NYSE:ELME Elme Communities Q1 2025 Earnings Report $2.17 +0.02 (+0.69%) Closing price 05/6/2026 03:59 PM EasternExtended Trading$2.17 0.00 (-0.23%) As of 05/6/2026 05:36 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 Elme Communities EPS ResultsActual EPS$0.24Consensus EPS $0.23Beat/MissBeat by +$0.01One Year Ago EPS$0.23Elme Communities Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$61.49 millionExpected Revenue$61.31 millionBeat/MissBeat by +$183.00 thousandYoY Revenue Growth+3.30%Elme Communities Announcement DetailsQuarterQ1 2025Date5/1/2025TimeAfter Market ClosesConference Call DateFriday, May 2, 2025Conference Call Time10:00AM ETConference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptSlide DeckPress Release (8-K)Quarterly Report (10-Q)SEC FilingEarnings HistoryCompany ProfileSlide DeckFull Screen Slide DeckPowered by Elme Communities Q1 2025 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrMay 2, 2025 ShareLink copied to clipboard.Key Takeaways Robust Q1 results: Same store revenue grew 3.9% and NOI increased 5.5% year over year, driven by strong rent growth in the Washington Metro and favorable tax appeal outcomes in Atlanta. High occupancy and rent growth: Q1 same store occupancy averaged 94.8% (up 50 bps Y/Y) with blended lease rates up 1.9% and initial April rate growth at 2.6% amid peak leasing season. Declining supply in Washington Metro: Annual net inventory growth is forecasted to drop from 2.2% in Q1 2025 to 1.1% by Q4 2026, the lowest since 2012, supporting future rent increases. Accelerated managed Wi-Fi program: Early integration of phases one and two is on track to deliver $0.6-0.8M of incremental NOI in 2025, rising to $1.5-2.0M annually by mid-2026. Strategic alternatives review: The Board continues a formal evaluation of strategic options to maximize shareholder value, with no assurance any transaction will occur. AI Generated. May Contain Errors.Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallElme Communities Q1 202500:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2xTranscript SectionsPresentationParticipantsPresentationSkip to Participants Operator00:00:00Good day, and welcome to the Elme Communities First Quarter 2025 earnings conference call. As a reminder, today's call is being recorded, and at this time, I would like to turn the call over to Amy Hopkins, Vice President, Investor Relations. Amy, please go ahead. Amy HopkinsVP of Investor Relations at Elme Communities00:00:18Good morning, and thank you for joining our First Quarter earnings call. Today's call will be available for replay on the Investors section of our website. Statements made during this call may constitute forward-looking statements that involve known and unknown risks and uncertainties, which may cause actual results to differ materially, and we undertake no duty to update them as actual events unfold. We refer to certain of these risks in our SEC filings. Reconciliations of the GAAP and non-GAAP financial measures discussed on this call are available in our most recent earnings press release and financials supplement, which was distributed yesterday and can be found on the Investors page of our website. Presenting on the call today will be Paul McDermott, our CEO, Tiffany Butcher, our COO, and Steve Freishtat, our CFO. With that, I will turn the call over to Paul. Paul McDermottCEO at Elme Communities00:01:07Thanks, Amy. Welcome, everyone, and thank you for joining us this morning. We kicked off the year with strong momentum as both same-store revenue and NOI came in ahead of our expectations, and the trends we are seeing as we enter peak leasing season are encouraging. I'll start today's call by highlighting what we're seeing on the ground here in the DMV and how we're positioned as regional employment trends evolve. Tiffany will provide a more detailed update on our operating trends, and Steve will discuss our outlook for 2025. While the new administration continues to work to streamline the federal workforce, the fundamentals that we are seeing across our Washington Metro portfolio remain solid and in line with seasonal norms. Looking forward, apartment tour volumes and renewal lease negotiations for June and July expirations remain strong and in line with our expectations. Paul McDermottCEO at Elme Communities00:02:08While we acknowledge that the region could be impacted by employment losses and a slowdown in economic growth, our mid-market rent levels and geographic focus on Northern Virginia put us in a better position than higher-end rentals and the broader regional housing market overall. Mid-market rent levels are widely recognized for offering relative resilience during periods of economic volatility. Looking back at performance during sequestration in 2013 and 2014, Class B apartments outperformed Class A in effective rent growth by over 1.8%, according to data collected by RealPage. With regard to our geographic focus, nearly 75% of Elme's Washington Metro homes are located in Northern Virginia, which is known for having the strongest private sector employment growth in the Washington Metro region. Paul McDermottCEO at Elme Communities00:03:05Over the past four years, Northern