NYSE:ELME Elme Communities Q2 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$62.10 millionExpected Revenue$61.63 millionBeat/MissBeat by +$471.00 thousandYoY Revenue Growth+3.30%Elme Communities Announcement DetailsQuarterQ2 2025Date8/5/2025TimeAfter Market ClosesConference Call DateWednesday, August 6, 2025Conference Call Time10:00AM ETConference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptPress Release (8-K)Quarterly Report (10-Q)Earnings HistoryCompany ProfilePowered by Elme Communities Q2 2025 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrAugust 6, 2025 ShareLink copied to clipboard.Key Takeaways Positive Sentiment: Elm entered into a definitive agreement to sell 19 multifamily assets to Cortland for $1.6 billion in cash, expected to close in Q4 2025, and approved a plan to liquidate its remaining portfolio pending shareholder approval. Positive Sentiment: The company expects to return net sale proceeds through an initial special distribution of $14.50–$14.82 per share and additional liquidating distributions of $2.90–$3.50 per share, totaling $17.58–$18.50 per share. Positive Sentiment: Second-quarter multifamily net operating income grew 4.5% year-over-year, driven by higher rental revenue and strong fee income from operational initiatives. Positive Sentiment: Monthly effective rent growth in the Washington Metro area continued to outpace the national average, supported by robust leasing and increased defense spending offsetting federal workforce reductions. Neutral Sentiment: A quarterly dividend of $0.18 per share was declared for payment on October 3, 2025, with future regular dividends suspended and further distributions at the board’s discretion following asset sales. AI Generated. May Contain Errors.Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallElme Communities Q2 202500:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2xThere are 7 speakers on the call. Speaker 400:00:00Welcome to the Elme Communities Second Quarter 2025 Earnings Conference Call. As a reminder, today's call is being recorded. At this time, I'd like to turn the call over to Amy Hopkins, Vice President, Investor Relations. Amy, please go ahead. Speaker 100:00:17Good morning, and thank you for joining our second 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 filing. Reconciliations of the GAAP and non-GAAP financial measures discussed on this call are available in our most recent earnings press release and financial 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, Steve Freishtat, our CFO, Tiffany Butcher, our COO, and Drew Hammond, our CAO and Treasurer. With that, I will turn the call over to Paul. Speaker 200:01:08Thanks, Amy. Welcome, everyone, and thank you for joining us this morning. We're pleased to report another solid quarter for Elme, reflecting both the stability of our portfolio and the continued execution of our operating strategy. Our second quarter results are detailed in our earnings release and associated filings. In addition to discussing our results, I want to spend time today discussing the announcement regarding our strategic alternatives review process. Steve will provide additional financial details about the proposed portfolio sale transaction and future asset sales, and Tiffany will cover our operating trends and initiatives. On Monday, we announced that our Board of Trustees completed the formal evaluation of strategic alternatives that it announced back in February. After an extensive evaluation, we have entered into a definitive agreement to sell a portfolio of 19 assets to Courtland, an Atlanta-based multifamily real estate investment development and management company. Speaker 200:02:18At closing, which we currently expect to occur in the fourth quarter following receipt of shareholder approval and satisfaction of other customary closing conditions, Elme will receive from Courtland $1.6 billion in cash, subject to certain adjustments. Along with the sale to Courtland, the Board has also approved a plan of sale and liquidation to sell our remaining assets. As such, we will be looking for buyers of all Elme's remaining multifamily assets, as well as Watergate 600. This plan of sale and liquidation is also subject to shareholder approval. I want to take a moment to provide some history leading up to this transaction. Over a decade ago, we launched a strategic transformation that streamlined our portfolio from four asset classes into one, including the sale of our office and retail portfolios in 2021. Speaker 200:03:25We designed and built a scalable operating platform, internalized multifamily operations, and executed platform initiatives to improve our performance and profitability with the goal of reducing our cost of capital in order to scale our portfolio and further maximize shareholder value. Despite the success we've had in transforming our company into a focused multifamily platform with strong operating capabilities, the current market environment has made it difficult to lower our cost of capital in a way that supports our ability to scale accretively. Our agreement with Courtland and the decision to sell our remaining assets came after a thoughtful and deliberate review process, taking into account the work the company has already undertaken to scale and geographically diversify our portfolio. The review process by our Board and advisors was robust. Speaker 200:04:28More than 80 potential counterparties were contacted, including pension funds, insurance companies, institutional advisors, financial sponsors, multifamily managers, sovereign wealth funds, family offices, and other public REITs. Underpinning its unanimous determination is that the combination of the sale of these assets to Courtland and a plan of sale and liquidation is expected to result in the greatest value for shareholders. Importantly for Elme, we anticipate a seamless transition of ownership to Courtland, enabling continuity of operations for both our residents and community team members and continuing our strong legacy of customer service excellence. We expect to prepare and file a preliminary proxy as soon as reasonably practical that will more fully describe the proposed Courtland sale transaction and the proposed plan of sale and liquidation. We intend to convene a special meeting this fall to approve these transactions. Speaker 200:05:42The Elme Communities Board has determined that these proposed transactions are in the best interests of our shareholders and unanimously recommends to our shareholders that they approve them. As noted in our announcement, we intend to commence the marketing and sale of our remaining assets in the near future, with a view toward completing these asset sales over the next 12 months. This marketing process should kick off in the third quarter, and certain of these asset sales are likely to move forward regardless of the outcome of the shareholder votes on the Courtland transaction and plan and sale of liquidation, subject to the acceptability of pricing and other terms. Our goal, as always, is to maximize value for Elme shareholders. I'll turn it over to Steve to provide more detail around the shareholder benefits of this transaction and the subsequent sales. Speaker 300:06:48Thanks, Paul. As noted in our press release on Monday, Elme intends to return net proceeds from the Courtland transaction and other asset sales to shareholders. Following the closing of the Courtland transaction, the company intends to declare an initial special distribution to shareholders funded by the net proceeds from the Courtland transaction and a portion of the proceeds from the new debt we expect to place on Elme's remaining assets. We estimate that the amount of this initial special distribution will be between $14.50 and $14.82 per share, after considering, among other factors, repayment of all of our existing corporate debt, the anticipated