NYSE:EPR EPR Properties Q1 2026 Earnings Report $58.63 -0.08 (-0.14%) As of 01:59 PM Eastern This is a fair market value price provided by Massive. Learn more. ProfileEarnings HistoryForecast EPR Properties EPS ResultsActual EPS$0.74Consensus EPS $0.76Beat/MissMissed by -$0.02One Year Ago EPS$1.21EPR Properties Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$181.25 millionExpected Revenue$150.02 millionBeat/MissBeat by +$31.24 millionYoY Revenue Growth+3.60%EPR Properties Announcement DetailsQuarterQ1 2026Date5/6/2026TimeAfter Market ClosesConference Call DateThursday, May 7, 2026Conference Call Time8:30AM ETUpcoming EarningsEPR Properties' Q2 2026 earnings is estimated for Wednesday, July 29, 2026, based on past reporting schedules, with a conference call scheduled on Thursday, July 30, 2026 at 8:30 AM ET. Check back for transcripts, audio, and key financial metrics as they become available.Conference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptSlide DeckPress Release (8-K)Quarterly Report (10-Q)SEC FilingEarnings HistoryCompany ProfileSlide DeckFull Screen Slide DeckPowered by EPR Properties Q1 2026 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrMay 7, 2026 ShareLink copied to clipboard.Key Takeaways Positive Sentiment: FFO as adjusted rose 5.9% year-over-year to $1.26 per share and management raised 2026 FFO guidance (midpoint ~6.5% growth) while also increasing the quarterly dividend by 5.1% to an annualized $3.72. Positive Sentiment: The company completed the majority of a $315 million acquisition of a 7-park Six Flags regional portfolio (6 properties closed, La Ronde expected in Q2), marking its largest post-COVID deal and expanding its experiential footprint. Positive Sentiment: Portfolio and balance-sheet metrics remain healthy: $7.1 billion gross investment across 335 properties that are ~99% leased/operated, strong coverage ratios (fixed charge 3.3x; interest & debt service 3.9x), and pro forma net debt/EBITDARE ~4.8x below target range. Neutral Sentiment: Capital activity includes an ATM forward sale (~$47.5M potential proceeds), increased 2026 investment guidance to $500M–$600M (highest since COVID), and higher disposition targets ($50M–$100M) to fund growth and recycle capital. Positive Sentiment: Operational trends support the thesis: theatrical box office was up ~25% in Q1, fitness & wellness remain resilient with rising per-visit spend, and ski/geographic diversification offset uneven weather — all reinforcing experiential demand. AI Generated. May Contain Errors.Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallEPR Properties Q1 202600:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2xTranscript SectionsPresentationParticipantsPresentationSkip to Participants Operator00:00:00Hello, and welcome to the EPR Properties first quarter 2026 earnings call. We ask that you please hold all questions until the completion of the formal remarks, at which time you will be given instructions for the question and answer session. As a reminder, this conference call is being recorded today. If you have any objections, please disconnect at this time. I will now hand the call over to Brian Moriarty, Senior Vice President of Corporate Communications. Brian MoriartySVP of Corporate Communications at EPR Properties00:00:33Thank you, operator. Thanks for joining us today for our first quarter 2026 earnings call and webcast. Participants on today's call are Greg Silvers, Chairman and CEO, Ben Fox, Executive Vice President and CIO, and Mark Peterson, Executive Vice President and CFO. I'll start the call by informing you that this call may include forward-looking statements as defined by the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995, identified by such words as will, be, intend, continue, believe, may expect, hope, anticipate, or other such comparable terms. The company's actual financial condition and the results of operations may vary materially from those contemplated by such forward-looking statements. Discussion of those factors that would cause results to differ materially from these forward-looking statements are contained in the company's SEC filings, including the company's reports on form 10-K and 10-Q. Brian MoriartySVP of Corporate Communications at EPR Properties00:01:33Additionally, this will contain references to certain non-GAAP measures which we believe are useful in evaluating the company's performance. A reconciliation of these measures to the most directly comparable GAAP measures are included in today's earnings release and supplemental information furnished to the SEC under form 8-K. If you wish to follow along, today's earnings release, supplemental, and earnings call presentation are all available on the investor center page of the company's website, www.eprkc.com. Now I'll turn the call over to Greg Silvers. Greg SilversChairman and CEO at EPR Properties00:02:12Thank you, Brian. Good morning, everyone, and welcome to our first quarter of 2026 earnings call and webcast. In previous quarters, we've discussed our focus on accelerating growth. For the quarter, we delivered a 5.9% increase in FFO as adjusted per share versus the prior year and have established strong momentum as we accelerate on our investment spending for the year. The centerpiece of our investments was our announced acquisition of a seven park regional portfolio from Six Flags. This $315 million portfolio is our largest acquisition in the post-COVID era, and we're pleased to own parks that have demonstrated success in the past and offer significant opportunities for the future. Greg SilversChairman and CEO at EPR Properties00:02:57These properties comprise more than 1,600 acres across six states and Canada, include 418 attractions, and have established guest bases that draw approximately 4.5 million visitors annually. We are delighted to be partnering with proven operators, Enchanted Parks to operate the U.S. parks, and La Ronde Operations to operate La Ronde in Montreal. These parks have become staples in their communities and have established multi-generational patronage by delivering fun, excitement, and lasting memories. Supporting both the stability of our portfolio and our confidence in our investment outlook is the sustained growth in consumer spending in the experience economy. As we highlight in our investor presentation, personal consumption expenditures in most of the categories we invest in have been growing for many years and most recently increased 7% from 2024 to 2025. Greg SilversChairman and CEO at EPR Properties00:03:54In an environment with a variety of macroeconomic crosscurrents, our overall portfolio coverage remains stable and resilient, with most tenants reporting steady or improving results. We're pleased to see box office running ahead of last year, supported by a variety of genres and titles. Fitness and wellness continue to demonstrate resilience as many consumers view this category as an essential part of their lifestyle. This reordering of priorities, where consumers increasingly treat fitness and wellness as protected, non-discretionary spending, reinforces the durability of the segment and supports the long-term thesis behind our investments in this category. I'm pleased to report that we're increasing both our investment spending and earnings guidance. Last year, we delivered 5.1% growth at FFO as adjusted per share. Greg SilversChairman and CEO at EPR Properties00:04:47With today's update, the midpoint of our 2026 guidance for FFO as adjusted per share represents 6.5% growth. This significant growth reflects the strength of our investments to date, our future pipeline, the quality of our portfolio, and the momentum we've established. As our portfolio continues to expand and diversify, we anticipate additional opportunities to capitalize on the experiential movement and strengthen our competitive advantage. I'm going to turn over the call to Ben Fox, who is joining us for his first call as CIO. We look forward to his leadership and contributions in the coming years. Ben, please take it from here. Ben FoxEVP and CIO at EPR Properties00:05:28Thank you, Greg. I appreciate that. I am very pleased with the positive momentum we have demonstrated to date with our investment activity. In the first quarter, we completed $51.3 million of investments, including the previously announced acquisition of a VITAL Climbing Gym located on the Lower East Side of Manhattan, as well as already committed development capital. Subsequent to quarter end, we completed the acquisition of six properties from Six Flags Entertainment, representing the substantial majority of this $315 million seven property transaction. We expect the remaining property, La Ronde, located in Canada, to close in Q2. This is a notable investment which further diversifies the portfolio alongside best-in-class operators. It underscores the value proposition we are uniquely positioned to deliver. Ben FoxEVP and CIO at EPR Properties00:06:29Our deep roster of client relationships enabled us to provide