Virginia's private sector job growth was two and a half times the private sector job gains in the Washington Metro region, according to BLS data. Although Northern Virginia is known as a major hub for federal contractors, we believe Elme's exposure to government contractors is very low at approximately 5% of our Washington Metro resident base as of April. More details about our exposure to federal workforce reductions can be found on slide 11 of our latest investor presentation. Additionally, most federal employees fall outside the typical age range of apartment renters. As of September 2024, over 70% of federal government employees were over 40, per OPM data. In contrast, only 30% of Elme residents fall into that age group, suggesting a lower impact on apartments compared to the broader housing market overall. Paul McDermottCEO at Elme Communities00:04:13Looking at supply, conditions are shaping up for a very positive trajectory in the Washington Metro. According to RealPage, annual supply peaked in Q1 2025 at 2.2% annual net inventory growth, below the national average of 2.9%. New construction starts in the Washington Metro are down over 70% from their peak, and supply is projected to decline steeply from here to 1.8% annual net inventory growth by the fourth quarter of this year, and still further to nearly half at 1.1% by the fourth quarter of 2026, which would be the lowest level reported since 2012. Beyond 2026, supply could drop even further depending on the effects of tariffs and increased construction costs, paving the way for additional favorable competitive dynamics in the region. Paul McDermottCEO at Elme Communities00:05:17Turning to our strategic review, as announced on February 13, 2025, our Board of Trustees is overseeing a formal evaluation of strategic alternatives to maximize shareholder value. This process was initiated from a position of strength and having transformed Elme into a multi-family REIT while improving performance and profitability, and underscores our commitment to acting in the best interests of Elme and its shareholders. Despite the current volatility and uncertain capital markets environment, this evaluation remains ongoing. The Board is working with independent financial and legal advisors to assess alternatives and determine the best path forward for Elme. Paul McDermottCEO at Elme Communities00:06:04As we said when we announced this formal evaluation, there can be no assurance that this process will result in Elme pursuing a transaction or any other strategic outcome, and we do not intend to provide further details on the process in connection with the discussion of our first quarter earnings results today. Thank you for your understanding and keeping your questions focused on our results and outlook. With that, I'll turn it over to Tiffany to discuss our operations. Tiffany ButcherCOO at Elme Communities00:06:37Thanks, Paul. Looking at our operational highlights, we are off to a solid start to the year. Demand trends across our Washington Metro and Atlanta portfolios reflect typical seasonality against a backdrop of stable supply levels in the DMV and improving supply dynamics in Atlanta. Elme's same-store multi-family occupancy averaged 94.8% during the first quarter, in line with our targeted range and up 50 basis points year-over-year. We achieved 1.9% same-store blended lease rate growth during the quarter, and our initial estimated blended rate growth for April is 2.6%, reflecting a typical upswing heading into the spring leasing season. Within our DMV portfolio, forward occupancy trends remain in line with our expectations, and renewal rates remain strong. We are continuing to closely monitor our forward-looking demand indicators and plan to adjust our pricing strategies accordingly. Tiffany ButcherCOO at Elme Communities00:07:35In Atlanta, we are experiencing stable rent and occupancy trends and better-than-expected bad debt performance. New delinquencies have declined since the second quarter of last year, supported by higher credit standards, process changes, and technology enhancements implemented last year. Eviction delays in Atlanta are steadily decreasing with the continued use of Georgia House Bill 1203, and improved processing efficiency is also helping to reduce bad debt. As Steve will discuss in a moment, we expect improvement in bad debt to be a larger contributor to revenue growth in 2025 than we had initially anticipated. Now, turning to renovations, we completed 88 renovations during the quarter at an ROI of approximately 18% and remain on track to complete over 500 full renovations in 2025. Tiffany ButcherCOO at Elme Communities00:08:27We expect the pace of renovations to increase as expirations pick up during the summer leasing season, and we maintain flexibility to adjust the pace of renovations as market demand shifts. Moving on to operating initiatives, our managed Wi-Fi program is ramping up more quickly than anticipated, and we now expect to capture $600,000-$800,000 of additional NOI in 2025 from the seven communities that are part of phase one and the four communities that are part of phase two. Once phase one and phase two are fully integrated by