amount of new debt financing, and the company's estimated transaction costs in connection with the portfolio sale transaction. Speaker 300:07:45After this, subject to shareholder approval of the plan of sale and liquidation, and depending on the timing and outcome of asset sales, we expect to make additional distributions to our shareholders. Our current estimate of the aggregate amount of additional distributions to shareholders from the sale of Elme's nine remaining assets and Watergate 600 is between $2.90 and $3.50 per share, accounting for, among other factors, estimated transaction expenses, payment of liabilities, and the establishment of necessary reserves to satisfy outstanding liabilities, obligations, and expenses associated with the final dissolution activities. In total, the aggregate amount of distributions is expected to be between $17.58 and $18.50 per share. These figures include the company's quarterly dividend distribution of $0.18 per share, which has been declared and is to be paid on October 3, 2025. Speaker 300:08:55The tax treatment of the distributions we make following asset sales may vary depending on each shareholder's particular situation. Assuming the Courtland transaction closes and plan of sale and liquidation is approved by shareholders, the initial special distribution following the Courtland transaction and all subsequent liquidating distributions by Elme in connection with remaining asset sales generally should be treated as a return of capital to shareholders to the extent of their basis in their Elme shares, with any excess treated as capital gain. To the extent that the liquidating distributions are less than a shareholder's tax basis in its Elme shares, that shareholder generally would recognize a capital loss on their Elme shares. Speaker 300:09:43Additional information on both the Courtland transaction and the plan of sale and liquidation, as well as a more complete summary of the potential tax considerations and consequences, will be available in the preliminary proxy that Paul mentioned earlier. Looking ahead, the Elme team expects to report on material developments relating to the sale of our remaining assets through quarterly SEC filings as appropriate. That wraps up the overview of key financial details related to the transactions. I'll turn it over to Tiffany for an update on operating results for the second quarter. Speaker 500:10:22Thanks, Steve. As Paul stated, we are pleased to have delivered a solid quarter with year-over-year multifamily NOI growth of 4.5%, driven primarily by higher rental revenue and strong growth in fee income from our operational initiatives. Our operating initiatives have driven strong growth, and combined with our strategic approach to asset management and our ongoing focus on enhancing customer service, have led to consistent improvements in our operating performance over time. I want to take a moment to recognize and thank our dedicated team members, whose efforts over the past several years have been instrumental in executing our long-term plan to enhance the value living experience for our residents. We believe the foundation we've built positions us to realize significant value through the announced Courtland sale, as well as through the sales of our remaining portfolio. Speaker 500:11:12Turning to the near-term macro environment, monthly effective rent growth for the Washington Metro area continues to outpace the national average, according to data from RealPage, and the Washington Metro ranks sixth in the nation in terms of transaction volume during the second quarter. Defense spending is now projected to exceed prior estimates, which could meaningfully offset broader federal workforce reductions in the region. Looking ahead, we remain confident in the strength of our portfolio and ability to achieve favorable executions as we sell our remaining assets. I'll turn it back to Paul for some closing remarks. Speaker 200:11:48Thanks, Tiffany. I want to take a moment to reiterate Tiffany's thanks to our entire team, both past and present, for their incredible hard work and dedication over the years. Their efforts have been instrumental in driving a successful outcome for our shareholders. Through periods of change, our teams continue to uphold and advance our brand values, delivering excellent customer experiences that distinguish us in the market and redefine what customers can expect at value-driven price points. I’d also like to extend my appreciation to our Board of Trustees for their support and for their thoughtful deliberation and careful selection of the path they believe offers the best outcome and greatest value. With that, I'll hand the call over to the operator to begin Q&A. Speaker 400:12:50Certainly. Everyone at this time will be conducting a question and answer session. If you have any questions or comments, please press star one on your phone at this time. We do ask that while posing your question, please pick up your handset if you're listening on speakerphone to provide optimum sound quality. Once again, if you have any questions or comments, please press star one on your phone. Your first question is coming from Cooper Clark from Wells Fargo. Your line is live. Speaker 400:13:21Great. Thank you for taking the question. I'm wondering if you could provide more color on the building blocks to get to the $320 million midpoint and distributions expected from the sale of the remaining portfolio. If you could break out sort of what's coming from expected pricing on the assets and kind of the offset from any expected leakage or liabilities and reserves that Steve Freishtat spoke to earlier on the call, just trying to get a better sense on what the pricing expectation is embedded in that $320 million. Speaker 300:13:50Yeah, Cooper, this is Steve. To the extent that I can get you the information right now, the company's current estimates of the net proceeds, as you mentioned, of the remaining assets are based on a number of estimates and assumptions, which includes estimated expenses and payments of liabilities. As far as additional information, there will be more in the proxy on the estimates and assumptions. It'll be more fully described when the proxy is filed in connection with these proposed transactions. Speaker 300:14:22Okay. I guess just zooming in on a few of the specific assets in the remaining portfolio, if we could just quickly talk about both Watergate 600 and Riverside and sort of how to think about those assets in a sale. I guess on Watergate 600, could you just sort of talk about any potential office to resi conversion for a potential buyer and what's the right way to think about the sale on Watergate 600? I appreciate that you bought it in Q2 2017 for $135 million. And then also Riverside, given the density and the development upside, is that fair to assume a higher cap rate on that versus some of the D.C. and Maryland and Atlanta portfolio, just given that it will take a specific buyer? Speaker 200:15:10Cooper, it's Paul. Let's start with the Watergate. As you know, we've never formally taken the Watergate out and done a formal sales process. We've really been focused on the operations and the leasing of the asset. We're looking forward to seeing the market pricing, but we recognize that Washington, D.C. is still a sought-after market with, I think as Tiffany said or alluded to, it ranked sixth in the United States in terms of transaction volume. We will be taking those assets out here in the third quarter, with a view of trying to complete the sale of all the assets over the next 12 months. In terms of Riverside, obviously a little bit larger asset, but we like the trends that we've seen in the marketplace. Speaker 200:16:17In terms of the additional FAR that we went through, we're not going to, or we'll be watching as people add, if they bifurcate the transaction and look at income versus