Six Flags with a one-stop solution as it sought to reduce its operating footprint. By bringing trusted, proven operating partners to the table, we helped Six Flags achieve its objectives while acquiring irreplaceable real estate. In addition to these highlighted investments, as of March 31st, we expect approximately $71 million in additional investment for existing experiential development and redevelopment projects, substantially all of which should fund over the balance of this year. Given the acceleration in our investment velocity, we're pleased to increase our investment guidance to $500 million-$600 million, which represents our highest investment expectation since COVID. This increase is reflective of the depth and breadth of opportunities we're seeing across all our verticals. We expect investment activity for 2026 to be weighted more toward acquisitions than development. Ben FoxEVP and CIO at EPR Properties00:07:40We also expect to continue employing convertible or other similar mortgage structures selectively where it makes sense for both us and our clients. Significantly, this increase in investment cadence demonstrates the depth and quality of relationships our investments team has created, allowing us to generate attractive proprietary deal flow across the experience economy. Before turning to the portfolio update, I want to spend a minute discussing the competitive landscape and pricing. Although the net lease sector is generally a competitive market, we're seeing cap rates holding steady for the investments we target. Again, this is reflective of the unique relationships we have and the insights that our underwriting and asset management teams provide. If anything, the continued volatility in the capital markets is providing an uplift in both the number of opportunities we're seeing and the corresponding conversion ratio for turning these opportunities into closed investments. Ben FoxEVP and CIO at EPR Properties00:08:46Turning now to an update on the portfolio. At the end of the quarter, our portfolio represented $7.1 billion of gross investment value, consisting of 335 properties, which were 99% leased or operated. 94% of this value reflects investments across experiential assets. These 280 properties are operated by 54 clients and continue to be 99% leased or operated. The remaining 6% of the portfolio represents our education segment comprised of 55 properties leased by five operators. At the end of the quarter, these properties were 100% leased. Importantly, the portfolio remains very healthy with two times unit level rent coverage. This coverage demonstrates the resiliency that our portfolio diversification creates. Moreover, it's also reflective of resilient consumer spending patterns and the continued prioritization of experiences. Ben FoxEVP and CIO at EPR Properties00:09:53Notably, within our theater segment, the first quarter saw a 25% increase in North American box office gross, benefiting from an increase in both attendance and the number of films released. The current film slate sets the rest of the year up favorably compared to last year. Several recent announcements have continued to remove uncertainty while demonstrating the enduring power of theatrical exhibition. First, both the Writers' and Screen Actors Guilds have reached new four-year agreements, removing any concern of strikes for the foreseeable future. Second, Amazon MGM has announced a commitment to 15 theatrical releases in 2027 with the standard theatrical window of 45 days. Following this move, Universal reversed course on its previous 17-day window, now committing to the standard window of at least 45 days. Ben FoxEVP and CIO at EPR Properties00:10:54Most recently, Netflix announced on Friday that the upcoming release of Narnia, which initially was slated for a two-week release exclusively in IMAX, will be getting a wide release in both IMAX and standard formats for a 49-day theatrical window before moving to streaming. These moves reflect studios' recognition that theatrical releases serve a dual purpose, generating box office economics upfront while meaningfully enhancing the value of a film's streaming window downstream. Within the Eat and Play segment, our operators performed in line with the prior year, seeing a small amount of attendance volatility offset by higher average spending per visit. Geographic diversification produced incremental gains in our ski portfolio, with significant outperformance in the Mid-Atlantic and East Coast properties more than offsetting the historically poor snowfall across the Western United States. Ben FoxEVP and CIO at EPR Properties00:11:59Our Fitness and Wellness segment continues to deliver solid performance, and we're continuing to see incremental gains at some of our recently opened properties. Lastly, our education portfolio continues to perform well, and coverage in this segment remains strong. Touching upon dispositions, the asset management team has done an outstanding job over the past several years on risk management and on resolving vacancies. Although dispositions targeting proactive risk management will remain a core element of our asset management strategy, the emphasis over the near term will be on generating accretive proceeds through sales of non-core assets. Accordingly, we are increasing our disposition guidance by $25 million on the lower and upper bounds to a new range of $50 million-$100 million. In summary, our portfolio continues to be resilient, and we remain enthusiastic about the investment landscape. Ben FoxEVP and CIO at EPR Properties00:13:03We are encouraged by the depth of our investment pipeline at this point in the year and have confidence in our revised investment guidance. With that, I'll turn it over to Mark for a review of our financial performance. Mark PetersonEVP, CFO, and Treasurer at EPR Properties00:13:17Thank you, Ben. Today, I will discuss our strong financial performance for the first quarter, provide an update on our balance sheet, and close by discussing the increases to our earnings and investment spending guidance for the year. FFO as adjusted for the quarter was $1.26 per share versus $1.19 in the prior year, an increase of 5.9%. AFFO for the quarter was $1.29 per share compared to $1.21 in the prior year, an increase of 6.6%. Before I walk through the key variances, I wanna explain two items excluded from FFO as adjusted and AFFO. First, during the quarter, we exercised our purchase option to convert a $70 million mortgage note receivable secured by an experiential lodging property into a wholly-owned rental property subject to a long-term triple net lease. Mark PetersonEVP, CFO, and Treasurer at EPR Properties00:14:05At the time of the conversion, we recognized a $1 million gain on real estate transactions and a $1.3 million benefit for credit losses. Second, benefit for credit losses was $5.6 million for the quarter and related to the conversion I just discussed, as well as changes to our current expected credit losses in our third-party model based on improvements to both property-level performance and certain relevant economic conditions. Moving to the key variances. Total revenue for the quarter was $181.3 million versus $175 million in the prior year, an increase of $6.3 million. This increase was mostly due to the impact of investment spending as well as rent and interest bumps. Mark PetersonEVP, CFO, and Treasurer at EPR Properties00:14:51This was partially offset by dispositions and a decrease in percentage rents and participating interest, which was $2.5 million for the quarter versus $5.1 million in the prior year. This decrease was mostly due to out-of-period percentage rent and participating interest totaling $2.9 million recognized in the first quarter of 2025. Both other income and other expense relate primarily to our consolidated operating properties, including The Kartrite Hotel and Indoor Waterpark and our four operating theaters. The decrease in other income and other expense versus prior year is due primarily to the sale of two operating theater properties in the first quarter of 2025. On the expense side, interest expense net increased by $1.7 million due to an increase in average borrowings and a decrease in capitalized interest versus the prior year. Mark PetersonEVP, CFO, and Treasurer at EPR Properties00:15:41Turning to the next slide, I'll review some of the company's key credit ratios. As you can see, our coverage ratios continue to be very strong with fixed charge coverage at 3.3x and both interest and debt service coverage ratios at 3.9x. Our pro forma net debt to annualized adjusted EBITDARE was 4.8x at quarter end, which is below the low end of our targeted range of five to 5.6x. Pro forma net debt is calculated by subtracting from net debt the estimated net proceeds from the forward sales agreement we executed during the quarter that I will discuss shortly. Mark PetersonEVP, CFO, and Treasurer at EPR Properties00:16:17Additionally, our pro forma net debt to gross assets was 39% on a book basis