026)Warner Bros. 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PresentationSkip to Participants Operator00:00:00Welcome to Community Healthcare Trust 2025 third quarter earnings release conference call. On the call today, the company will discuss its 2025 third quarter financial results. It will also discuss progress made in various aspects of its business. Following the remarks, the phone lines will be open for question and answer session. The company's earnings release was distributed last evening and has also been posted on its website, www.chct.reit. The company wants to emphasize that some of the information that may be discussed on this call will be based on information as of today, October 29th, 2025, and may contain forward-looking statements that involve risk and uncertainty. Actual results may differ materially from those set forth in such statements. Operator00:00:54For a discussion of these risks and uncertainties, you should review the company's disclosures regarding forward-looking statements in its earnings release, as well as its Risk Factors and MD&A in its SEC filings. The company undertakes no obligation to update forward-looking statements, whether as the result of new information, future developments, or otherwise, except as may be required by law. During this call, the company will discuss GAAP and non-GAAP financial measures. A reconciliation between the two is available in its earnings release, which is posted on its website. All participants are advised that this conference call is being recorded for playback purposes. An archive of the call will be made available on the company's Investor Relations website for approximately 30 days and is the property of the company. The call may not be recorded or otherwise reproduced or distributed without the company's prior written permission. Operator00:01:56Now, I would like to turn the call over to Dave Dupuy, CEO of Community Healthcare Trust. Dave DupuyCEO at Community Healthcare Trust00:02:04Great. Thank you, Danielle. Good morning. Thank you for joining us today for our 2025 third quarter conference call. On the call with me today is Bill Monroe, our Chief Financial Officer, Leigh Ann Stach, our Chief Accounting Officer, and Mark Kearns, our Senior Vice President of Asset Management. Our earnings announcement and supplemental data report were released last night and furnished on Form 8-K, along with our quarterly report on Form 10-Q. In addition, an updated investor presentation was posted to our website last night. During the third quarter, the geriatric behavioral hospital operator, a tenant in six of the company's properties, paid rent of approximately $200,000. On July 17th, 2025, this tenant signed a letter of intent for the sale of the operations of all six of its hospitals to an experienced behavioral healthcare operator and is under exclusivity with that buyer. Dave DupuyCEO at Community Healthcare Trust00:03:05Among other terms and conditions of the sale, the buyer would sign new or amended leases for the six geriatric psych hospitals owned by CHCT. The buyer continues to perform legal and business due diligence on the transaction. While we can't provide certainty that the transaction will close, we will share more information as we move through the process. As it relates to our core business, we had a busy third quarter from an operations perspective and continue to be selective from an acquisition standpoint. Our occupancy decreased from 90.7% to 90.1% during the quarter. However, our leasing team is very busy with a number of new leases signed so far in October. Based on leasing activity across the portfolio, we would expect our leased occupancy to increase by 50 basis points-100 basis points by year-end. Dave DupuyCEO at Community Healthcare Trust00:04:04Our weighted average lease term increased slightly from 6.6 to 6.7 years. We have three properties that are undergoing redevelopment or significant renovations with long-term tenants in place when the renovations and redevelopment are complete. During the third quarter, we acquired one inpatient rehabilitation facility after completion of construction for a purchase price of $26.5 million. We entered into a new lease with a lease expiration in 2040 and anticipated annual return of approximately 9.4%. Also, we have signed definitive purchase and sale agreements for six properties to be acquired after completion and occupancy for an aggregate expected investment of $146 million. The expected return on these investments should range from 9.1%-9.75%. We expect to close on one of these properties in the fourth quarter, with the remaining five properties closing throughout 2026 and 2027. Dave DupuyCEO at Community Healthcare Trust00:05:14As it relates to our capital recycling program, we had one disposition in the third quarter providing approximately $700,000 of proceeds and generating a small loss on the sale. In addition, we have two other dispositions in our program that we expect to close in the fourth quarter with anticipated net proceeds of $6.1 million. Also, as part of this program, we expect to close on the sale of an inpatient rehabilitation facility in the fourth quarter with an expected gain of approximately $11.5 million and net proceeds expected to fund our fourth quarter acquisition through a 1031 like-kind exchange. The indicative cap rate associated with the property sale is in the high 7% range. We have other properties with similar expected cap rate ranges both in market and under review as part of our capital recycling program. Dave DupuyCEO at Community Healthcare Trust00:06:11We would anticipate utilizing a similar 1031 like-kind exchange to accretively reinvest proceeds to fund our pipeline on a leverage-neutral basis. We did not issue any shares under