additional FAR, but we'll have a better lens into that in the coming months. Speaker 200:16:40Great. Thank you. On the Maryland portfolio, just curious how much potential policy risks come into play and what's the right way to think about some of the puts and takes related to Maryland specifically. Also, a question for Tiffany, if you could just sort of talk about the RemainCo portfolio and some of the trends year to date versus the kind of legacy portfolio average, whether it's revenue growth or blended rent growth. Speaker 200:17:10Sure. Cooper, let's start with your question on the Maryland assets. As you know, rent control was put in place in Montgomery County, and I think that has now been baked into how investors are underwriting assets. I think it's a pretty understandable process in Montgomery County. We continue to see transaction volume in Montgomery County. We are excited to launch the marketing process for those assets. As we stated in our prepared remarks, we are confident in our ability to ultimately execute successfully on the sale of those communities. In terms of your question on RemainCo, I would refer you to our supplement where we provide asset level details starting on page 22 of our supplement. If you were just kind of asking about big picture trends, I would be more than happy to kind of talk about the trends we're seeing in our various markets. Speaker 200:18:11As I mentioned in my prepared remarks, Northern Virginia continues to be a very strong market for growth in the area. We continue to see both strong new lease rate growth as well as renewal rent growth. Maryland also, we've seen positive blended lease rate growth year to date, really driven by very strong renewals there. D.C. has tended to be a little bit more flat in terms of blended lease rate growth year to date, driven by strong renewals that are covering some of the softness in new lease rate growth in the D.C. market. Speaker 200:18:51Great. Thank you for taking the questions. Speaker 400:18:56Thank you. Your next question is coming from Anthony Paolone from JP Morgan. Your line is live. Speaker 400:19:03Thank you, and congratulations on getting everything through your process there. I know you may be constrained on what all you could say. To the extent you can, maybe Paul, can you take us a bit into the process and just what liquidity looked like as you brought the company and the portfolios out to market in terms of, you know, were there limitations on liquidity as the deal size got bigger or certain quality cuts of assets that had more demand versus others or just anything you can help us with to give us some context around liquidity that was out there in this process would be great. Speaker 200:19:46Sure, Tony. The Board, with assistance from its dedicated transaction committee, which was comprised of all independent trustees, really conducted a thorough evaluation of all the potential strategic alternatives, including keeping Elme, you know, under its current business strategy. The goal, obviously, when we started this front, we announced this process in February, was making an informed determination that the Board believed would be the best opportunity for maximizing value for our shareholders. As I think you know, we engaged financial advisors to assist with this process, and those advisors contacted everyone from, as I said earlier, pension funds, insurance companies, institutional advisors, financial sponsors, multifamily managers, sovereign wealth funds, family offices, and other public REITs. I think the Board and the transaction committee recognized our goals prior to the strategic process of being our efforts to undertake to scale the portfolio and reduce its cost of capital. Speaker 200:21:14As we looked as operators and the management team and Board looked, we were really trying to scale the business, grow the operations effectively, and make accretive acquisitions. The process did not produce a viable offer on an entity-level basis at a price that the transaction committee and the Board considered more attractive than the combination of the portfolio sale to Courtland and the liquidating distributions that the company would make with our plan of sale and liquidation. I think the Board unanimously determined that what we've proposed are advisable and in the best interests of the shareholders, Tony. Speaker 200:22:09Okay. Was there a dynamic where, did the potential bidders want more value add versus more core, or just the size got a little bit too big, or was there anything to glean from that? Speaker 200:22:28I think a lot of this will be addressed in the proxy statement that's going to be coming out. I think you had a wide array of, as I said, we contacted over 80 capital sources, and you had a wide array of capital sources with different criteria. Speaker 200:22:49Okay. I understand. Is there anything you can give us in terms of total costs for the transaction, either advisors, originating that piece of debt that you'll take on, transfer taxes, anything of that nature that you could put brackets around? Speaker 300:23:12Yeah, Tony, in our estimates, those are factored in, but similar to what Paul just mentioned, the additional information regarding the transaction costs will be in the proxy statement that will be filed in due course. Speaker 300:23:29Okay. Fair enough. Thank you. Speaker 400:23:33Thank you. Your next question is coming from Michael Lewis from Chua Securities. Your line is live. Speaker 400:23:40Great. Thank you. Paul, I appreciate your comments. I know it must be bittersweet to maximize value in this way after all the work you and the team have done. My question, assuming Courtland closes, that leaves us with the 10 assets to talk about. Is there any reason you could give why Courtland left these assets out? Was there a theme? I realize Watergate 600 is a unique asset, but among the remaining apartment assets, was there something about those that didn't meet their investment goals or their criteria or whatever it is? Is there some reason that kind of runs through it, why those assets are left out of the deal? Speaker 200:24:24Michael, as I said earlier, it was a very thorough process that was conducted by our Board and with the transaction committee, and a number of strategic alternatives and combinations were considered. As we all have said, additional information regarding all of the alternatives that were evaluated are going to be in our upcoming proxy statement. Our Board determined that the combination of this portfolio sale to Courtland plus the individual sales of the remaining assets was the right path forward to maximize value for our shareholders. Speaker 200:25:06Okay. Were there interested buyers for the remaining assets as you ran the process that maybe you could go back to? Do you think being a motivated seller impacts the value now as you liquidate those assets, do you think? Speaker 200:25:25I'm sure from a macro level, Michael, I think that, obviously, when we look back at our process, you're going to have a wider pool of bidders on a one-off basis versus an entity-level basis. We're looking forward to commencing our sales process and getting the maximum value allowable from the market for our shareholders. Speaker 200:25:54Okay. Lastly for me, I assume you'll be making the additional distributions as you close deals, so it won't just be one at the end. Also, as you run the operation forward now, over however long this takes, how lean does the operation get in terms of overhead and kind of continuing to run the company now the next few months? Speaker 300:26:19Yeah, Michael, as far as the distributions, obviously we'll suspend our quarterly distribution after the $0.18 distribution that I mentioned in my prepared remarks in October. Future liquidating distributions would be at the Board's discretion following future sales. As far as you talked about