mid-2026, we expect to capture $1.5 million-$2 million of additional NOI per year, with further upside from future phases. With that, I'll turn it over to Steve to cover our performance and outlook. Steven FreishtatCFO at Elme Communities00:09:15Thanks, Tiffany. Our first quarter results were very strong, with same-store revenue growth of 3.9% and NOI growth of 5.5% year-over-year. Our better-than-expected performance was driven primarily by stronger rent growth across our Washington Metro portfolio and two favorable real estate tax appeals in Atlanta. As Tiffany mentioned, our managed Wi-Fi rollout is going very well, and the associated income is ramping up more quickly than we had anticipated. Additionally, Atlanta bad debt continues to decline, and we expect improvement in bad debt to be a larger contributor to revenue growth in 2025 than we had initially anticipated. Steven FreishtatCFO at Elme Communities00:10:00Based on our year-to-date performance and updated projections for fee income and bad debt, we believe we only need an additional 50-60 basis points of revenue growth from rent and occupancy changes across the rest of the year to reach the midpoint of our revenue forecast, a target we consider highly attainable. Additionally, our balance sheet remains in very good shape. Annualized net debt to adjusted EBITDA was 5.6 times during the first quarter, and we have over 60% of our total capacity available on our line of credit and no secured debt. In closing, our revenue and NOI are ahead of expectations at this point in the year, and we are encouraged by the positive momentum heading into the peak leasing season. Steven FreishtatCFO at Elme Communities00:10:48Although the macro environment is in flux, the strong fundamentals of our portfolio and business, along with the ongoing success of our value-add renovation pipeline and platform initiatives, give us confidence in our ability to deliver resilient performance. Operator, I'd like to open it up for questions. Operator00:11:10Thank you, sir. At this time, we will be conducting our question-and-answer session. If you'd like to ask a question, please press Star 1 on your telephone keypad. A confirmation tone will indicate your line is in the question queue. You may press Star 2 if you would wish to remove your question from the queue. For participants using speaker equipment, it may be necessary to pick up your handset before pressing the Star keys. One moment, please, while we pull for questions. Thank you. Our first question is coming from Cooper Clark with Wells Fargo. Your line is live. Cooper ClarkAnalyst at Wells Fargo00:11:49Hey, thank you for taking the question this morning. Paul, was wondering if you could talk about the multi-family transaction market in DC. Curious if you've seen any buyers taking contrarian bets on the Metro and where you're seeing deals, if any, get done today from a cap rate perspective. Paul McDermottCEO at Elme Communities00:12:05Sure, Cooper. Just stepping back for a second, my overall observation would be that the living sector is continuing to do well. We're seeing continual capital flows into it. We have the agencies here, so we see continued liquidity in the debt markets. All of the lenders are active. The agencies are fairly aggressive, and the debt funds are feeding kind of the higher LTV requirements and getting paid for it. The life companies are still playing well in that 50-55% loan-to-value. I think from the equity perspective, the change that we've seen probably this year are really the ODCEs. Is there queues coming down, reentering with strategic capital allocations, and really looking for AUM? The investors that we talked to in the DMV, Cooper, I think their perspective is they're looking at national construction starts down, as we said in our remarks, down 77%. Paul McDermottCEO at Elme Communities00:13:19In 2026, we'll be over 80% down, as I mentioned in my remarks. You're balancing that with watching single-family mortgage originations at their lowest point in 30 years. I look at Washington, DC, for the fifth quarter in a row, we're one of the top three in rental growth. I think investors are concluding when they look at this region that when they look at 2026 through 2028, there's a nice runway for rental growth. The cap rates that we are seeing and that that's translated into the core buyer profile has, I think, gotten a little bit more competitive, and we've seen cap rates as low as 4.25% up to 5%, looking at levered IRRs between 9% and 11%. Paul McDermottCEO at Elme Communities00:14:15The core plus buyers still solid in that 4.75-5.25% cap rate range, looking at 11-13% levered IRRs. Then value-add, I think that's kind of low to mid 5% range, depending on vintage and performance, but that levered IRR is really in the 13-15% range. I'd say the one thing that we've observed over the last 12-18 months is that discount to replacement cost is shrinking in some of our stronger sub-markets here. We feel pretty optimistic just about the continued investment sales activity that we're seeing in the region, Cooper. Cooper ClarkAnalyst at Wells Fargo00:15:03Awesome. Thank you very much. Could you also just touch on the