our ATM last quarter. However, we anticipate having sufficient capital from selected asset sales coupled with our revolver capacity to fund near-term acquisitions. Going forward, we will evaluate the best uses of our capital, all while maintaining modest leverage levels. To finish up, we declared our dividend for the third quarter and raised it to $0.4750 per common share. This equates to an annualized dividend of $1.90 per share, and we are proud to have raised our dividend every quarter since our IPO. That takes care of the items I wanted to cover, so I will hand things off to Bill to discuss the numbers. Bill MonroeCFO at Community Healthcare Trust00:07:06Thank you, Dave. I will now provide more details on our third quarter financial performance. I'm pleased to report total revenue grew from $29.6 million in the third quarter of 2024 to $31.1 million in the third quarter of 2025, representing 4.9% annual growth over the same period last year. When compared to our $29.1 million of total revenue in the second quarter of 2025, we need to consider that the second quarter was negatively impacted by the reversal of $1.7 million of interest receivables from the geriatric behavioral hospital tenant that Dave discussed earlier. Normalizing the second quarter for this, we achieved 1.1% total revenue growth quarter-over-quarter. Moving to expenses, property operating expenses increased by approximately $300,000 quarter-over-quarter to $5.9 million for the third quarter of 2025. Bill MonroeCFO at Community Healthcare Trust00:08:06This quarter-over-quarter increase in the third quarter is typical with a seasonal increase in utility expenses during the summer compared to the milder temperatures in the second quarter. On a year-over-year basis, property operating expenses decreased by approximately $50,000. Total general and administrative expense was $4.7 million in the third quarter of 2025, which was flat quarter-over-quarter once you exclude the $5.9 million of severance and transition-related payments incurred within the second quarter's $10.6 million of G&A expense. On a year-over-year basis, G&A expense decreased by approximately $300,000 in the third quarter of 2025. Bill MonroeCFO at Community Healthcare Trust00:08:52Interest expense increased by approximately $500,000 quarter-over-quarter to $7.1 million in the third quarter of 2025 due to increased borrowings under our revolving credit facility early in the third quarter to fund the $26.5 million property acquisition, as well as one extra day of interest in the third quarter compared to the second quarter. We benefited late in the quarter from the FOMC's 25 basis point reduction to the federal funds rate in mid-September, but the full benefit of that cut will be realized in our fourth quarter financials based on the approximately $180 million of floating rate exposure we have within our revolver borrowings. If there are any additional rate cuts by the FOMC later today or during their December meeting, we expect those cuts will reduce our interest expense further. Bill MonroeCFO at Community Healthcare Trust00:09:46Moving to funds from operations, FFO in the third quarter of 2025 was $13.5 million, a 5.7% increase year over year compared to the $12.8 million of FFO in the third quarter of 2024. On the diluted common share basis, FFO increased from $0.48 in the third quarter of 2024 to $0.50 in the third quarter of 2025. Adjusted funds from operations, or AFFO, which adjusts for straight line rent and stock-based compensation, totaled $15.1 million in the third quarter of 2025, a 3.1% increase year over year compared to the $14.6 million of AFFO in the third quarter of 2024. AFFO on a diluted common share basis was $0.56 in the third quarter of 2025, or $0.01 higher than the $0.55 of AFFO in the third quarter of 2024. I'll note that our third quarter 2025 AFFO dividend payout ratio remains strong at 85%. That concludes our prepared remarks. Bill MonroeCFO at Community Healthcare Trust00:10:58Danielle, we are now ready to begin the question and answer session. Operator00:11:05Thank you. We will now begin the question and answer session. To ask a question, you may press star, then one on your touch-tone phone. If you are using a speakerphone, please pick up your handset before pressing the keys. To withdraw your question, please press star, then two. The first question comes from Alexander Goldfarb from Piper Sandler. Please go ahead. Alexander GoldfarbManaging Director and Senior REIT Equity Research Analyst at Piper Sandler00:11:31Hey, morning down there. Two questions, Dave. The first one, the acquisition pipeline, I guess they're related. The first one is just on the acquisition pipeline, and we'll discuss the funding part on my second question. Is it the same now that it was in the second quarter? Obviously, you guys are balancing where the stock is and your funding needs. As you look at the opportunity set, would you say it's growing, meaning that if you had a more competitive equity source, that pipeline would have increased quarter to quarter, or is the opportunity set basically unchanged, in which case, even if you had a better cost of capital, that acquisition pipeline would not have changed? Dave DupuyCEO at Community Healthcare Trust00:12:23Yeah, what I would say is if we are being highly selective, and hey, Alex, good to talk to you. I appreciate the question. We're being highly selective. We know we have this pipeline of very good quality assets at great returns. We want to make sure that we have the ability to pay for those acquisitions that are coming up over the upcoming quarters, and we don't want to issue shares at these depressed levels. That's why we're doing the capital recycling to pay for them. Yes, I would say we are seeing opportunities