expenses, we expect some changes will be made to expenses as we conduct the sales of the remaining assets and begin to reduce the size of the company. Those estimates are in the numbers that we have talked about. Speaker 300:26:58All right. Thank you, guys. Appreciate it. Speaker 400:27:02Thank you. Once again, everyone, if you have any questions or comments, please press star then one on your phone. Your next question is coming from John Pawlowski from Green Street. Your line is live. Speaker 400:27:16Thanks for the time. I know you can't quantify the expected frictional costs, but I'm just confirming that the distributions you laid out to shareholders in the press release are net of all expected costs, and there aren't any additional costs that might drive a diminution in proceeds to shareholders when all is said and done? Speaker 300:27:35Yeah, John, this is Steve Freishtat, and you're correct that the estimates that we have include estimated expenses and payment of liabilities. Speaker 300:27:44Okay. I want a few questions on the timing of the liquidation. First, on the remaining multifamily assets, could you put brackets around like fastest and slowest you think you can get, or the next buyer could close on the D.C. and Maryland assets that need to go through or potentially need to go through a right of first refusal process? What's the quickest and the slowest you think the multifamily assets could sell? Speaker 300:28:12I can start off on that, John. Elme intends to begin the process of marketing our assets, the nine multifamily assets and Watergate 600, starting in the third quarter, with obviously the view towards completing all of the asset sales within the next 12 months. In terms of, you mentioned, you know, Washington, D.C. and the TOPA process, what I would say to that is that we've been operating in this market for a very long time. We know the TOPA process, and we do plan to take the D.C. assets out along with the Maryland assets sooner rather than later, given the timeline that it does take to get through both the TOPA process in D.C. and HOC requirements in Montgomery County. We're going to certainly work with any tenant association and prospective buyer to progress the sale process in a timely manner. Speaker 300:29:01We feel that the timelines that we have laid out, in terms of being able to complete in the next 12 months, are realistic, taking into account those processes. Speaker 300:29:13Okay. I just have a question on why it would take a full 12 months. Do the 12 months just give you enough cushion and potentially a dose of conservatism, or do you really think, you know, a TOPA process or a ROFR process in Maryland could really take 12 months? My understanding would be more of a four to six-month process in these markets, but I could be wrong. Speaker 300:29:40Yeah, John, when we're talking about 12 months, we are talking about, you know, the entire RemainCo portfolio. We're not commenting on the specific timeline for any one asset. We have laid out the view of trying to complete all of the asset sales within that 12-month period. Speaker 300:30:00Okay. One more from me. Could you share some views on the lease roll at Watergate 600? I think it's 82% leased right now. Where is that leasing percentage likely to trend in the next six months based off of known move-outs and leasing progress you're doing right now? Speaker 200:30:20We are still in discussions with our largest tenant to determine their ultimate footprint. Your 82% number is accurate, which is where we hope to finish at the end of 2025. We do recognize that we have almost 9% expiring in 2026, and we hope to be successful in some of our releasing efforts on that. Speaker 200:30:55Okay. Sorry. One more. Bear with me. I want to go back to the timing. Is there anything other than the potential challenges of selling Watergate 600 and the regulation hurdles for the multifamily? Is there anything idiosyncratic in this portfolio that would take 12 months for RemainCo to liquidate? Again, it strikes me as a long horizon. Speaker 200:31:23No. I think we've laid out that there will be different timelines associated with each asset in the portfolio, but we are going to begin kicking them off starting in the third quarter and will be working to execute the sale process as quickly as practically possible. Speaker 200:31:44Okay, thank you. Speaker 400:31:48Thank you. Your next question is coming from Cooper Clark from Wells Fargo. Your line is live. Speaker 400:31:56Hey, this is Jamie Feldman following up. Just stepping away from the transaction for a second, you guys have had front row seats in probably the most controversial and interesting apartment market in the country this year with the Doge announcements and all the other ups and downs of the market. Can you just talk us through kind of looking back at the headlines, the timing of the headlines, and the impact on leasing volumes across your markets, across your submarkets? I think we're all just trying to understand what the real impact is. DC is kind of surprised to the upside so far for people. Is it over? Or maybe by the time some of these layoffs hit and people are off their, the period after layoffs where they're still getting paid, like we still have a shoe to drop. Speaker 400:32:49Just curious what your thoughts are across the different submarkets within DC. Speaker 200:32:57Jamie, it's Paul. I'll start and then I'll ask Tiffany to follow up on our portfolio and what we've observed. I think that the alarm bells that were sounded right at the beginning of the year were probably a bit overblown in terms of our ability to continue the momentum. I think we tried to articulate that in our guidance for 2025. We did have things slowing down at the back half of the year, which we did incorporate in there, and we did factor in a number of various scenarios and outcomes that could impact both our occupancy and our pricing leverage. I feel that right now the market, and Tiffany can get into it more, the market will be either based on seasonality or some other external factors. We will see some type of slowdown. Speaker 200:34:09I think if you look at Elme Communities' track record for the first six months of this year, we've had beats and we feel very optimistic about this portfolio and the assets moving forward. Tiffany? Speaker 200:34:26Yeah, just kind of adding on to that. As I mentioned in my prepared remarks, monthly effective rent growth for the Washington Metro area continues to outpace the national average. We do also see that the federal defense spending that is going to be projected to happen is now going to exceed prior estimates, which could meaningfully offset some of the broader potential federal workforce reductions that Paul mentioned. In terms of what we've been seeing actually in our portfolio year to date, occupancy has actually remained very strong in both the first and second quarter. Our occupancy in the DMV exceeded 96%. As I mentioned in response to Cooper's earlier question, year to date, we have had strong positive blended lease rate growth in our Virginia portfolio, and we've seen positive blended lease rate growth in our Maryland portfolio. D.C. properties remained a little bit flattish. Speaker 200:35:24Overall, the DMV has continued to perform well in terms of both occupancy and lease rate growth. Speaker 200:35:33Okay. Thank you for the color. Are you able to talk us through transfer taxes by your different submarkets as we think about the sale? Speaker 300:35:45No, Jamie, I think that information will be in the proxy. It will, of course, be submitting in due course. Speaker 300:35:57Okay. As we think about management incentives from a transaction, is that all baked into the fully diluted share count, or are there going to be incremental incentives on a sale? Speaker 300:36:09Again, Jamie, I'd say all of the transaction costs that we're