at quarter end, and our common dividend continues to be very well-covered with an AFFO payout ratio of 70% for the first quarter. Let's move to our capital market activities and balance sheet, which is in great shape to support our continued growth. At quarter end, we had consolidated debt of $2.9 billion, of which all is either fixed rate debt or debt that has been fixed through interest rate swaps with an overall blended coupon of approximately 4.4%. Our liquidity position remains strong with $68.5 million of cash on hand at quarter end and no balance drawn on our $1 billion revolver. Mark PetersonEVP, CFO, and Treasurer at EPR Properties00:16:56In March, we were pleased to enter into a forward sales agreement under our ATM program to sell an aggregate 797,422 common shares for initial gross proceeds of 47.5 Million or an average sale price of $59.52 per share. We can settle the outstanding shares any time before March 1st, 2027 for the gross proceeds subject to various adjustments. As of today, we have not settled any of these shares. We are increasing our 2026 FFO as adjusted per share guidance to a range of $5.37-$5.53 from a range of $5.28-$5.48, representing an increase versus the prior year of 6.5% at the midpoint. We expect a similar percentage increase in AFFO per share. Mark PetersonEVP, CFO, and Treasurer at EPR Properties00:17:43We are also increasing our 2026 guidance for investment spending to a range of $500 million-$600 million from a range of $400 million-$500 million, and increasing disposition proceeds to a range of $50 million-$100 million from a range of $25 million-$75 million. We are confirming our percentage rent and participating interest income guidance of $18.5 million-$22.5 million, which continues to be very heavily weighted to the back half of the year. We are also confirming our G&A expense guidance of $56 million-$59 million and the guidance for our consolidated operating properties, which is provided by giving a range for other income and other expense. Guidance details can be found on page 23 of our supplemental. Mark PetersonEVP, CFO, and Treasurer at EPR Properties00:18:23Finally, we were pleased to have increased our monthly common and dividend by 5.1% to $3.72 per share annualized, which began with the dividend payable April 15th to shareholders of record as of March 31st. We expect our 2026 dividend to be well covered with an AFFO payout ratio below 70% based on the midpoint of guidance. With that, I'll turn it back over to Greg for his closing remarks. Greg SilversChairman and CEO at EPR Properties00:18:50Thank you, Mark. As discussed today, both our investments and earnings are accelerating and reflect the resiliency and opportunity of our experiential focus. We've also demonstrated our ability to utilize multiple sources of capital to fuel this growth with the initial execution of our ATM program, along with opportunistically recycling capital with planned asset sales. All of these positives reinforce our conviction that EPR's unique platform and asset classes position us to deliver outsized shareholder returns. With that, operator, why don't we open it up for questions? Operator00:19:30At this time, if you would like to ask a question, please click on the Raise Hand button, which can be found on the black bar at the bottom of your screen. When it is your turn, you will receive a message on your screen from the host allowing you to talk, and then you will hear your name called. Please accept, unmute your audio, and ask your question. If you are on a mobile device using the app, simply tap the three dots or More button to find the Raise Hand feature. Lastly, if you are calling in today, star nine will activate the Raise Hand and use star six to mute and unmute. We will wait one moment to allow the queue to form. Our first question will come from Yana Galan with BofA. Please unmute yourself, accept, and ask your question. Yana. Yana GalanAnalyst at Bank of America00:20:19Thank you. Operator00:20:19Please go ahead. Yana GalanAnalyst at Bank of America00:20:20Good morning, and congrats on a really nice first quarter. Mark, for the increase in AFFO guidance, can you help parse out how much came from a slightly better first quarter, and then how much you're seeing from the acceleration in investment activity? Or is it maybe also better yields on that investment activity? Mark PetersonEVP, CFO, and Treasurer at EPR Properties00:20:40Yeah, we did. You know, we were a little better for the quarter, about $0.01 or $0.02. As you look forward, really the increase is due to a couple things. One, obviously, we raised our investment spending and paid for that via the capital raise, but there was probably $0.01 out of that increased guidance. I think more broadly, we got a benefit from being fairly conservative with respect to the Six Flags transaction at the end of the year because we weren't sure, you know, for sure it would close and when exactly it would close. I think the ultimate outcome of that was better than anticipated. Mark PetersonEVP, CFO, and Treasurer at EPR Properties00:21:16I think the remaining investments, not just the increase for the year, but the remaining investments are coming in, coming in a little bit sooner than planned and at a better cap rate. The last thing I'll mention that impacted our FFOAA guidance was the Margaritaville conversion, from a note to a lease. We got incremental straight-line rent from that, and that was probably a little under $0.02 in terms of straight-line benefit converting from a mortgage to now a 20-year lease, with escalators that had some straight-line impact. Yana GalanAnalyst at Bank of America00:21:52Thank you. Maybe just one for Ben on the strategy to kind of employ more convertible or other mortgage structures as a way to invest in assets. Just curious, is kind of the first quarter purchase option that you guys exercised kind of a key example of what this would look like? Ben FoxEVP and CIO at EPR Properties00:22:11Yeah, Yana, that's exactly right. You know, really the mortgages that we use, as I mentioned, are pathways to real estate ownership, and so that conversion of the Margaritaville is exactly representative of the types of structures we enter into. As opportunities present themselves, we will convert those and use those selectively. Yana GalanAnalyst at Bank of America00:22:41Thank you. Operator00:22:44Thank you. Our next question will come from Smedes Rose with Citi. You will receive a message on your screen. Please accept, unmute your line, and ask your question. Bennett, please go ahead. Smedes RoseAnalyst at Citi00:22:57Hi, thank you. I just wanted to follow up on that on these convertible mortgage opportunities. Could you maybe just talk a little bit about sort of how many you have and kind of, you know, what that could look like, you know, over the next couple of years as you choose to go down that path? Ben FoxEVP and CIO at EPR Properties00:23:16Yeah. It's a good question. Really, if you look at our mortgage book, the majority of those, probably more than 80% are convertible, right? What we're highlighting here is with this transaction in Margaritaville, that is just an example of the opportunities that sit within the existing portfolio, as well as the types of structures that you could see us enter into in the upcoming quarters and years. Smedes RoseAnalyst at Citi00:23:50Okay, thanks. I just wanted to ask you on your the acquisition of theme parks from Six Flags, do you guys see that them, I guess, as a potential partner going forward? Is it your sense that Six Flags may want to shed more what they would consider non-core assets? Is that something you're willing, you know, would be willing to lean into more at this juncture? Greg SilversChairman and CEO at EPR Properties00:24:13Smedes, it's Greg. I think, again, I think clearly we've demonstrated a partnership with them. We'll definitely take a look at that. I think they're exploring. I think, you know, real estate solutions are being explored across the board in the attraction space. I think our team has demonstrated our ability to be a market leader in that space, whether that's with Six Flags or with other participants. I think us carving out our leadership position will ultimately probably create more opportunities, which I think we think we find very attractive. Smedes RoseAnalyst at Citi00:24:48Great. Thank you. Appreciate it. Greg SilversChairman and CEO at EPR Properties00:24:50Thank you, Smedes. Operator00:24:52Thank you. Our next question comes from Upal Rana with KeyBanc Capital Markets. You'll receive a message on your screen. Please unmute and ask your question. Upal, go ahead. Upal RanaAnalyst at KeyBanc Capital Markets00:25:03Great. Thank you. Just on the Six Flags transaction, you know, can you walk through the strategy behind- Greg SilversChairman and CEO at EPR Properties00:25:12Upal, we kind of cut you off, but I think you're saying what was the strategy? I think our point was, again, long term, we look at these as incredibly stable