addition of Ron to your board from a high level and walk us through that process, specifically from a timing perspective as it relates to the announcement of your strategic review? Paul McDermottCEO at Elme Communities00:15:17Let's start there. The announcement for the strategic review, we made that decision last year coming out of our strategic retreat, and just the board felt it was necessary to look at options to maximize shareholder value. The process for Ron getting on our board was Ron is a well-known entity, and our board, as we've done over the last several years, our board continues to look at a refreshment process. I think Ron was just the appropriate candidate. We enjoy his skill sets and his operating history and really looking forward to working with him and gaining valuable insights from him. Cooper ClarkAnalyst at Wells Fargo00:16:12Great. Thank you very much for taking the questions. Paul McDermottCEO at Elme Communities00:16:15Sure, Cooper. Operator00:16:18Thank you. Our next question is coming from Ann Chan with Green Street. Your line is live. Ann ChanAnalyst at Green Street00:16:25Hey, good morning. Thanks for taking my question. Could you elaborate on what's driving the acceleration of the Wi-Fi initiative income? Does this imply a corresponding acceleration in the rollout-related expenses as well? Tiffany ButcherCOO at Elme Communities00:16:42Sure. I can start with that. Obviously, Steve or others can feel free to chime in. We started rolling out our managed Wi-Fi initiative last year with the first seven communities. We are in the process of installing phase two, which is our next four communities. The installation process has gone a little faster than anticipated, particularly on phase two. We are able to get those projects live a little bit quicker. The timing is critical on that, given that we are entering our spring and summer leasing season when a lot of leases roll, and we have the ability to roll residents onto that. Tiffany ButcherCOO at Elme Communities00:17:17The ability to get those systems live earlier and get more residents signed up quickly is allowing us to accelerate our expectations for achieving managed Wi-Fi income this year, which is what led us to increase the amount of revenue we're expecting to get in 2025 for managed Wi-Fi. Steven FreishtatCFO at Elme Communities00:17:36Anne, this is Steve. You're correct. There'll be an associated charge, so the expenses will see that, but to a lesser extent. Ann ChanAnalyst at Green Street00:17:47Okay. Thank you. Just given that guidance is unchanged, but you're seeing some more contribution from the Wi-Fi income this year and also from bad debt recovery in Atlanta, should we assume that there's been a shift in revenue composition? In that context, are there any line items you see carrying potential downside in order to serve them the point of guidance? Steven FreishtatCFO at Elme Communities00:18:13Yeah, Anne. Obviously, as we talked about in the prepared remarks, we had a strong first quarter, a first quarter that was above our initial expectations coming into the year. We talked about how we're tracking post-quarter end in line with seasonal norms. When looking at the whole year and looking at the leasing that we need to get done, we're just getting into the busy spring and summer leasing season. We still have a lot of leases that will turn over the next few months. We feel good about the trends, but there is still in the next few months a lot to take care of. When looking at our guidance and the potential outcomes over the remainder of the year, we feel that keeping our guidance range unchanged at this point in time is appropriate. Steven FreishtatCFO at Elme Communities00:19:02We should know a lot more on our Q2 call, and we'll look to update the guidance at that point. Ann ChanAnalyst at Green Street00:19:08Okay. Great. Thank you. Operator00:19:12Thank you. If there are no further questions, I'd like to turn the floor back to management for any closing comments. Paul McDermottCEO at Elme Communities00:19:21Thank you very much, everybody. We appreciate your time today, and we're looking forward to talking to many of you in the coming weeks. Thank you. Operator00:19:34Thank you, ladies and gentlemen. This concludes today's call. You may disconnect your lines at this time, and we thank you for your participation.Read moreParticipantsExecutivesAmy HopkinsVP of Investor RelationsPaul McDermottCEOSteven FreishtatCFOTiffany ButcherCOOAnalystsAnn ChanAnalyst at Green StreetCooper ClarkAnalyst at Wells FargoPowered by Earnings DocumentsSlide DeckPress Release(8-K)Quarterly report(10-Q) Elme Communities Earnings HeadlinesElme Communities: A Short-Term Liquidation OpportunityApril 1, 2026 | seekingalpha.comElme Communities (ELME) price target increased by 42.10% to 18.36March 27, 2026 | msn.comNobody Understands Why Trump Is Invading Iran (here’s the answer)Most investors are reacting to the Iran strikes without understanding the underlying motive driving the decision. Addison Wiggin, Founder of Grey Swan Investment Fraternity, says there is a hidden reason behind the bombing - and knowing it could change how you position your money right now. | Banyan Hill Publishing (Ad)Watergate 600 office has sold. It will remain office.March 7, 2026 | bizjournals.comLegalZoom Index Addition Tests Belief In Online Legal Growth StoryJanuary 29, 2026 | finance.yahoo.comElme Communities Provides Update On Liquidation ActivitiesJanuary 23, 2026 | markets.businessinsider.comSee More Elme Communities Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like Elme Communities? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on Elme Communities and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About Elme CommunitiesElme Communities (NYSE:ELME), Inc. is a real estate investment trust (REIT) specializing in senior living real estate. The company focuses on acquiring and strategically partnering in a diversified portfolio of senior housing communities, providing real estate solutions across the spectrum of independent living, assisted living and memory care facilities. Elme Communities leases properties to experienced operators under long-term contractual arrangements designed to generate stable rental income and align incentives for both landlord and operator. The company’s core activities include identifying acquisition opportunities, underwriting property performance, structuring lease agreements and overseeing asset management functions. Elme Communities pursues a range of transaction structures, including triple-net leases, sale-leasebacks and joint ventures, to tailor its capital solutions to the needs of senior living operators. This flexible approach allows the company to partner with best-in-class operators while maintaining a disciplined focus on portfolio diversification and risk management. Elme Communities’ portfolio spans multiple states across the United States and select markets in Canada, reflecting its strategy to target high-barrier-to-entry regions with favorable demographic profiles. By concentrating on markets with growing senior populations and limited new construction, the company seeks to capture stable occupancy levels and sustainable rent growth. Key geographic markets include major metropolitan and suburban regions where demand for quality senior housing remains strong. Listed on the New York Stock Exchange under the ticker ELME, Elme Communities began trading publicly in mid-2023. The company is led by a management team of real estate investment and senior living professionals with extensive experience in sourcing assets, structuring transactions and driving operational performance. Through its disciplined investment approach and industry partnerships, Elme Communities aims to deliver long-term value to shareholders while supporting the evolving needs of the senior living sector. 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PresentationSkip to Participants Operator00:00:00Good day, and welcome to the Elme Communities First Quarter 2025 earnings conference call. As a reminder, today's call is being recorded, and at this time, I would like to turn the call over to Amy Hopkins, Vice President, Investor Relations. Amy, please go ahead. Amy HopkinsVP of Investor Relations at Elme Communities00:00:18Good morning, and thank you for joining our First Quarter earnings call. Today's call will be available for replay on the Investors section of our website. Statements made during this call may constitute forward-looking statements that involve known and unknown risks and uncertainties, which may cause actual results to differ materially, and we undertake no duty to update them as actual events unfold. We refer to certain of these risks in our SEC filings. Reconciliations of the GAAP and non-GAAP financial measures discussed on this call are available in our most recent earnings press release and financials supplement, which was distributed yesterday and can be found on the Investors page of our website. Presenting on the call today will be Paul McDermott, our CEO, Tiffany Butcher, our COO, and Steve Freishtat, our CFO. With that, I will turn the call over to Paul. Paul McDermottCEO at Elme Communities00:01:07Thanks, Amy. Welcome, everyone, and thank you for joining us this morning. We kicked off the year with strong momentum as both same-store revenue and NOI came in ahead of our expectations, and the trends we are seeing as we enter peak leasing season are encouraging. I'll start today's call by highlighting what we're seeing on the ground here in the DMV and how we're positioned as regional employment trends evolve. Tiffany will provide a more detailed update on our operating trends, and Steve will discuss our outlook for 2025. While the new administration continues to work to streamline the federal workforce, the fundamentals that we are seeing across our Washington Metro portfolio remain solid and in line with seasonal norms. Looking forward, apartment tour volumes and renewal lease negotiations for June and July expirations remain strong and in line with our expectations. Paul McDermottCEO at Elme Communities00:02:08While we acknowledge that the region could be impacted by employment losses and a slowdown in economic growth, our mid-market rent levels and geographic focus on Northern Virginia put us in a better position than higher-end rentals and the