estimating, you know, we'll have additional details on that in the proxy. Speaker 300:36:20Okay. All right. Speaker 300:36:24Again, everything, all of the transaction costs that we expect are in the estimates that we have provided. Speaker 300:36:34Right. Okay. All right. Thank you and good luck with the execution and closing. Speaker 200:36:40Thank you, Jamie. Speaker 400:36:44Thank you. That concludes our Q&A session. I'll now hand the conference back to Paul McDermott, Chief Executive Officer, for closing remarks. Please go ahead. Speaker 200:36:54Thank you, everyone, for joining us today. We look forward to keeping you informed as we move forward with our plan to return capital to our shareholders. Speaker 400:37:07Thank you. Everyone, this concludes today's event. You may disconnect at this time and have a wonderful day. Thank you for your participation.Read morePowered by Earnings DocumentsPress 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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There are 7 speakers on the call. Speaker 400:00:00Welcome to the Elme Communities Second Quarter 2025 Earnings Conference Call. As a reminder, today's call is being recorded. At this time, I'd like to turn the call over to Amy Hopkins, Vice President, Investor Relations. Amy, please go ahead. Speaker 100:00:17Good morning, and thank you for joining our second 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 filing. Reconciliations of the GAAP and non-GAAP financial measures discussed on this call are available in our most recent earnings press release and financial 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, Steve Freishtat, our CFO, Tiffany Butcher, our COO, and Drew Hammond, our CAO and Treasurer. With that, I will turn the call over to Paul. Speaker 200:01:08Thanks, Amy. Welcome, everyone, and thank you for joining us this morning. We're pleased to report another solid quarter for Elme, reflecting both the stability of our portfolio and the continued execution of our operating strategy. Our second quarter results are detailed in our earnings release and associated filings. In addition to discussing our results, I want to spend time today discussing the announcement regarding our strategic alternatives review process. Steve will provide additional financial details about the proposed portfolio sale transaction and future asset sales, and Tiffany will cover our operating trends and initiatives. On Monday, we announced that our Board of Trustees completed the formal evaluation of strategic alternatives that it announced back in February. After an extensive evaluation, we have entered into a definitive agreement to sell a portfolio of 19 assets to Courtland, an Atlanta-based multifamily real estate investment development and management company. Speaker 200:02:18At closing, which we currently expect to occur in the fourth quarter following receipt of shareholder approval and satisfaction of other customary closing conditions, Elme will receive from Courtland $1.6 billion in cash, subject to certain adjustments. Along with the sale to Courtland, the Board has also approved a plan of sale and liquidation to sell our remaining assets. As such, we will be looking for buyers of all Elme's remaining multifamily assets, as well as Watergate 600. This plan of sale and liquidation is also subject to shareholder approval. I want to take a moment to provide some history leading up to this transaction. Over a decade ago, we launched a strategic transformation that streamlined our portfolio from four asset classes into one, including the sale of our office and retail portfolios in 2021. Speaker 200:03:25We designed and built a scalable operating platform, internalized multifamily operations, and executed platform initiatives to improve our performance and profitability with the goal of reducing our cost of capital in order to scale our portfolio and further maximize shareholder value. Despite the success we've had in transforming our company into a focused multifamily platform with strong operating capabilities, the current market environment has made it difficult to lower our cost of capital in a way that supports our ability to scale accretively. Our agreement with Courtland and the decision to sell our remaining assets came after a thoughtful and deliberate review process, taking into account the work the company has already undertaken to scale and geographically diversify our portfolio. The review process by our Board and advisors was robust. Speaker 200:04:28More than 80 potential counterparties were contacted, including pension funds, insurance companies, institutional advisors, financial sponsors, multifamily managers, sovereign wealth funds, family offices, and other public REITs. Underpinning its unanimous determination is that the combination of the sale of these assets to Courtland and a plan of sale and liquidation is expected to result in the greatest value for shareholders. Importantly for Elme, we anticipate a seamless transition of ownership to Courtland, enabling continuity of operations for both our residents and community team members and continuing our strong legacy of customer service excellence. We expect to prepare and file a preliminary proxy as soon as reasonably practical that will more fully describe the proposed Courtland sale transaction and the proposed plan of sale and liquidation. We intend to convene a special meeting this fall to approve these transactions. Speaker 200:05:42The Elme Communities Board has determined that these proposed transactions are in the best interests of our shareholders and unanimously recommends to our shareholders that they approve them. As noted in our announcement, we intend to commence the marketing and sale of our remaining assets in the near future, with a view toward completing these asset sales over the next 12 months. This marketing process should kick off in the third quarter, and certain of these asset sales are likely to move forward regardless of the outcome of the shareholder votes on the Courtland transaction and plan and sale of liquidation, subject to the acceptability of pricing and other terms. Our goal, as always, is to maximize value for Elme shareholders. I'll turn it over to Steve to provide more detail around the shareholder benefits of this transaction and the subsequent sales. Speaker 300:06:48Thanks, Paul. As noted in our press release on Monday, Elme intends to return net proceeds from the Courtland transaction and other asset sales to shareholders. Following the closing of the Courtland transaction, the company intends to declare an initial special distribution to shareholders funded by the net proceeds from the Courtland transaction and a portion of the proceeds from the new debt we expect to place on Elme's remaining assets. We estimate that the amount of this initial special distribution will be between $14.50 and $14.82 per share, after considering, among other factors, repayment of all of our existing corporate debt, the anticipated amount of new debt financing, and the company's estimated transaction costs in connection with the portfolio sale transaction. Speaker 300:07:45After this, subject to shareholder approval of the plan of sale and liquidation, and depending on the timing and outcome of asset sales, we expect to make additional distributions to our shareholders. Our current estimate of the aggregate amount of additional distributions to shareholders from the sale of Elme's nine remaining assets and Watergate 600 is between $2.90 and $3.50 per share, accounting for, among other factors, estimated transaction expenses, payment of liabilities, and the establishment of necessary reserves to satisfy outstanding liabilities, obligations, and expenses associated with the final dissolution activities. In total, the aggregate amount of distributions is expected to be between $17.58 and $18.50 per