assets, if you look over time. That these are, they're market dominant that you just cannot create. As been reported, these assets were, you know, have had multi-billion dollars spent on them that we can buy very attractively, which we think create long-term stability. They're very much part of the communities in where they exist. We feel like this is really strong anchors to an experiential portfolio. I think again, as we said, there's really been no new parks built in, you know, decades. We feel the durability and the resilience of these are quite good. Greg SilversChairman and CEO at EPR Properties00:26:08We will continue, as I said, to explore opportunities. Upal RanaAnalyst at KeyBanc Capital Markets00:26:14Okay, great. That was helpful. Then maybe, you know, in your prepared remarks, you mentioned you're encouraged by your pipeline that you're seeing. You know, maybe you could talk a little bit about that and what types of deals you're seeing and any kind of sizes. Greg SilversChairman and CEO at EPR Properties00:26:28I'll let Ben add a little bit to this, but I think what we're encouraged is kind of what I talked about in the beginning. Experiential spending continues to accelerate and we continue to see you know, multiple reports about how people are valuing experiences over things and continuing to prioritize those. Again, whether it's attractions, fitness, eat and play, across the board, we're seeing strength. Therefore, I think, we would say that almost all of our categories, as we said, we're not growing theaters, but all of our categories, our pipeline of opportunities is expanding. I'll let Ben, you know, if you wanna add anything. Ben FoxEVP and CIO at EPR Properties00:27:12I think that's exactly right. It really is across the board, and, you know, just the ability to get a lot of our relationships to the table is increasing, and there's a general increased willingness to transact and de-risk capital markets exposure. Upal RanaAnalyst at KeyBanc Capital Markets00:27:37Great. Thank you. Greg SilversChairman and CEO at EPR Properties00:27:39Thank you. Operator00:27:39Thank you. As a reminder, if you would like to ask a question, please use the Raise Hand button or simply star nine will activate your raise hand by mobile. Our next question comes from Justin Haasbeek with UBS. Justin, please go ahead. Justin HaasbeekAnalyst at UBS00:28:00Yeah, this is Justin Haasbeek on for Michael Goldsmith. Thanks for taking my questions. Are you seeing any cap rate compression or increased competition in your top three acquisition segments of fitness and wellness, attractions and Eat and Play? Are those still your top three, in terms of acquisition focus? Greg SilversChairman and CEO at EPR Properties00:28:21I would say, yeah. I mean, again, as especially on our flow business, I mean, clearly with what we did with attractions this year, that was a big anchor transaction. Our flow business, I think those are still the top. As Ben commented in his opening comments, I think our cap rates remain stable. I think, again, our position as kind of a leading market participant here makes us get the first call usually on these type of assets. I think there's always gonna be competition, but again, everyone in this space knows who we are, and we're going to get that call. I think that bodes well for us continuing to grow that pipeline more and more. Justin HaasbeekAnalyst at UBS00:29:07Okay, great. Does the strong box office performance in the first quarter here, does that change how you think about your exposure? You know, has there been any private market interest in theaters? Has that changed at all? Greg SilversChairman and CEO at EPR Properties00:29:21First of all, I should answer the first one. I don't think it's changed our interest in the sense that we still believe that increasing our diversity is a strategic objective of ours. I think there's no doubt that there continues to be getting and improving interest in the theater space as this continues, especially with some of the things that Ben mentioned in his comments. You've got the studios now kind of embracing much more on a theatrical forward kind of direction, whether that's embracing the windows, whether that's Netflix now starting to use theatrical. I think there's a lot more positive feeling about it. We're seeing more interest in there. We'll see if that plays out to ability for us to transact. Greg SilversChairman and CEO at EPR Properties00:30:16There's no doubt that we're getting more inbound calls on our portfolio. Great. Thank you. Operator00:30:25Thank you. Our next question will come from Michael Carroll with RBC Capital Markets. You'll receive a message on your screen. Please accept, unmute your audio, and ask your question. Michael, please go ahead. Michael CarrollAnalyst at RBC Capital Markets00:30:39Yeah, thanks. Greg, can you talk a little bit about the current macro uncertainty and how that has impacted the experiential space? I guess mainly, have you received any calls from potential sellers looking to further de-risk, I guess, their company and maybe doing a deal with you, just given the potential volatility that could be caused in the capital markets? Greg SilversChairman and CEO at EPR Properties00:31:02I think it's been said. We're getting inbound calls of people who are again, I think the idea of it used to be at the beginning or the end of last year, wait till rates improve, and now I think that that volatility in that market has helped in that sense. I think, though, the thing that's got us is the underlying support and resiliency of the activities. I mean, you know, as we said, our coverage remains very strong against this backdrop. I think it gives us confidence to move forward that the consumer is still there. I think there is, as Ben noted, some people who on the capital side are looking at saying, "Okay, it doesn't look like rates are going materially down, and there is a risk with where we're at of them going up. Greg SilversChairman and CEO at EPR Properties00:31:49Let's see if we can lock in transactions." Ben, I don't know if that's consistent. Ben FoxEVP and CIO at EPR Properties00:31:53That's very consistent with what we're seeing. Greg SilversChairman and CEO at EPR Properties00:31:55Yep. Michael CarrollAnalyst at RBC Capital Markets00:31:56Okay. On the disposition side, I know that you modestly increased your target. I mean, should we think about those sales still mainly be coming from the early education segment? Is that the focus, or is there other sales outside of that you can look at? Greg SilversChairman and CEO at EPR Properties00:32:12I think you're gonna see that probably will be a bulk of that. I think you will also see us, as I mentioned earlier, hopefully, you know, capitalize on some really interesting opportunities on our theater side to sell some assets so that we can show some real kind of interest in that. We'll have to go from there. Michael CarrollAnalyst at RBC Capital Markets00:32:34Okay. On the theater side, if you sell assets, I mean, I'm assuming you can't do much out of AMC, given that's now in a master lease, right? Unless you do a bigger JV. Should we think about those potential sales being with smaller operators? Greg SilversChairman and CEO at EPR Properties00:32:51Yeah, one-offs. One-offs or things. Yeah, one-offs and other opportunities there. You're exactly correct. It will probably not be out of the master lease. Michael CarrollAnalyst at RBC Capital Markets00:33:01Okay, great. Thanks, Greg. Greg SilversChairman and CEO at EPR Properties00:33:03Thank you. Operator00:33:05There are no more questions, so I will now turn the call back over to Greg Silvers, Chairman and CEO, for any closing remarks. Greg SilversChairman and CEO at EPR Properties00:33:13Thank you, guys. I appreciate the time and attention today. We look forward to talking to you as we go through the rest of the year and appreciate your interest. Thank you all. Ben FoxEVP and CIO at EPR Properties00:33:22Thank you. Operator00:33:24Thank you for joining EPR Properties first quarter 2026 earnings call. This concludes today's call. You may now disconnect.Read moreParticipantsExecutivesBen FoxEVP and CIOBrian MoriartySVP of Corporate CommunicationsGreg SilversChairman and CEOMark PetersonEVP, CFO, and TreasurerAnalystsJustin HaasbeekAnalyst at UBSMichael CarrollAnalyst at RBC Capital MarketsSmedes RoseAnalyst at CitiUpal RanaAnalyst at KeyBanc Capital MarketsYana GalanAnalyst at Bank of AmericaPowered by Earnings DocumentsSlide DeckPress Release(8-K)Quarterly report(10-Q) EPR Properties Earnings Headlines2 Top Dividend Stocks For A 'Higher-For-Longer' Rate EnvironmentMay 20 at 8:00 PM | seekingalpha.comEPR Properties (NYSE:EPR) Given Consensus Recommendation of "Hold" by AnalystsMay 15, 2026 | americanbankingnews.comI’m sounding the alarmMeta is cutting 10% of its workforce. Microsoft offered voluntary retirement to 7% of U.S. employees. Oracle, Amazon, Snap, and Block have done the same. Most assume this is about AI - but investor Porter Stansberry says the real driver runs far deeper. Goldman Sachs estimates 12,400 Americans are being financially harmed every day by this shift, while others grow wealthier. Stansberry - who predicted the internet economy's rise and recommended Amazon, Qualcomm, and Texas Instruments before they were household names - is now releasing a new investigation he calls The Final Displacement.May 22 at 1:00 AM | Porter & Company (Ad)EPR Properties Declares Monthly Dividend for Common ShareholdersMay 14, 2026 | businesswire.comOur 5 Top Monthly-Pay REITs Offer a Lifetime of Recession-Resistant IncomeMay 13, 2026 | 247wallst.comEPR Properties: The Valuation Disconnect Continues As Investments Hit Post-Pandemic RecordsMay 10, 2026 | seekingalpha.comSee More EPR Properties Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like EPR Properties? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on EPR Properties and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About EPR PropertiesEPR Properties (NYSE:EPR) is a real estate investment trust that specializes in experiential properties across the United States, Canada and select international markets. Established in 1997 and headquartered in Kansas City, Missouri, the company targets properties in the entertainment, recreation and education sectors. Its portfolio includes movie theaters, ski resorts, family entertainment centers, charter schools and other venues that benefit from consumer-driven experiences. The trust employs long-term, triple-net lease agreements, where tenants are responsible for real estate taxes, insurance and maintenance. This structure provides EPR Properties with predictable rent streams while allowing tenants to focus on their core operations. Key tenants include nationally recognized cinema chains, operators of amusement parks, and educational institutions under charter school arrangements. Over its history, EPR Properties has grown through strategic acquisitions and portfolio diversification. The company went public in 1998 under the name Education Properties Trust and rebranded in 2006 to reflect its broader focus on experiential real estate. Its assets span more than 40 U.S. states, several Canadian provinces and select international jurisdictions, positioning the trust to benefit from diverse demographic and economic trends. The company is led by Gregory R. Bilde, who serves as Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, supported by a senior management team with extensive experience in real estate investment, finance and operations. EPR Properties’ governance framework emphasizes disciplined underwriting, active asset management and a commitment to sustainable property enhancements that drive tenant and shareholder value over the long term.View EPR Properties ProfileRead more More Earnings Resources from MarketBeat Earnings Tools Today's Earnings Tomorrow's Earnings Next Week's Earnings Upcoming Earnings Calls Earnings Newsletter Earnings Call Transcripts Earnings Beats & Misses Corporate Guidance Earnings Screener Latest Articles Overextended, e.l.f. Beauty Is Primed to Rebound in Back HalfDeere Beats Q2 Estimates, But Ag Weakness Weighs on OutlookNVIDIA Price Pullback? 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PresentationSkip to Participants Operator00:00:00Hello, and welcome to the EPR Properties first quarter 2026 earnings call. We ask that you please hold all questions until the completion of the formal remarks, at which time you will be given instructions for the question and answer session. As a reminder, this conference call is being recorded today. If you have any objections, please disconnect at this time. I will now hand the call over to Brian Moriarty, Senior Vice President of Corporate Communications. Brian MoriartySVP of Corporate Communications at EPR Properties00:00:33Thank you, operator. Thanks for joining us today for our first quarter 2026 earnings call and webcast. Participants on today's call are Greg Silvers, Chairman and CEO, Ben Fox, Executive Vice President and CIO, and Mark Peterson, Executive Vice President and CFO. I'll start the call by informing you that this call may include forward-looking statements as defined by the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995, identified by such words as will, be, intend, continue, believe, may expect, hope, anticipate, or other such comparable terms. The company's actual financial condition and the results of operations may vary materially from those contemplated by such forward-looking statements. Discussion of those factors that would cause results to differ materially from these forward-looking statements are contained in the company's SEC filings, including the company's reports on form 10-K and 10-Q. Brian MoriartySVP of Corporate Communications at EPR Properties00:01:33Additionally, this will contain references to certain non-GAAP measures which we believe are useful in evaluating the company's performance. A reconciliation of these measures to the most directly comparable GAAP measures are included in today's earnings release and supplemental information furnished to the SEC under form 8-K. If you wish to follow along, today's earnings release, supplemental, and earnings call presentation are all available on the investor center page of the company's website, www.eprkc.com. Now I'll turn the call over to Greg Silvers. Greg SilversChairman and CEO at EPR Properties00:02:12Thank you, Brian. Good morning, everyone, and welcome to our first quarter of 2026 earnings call and webcast. In previous quarters, we've discussed our focus on accelerating growth. For the quarter, we delivered a 5.9% increase in FFO as adjusted per share versus the prior year and have established strong momentum as we accelerate on our investment spending for the year. The centerpiece of our investments was our announced acquisition of a seven park regional portfolio from Six Flags. This $315 million portfolio is our largest acquisition in the post-COVID era, and we're pleased to own parks that have demonstrated success in the past and offer significant opportunities for the future. Greg SilversChairman and CEO at EPR Properties00:02:57These properties comprise more than 1,600 acres across six states and Canada, include 418 attractions, and have established guest bases that draw approximately 4.5 million visitors annually. We are delighted to be partnering with proven operators, Enchanted Parks to operate the U.S. parks, and La Ronde Operations to operate La Ronde in Montreal. These parks have become staples in their communities and have established multi-generational patronage by delivering fun, excitement, and lasting memories. Supporting both the stability of our portfolio and our confidence in our investment outlook is the sustained growth in consumer spending in the experience economy. As we highlight in our investor presentation, personal consumption expenditures in most of the categories we invest in have been growing for many years and most recently increased 7% from 2024 to 2025. Greg SilversChairman and CEO at EPR Properties00:03:54In an environment with a variety of macroeconomic crosscurrents, our overall portfolio coverage remains stable and resilient, with most tenants reporting steady or improving results. We're pleased to see box office running ahead of last year, supported by a variety of genres and titles. Fitness and wellness continue to demonstrate resilience as many consumers view this category as an essential part of their lifestyle. This reordering of priorities, where consumers increasingly treat fitness and wellness as protected, non-discretionary spending, reinforces the durability of the segment and supports the long-term thesis behind our investments in this category. I'm pleased to report that we're increasing both our investment spending and earnings guidance. Last year, we delivered 5.1% growth at FFO as adjusted per share. Greg SilversChairman and CEO at EPR Properties00:04:47With today's update, the midpoint of our 2026 guidance for FFO as adjusted per share represents 6.5% growth. This significant growth reflects the strength of our investments to date, our future pipeline, the quality of our portfolio, and the momentum we've established. As our portfolio continues to expand and diversify, we anticipate additional opportunities to capitalize on the experiential movement and strengthen our competitive advantage. I'm going to turn over the call to Ben Fox, who is joining us for his first call as CIO. We look forward to his leadership and contributions in the coming years. Ben, please take it from here. Ben FoxEVP and CIO at EPR Properties00:05:28Thank you, Greg. I appreciate that. I am very pleased with the positive momentum we have demonstrated to date with our investment activity. In the first quarter, we completed $51.3 million of investments, including the previously announced acquisition of a VITAL Climbing Gym located on the Lower East Side of Manhattan, as well as already committed development capital. Subsequent to