broader regional housing market overall. Mid-market rent levels are widely recognized for offering relative resilience during periods of economic volatility. Looking back at performance during sequestration in 2013 and 2014, Class B apartments outperformed Class A in effective rent growth by over 1.8%, according to data collected by RealPage. With regard to our geographic focus, nearly 75% of Elme's Washington Metro homes are located in Northern Virginia, which is known for having the strongest private sector employment growth in the Washington Metro region. Paul McDermottCEO at Elme Communities00:03:05Over the past four years, Northern Virginia's private sector job growth was two and a half times the private sector job gains in the Washington Metro region, according to BLS data. Although Northern Virginia is known as a major hub for federal contractors, we believe Elme's exposure to government contractors is very low at approximately 5% of our Washington Metro resident base as of April. More details about our exposure to federal workforce reductions can be found on slide 11 of our latest investor presentation. Additionally, most federal employees fall outside the typical age range of apartment renters. As of September 2024, over 70% of federal government employees were over 40, per OPM data. In contrast, only 30% of Elme residents fall into that age group, suggesting a lower impact on apartments compared to the broader housing market overall. Paul McDermottCEO at Elme Communities00:04:13Looking at supply, conditions are shaping up for a very positive trajectory in the Washington Metro. According to RealPage, annual supply peaked in Q1 2025 at 2.2% annual net inventory growth, below the national average of 2.9%. New construction starts in the Washington Metro are down over 70% from their peak, and supply is projected to decline steeply from here to 1.8% annual net inventory growth by the fourth quarter of this year, and still further to nearly half at 1.1% by the fourth quarter of 2026, which would be the lowest level reported since 2012. Beyond 2026, supply could drop even further depending on the effects of tariffs and increased construction costs, paving the way for additional favorable competitive dynamics in the region. Paul McDermottCEO at Elme Communities00:05:17Turning to our strategic review, as announced on February 13, 2025, our Board of Trustees is overseeing a formal evaluation of strategic alternatives to maximize shareholder value. This process was initiated from a position of strength and having transformed Elme into a multi-family REIT while improving performance and profitability, and underscores our commitment to acting in the best interests of Elme and its shareholders. Despite the current volatility and uncertain capital markets environment, this evaluation remains ongoing. The Board is working with independent financial and legal advisors to assess alternatives and determine the best path forward for Elme. Paul McDermottCEO at Elme Communities00:06:04As we said when we announced this formal evaluation, there can be no assurance that this process will result in Elme pursuing a transaction or any other strategic outcome, and we do not intend to provide further details on the process in connection with the discussion of our first quarter earnings results today. Thank you for your understanding and keeping your questions focused on our results and outlook. With that, I'll turn it over to Tiffany to discuss our operations. Tiffany ButcherCOO at Elme Communities00:06:37Thanks, Paul. Looking at our operational highlights, we are off to a solid start to the year. Demand trends across our Washington Metro and Atlanta portfolios reflect typical seasonality against a backdrop of stable supply levels in the DMV and improving supply dynamics in Atlanta. Elme's same-store multi-family occupancy averaged 94.8% during the first quarter, in line with our targeted range and up 50 basis points year-over-year. We achieved 1.9% same-store blended lease rate growth during the quarter, and our initial estimated blended rate growth for April is 2.6%, reflecting a typical upswing heading into the spring leasing season. Within our DMV portfolio, forward occupancy trends remain in line with our expectations, and renewal rates remain strong. We are continuing to closely monitor our forward-looking demand indicators and plan to adjust our pricing strategies accordingly. Tiffany ButcherCOO at Elme Communities00:07:35In Atlanta, we are experiencing stable rent and occupancy trends and better-than-expected bad debt performance. New delinquencies have declined since the second quarter of last year, supported by higher credit standards, process changes, and technology enhancements implemented last year. Eviction delays in Atlanta are steadily decreasing with the continued use of Georgia House Bill 1203, and improved processing efficiency is also helping to reduce bad debt. As Steve will discuss in a moment, we expect improvement in bad debt to be a larger contributor to revenue growth in 2025 than we had initially anticipated. Now, turning to renovations, we completed 88 renovations during the quarter at an ROI of approximately 18% and