share. These figures include the company's quarterly dividend distribution of $0.18 per share, which has been declared and is to be paid on October 3, 2025. Speaker 300:08:55The tax treatment of the distributions we make following asset sales may vary depending on each shareholder's particular situation. Assuming the Courtland transaction closes and plan of sale and liquidation is approved by shareholders, the initial special distribution following the Courtland transaction and all subsequent liquidating distributions by Elme in connection with remaining asset sales generally should be treated as a return of capital to shareholders to the extent of their basis in their Elme shares, with any excess treated as capital gain. To the extent that the liquidating distributions are less than a shareholder's tax basis in its Elme shares, that shareholder generally would recognize a capital loss on their Elme shares. Speaker 300:09:43Additional information on both the Courtland transaction and the plan of sale and liquidation, as well as a more complete summary of the potential tax considerations and consequences, will be available in the preliminary proxy that Paul mentioned earlier. Looking ahead, the Elme team expects to report on material developments relating to the sale of our remaining assets through quarterly SEC filings as appropriate. That wraps up the overview of key financial details related to the transactions. I'll turn it over to Tiffany for an update on operating results for the second quarter. Speaker 500:10:22Thanks, Steve. As Paul stated, we are pleased to have delivered a solid quarter with year-over-year multifamily NOI growth of 4.5%, driven primarily by higher rental revenue and strong growth in fee income from our operational initiatives. Our operating initiatives have driven strong growth, and combined with our strategic approach to asset management and our ongoing focus on enhancing customer service, have led to consistent improvements in our operating performance over time. I want to take a moment to recognize and thank our dedicated team members, whose efforts over the past several years have been instrumental in executing our long-term plan to enhance the value living experience for our residents. We believe the foundation we've built positions us to realize significant value through the announced Courtland sale, as well as through the sales of our remaining portfolio. Speaker 500:11:12Turning to the near-term macro environment, monthly effective rent growth for the Washington Metro area continues to outpace the national average, according to data from RealPage, and the Washington Metro ranks sixth in the nation in terms of transaction volume during the second quarter. Defense spending is now projected to exceed prior estimates, which could meaningfully offset broader federal workforce reductions in the region. Looking ahead, we remain confident in the strength of our portfolio and ability to achieve favorable executions as we sell our remaining assets. I'll turn it back to Paul for some closing remarks. Speaker 200:11:48Thanks, Tiffany. I want to take a moment to reiterate Tiffany's thanks to our entire team, both past and present, for their incredible hard work and dedication over the years. Their efforts have been instrumental in driving a successful outcome for our shareholders. Through periods of change, our teams continue to uphold and advance our brand values, delivering excellent customer experiences that distinguish us in the market and redefine what customers can expect at value-driven price points. I’d also like to extend my appreciation to our Board of Trustees for their support and for their thoughtful deliberation and careful selection of the path they believe offers the best outcome and greatest value. With that, I'll hand the call over to the operator to begin Q&A. Speaker 400:12:50Certainly. Everyone at this time will be conducting a question and answer session. If you have any questions or comments, please press star one on your phone at this time. We do ask that while posing your question, please pick up your handset if you're listening on speakerphone to provide optimum sound quality. Once again, if you have any questions or comments, please press star one on your phone. Your first question is coming from Cooper Clark from Wells Fargo. Your line is live. Speaker 400:13:21Great. Thank you for taking the question. I'm wondering if you could provide more color on the building blocks to get to the $320 million midpoint and distributions expected from the sale of the remaining portfolio. If you could break out sort of what's coming from expected pricing on the assets and kind of the offset from any expected leakage or liabilities and reserves that Steve Freishtat spoke to earlier on the call, just trying to get a better sense on what the pricing expectation is embedded in that $320 million. Speaker 300:13:50Yeah, Cooper, this is Steve. To the extent that I can get you the information right now, the company's current estimates of the net proceeds, as you mentioned, of the remaining assets are based on a number of estimates and assumptions, which includes estimated expenses and payments of liabilities. As far as additional information, there will be more in the proxy on the estimates and assumptions. It'll be more fully described when the proxy is filed in connection with these proposed transactions. Speaker 300:14:22Okay. I guess just zooming in on a few of the specific assets in the remaining portfolio, if we could just quickly talk about both Watergate 600 and Riverside and sort of how to think about those assets in a sale. I guess on Watergate 600, could you just sort of talk about any potential office to resi conversion for a potential buyer and what's the right way to think about the sale on Watergate 600? I appreciate that you bought it in Q2 2017 for $135 million. And then also Riverside, given the density and the development upside, is that fair to assume a higher cap rate on that versus some of the D.C. and Maryland and Atlanta portfolio, just given that it will take a specific buyer? Speaker 200:15:10Cooper, it's Paul. Let's start with the Watergate. As you know, we've never formally taken the Watergate out and done a formal sales process. We've really been focused on the operations and the leasing of the asset. We're looking forward to seeing the market pricing, but we recognize that Washington, D.C. is still a sought-after market with, I think as Tiffany said or alluded to, it ranked sixth in the United States in terms of transaction volume. We will be taking those assets out here in the third quarter, with a view of trying to complete the sale of all the assets over the next 12 months. In terms of Riverside, obviously a little bit larger asset, but we like the trends that we've seen in the marketplace. Speaker 200:16:17In terms of the additional FAR that we went through, we're not going to, or we'll be watching as people add, if they bifurcate the transaction and look at income versus additional FAR, but we'll have a better lens into that in the coming months. Speaker 200:16:40Great. Thank you. On the Maryland portfolio, just curious how much potential policy risks come into play and what's the right way to think about some of the puts and takes related to Maryland specifically. Also, a question for Tiffany, if you could just sort of talk about the RemainCo portfolio and some of the trends year to date versus the kind of legacy portfolio average, whether it's revenue growth or blended rent growth. Speaker 200:17:10Sure. Cooper, let's start with your question on the Maryland assets. As you know, rent control was put in place in Montgomery County, and I think that has now been baked into how investors are underwriting assets. I think it's a pretty understandable process in Montgomery County. We continue to see transaction volume in Montgomery County. We