quarter end, we completed the acquisition of six properties from Six Flags Entertainment, representing the substantial majority of this $315 million seven property transaction. We expect the remaining property, La Ronde, located in Canada, to close in Q2. This is a notable investment which further diversifies the portfolio alongside best-in-class operators. It underscores the value proposition we are uniquely positioned to deliver. Ben FoxEVP and CIO at EPR Properties00:06:29Our deep roster of client relationships enabled us to provide Six Flags with a one-stop solution as it sought to reduce its operating footprint. By bringing trusted, proven operating partners to the table, we helped Six Flags achieve its objectives while acquiring irreplaceable real estate. In addition to these highlighted investments, as of March 31st, we expect approximately $71 million in additional investment for existing experiential development and redevelopment projects, substantially all of which should fund over the balance of this year. Given the acceleration in our investment velocity, we're pleased to increase our investment guidance to $500 million-$600 million, which represents our highest investment expectation since COVID. This increase is reflective of the depth and breadth of opportunities we're seeing across all our verticals. We expect investment activity for 2026 to be weighted more toward acquisitions than development. Ben FoxEVP and CIO at EPR Properties00:07:40We also expect to continue employing convertible or other similar mortgage structures selectively where it makes sense for both us and our clients. Significantly, this increase in investment cadence demonstrates the depth and quality of relationships our investments team has created, allowing us to generate attractive proprietary deal flow across the experience economy. Before turning to the portfolio update, I want to spend a minute discussing the competitive landscape and pricing. Although the net lease sector is generally a competitive market, we're seeing cap rates holding steady for the investments we target. Again, this is reflective of the unique relationships we have and the insights that our underwriting and asset management teams provide. If anything, the continued volatility in the capital markets is providing an uplift in both the number of opportunities we're seeing and the corresponding conversion ratio for turning these opportunities into closed investments. Ben FoxEVP and CIO at EPR Properties00:08:46Turning now to an update on the portfolio. At the end of the quarter, our portfolio represented $7.1 billion of gross investment value, consisting of 335 properties, which were 99% leased or operated. 94% of this value reflects investments across experiential assets. These 280 properties are operated by 54 clients and continue to be 99% leased or operated. The remaining 6% of the portfolio represents our education segment comprised of 55 properties leased by five operators. At the end of the quarter, these properties were 100% leased. Importantly, the portfolio remains very healthy with two times unit level rent coverage. This coverage demonstrates the resiliency that our portfolio diversification creates. Moreover, it's also reflective of resilient consumer spending patterns and the continued prioritization of experiences. Ben FoxEVP and CIO at EPR Properties00:09:53Notably, within our theater segment, the first quarter saw a 25% increase in North American box office gross, benefiting from an increase in both attendance and the number of films released. The current film slate sets the rest of the year up favorably compared to last year. Several recent announcements have continued to remove uncertainty while demonstrating the enduring power of theatrical exhibition. First, both the Writers' and Screen Actors Guilds have reached new four-year agreements, removing any concern of strikes for the foreseeable future. Second, Amazon MGM has announced a commitment to 15 theatrical releases in 2027 with the standard theatrical window of 45 days. Following this move, Universal reversed course on its previous 17-day window, now committing to the standard window of at least 45 days. Ben FoxEVP and CIO at EPR Properties00:10:54Most recently, Netflix announced on Friday that the upcoming release of Narnia, which initially was slated for a two-week release exclusively in IMAX, will be getting a wide release in both IMAX and standard formats for a 49-day theatrical window before moving to streaming. These moves reflect studios' recognition that theatrical releases serve a dual purpose, generating box office economics upfront while meaningfully enhancing the value of a film's streaming window downstream. Within the Eat and Play segment, our operators performed in line with the prior year, seeing a small amount of attendance volatility offset by higher average spending per visit. Geographic diversification produced incremental gains in our ski portfolio, with significant outperformance in the Mid-Atlantic and East Coast properties more than offsetting the historically poor snowfall across the Western United States. Ben FoxEVP and CIO at EPR Properties00:11:59Our Fitness and Wellness segment continues to deliver solid performance, and we're continuing to see incremental gains at some of our recently opened properties. Lastly, our education portfolio continues to perform well, and coverage in this segment remains strong. Touching upon dispositions, the asset management team has done an outstanding job over the past several years on risk management and on resolving vacancies. Although dispositions targeting proactive risk management will remain a core element of our asset management strategy, the emphasis over the near term will be on generating accretive proceeds through sales of non-core assets. Accordingly, we are increasing our disposition guidance by $25 million on the lower and upper bounds to a new range of $50 million-$100 million. In summary, our portfolio continues to be resilient, and we remain enthusiastic about the investment landscape. Ben FoxEVP and CIO at EPR Properties00:13:03We are encouraged by the depth of our investment pipeline at this point in the year and have confidence in our revised investment guidance. With that, I'll turn it over to Mark for a review of our financial performance. Mark PetersonEVP, CFO, and Treasurer at EPR Properties00:13:17Thank you, Ben. Today, I will discuss our strong financial performance for the first quarter, provide an update on our balance sheet, and close by discussing the increases to our earnings and investment spending guidance for the year. FFO as adjusted for the quarter was $1.26 per share versus $1.19 in the prior year, an increase of 5.9%. AFFO for the quarter was $1.29 per share compared to $1.21 in the prior year, an increase of 6.6%. Before I walk through the key variances, I wanna explain two items excluded from FFO as adjusted and AFFO. First, during the quarter, we exercised our purchase option to convert a $70 million mortgage note receivable secured by an experiential lodging property into a wholly-owned rental property subject to a long-term triple net lease. Mark PetersonEVP, CFO, and Treasurer at EPR Properties00:14:05At the time of the conversion, we recognized a $1 million gain on real estate transactions and a $1.3 million benefit for credit losses. Second, benefit for credit losses was $5.6 million for the quarter and related to the conversion I just discussed, as well as changes to our current expected credit losses in our third-party model based on improvements to both property-level performance and certain relevant economic conditions. Moving to the key variances. Total revenue for the quarter was $181.3 million versus $175 million in the prior year, an increase of $6.3 million. This increase was mostly due to the impact of investment spending as well as rent and interest bumps. Mark PetersonEVP, CFO, and Treasurer at EPR Properties00:14:51This was partially offset by dispositions and a decrease in percentage rents and participating interest, which was $2.5 million for the quarter versus $5.1 million in the prior year. This decrease was mostly due to out-of-period percentage rent and participating interest totaling $2.9 million recognized in the first quarter of 2025. Both other income and other expense relate primarily to our consolidated operating properties, including The Kartrite Hotel and Indoor Waterpark and our four operating theaters. The decrease in other income and other expense versus prior year is due primarily to the sale of two operating theater properties in the first quarter of 2025. On the expense side, interest expense net increased by $1.7 million due to an increase in average borrowings and a decrease in capitalized interest versus the prior year. Mark PetersonEVP, CFO, and Treasurer at EPR Properties00:15:41Turning to the next slide, I'll review some of the company's key credit ratios. As you can see, our coverage ratios continue to be very strong with fixed charge