remain on track to complete over 500 full renovations in 2025. Tiffany ButcherCOO at Elme Communities00:08:27We expect the pace of renovations to increase as expirations pick up during the summer leasing season, and we maintain flexibility to adjust the pace of renovations as market demand shifts. Moving on to operating initiatives, our managed Wi-Fi program is ramping up more quickly than anticipated, and we now expect to capture $600,000-$800,000 of additional NOI in 2025 from the seven communities that are part of phase one and the four communities that are part of phase two. Once phase one and phase two are fully integrated by mid-2026, we expect to capture $1.5 million-$2 million of additional NOI per year, with further upside from future phases. With that, I'll turn it over to Steve to cover our performance and outlook. Steven FreishtatCFO at Elme Communities00:09:15Thanks, Tiffany. Our first quarter results were very strong, with same-store revenue growth of 3.9% and NOI growth of 5.5% year-over-year. Our better-than-expected performance was driven primarily by stronger rent growth across our Washington Metro portfolio and two favorable real estate tax appeals in Atlanta. As Tiffany mentioned, our managed Wi-Fi rollout is going very well, and the associated income is ramping up more quickly than we had anticipated. Additionally, Atlanta bad debt continues to decline, and we expect improvement in bad debt to be a larger contributor to revenue growth in 2025 than we had initially anticipated. Steven FreishtatCFO at Elme Communities00:10:00Based on our year-to-date performance and updated projections for fee income and bad debt, we believe we only need an additional 50-60 basis points of revenue growth from rent and occupancy changes across the rest of the year to reach the midpoint of our revenue forecast, a target we consider highly attainable. Additionally, our balance sheet remains in very good shape. Annualized net debt to adjusted EBITDA was 5.6 times during the first quarter, and we have over 60% of our total capacity available on our line of credit and no secured debt. In closing, our revenue and NOI are ahead of expectations at this point in the year, and we are encouraged by the positive momentum heading into the peak leasing season. Steven FreishtatCFO at Elme Communities00:10:48Although the macro environment is in flux, the strong fundamentals of our portfolio and business, along with the ongoing success of our value-add renovation pipeline and platform initiatives, give us confidence in our ability to deliver resilient performance. Operator, I'd like to open it up for questions. Operator00:11:10Thank you, sir. At this time, we will be conducting our question-and-answer session. If you'd like to ask a question, please press Star 1 on your telephone keypad. A confirmation tone will indicate your line is in the question queue. You may press Star 2 if you would wish to remove your question from the queue. For participants using speaker equipment, it may be necessary to pick up your handset before pressing the Star keys. One moment, please, while we pull for questions. Thank you. Our first question is coming from Cooper Clark with Wells Fargo. Your line is live. Cooper ClarkAnalyst at Wells Fargo00:11:49Hey, thank you for taking the question this morning. Paul, was wondering if you could talk about the multi-family transaction market in DC. Curious if you've seen any buyers taking contrarian bets on the Metro and where you're seeing deals, if any, get done today from a cap rate perspective. Paul McDermottCEO at Elme Communities00:12:05Sure, Cooper. Just stepping back for a second, my overall observation would be that the living sector is continuing to do well. We're seeing continual capital flows into it. We have the agencies here, so we see continued liquidity in the debt markets. All of the lenders are active. The agencies are fairly aggressive, and the debt funds are feeding kind of the higher LTV requirements and getting paid for it. The life companies are still playing well in that 50-55% loan-to-value. I think from the equity perspective, the change that we've seen probably this year are really the ODCEs. Is there queues coming down, reentering with strategic capital allocations, and really looking for AUM? The investors that we talked to in the DMV, Cooper, I think their perspective is they're looking at national construction starts down, as we said in our remarks, down 77%. Paul McDermottCEO at Elme Communities00:13:19In 2026, we'll be over 80% down, as I mentioned in my remarks. You're balancing that with watching single-family mortgage originations at their lowest point in 30 years. I look at Washington, DC, for the fifth quarter in a row, we're one of the top three in rental growth. I think investors are concluding when they look at this region that when they look at 2026 through 2028, there's a nice runway for rental growth. The cap rates that we are seeing and that that's translated into the core buyer profile has, I think, gotten a little bit more competitive, and we've seen cap rates as low as 4.25% up to 5%, looking at levered IRRs between 9% and 11%. Paul McDermottCEO at Elme Communities00:14:15The