are excited to launch the marketing process for those assets. As we stated in our prepared remarks, we are confident in our ability to ultimately execute successfully on the sale of those communities. In terms of your question on RemainCo, I would refer you to our supplement where we provide asset level details starting on page 22 of our supplement. If you were just kind of asking about big picture trends, I would be more than happy to kind of talk about the trends we're seeing in our various markets. Speaker 200:18:11As I mentioned in my prepared remarks, Northern Virginia continues to be a very strong market for growth in the area. We continue to see both strong new lease rate growth as well as renewal rent growth. Maryland also, we've seen positive blended lease rate growth year to date, really driven by very strong renewals there. D.C. has tended to be a little bit more flat in terms of blended lease rate growth year to date, driven by strong renewals that are covering some of the softness in new lease rate growth in the D.C. market. Speaker 200:18:51Great. Thank you for taking the questions. Speaker 400:18:56Thank you. Your next question is coming from Anthony Paolone from JP Morgan. Your line is live. Speaker 400:19:03Thank you, and congratulations on getting everything through your process there. I know you may be constrained on what all you could say. To the extent you can, maybe Paul, can you take us a bit into the process and just what liquidity looked like as you brought the company and the portfolios out to market in terms of, you know, were there limitations on liquidity as the deal size got bigger or certain quality cuts of assets that had more demand versus others or just anything you can help us with to give us some context around liquidity that was out there in this process would be great. Speaker 200:19:46Sure, Tony. The Board, with assistance from its dedicated transaction committee, which was comprised of all independent trustees, really conducted a thorough evaluation of all the potential strategic alternatives, including keeping Elme, you know, under its current business strategy. The goal, obviously, when we started this front, we announced this process in February, was making an informed determination that the Board believed would be the best opportunity for maximizing value for our shareholders. As I think you know, we engaged financial advisors to assist with this process, and those advisors contacted everyone from, as I said earlier, pension funds, insurance companies, institutional advisors, financial sponsors, multifamily managers, sovereign wealth funds, family offices, and other public REITs. I think the Board and the transaction committee recognized our goals prior to the strategic process of being our efforts to undertake to scale the portfolio and reduce its cost of capital. Speaker 200:21:14As we looked as operators and the management team and Board looked, we were really trying to scale the business, grow the operations effectively, and make accretive acquisitions. The process did not produce a viable offer on an entity-level basis at a price that the transaction committee and the Board considered more attractive than the combination of the portfolio sale to Courtland and the liquidating distributions that the company would make with our plan of sale and liquidation. I think the Board unanimously determined that what we've proposed are advisable and in the best interests of the shareholders, Tony. Speaker 200:22:09Okay. Was there a dynamic where, did the potential bidders want more value add versus more core, or just the size got a little bit too big, or was there anything to glean from that? Speaker 200:22:28I think a lot of this will be addressed in the proxy statement that's going to be coming out. I think you had a wide array of, as I said, we contacted over 80 capital sources, and you had a wide array of capital sources with different criteria. Speaker 200:22:49Okay. I understand. Is there anything you can give us in terms of total costs for the transaction, either advisors, originating that piece of debt that you'll take on, transfer taxes, anything of that nature that you could put brackets around? Speaker 300:23:12Yeah, Tony, in our estimates, those are factored in, but similar to what Paul just mentioned, the additional information regarding the transaction costs will be in the proxy statement that will be filed in due course. Speaker 300:23:29Okay. Fair enough. Thank you. Speaker 400:23:33Thank you. Your next question is coming from Michael Lewis from Chua Securities. Your line is live. Speaker 400:23:40Great. Thank you. Paul, I appreciate your comments. I know it must be bittersweet to maximize value in this way after all the work you and the team have done. My question, assuming Courtland closes, that leaves us with the 10 assets to talk about. Is there any reason you could give why Courtland left these assets out? Was there a theme? I realize Watergate 600 is a unique asset, but among the remaining apartment assets, was there something about those that didn't meet their investment goals or their criteria or whatever it is? Is there some reason that kind of runs through it, why those assets are left out of the deal? Speaker 200:24:24Michael, as I said earlier, it was a very thorough process that was conducted by our Board and with the transaction committee, and a number of strategic alternatives and combinations were considered. As we all have said, additional information regarding all of the alternatives that were evaluated are going to be in our upcoming proxy statement. Our Board determined that the combination of this portfolio sale to Courtland plus the individual sales of the remaining assets was the right path forward to maximize value for our shareholders. Speaker 200:25:06Okay. Were there interested buyers for the remaining assets as you ran the process that maybe you could go back to? Do you think being a motivated seller impacts the value now as you liquidate those assets, do you think? Speaker 200:25:25I'm sure from a macro level, Michael, I think that, obviously, when we look back at our process, you're going to have a wider pool of bidders on a one-off basis versus an entity-level basis. We're looking forward to commencing our sales process and getting the maximum value allowable from the market for our shareholders. Speaker 200:25:54Okay. Lastly for me, I assume you'll be making the additional distributions as you close deals, so it won't just be one at the end. Also, as you run the operation forward now, over however long this takes, how lean does the operation get in terms of overhead and kind of continuing to run the company now the next few months? Speaker 300:26:19Yeah, Michael, as far as the distributions, obviously we'll suspend our quarterly distribution after the $0.18 distribution that I mentioned in my prepared remarks in October. Future liquidating distributions would be at the Board's discretion following future sales. As far as you talked about expenses, we expect some changes will be made to expenses as we conduct the sales of the remaining assets and begin to reduce the size of the company. Those estimates are in the numbers that we have talked about. Speaker 300:26:58All right. Thank you, guys. Appreciate it. Speaker 400:27:02Thank you. Once again, everyone, if you have any questions or comments, please press star then one on your phone. Your next question is coming from John Pawlowski from Green Street. Your line is live. Speaker 400:27:16Thanks for the time. I know you can't quantify the expected frictional costs, but I'm just confirming that the distributions you laid out to shareholders in the press release are net of all expected costs, and there aren't any additional costs that might drive a diminution in proceeds to shareholders when all is said and done? Speaker 300:27:35Yeah, John, this is Steve Freishtat, and