Timothy M. Martin
Thank you, Chris. Good morning, everyone. And as always, thanks for taking a few minutes out of your day and spending it with us. Second quarter results reflect exactly what Chris was touching on, the continuation of stabilizing operating trends that we talked about back in the first quarter. Same-store revenue growth was down 0.5% over last year, with average occupancy for our same-store portfolio down 80 basis points to 90.6% during the quarter. From a rate perspective, our move-in rates during Q2 were down about 4% year-over-year, improving from down 8% in Q1 and from down 10% back in Q4 of last year. Same-store operating expenses grew 1.2% over last year, again, this quarter, trending a bit better than our expectations. We've had sector-leading expense controls over the past 3 years, and our team's focus in this area continues to show up in the results. I'll expand on some of the expense line items in a moment when discussing changes to our full year guidance ranges. Revenue growth of negative 0.5% combined with 1.2% expense growth yielded negative 1.1% same-store NOI growth for the quarter. We reported FFO per share as adjusted of $0.65 for the quarter, which was at the high end of our guidance range entering the quarter. We were quiet this quarter as it relates to on-balance sheet investments. The team continues to evaluate a healthy volume of acquisition opportunities, but returns on marketed transactions haven't reached compelling levels on a risk-adjusted basis from our perspective. We remain well positioned with plenty of capacity when we do find attractive deals. We added 30 stores to our third-party management platform during the quarter, bringing that total to 873 stores at quarter end. We have seen some churn in the third-party portfolio from larger transactions, including our acquisition of 28 stores from our joint venture last quarter as well as a handful of portfolios that our third-party owners have sold this year. Balance sheet metrics remain strong with net debt-to-EBITDA at 4.7x. Our $300 million of 2025 senior unsecured notes mature in November of this year. So we will be actively monitoring the market in the coming months with a focus on issuing long-term unsecured debt and effectively pushing that debt out to the end of our maturity schedule. Details of our 2025 earnings guidance and related assumptions were included in our release last evening. Second quarter results, combined with the continuation of stabilizing operating trends were the primary drivers of our improved FFO per share and our same-store operating estimates. Overall trends, as we've mentioned, continue to move in a positive direction with all key operating metrics seeing better-than-forecasted performance through July. The negative occupancy and rate gaps have narrowed throughout the year. The cadence and pace that these improving trends have on year-over-year revenue growth as we look at the balance of the year are impacted by a variety of things, including the timing of changes we made in our fee structure mid last year, the timing related to rate increases to existing customers and how that flows through revenue year-over-year as well as the reality that only about 5% of our customers churn on a monthly basis. Embedded in our expectations for third quarter results is our expectation that same-store revenue growth will be slightly more negative than it was in the second quarter and then improving as we get into the fourth quarter. So while we're very encouraged by the positive trends in operating fundamentals, I just want to manage expectations that these improvements will take a little bit of time to flow through. On the expense front, as I mentioned, we had a really good first half of 2025 as we continue to be laser-focused on improving expense efficiencies. Our improved expectations that led to our improved expense growth guidance range were driven by a variety of line items, but the leading areas of improvement were the much better-than-anticipated insurance renewal in May, successful property tax appeals and the impact of efficiency-focused projects at our stores, including staffing and telecom initiatives. That wraps up our prepared remarks for this morning. Thanks again for joining us on the call. And at this time, Jeannie, let's open up the call for some questions.