core plus buyers still solid in that 4.75-5.25% cap rate range, looking at 11-13% levered IRRs. Then value-add, I think that's kind of low to mid 5% range, depending on vintage and performance, but that levered IRR is really in the 13-15% range. I'd say the one thing that we've observed over the last 12-18 months is that discount to replacement cost is shrinking in some of our stronger sub-markets here. We feel pretty optimistic just about the continued investment sales activity that we're seeing in the region, Cooper. Cooper ClarkAnalyst at Wells Fargo00:15:03Awesome. Thank you very much. Could you also just touch on the addition of Ron to your board from a high level and walk us through that process, specifically from a timing perspective as it relates to the announcement of your strategic review? Paul McDermottCEO at Elme Communities00:15:17Let's start there. The announcement for the strategic review, we made that decision last year coming out of our strategic retreat, and just the board felt it was necessary to look at options to maximize shareholder value. The process for Ron getting on our board was Ron is a well-known entity, and our board, as we've done over the last several years, our board continues to look at a refreshment process. I think Ron was just the appropriate candidate. We enjoy his skill sets and his operating history and really looking forward to working with him and gaining valuable insights from him. Cooper ClarkAnalyst at Wells Fargo00:16:12Great. Thank you very much for taking the questions. Paul McDermottCEO at Elme Communities00:16:15Sure, Cooper. Operator00:16:18Thank you. Our next question is coming from Ann Chan with Green Street. Your line is live. Ann ChanAnalyst at Green Street00:16:25Hey, good morning. Thanks for taking my question. Could you elaborate on what's driving the acceleration of the Wi-Fi initiative income? Does this imply a corresponding acceleration in the rollout-related expenses as well? Tiffany ButcherCOO at Elme Communities00:16:42Sure. I can start with that. Obviously, Steve or others can feel free to chime in. We started rolling out our managed Wi-Fi initiative last year with the first seven communities. We are in the process of installing phase two, which is our next four communities. The installation process has gone a little faster than anticipated, particularly on phase two. We are able to get those projects live a little bit quicker. The timing is critical on that, given that we are entering our spring and summer leasing season when a lot of leases roll, and we have the ability to roll residents onto that. Tiffany ButcherCOO at Elme Communities00:17:17The ability to get those systems live earlier and get more residents signed up quickly is allowing us to accelerate our expectations for achieving managed Wi-Fi income this year, which is what led us to increase the amount of revenue we're expecting to get in 2025 for managed Wi-Fi. Steven FreishtatCFO at Elme Communities00:17:36Anne, this is Steve. You're correct. There'll be an associated charge, so the expenses will see that, but to a lesser extent. Ann ChanAnalyst at Green Street00:17:47Okay. Thank you. Just given that guidance is unchanged, but you're seeing some more contribution from the Wi-Fi income this year and also from bad debt recovery in Atlanta, should we assume that there's been a shift in revenue composition? In that context, are there any line items you see carrying potential downside in order to serve them the point of guidance? Steven FreishtatCFO at Elme Communities00:18:13Yeah, Anne. Obviously, as we talked about in the prepared remarks, we had a strong first quarter, a first quarter that was above our initial expectations coming into the year. We talked about how we're tracking post-quarter end in line with seasonal norms. When looking at the whole year and looking at the leasing that we need to get done, we're just getting into the busy spring and summer leasing season. We still have a lot of leases that will turn over the next few months. We feel good about the trends, but there is still in the next few months a lot to take care of. When looking at our guidance and the potential outcomes over the remainder of the year, we feel that keeping our guidance range unchanged at this point in time is appropriate. Steven FreishtatCFO at Elme Communities00:19:02We should know a lot more on our Q2 call, and we'll look to update the guidance at that point. Ann ChanAnalyst at Green Street00:19:08Okay. Great. Thank you. Operator00:19:12Thank you. If there are no further questions, I'd like to turn the floor back to management for any closing comments. Paul McDermottCEO at Elme Communities00:19:21Thank you very much, everybody. We appreciate your time today, and we're looking forward to talking to many of you in the coming weeks. Thank you. Operator00:19:34Thank you, ladies and gentlemen. This concludes today's call. You may disconnect your lines at this time, and we thank you for your participation.Read moreParticipantsExecutivesAmy HopkinsVP of Investor RelationsPaul McDermottCEOSteven FreishtatCFOTiffany ButcherCOOAnalystsAnn ChanAnalyst at Green StreetCooper ClarkAnalyst at Wells FargoPowered by