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BRT Apartments Corp. (BRT)·Q1 2025 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q1 2025 delivered modest operational improvement and stronger non-GAAP earnings: FFO per diluted share rose 20% YoY to $0.30 and AFFO increased 11% YoY to $0.39, while GAAP diluted EPS loss narrowed to $(0.12) from $(0.17) .
- Combined Portfolio NOI grew 2.2% YoY and combined revenues increased 0.9% YoY; insurance expense declined 15.5%, helping offset higher utilities, with weighted average consolidated occupancy steady at 93.7% .
- Management reiterated a 2025 focus on stabilizing occupancy amid Sunbelt new supply, expecting better rental rate growth in 2026; balance sheet liquidity remains solid with the $40M revolver undrawn and no maturities until Q3 2025 .
- Capital returns remain active: 78,724 shares repurchased in Q1 at $17.55 and a further 63,356 shares post-quarter at $15.84; as of April 30, 2025, $8.75M remained available for repurchases; dividend was maintained at $0.25/qtr .
- Versus S&P Global consensus, BRT beat both EPS and revenue for Q1 2025; the narrative catalysts are improving insurance costs, disciplined occupancy stabilization, and continued capital allocation via preferred equity and repurchases (see Estimates Context). Values retrieved from S&P Global.
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Non-GAAP earnings momentum: “FFO of $0.30 per diluted share grew 20%… AFFO of $0.39… increase of 11%” YoY, reflecting solid core operations and lower insurance costs .
- Operating cost tailwinds: Insurance expense declined 15.5% YoY; combined operating expenses fell 0.7% YoY despite utilities rising, supporting NOI growth of 2.2% YoY .
- Balance sheet/Liquidity: Revolving credit facility of up to $40.0M remained undrawn; no debt maturities until Q3 2025; DSCR of 1.60 for Q1 underscores manageable serviceability in current conditions .
What Went Wrong
- GAAP profitability remains negative: Net loss attributable to common stockholders was $(2.35)M; diluted EPS remained a loss at $(0.12), reflecting pressure from interest expense and depreciation .
- Utilities up 6.8% YoY and select markets facing occupancy/rent pressure from new supply; management expects muted rent growth through 2025 in Sunbelt markets .
- DSCR declined vs Q4 2024 (2.09) to 1.60 in Q1 2025, highlighting tighter coverage in the quarter amid rate environment and seasonal expense mix .
Financial Results
Values retrieved from S&P Global.*
Segment/state contribution snapshot (Q1 2025 consolidated NOI):
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Note: A Q1 2025 earnings call transcript was not available in the document catalog; analysis relies on supplemental and press releases .
Management Commentary
- “Combined Portfolio NOI increased 2.2% for the first quarter of 2025 compared to the prior-year period.”
- “BRT intends to emphasize stable average occupancy within the portfolio until it can achieve a lift in rental rates.”
- “Controllable expense growth is expected to grow modestly compared to 2024 and insurance expense is expected to decline.”
- “The Company expects to pursue additional Preferred Equity financing opportunities… and remains patient on asset growth in the near term.”
- “Maintained revolving credit facility of up to $40.0 million, with $0 outstanding, and maturity in September 2027.”
Q&A Highlights
An earnings call transcript for Q1 2025 was not available in our sources; no Q&A details were published. Narrative insights are drawn from the Q1 supplemental and press releases .
Estimates Context
Values retrieved from S&P Global.*
Implications:
- BRT posted an EPS beat and a revenue beat vs consensus. The strong AFFO/FFO and lower insurance costs suggest estimates for FY 2025 operating expenses (insurance line) may drift lower, while rent growth assumptions remain constrained until 2026. Values retrieved from S&P Global.*
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Non-GAAP strength: AFFO ($0.39) and FFO ($0.30) improved YoY despite GAAP losses; cost discipline and insurance tailwinds are helping stabilize NOI .
- Sunbelt supply overhang persists into 2025; management signals rental rate lift likely in 2026—position sizing should reflect a longer recovery timeline .
- Balance sheet/liquidity: Undrawn $40M revolver and no maturities until Q3 2025 provide flexibility for preferred equity deals and selective acquisitions .
- Capital returns: Active buybacks ($1.38M in Q1; $1.00M in April) and a maintained $0.25 dividend support total return; ~$8.75M repurchase capacity remains .
- Cost mix watch: Utilities up 6.8% YoY; monitor whether declines in insurance continue to offset other non-controllables in 2H 2025 .
- State exposure: Tennessee and Mississippi drive ~32% of consolidated NOI; portfolio concentration in Southeastern U.S. and Texas merits close tracking of local supply/demand dynamics .
- Near-term trading: Potential positive drift from beats and improving insurance costs, but muted rent growth and GAAP losses may cap upside until leasing conditions normalize; catalysts include incremental preferred equity deployments and further buyback execution .
Sources: Q1 2025 8-K supplemental (Exhibit 99.1), press releases and prior quarter supplementals . Values retrieved from S&P Global.*