Michael L. Manelis
Thanks, Mark, and thanks to all of you for joining us today. Our second quarter results exceeded our expectations from the beginning of the year, and we're about in line with our expectations going into the leasing season. The financial health of our residents remains strong. The average household income of our residents who moved in with us in the second quarter is up 8.5% from the same quarter last year and rent as a percent of income remains low at 20%. In addition, as Mark mentioned, we are not losing residents to home purchase. And in fact, that number sat at 7.2% in the quarter which is among the lowest levels we have seen. Our blended rate growth of 3% was about where we thought it would be driven by strong renewal rate of 5.2% and with 60% of the residents renewing in the quarter. Our intense focus on customer satisfaction and stronger-than-expected results from our centralized renewal process have driven this performance. Our physical occupancy was very good at 96.6%. New lease rate was slightly negative in the quarter, which reflects that while there is good demand. It is a bit price sensitive and concession use continues in a number of our markets, particularly those with heavy supply. As we look to the markets, New York continues to benefit from high occupancy actually the highest in our portfolio and very little competitive new supply, leading to some of the best blended rate growth in our portfolio. With demand being driven by a steady job market, we continue to expect this market where we have a predominantly urban portfolio to be one of our best-performing markets in 2025. Boston has had steady demand leading to good occupancy and a strong renewal rate. The market is feeling some of the pressure and uncertainty from actual and potential cuts to the education and research sector. As a result, the job market seems a little softer here and foreign inbound demand was slightly below historical norms. Our urban assets continue to outperform our suburban ones as the new supply is more focused in the suburbs. Our bias here will continue to be occupancy focused, and the second quarter was already up 90 basis points sequentially. Washington, D.C. has been an excellent performer throughout the first half of the year with high occupancy and good retention and really strong rent growth. Not surprisingly, we have recently seen a slowing in the market likely due to the uncertainty around jobs given the cuts by the administration. While the government is not the only employer in the market, it clearly has an influence on the overall feel and confidence levels. Currently, our pressure is being felt in the district in areas of Northern Virginia. Velocity slowed a bit in July, but demand recovered quickly as we backed off on rate, which is allowing us to maintain strong occupancy. Despite the recent softening, the Washington, D.C. market remains on track to be one of our strongest revenue growth market in 2025 with a very significant drop off in supply expected in '26. Moving out West. The real standout market for this year is San Francisco. We talked about the potential for recovery in this market at our Investor Day and are very pleased that this recovery is coming to fruition at a pace even beyond what we expected. Our blended rate growth of 5.8% here is the best in our portfolio driven by strong new lease and renewal increases with sequential gains in occupancy. This is a great example of where we saw a recovery in full force and drove very robust seasonal price acceleration, including the pullback on concessions. Tech jobs are steady with a lot of continued AI focus in the market. During the second quarter, we observed very favorable migration patterns with 8% more move-ins coming to us from outside the MSA and 5% more move-ins coming to us from other states. We are optimistic that these migration patterns continue, especially in the downtown submarket as the city is really starting to feel the positive impact from the focus on quality of life issues. Competitive supply in the market at less than 1% of inventory is very manageable, and we believe this will be our best performing market this year. In Seattle, the improvements continue with the market working past the quality of life issues that have been a challenge. Seattle is seeing a slow and steady job growth from the tech firms leading to modest growth in office-using jobs, which is also being positively impacted by the return to office policies of big employers like Amazon and Starbucks. As expected, supply pressure was felt in the city of Seattle and Redmond submarket which impacted some of our new lease pricing power. But the good news is that most of the concentrated deliveries are behind us, and this is likely to be a temporary condition. Concessions are still in wide use as the market seems to have become accustomed to them over the past few years. Overall, solid employment and an easier comp for us in the second half of the year at Seattle continuing to be one of the top performing markets for us this year with a great setup in 2026. Los Angeles continues to face challenges and underperform our pretty modest beginning of the year expectations. Lackluster job growth, driven by a pretty weak entertainment sector, along with the quality of life issues are keeping pressure on demand. Our West L.A. and suburban portfolios are doing better than our assets located in Korea and Mid-Wilshire submarkets. On the hopeful side, a very large tax incentive should spur local employment by driving the return of filming and production to the market. We have good occupancy overall, but it appears that our rents peaked in early June. This is a good example of a market where our focus is on retention and capturing good renewal rates while maintaining occupancy as overall pricing power was softer than seasonal norms. Orange County and San Diego are performing in line with our expectations for the year. New supply and modest job growth are keeping pressure on rents after a number of years of strong performance. And finally, in our expansion markets, Denver continues to feel the impact from modest job growth and high levels of new supply, particularly in the downtown market. Concession use is heavy in the overall market. We have a good pace on our leasing volume, but a fair bit of price sensitivity and deal shopping is impacting new lease growth and making us prioritize retention and renewal rates. Our Atlanta portfolio is performing in line with our expectations for the year. As a reminder, our same-store portfolio here is just 7 assets and is primarily located in more urban locations like Midtown unlike our newer suburban acquisitions. The urban areas are experiencing a lot of new supply and concession use, but it appears that this submarket found the bottom as we have had a few months of stability with early signs of potential improving conditions. Our non- same-store properties, which I mentioned are more suburban focused will join the same-store set next year and are performing at or slightly better than our underwritten expectations and clearly better than our urban Atlanta properties. We feel good about Dallas. Demand is strong due to better-than-average job growth in the market, but concessions are plentiful as the market absorbs supply, particularly in select submarkets. Similar to Atlanta, our newer acquisitions, which are in less supply concentrated submarkets, will join the 2026 same-store set and tend to face less direct supply pressure and are performing better with fewer concessions and stronger occupancies. Switching to innovation and automation updates, the opportunity to apply artificial intelligence in our business is really exciting. Our AI leasing application pilots have reduced overall application completion time by over 50%, while significantly improving fraud detection, resident underwriting and user satisfaction. Given this success, we are accelerating the rollout aiming for full deployment by end of year, which is about a quarter earlier in the original time frame. Additionally, our new delinquency management AI will be fully deployed by the end of this month, and so far, we can see that consistent engagement with customers improves overall payment behaviors. All of these automation and conversational AI initiatives are set up to dramatically improve both our customer experience and operational efficiency. As we think about the third quarter, we expect blended rates to begin to moderate as usual with strong retention and occupancy continuing against a backdrop of slightly lower achieved renewal and new lease rates. Which combined, will result in an expected blended rate growth range of 2.2% to 2.8% for the quarter. With our occupancy holding study and resident turnover continuing to track at record low levels, we are well positioned for a solid back half of the year, especially as supply headwinds continues to subside. As I think about our setup for 2026, we expect to have normal embedded growth, continued strong renewal performance and occupancy against a backdrop of much less competitive new supply pressure. At this time, I will turn the call over to Bob to walk us through the financial results and guidance changes.