you're correct that the estimates that we have include estimated expenses and payment of liabilities. Speaker 300:27:44Okay. I want a few questions on the timing of the liquidation. First, on the remaining multifamily assets, could you put brackets around like fastest and slowest you think you can get, or the next buyer could close on the D.C. and Maryland assets that need to go through or potentially need to go through a right of first refusal process? What's the quickest and the slowest you think the multifamily assets could sell? Speaker 300:28:12I can start off on that, John. Elme intends to begin the process of marketing our assets, the nine multifamily assets and Watergate 600, starting in the third quarter, with obviously the view towards completing all of the asset sales within the next 12 months. In terms of, you mentioned, you know, Washington, D.C. and the TOPA process, what I would say to that is that we've been operating in this market for a very long time. We know the TOPA process, and we do plan to take the D.C. assets out along with the Maryland assets sooner rather than later, given the timeline that it does take to get through both the TOPA process in D.C. and HOC requirements in Montgomery County. We're going to certainly work with any tenant association and prospective buyer to progress the sale process in a timely manner. Speaker 300:29:01We feel that the timelines that we have laid out, in terms of being able to complete in the next 12 months, are realistic, taking into account those processes. Speaker 300:29:13Okay. I just have a question on why it would take a full 12 months. Do the 12 months just give you enough cushion and potentially a dose of conservatism, or do you really think, you know, a TOPA process or a ROFR process in Maryland could really take 12 months? My understanding would be more of a four to six-month process in these markets, but I could be wrong. Speaker 300:29:40Yeah, John, when we're talking about 12 months, we are talking about, you know, the entire RemainCo portfolio. We're not commenting on the specific timeline for any one asset. We have laid out the view of trying to complete all of the asset sales within that 12-month period. Speaker 300:30:00Okay. One more from me. Could you share some views on the lease roll at Watergate 600? I think it's 82% leased right now. Where is that leasing percentage likely to trend in the next six months based off of known move-outs and leasing progress you're doing right now? Speaker 200:30:20We are still in discussions with our largest tenant to determine their ultimate footprint. Your 82% number is accurate, which is where we hope to finish at the end of 2025. We do recognize that we have almost 9% expiring in 2026, and we hope to be successful in some of our releasing efforts on that. Speaker 200:30:55Okay. Sorry. One more. Bear with me. I want to go back to the timing. Is there anything other than the potential challenges of selling Watergate 600 and the regulation hurdles for the multifamily? Is there anything idiosyncratic in this portfolio that would take 12 months for RemainCo to liquidate? Again, it strikes me as a long horizon. Speaker 200:31:23No. I think we've laid out that there will be different timelines associated with each asset in the portfolio, but we are going to begin kicking them off starting in the third quarter and will be working to execute the sale process as quickly as practically possible. Speaker 200:31:44Okay, thank you. Speaker 400:31:48Thank you. Your next question is coming from Cooper Clark from Wells Fargo. Your line is live. Speaker 400:31:56Hey, this is Jamie Feldman following up. Just stepping away from the transaction for a second, you guys have had front row seats in probably the most controversial and interesting apartment market in the country this year with the Doge announcements and all the other ups and downs of the market. Can you just talk us through kind of looking back at the headlines, the timing of the headlines, and the impact on leasing volumes across your markets, across your submarkets? I think we're all just trying to understand what the real impact is. DC is kind of surprised to the upside so far for people. Is it over? Or maybe by the time some of these layoffs hit and people are off their, the period after layoffs where they're still getting paid, like we still have a shoe to drop. Speaker 400:32:49Just curious what your thoughts are across the different submarkets within DC. Speaker 200:32:57Jamie, it's Paul. I'll start and then I'll ask Tiffany to follow up on our portfolio and what we've observed. I think that the alarm bells that were sounded right at the beginning of the year were probably a bit overblown in terms of our ability to continue the momentum. I think we tried to articulate that in our guidance for 2025. We did have things slowing down at the back half of the year, which we did incorporate in there, and we did factor in a number of various scenarios and outcomes that could impact both our occupancy and our pricing leverage. I feel that right now the market, and Tiffany can get into it more, the market will be either based on seasonality or some other external factors. We will see some type of slowdown. Speaker 200:34:09I think if you look at Elme Communities' track record for the first six months of this year, we've had beats and we feel very optimistic about this portfolio and the assets moving forward. Tiffany? Speaker 200:34:26Yeah, just kind of adding on to that. As I mentioned in my prepared remarks, monthly effective rent growth for the Washington Metro area continues to outpace the national average. We do also see that the federal defense spending that is going to be projected to happen is now going to exceed prior estimates, which could meaningfully offset some of the broader potential federal workforce reductions that Paul mentioned. In terms of what we've been seeing actually in our portfolio year to date, occupancy has actually remained very strong in both the first and second quarter. Our occupancy in the DMV exceeded 96%. As I mentioned in response to Cooper's earlier question, year to date, we have had strong positive blended lease rate growth in our Virginia portfolio, and we've seen positive blended lease rate growth in our Maryland portfolio. D.C. properties remained a little bit flattish. Speaker 200:35:24Overall, the DMV has continued to perform well in terms of both occupancy and lease rate growth. Speaker 200:35:33Okay. Thank you for the color. Are you able to talk us through transfer taxes by your different submarkets as we think about the sale? Speaker 300:35:45No, Jamie, I think that information will be in the proxy. It will, of course, be submitting in due course. Speaker 300:35:57Okay. As we think about management incentives from a transaction, is that all baked into the fully diluted share count, or are there going to be incremental incentives on a sale? Speaker 300:36:09Again, Jamie, I'd say all of the transaction costs that we're estimating, you know, we'll have additional details on that in the proxy. Speaker 300:36:20Okay. All right. Speaker 300:36:24Again, everything, all of the transaction costs that we expect are in the estimates that we have provided. Speaker 300:36:34Right. Okay. All right. Thank you and good luck with the execution and closing. Speaker 200:36:40Thank you, Jamie. Speaker 400:36:44Thank you. That concludes our Q&A session. I'll now hand the conference back to Paul McDermott, Chief Executive Officer, for closing remarks. Please go ahead. Speaker 200:36:54Thank you, everyone, for joining us today. We look forward to keeping you informed as we move forward with our plan to return capital to our shareholders. Speaker 400:37:07Thank you. Everyone, this concludes today's event. You may disconnect at this time and have a wonderful day. Thank you for your participation.Read morePowered by