coverage at 3.3x and both interest and debt service coverage ratios at 3.9x. Our pro forma net debt to annualized adjusted EBITDARE was 4.8x at quarter end, which is below the low end of our targeted range of five to 5.6x. Pro forma net debt is calculated by subtracting from net debt the estimated net proceeds from the forward sales agreement we executed during the quarter that I will discuss shortly. Mark PetersonEVP, CFO, and Treasurer at EPR Properties00:16:17Additionally, our pro forma net debt to gross assets was 39% on a book basis at quarter end, and our common dividend continues to be very well-covered with an AFFO payout ratio of 70% for the first quarter. Let's move to our capital market activities and balance sheet, which is in great shape to support our continued growth. At quarter end, we had consolidated debt of $2.9 billion, of which all is either fixed rate debt or debt that has been fixed through interest rate swaps with an overall blended coupon of approximately 4.4%. Our liquidity position remains strong with $68.5 million of cash on hand at quarter end and no balance drawn on our $1 billion revolver. Mark PetersonEVP, CFO, and Treasurer at EPR Properties00:16:56In March, we were pleased to enter into a forward sales agreement under our ATM program to sell an aggregate 797,422 common shares for initial gross proceeds of 47.5 Million or an average sale price of $59.52 per share. We can settle the outstanding shares any time before March 1st, 2027 for the gross proceeds subject to various adjustments. As of today, we have not settled any of these shares. We are increasing our 2026 FFO as adjusted per share guidance to a range of $5.37-$5.53 from a range of $5.28-$5.48, representing an increase versus the prior year of 6.5% at the midpoint. We expect a similar percentage increase in AFFO per share. Mark PetersonEVP, CFO, and Treasurer at EPR Properties00:17:43We are also increasing our 2026 guidance for investment spending to a range of $500 million-$600 million from a range of $400 million-$500 million, and increasing disposition proceeds to a range of $50 million-$100 million from a range of $25 million-$75 million. We are confirming our percentage rent and participating interest income guidance of $18.5 million-$22.5 million, which continues to be very heavily weighted to the back half of the year. We are also confirming our G&A expense guidance of $56 million-$59 million and the guidance for our consolidated operating properties, which is provided by giving a range for other income and other expense. Guidance details can be found on page 23 of our supplemental. Mark PetersonEVP, CFO, and Treasurer at EPR Properties00:18:23Finally, we were pleased to have increased our monthly common and dividend by 5.1% to $3.72 per share annualized, which began with the dividend payable April 15th to shareholders of record as of March 31st. We expect our 2026 dividend to be well covered with an AFFO payout ratio below 70% based on the midpoint of guidance. With that, I'll turn it back over to Greg for his closing remarks. Greg SilversChairman and CEO at EPR Properties00:18:50Thank you, Mark. As discussed today, both our investments and earnings are accelerating and reflect the resiliency and opportunity of our experiential focus. We've also demonstrated our ability to utilize multiple sources of capital to fuel this growth with the initial execution of our ATM program, along with opportunistically recycling capital with planned asset sales. All of these positives reinforce our conviction that EPR's unique platform and asset classes position us to deliver outsized shareholder returns. With that, operator, why don't we open it up for questions? Operator00:19:30At this time, if you would like to ask a question, please click on the Raise Hand button, which can be found on the black bar at the bottom of your screen. When it is your turn, you will receive a message on your screen from the host allowing you to talk, and then you will hear your name called. Please accept, unmute your audio, and ask your question. If you are on a mobile device using the app, simply tap the three dots or More button to find the Raise Hand feature. Lastly, if you are calling in today, star nine will activate the Raise Hand and use star six to mute and unmute. We will wait one moment to allow the queue to form. Our first question will come from Yana Galan with BofA. Please unmute yourself, accept, and ask your question. Yana. Yana GalanAnalyst at Bank of America00:20:19Thank you. Operator00:20:19Please go ahead. Yana GalanAnalyst at Bank of America00:20:20Good morning, and congrats on a really nice first quarter. Mark, for the increase in AFFO guidance, can you help parse out how much came from a slightly better first quarter, and then how much you're seeing from the acceleration in investment activity? Or is it maybe also better yields on that investment activity? Mark PetersonEVP, CFO, and Treasurer at EPR Properties00:20:40Yeah, we did. You know, we were a little better for the quarter, about $0.01 or $0.02. As you look forward, really the increase is due to a couple things. One, obviously, we raised our investment spending and paid for that via the capital raise, but there was probably $0.01 out of that increased guidance. I think more broadly, we got a benefit from being fairly conservative with respect to the Six Flags transaction at the end of the year because we weren't sure, you know, for sure it would close and when exactly it would close. I think the ultimate outcome of that was better than anticipated. Mark PetersonEVP, CFO, and Treasurer at EPR Properties00:21:16I think the remaining investments, not just the increase for the year, but the remaining investments are coming in, coming in a little bit sooner than planned and at a better cap rate. The last thing I'll mention that impacted our FFOAA guidance was the Margaritaville conversion, from a note to a lease. We got incremental straight-line rent from that, and that was probably a little under $0.02 in terms of straight-line benefit converting from a mortgage to now a 20-year lease, with escalators that had some straight-line impact. Yana GalanAnalyst at Bank of America00:21:52Thank you. Maybe just one for Ben on the strategy to kind of employ more convertible or other mortgage structures as a way to invest in assets. Just curious, is kind of the first quarter purchase option that you guys exercised kind of a key example of what this would look like? Ben FoxEVP and CIO at EPR Properties00:22:11Yeah, Yana, that's exactly right. You know, really the mortgages that we use, as I mentioned, are pathways to real estate ownership, and so that conversion of the Margaritaville is exactly representative of the types of structures we enter into. As opportunities present themselves, we will convert those and use those selectively. Yana GalanAnalyst at Bank of America00:22:41Thank you. Operator00:22:44Thank you. Our next question will come from Smedes Rose with Citi. You will receive a message on your screen. Please accept, unmute your line, and ask your question. Bennett, please go ahead. Smedes RoseAnalyst at Citi00:22:57Hi, thank you. I just wanted to follow up on that on these convertible mortgage opportunities. Could you maybe just talk a little bit about sort of how many you have and kind of, you know, what that could look like, you know, over the next couple of years as you choose to go down that path? Ben FoxEVP and CIO at EPR Properties00:23:16Yeah. It's a good question. Really, if you look at our mortgage book, the majority of those, probably more than 80% are convertible, right? What we're highlighting here is with this transaction in Margaritaville, that is just an example of the opportunities that sit within the existing portfolio, as well as the types of structures that you could see us enter into in the upcoming quarters and years. Smedes RoseAnalyst at Citi00:23:50Okay, thanks. I just wanted to ask you on your the acquisition of theme parks from Six Flags, do you guys see that them, I guess, as a potential partner going forward? Is it your sense that Six Flags may want to shed more what they would consider non-core assets? Is that something you're willing, you know, would be willing to lean into more at this juncture? Greg SilversChairman and CEO at EPR Properties00:24:13Smedes, it's Greg. I think, again, I think clearly we've demonstrated a partnership with them. We'll definitely take a look at that. I think they're exploring. I think, you know, real estate solutions are being explored across the board in the attraction space. I think our team has demonstrated our ability to be a market leader in that space, whether that's with Six Flags or with other participants. I think us carving out our leadership position will ultimately probably create more opportunities, which I think we think we find very attractive. Smedes RoseAnalyst at Citi00:24:48Great. Thank you. Appreciate it. Greg SilversChairman and CEO at EPR Properties00:24:50Thank you, Smedes. Operator00:24:52Thank