that are generally attractive in this market in that 9%-10% cap rate range that if our currency was different, if our share price was different, we'd be looking to make those acquisitions, and they would be very attractive relative to risk return. Yes, we're being highly selective. Dave DupuyCEO at Community Healthcare Trust00:13:20We're very focused on making sure we get this pipeline of high-quality assets paid for and do that without increasing our leverage. Yes, you're reading that right. Alexander GoldfarbManaging Director and Senior REIT Equity Research Analyst at Piper Sandler00:13:34Okay. Then just the second question when it goes to funding, you know, if you're doing asset sales, I get it that it sounds like there's maybe 150 bps, maybe 200 bps of positive spread between what you're selling and what you're buying. If you're basically trading one asset for another and taking on additional debt to help fund, isn't that raising leverage just by taking on more debt? You know, because you're swapping one asset for another and then you're incrementally taking on more debt, your leverage is naturally going to rise. My question is, is there a limit to how much debt you'll take on, you know, as long as you're still in this current depressed equity situation or your view is you're fine running leverage higher than normal with the hope that once the geriatric situation is resolved, hopefully you have a better currency? Dave DupuyCEO at Community Healthcare Trust00:14:30We really feel like based on the pipeline of opportunities from a capital recycling that we have, that we are not going to increase leverage over the upcoming quarters. Yes, you know, we did not have any capital recycling to do ahead of the, you know, the current acquisition that we did in the third quarter. Future acquisitions, we are very focused on matching up dispositions with acquisitions that are accretive to the company. We do not expect to meaningfully increase leverage. Bill, I don't know if you want to jump in. Bill MonroeCFO at Community Healthcare Trust00:15:12Yeah, Alex, just to clarify, the property that we have held for sale and will recognize $11.5 million capital gain, we expect that will fully pay for the next acquisition such that there will not be any incremental debt associated with that next acquisition. It'll be completely paid for with the proceeds of this larger upcoming disposition. Alexander GoldfarbManaging Director and Senior REIT Equity Research Analyst at Piper Sandler00:15:38Okay, great. Thank you very much. Dave DupuyCEO at Community Healthcare Trust00:15:42Thanks, Alex. Operator00:15:45As a reminder, if you have a question, please press star one. The next question comes from Rob Stevenson from Janney. Please go ahead. Rob StevensonManaging Director and Head of Real Estate Research at Janney00:15:55Good morning, guys. In terms of the behavioral health tenant, $200,000 paid in the quarter, can you remind us what that tenant was previously paying per quarter before they hit the wall? Dave DupuyCEO at Community Healthcare Trust00:16:07Yeah, they were paying in rent approximately $800,000 per quarter. Rob StevensonManaging Director and Head of Real Estate Research at Janney00:16:13Okay, that's helpful. You know, what's the expectations for our timing in terms of the closing of the acquisition if it occurs? Is that something that occurs before year-end if it happens given that the deal was signed in July, or could that stretch into 2026 from your understanding at this point? Dave DupuyCEO at Community Healthcare Trust00:16:35We're very, we'd love for it, and hey, Rob, good to talk to you, but we'd love for it to close by year-end. Some of the due diligence process has taken a little bit longer than we would have expected. It's probably more realistic to expect something to close in the first quarter. I think there's still a chance that it gets done by the end of the fourth quarter, but it's probably more likely to happen in the first quarter. We certainly would love to provide additional detail as soon as we have that. Rob StevensonManaging Director and Head of Real Estate Research at Janney00:17:14Okay. To what extent are you guys actively pursuing plan B just in case the deal falls through? Dave DupuyCEO at Community Healthcare Trust00:17:29You should expect that we are going down multiple paths simultaneously, as we always have. Yes, we're looking at multiple plans, multiple ways that we can move forward with the goal of ultimately getting paid more rent associated with this tenant. I think all of this is upside, right, relative to our performance. The portfolio has been stable. We're growing. I think we're certainly motivated to get this resolved as soon as possible. We think that it will. Yes, we are looking at all options. Rob StevensonManaging Director and Head of Real Estate Research at Janney00:18:13Okay. Last one on this topic, when you sit there and think about where they are in their life cycle, etc., what's the likelihood today of getting back any of the unpaid interest or rents, back rents going forward, or is a similar couple hundred thousand in the fourth quarter and a new lease with the buyer of these assets the best case scenario for you guys today? Dave DupuyCEO at Community Healthcare Trust00:18:40I would call that, you know, that's probably consistent with where we're headed and part of the reason, you know, we did the additional note write-off that we did is because we did not deem that it was likely to be collected. I think we're operating under that expectation, but we're certainly very focused on, to the extent we do have the ability to get any back rent or back interest, we will. We do not put a high likelihood on that. Rob StevensonManaging Director and Head of Real Estate Research at