DH
DIVERSIFIED HEALTHCARE TRUST (DHC)·Q3 2025 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q3 revenue was $388.7M, up 4.0% year over year and modestly above S&P Global consensus by ~$6.6M; Primary EPS was slightly below consensus, while Normalized FFO was $0.04 per share as SHOP margin compressed sequentially due to transition labor costs . Revenue vs. consensus and EPS vs. consensus shown below (S&P Global) . Primary EPS consensus and actual marked with asterisks; see S&P disclaimer.
- Management reaffirmed FY25 SHOP NOI guidance of $132–$142M and introduced FY25 Adjusted EBITDAre guidance of $275–$285M; CapEx guidance maintained at $140–$160M .
- Balance sheet/liquidity improved: ~$351M liquidity (cash + undrawn revolver); company expects to repay remaining 2026 zero-coupon notes as early as year-end, leaving no maturities until 2028; JV refinancing yielded $28M cash distribution .
- Strategic transitions: 85 of 116 AlerisLife-managed communities were transitioned to new operators by the call; transition labor added ~$5.1M expense in Q3 but is expected to normalize in Q4, with occupancy still trending to 82–83% by year-end .
- Leasing momentum: Medical Office & Life Science (MOLSP) leased ~86k sq ft at +9.1% rent spreads and raised consolidated occupancy to 86.6%; active pipeline (717k sq ft) supports further rent growth and occupancy .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
- What Went Well
- SHOP demand and pricing: YOY occupancy +210 bps to 81.5% and average monthly rate +5.3%; consolidated SHOP NOI +8% YOY to $29.6M. CEO: “DHC continued to deliver operational improvements... SHOP… occupancy increase of 210 bps to 81.5%, alongside an average monthly rate growth of over 5%...” .
- Leasing strength in MOLSP: 85,992 sq ft leased at +9.1% rent spreads; consolidated occupancy up 370 bps sequentially to 86.6% .
- Balance sheet progress: $1.0B JV refinancing led to $28M distribution; issued $375M 2030 secured notes; partially redeemed 2026 notes; on track to repay remaining 2026 maturity by year-end .
- What Went Wrong
- Net loss widened to $(164.0)M, driven by $93.2M impairments and $11.2M debt extinguishment loss in the quarter .
- SHOP margin compression: SHOP NOI margin fell to 8.9% (from 11.2% in Q2) due to ~$5.1M transition compensation costs and higher seasonal utilities; management expects ~$1.5–$2.0M of remaining transition impact in Q4 .
- Consolidated Same Property Cash NOI fell 9.5% sequentially; SHOP same-property Cash NOI declined 15.9% sequentially as transitions progressed .
Financial Results
Revenue, EPS, FFO and Adjusted EBITDAre
Actual vs. S&P Global Wall Street Consensus (Q3 2025)
Values marked with * retrieved from S&P Global.
Segment Mix and Profitability
Key Operating KPIs
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- CEO framing: “DHC continued to deliver operational improvements and further strengthened its balance sheet... MOLSP... occupancy rising to 86.6%. Our SHOP segment experienced a year-over-year occupancy increase of 210 bps to 81.5%... While near-term labor costs have been elevated due to these transitions... we anticipate labor expenses will normalize... we intend to repay our 2026 debt maturity as early as year-end and enter 2026 with no debt maturities until 2028.” — Chris Bilotto .
- Transition cost quantification: Compensation expense in transitioning portfolio “~240 bps above... representing an incremental cost of roughly $5.1M for the quarter.” — Chris Bilotto .
- Path forward: “We are maintaining our full-year SHOP NOI guidance range of $132–$142M... with the expected payoff of our remaining 2026 zero-coupon bond notes as early as the fourth quarter, DHC will have no debt maturities until 2028.” — Management remarks .
- Liquidity and leverage: “We ended the quarter with approximately $351M of liquidity... After this repayment, we estimate the weighted average interest rate on our remaining debt to be ~5.7%, with no maturities until 2028.” — CFO Matt Brown .
Q&A Highlights
- Transition cost cadence: ~$5.1M impact in Q3; ~$1.5–$2.0M expected in Q4 as most communities transitioned by October/mid-November .
- Occupancy target: Still expecting 82–83% SHOP occupancy by year-end .
- Revenue disruption: Management acknowledged potential sales-process noise but emphasized expense-side impact as the main driver; disruption should abate post-transition completion .
- Dispositions timing: “Close to $200M” expected to close in Q4; some portfolio deals (mainly SHOP) to slip into Q1 2026 .
- Capital allocation: Any excess capital post-2026 bond repayment to remain as dry powder; next maturity (2028) at 4.75% to remain outstanding .
Estimates Context
- Q3 revenue beat: $388.7M actual vs. $382.1M consensus; Primary EPS slight miss: -0.2248 vs. -0.215 (S&P Global). Estimate table above.
- Implications: Sequential SHOP margin compression from transition costs and seasonal utilities likely prompts modest near-term EPS/FFO trimming for Q4, while reaffirmed SHOP NOI and new Adj. EBITDAre ranges bracket full-year outcomes (S&P Global; company commentary) .
Values marked with * in estimates are retrieved from S&P Global.
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Transition headwinds are temporary; with ~$1.5–$2.0M expected Q4 impact, SHOP NOI margins should stabilize as new operators ramp, supporting FY25 guide and 2026 margin expansion .
- Balance sheet de-risking is a near-term catalyst: expected full repayment of 2026 notes by year-end removes the most acute maturity overhang; no maturities until 2028 .
- Demand/pricing remain constructive: SHOP occupancy and rates improved YOY; MOLSP leasing spreads remain positive with a robust pipeline, backing medium-term NOI growth .
- Q3’s GAAP loss was driven by non-cash impairments and financing actions; Normalized FFO of $0.04 underscores underlying cash performance amid transitions .
- Asset sales provide incremental deleveraging capacity and potential operating simplification; >$200M targeted closings in Q4 with remainder in early 2026 .
- Near-term trading setup: modest EPS/FFO pressure near term vs. clearer multi-quarter path to higher occupancy/margins and lower risk profile as maturities are addressed .
- Dividend remains symbolic at $0.01/share; capital is prioritized to transitions, asset sales execution, and debt reduction .
S&P Global estimates disclaimer: Values marked with * were retrieved from S&P Global.