you. Our next question comes from Upal Rana with KeyBanc Capital Markets. You'll receive a message on your screen. Please unmute and ask your question. Upal, go ahead. Upal RanaAnalyst at KeyBanc Capital Markets00:25:03Great. Thank you. Just on the Six Flags transaction, you know, can you walk through the strategy behind- Greg SilversChairman and CEO at EPR Properties00:25:12Upal, we kind of cut you off, but I think you're saying what was the strategy? I think our point was, again, long term, we look at these as incredibly stable assets, if you look over time. That these are, they're market dominant that you just cannot create. As been reported, these assets were, you know, have had multi-billion dollars spent on them that we can buy very attractively, which we think create long-term stability. They're very much part of the communities in where they exist. We feel like this is really strong anchors to an experiential portfolio. I think again, as we said, there's really been no new parks built in, you know, decades. We feel the durability and the resilience of these are quite good. Greg SilversChairman and CEO at EPR Properties00:26:08We will continue, as I said, to explore opportunities. Upal RanaAnalyst at KeyBanc Capital Markets00:26:14Okay, great. That was helpful. Then maybe, you know, in your prepared remarks, you mentioned you're encouraged by your pipeline that you're seeing. You know, maybe you could talk a little bit about that and what types of deals you're seeing and any kind of sizes. Greg SilversChairman and CEO at EPR Properties00:26:28I'll let Ben add a little bit to this, but I think what we're encouraged is kind of what I talked about in the beginning. Experiential spending continues to accelerate and we continue to see you know, multiple reports about how people are valuing experiences over things and continuing to prioritize those. Again, whether it's attractions, fitness, eat and play, across the board, we're seeing strength. Therefore, I think, we would say that almost all of our categories, as we said, we're not growing theaters, but all of our categories, our pipeline of opportunities is expanding. I'll let Ben, you know, if you wanna add anything. Ben FoxEVP and CIO at EPR Properties00:27:12I think that's exactly right. It really is across the board, and, you know, just the ability to get a lot of our relationships to the table is increasing, and there's a general increased willingness to transact and de-risk capital markets exposure. Upal RanaAnalyst at KeyBanc Capital Markets00:27:37Great. Thank you. Greg SilversChairman and CEO at EPR Properties00:27:39Thank you. Operator00:27:39Thank you. As a reminder, if you would like to ask a question, please use the Raise Hand button or simply star nine will activate your raise hand by mobile. Our next question comes from Justin Haasbeek with UBS. Justin, please go ahead. Justin HaasbeekAnalyst at UBS00:28:00Yeah, this is Justin Haasbeek on for Michael Goldsmith. Thanks for taking my questions. Are you seeing any cap rate compression or increased competition in your top three acquisition segments of fitness and wellness, attractions and Eat and Play? Are those still your top three, in terms of acquisition focus? Greg SilversChairman and CEO at EPR Properties00:28:21I would say, yeah. I mean, again, as especially on our flow business, I mean, clearly with what we did with attractions this year, that was a big anchor transaction. Our flow business, I think those are still the top. As Ben commented in his opening comments, I think our cap rates remain stable. I think, again, our position as kind of a leading market participant here makes us get the first call usually on these type of assets. I think there's always gonna be competition, but again, everyone in this space knows who we are, and we're going to get that call. I think that bodes well for us continuing to grow that pipeline more and more. Justin HaasbeekAnalyst at UBS00:29:07Okay, great. Does the strong box office performance in the first quarter here, does that change how you think about your exposure? You know, has there been any private market interest in theaters? Has that changed at all? Greg SilversChairman and CEO at EPR Properties00:29:21First of all, I should answer the first one. I don't think it's changed our interest in the sense that we still believe that increasing our diversity is a strategic objective of ours. I think there's no doubt that there continues to be getting and improving interest in the theater space as this continues, especially with some of the things that Ben mentioned in his comments. You've got the studios now kind of embracing much more on a theatrical forward kind of direction, whether that's embracing the windows, whether that's Netflix now starting to use theatrical. I think there's a lot more positive feeling about it. We're seeing more interest in there. We'll see if that plays out to ability for us to transact. Greg SilversChairman and CEO at EPR Properties00:30:16There's no doubt that we're getting more inbound calls on our portfolio. Great. Thank you. Operator00:30:25Thank you. Our next question will come from Michael Carroll with RBC Capital Markets. You'll receive a message on your screen. Please accept, unmute your audio, and ask your question. Michael, please go ahead. Michael CarrollAnalyst at RBC Capital Markets00:30:39Yeah, thanks. Greg, can you talk a little bit about the current macro uncertainty and how that has impacted the experiential space? I guess mainly, have you received any calls from potential sellers looking to further de-risk, I guess, their company and maybe doing a deal with you, just given the potential volatility that could be caused in the capital markets? Greg SilversChairman and CEO at EPR Properties00:31:02I think it's been said. We're getting inbound calls of people who are again, I think the idea of it used to be at the beginning or the end of last year, wait till rates improve, and now I think that that volatility in that market has helped in that sense. I think, though, the thing that's got us is the underlying support and resiliency of the activities. I mean, you know, as we said, our coverage remains very strong against this backdrop. I think it gives us confidence to move forward that the consumer is still there. I think there is, as Ben noted, some people who on the capital side are looking at saying, "Okay, it doesn't look like rates are going materially down, and there is a risk with where we're at of them going up. Greg SilversChairman and CEO at EPR Properties00:31:49Let's see if we can lock in transactions." Ben, I don't know if that's consistent. Ben FoxEVP and CIO at EPR Properties00:31:53That's very consistent with what we're seeing. Greg SilversChairman and CEO at EPR Properties00:31:55Yep. Michael CarrollAnalyst at RBC Capital Markets00:31:56Okay. On the disposition side, I know that you modestly increased your target. I mean, should we think about those sales still mainly be coming from the early education segment? Is that the focus, or is there other sales outside of that you can look at? Greg SilversChairman and CEO at EPR Properties00:32:12I think you're gonna see that probably will be a bulk of that. I think you will also see us, as I mentioned earlier, hopefully, you know, capitalize on some really interesting opportunities on our theater side to sell some assets so that we can show some real kind of interest in that. We'll have to go from there. Michael CarrollAnalyst at RBC Capital Markets00:32:34Okay. On the theater side, if you sell assets, I mean, I'm assuming you can't do much out of AMC, given that's now in a master lease, right? Unless you do a bigger JV. Should we think about those potential sales being with smaller operators? Greg SilversChairman and CEO at EPR Properties00:32:51Yeah, one-offs. One-offs or things. Yeah, one-offs and other opportunities there. You're exactly correct. It will probably not be out of the master lease. Michael CarrollAnalyst at RBC Capital Markets00:33:01Okay, great. Thanks, Greg. Greg SilversChairman and CEO at EPR Properties00:33:03Thank you. Operator00:33:05There are no more questions, so I will now turn the call back over to Greg Silvers, Chairman and CEO, for any closing remarks. Greg SilversChairman and CEO at EPR Properties00:33:13Thank you, guys. I appreciate the time and attention today. We look forward to talking to you as we go through the rest of the year and appreciate your interest. Thank you all. Ben FoxEVP and CIO at EPR Properties00:33:22Thank you. Operator00:33:24Thank you for joining EPR Properties first quarter 2026 earnings call. This concludes today's call. You may now disconnect.Read moreParticipantsExecutivesBen FoxEVP and CIOBrian MoriartySVP of Corporate CommunicationsGreg SilversChairman and CEOMark PetersonEVP, CFO, and TreasurerAnalystsJustin HaasbeekAnalyst at UBSMichael CarrollAnalyst at RBC Capital MarketsSmedes RoseAnalyst at CitiUpal RanaAnalyst at KeyBanc Capital MarketsYana GalanAnalyst at Bank of AmericaPowered by