Janney00:19:10Okay. Just switching topics here, the three properties that are under redevelopment, how material is that? When do those leases expect it to kick in and impact earnings? Dave DupuyCEO at Community Healthcare Trust00:19:25Yeah, so I think one is very significant in a lease that was signed a while ago for a behavioral residential treatment facility. That's a large investment by us with a very recognizable operator. My guess is that lease won't commence until sometime after mid-year next year. That's a meaningful one. We don't provide specifics as to what those numbers are, but wouldn't start seeing any tailwind associated with the rent until after, probably after second quarter. The other one is probably a late 2026 opportunity as well. There's one smaller one that will happen first part of 2026, again, that should start contributing additional rent. These vary in terms of their impact, and we haven't provided details relative to that, but it's just an example of how we're reinvesting in buildings and with strong tenants based on signed leases. Anyway. Rob StevensonManaging Director and Head of Real Estate Research at Janney00:20:43Okay. Just trying to figure out just what type of earnings tailwind, because it sounds like you said that you're expecting to see 50 basis points-100 basis points increase in occupancy in the near term, plus this. Just wanted to figure out when that was going to start all hitting in terms of the earnings. Thanks, guys. Appreciate the time. Dave DupuyCEO at Community Healthcare Trust00:21:03Yeah, as far as the 50 basis points-100 basis points, we're seeing great leasing activity across the portfolio. There's always a delay between signing leases and having those leases commence, but I think it sort of speaks to the strong activity we're seeing across the portfolio, and I think it will be a tailwind for 2026 in terms of our ability to grow. Rob StevensonManaging Director and Head of Real Estate Research at Janney00:21:27Okay, thanks. Appreciate the time, guys. Dave DupuyCEO at Community Healthcare Trust00:21:30Thank you. Thanks, Rob. Operator00:21:34The next question comes from Jim Kammert from Evercore. Please go ahead. Jim KammertManaging Director and REIT Analyst at Evercore00:21:39Thank you. Good morning. Obviously, I think the capital recycling shift is well received. I was just curious, how are you sort of identifying which assets you would like to or most likely to dispose? Is it a geographic concentration, tenant concentration? Just trying to understand the mix or how you're lighting upon the candidates. Dave DupuyCEO at Community Healthcare Trust00:22:00Hey, Jim. Thanks for the question. Yeah, as you sort of hit on, you would, you know, think about it around tenant concentration, weighted average lease term, size profile, markets. We're looking at all of those criteria as we evaluate what we want to do from a capital recycling perspective. Obviously, with the key components associated with that of paying for this pipeline in a way that's accretive. Those are all the areas that we're focused on. What I'd also remind everybody of is, we sort of looked at our capital recycling program in two buckets. One is the bucket of smaller properties that are non-core that aren't going to drive a substantial amount of proceeds, but they are going to get us focused on our better buildings and better markets. Dave DupuyCEO at Community Healthcare Trust00:22:57You're seeing a few of those sales occur, and those sales we expect to conclude at the end of the fourth quarter. The larger opportunities are where we can have a very accretive cap rate sale to then reinvest in new very attractive buildings. Yeah, you're thinking about it in the right way. We're looking at tenant concentration, weighted average lease term, size profile, etc., as we look to push forward with our capital recycling. Jim KammertManaging Director and REIT Analyst at Evercore00:23:26That's helpful. The derivative question, then I'll be done, is, you mentioned that one of the large transactions pending is a 1031, but I'm just trying to assess the depth of buyer interest. You're not restricting your capital recycling to just 1031 exchanges. There is a depth of buyers presumably for, you know, stand-up, just traditional sales as well. Dave DupuyCEO at Community Healthcare Trust00:23:49Yeah, good question, Jim. The 1031 is more, you know, on our side than on the potential buyer's side as far as, you know, we don't want, you know, we're deferring that capital gain associated with that sale by putting it into a 1031. We have within our acquisition pipeline other properties, you know, that we have identified that will then be the replacement property as part of that 1031 like-kind exchange transaction. No, we're going to a very, you know, wide set of potential buyers to make sure that, you know, we're maximizing proceeds to us. Jim KammertManaging Director and REIT Analyst at Evercore00:24:22Okay, great clarification. Thank you, guys. Dave DupuyCEO at Community Healthcare Trust00:24:26Thanks, Jim. Operator00:24:28This concludes our question and answer session. I would like to turn the conference back over to Mr. Dupuy for closing remarks. Dave DupuyCEO at Community Healthcare Trust00:24:38Thanks, Danielle. Thank you, everybody, for dialing in. Of course, call if you have any questions. I hope everyone has a good rest of the day. Thank you. Operator00:25:03The conference is now concluded. Thank you for attending today's presentation.Read moreParticipantsExecutivesBill MonroeCFODave DupuyCEOAnalystsJim KammertManaging Director and REIT Analyst at EvercoreAlexander GoldfarbManaging Director and Senior REIT Equity Research Analyst at Piper SandlerRob StevensonManaging Director and Head of Real Estate Research at JanneyPowered by