SmartStop Self Storage REIT - Earnings Call - Q2 2025
August 7, 2025
Executive Summary
- Q2 2025 delivered stable operations with same-store revenue up 0.4% YoY, average occupancy at 93.1% (+90 bps YoY), and FFO, as adjusted per diluted share of $0.42; management raised full-year FFO, as adjusted guidance midpoint by $0.01 to $1.89 and narrowed several guidance ranges.
- Revenue came in at $66.8M, ahead of S&P Global consensus ($62.3M), while GAAP EPS was a loss of $0.16 vs a small positive consensus; definitional differences (company “total revenues” vs standardized revenue and “Primary EPS”) contribute to variance—nonetheless, the print was a revenue beat and an EPS miss relative to S&P consensus.
- Balance sheet and funding catalysts: $931M IPO and CAD500M Maple Bond at 3.91% (hedged to 3.85%) lowered funding costs, flipped facilities to unsecured, and set up ~$2M quarterly accretion as these proceeds refinanced higher-cost debt and funded mid-5% yield acquisitions; ratings at DBRS BBB (stable) and KBRA BBB (stable) support access to capital.
- External growth is tracking to guidance: $232M acquisitions YTD through June, with ~$70M CAD portfolio targeted to close late August and acquisitions narrowed to $350–$400M for FY25 (midpoint unchanged at $375M).
- Near-term stock catalysts: guidance raise, funding accretion from Maple Bond and unsecured revolver, and evidence of rate stabilization with lower concessions; watch for late-August Canada portfolio close and October 1 lock-up expiry for retail shareholders (potential recycling).
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- “We posted a strong second quarter… average occupancy 93.1% and FFO as adjusted per share of $0.42” with guidance midpoint for FFO, as adjusted raised; same-store NOI guidance maintained at midpoint.
- Capital formation and cost of capital improvements: $931M IPO, CAD500M Maple Bond at 3.91% (3.85% effective), facilities flipped to unsecured, revolver pricing stepped down ~65 bps; ratings confirmed/raised (DBRS BBB, KBRA BBB).
- Rate stabilization with materially reduced concessions: web rates +2.4% YoY; achieved move-in rates down a modest 2.5% YoY; concessions down ~20–25% YoY; July revenue growth re-accelerating to ~2% YoY with improving August trends early in the month.
What Went Wrong
- June demand was weaker than anticipated, forcing more competitive pricing and modest pressure on move-in rates; drove tightening/lowering of the top end of same-store revenue growth guidance range (now 1.8–2.8%).
- Property operating expenses rose faster than revenue (taxes +7.8%, insurance +5.9%), resulting in same-store NOI down 1.1% YoY for Q2.
- Reported GAAP net loss widened YoY (+$4.5M) with Q2 loss per share at -$0.16; transactional and non-recurring items weighed on GAAP, though FFO, as adjusted remained healthy at $0.42.
Transcript
Speaker 1
Thank you for standing by. My name is Kayla and I will be the conference operator today. At this time I'd like to welcome everyone to the SmartStop Self Storage REIT second quarter 2025 earnings call. All lines have been placed on mute to prevent any background noise. After the speakers' remarks, there will be a question and answer session. If you'd like to ask a question during this time, simply press STAR followed by the number one on your telephone keypad. If you'd like to withdraw your question, again press the STAR and one. Please limit comments to one question and one follow-up. I would now like to turn the call over to David Corak, Senior Vice President of Corporate Finance and Strategy. You may begin.
Speaker 2
Thank you, operator. Before we begin, I would like to remind everyone that certain statements made during today's call, including statements about our future, may contain forward-looking information.
Speaker 3
Plans, prospects, and expectations may be considered.
Speaker 2
Forward looking statements within the meaning of the safe harbor provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act. These forward looking statements are subject to numerous risks and uncertainties as described in our filings with the Securities and Exchange.
Speaker 3
Commission, and these risks could cause our actual results to differ materially from those.
Speaker 2
Expressed in or implied by our comments. Forward-looking statements in our earnings release that we issued last night, along with the comments on this call, are made only as of today. The Company assumes no obligation to update any forward-looking statements, whether as a.
Speaker 3
Result of new information, future events or otherwise.
Speaker 2
In addition, we will also refer to SmartStop Self Storage REIT.
Speaker 3
Certain non-GAAP financial measures.
Speaker 2
Information regarding our use of these measures and a reconciliation of these measures to.
Speaker 3
GAAP measures can be found in our.
Speaker 2
Earnings release and supplemental disclosure that we issued last night are available for download on our website at investors.smartstopselfstorage.com.
Speaker 3
In addition to myself, today we have.
Speaker 2
H. Michael Schwartz, Founder, Chairman and CEO, as well as James R. Barry, our CFOs.
Speaker 3
Now I'll turn it over to Michael.
Speaker 0
Thank you, David, thank you for joining us today for our second quarter earnings call to discuss our inaugural quarter as a New York Stock Exchange listed company. I'll start with some introductory remarks on SmartStop Self Storage REIT and the industry before I hand it over to James to discuss the quarter. After that, we'll open it up for Q and A with James, David, and myself. Before we dive into high-level remarks, a few highlights of our second quarter results. We posted a strong second quarter with our same store revenue growth of positive 40 basis points, average occupancy 93.1%, and FFO as adjusted per share of $0.42, all largely in line with our expectations. We maintained our full year 2025 same store NOI guidance of 1.1% and raised our FFO as adjusted per share guidance by a penny.
On the midpoint, we had an exceptionally robust quarter both in terms of performance and activity. We raised approximately $1.3 billion of capital during the quarter. First, we raised $931 million in April with our initial public offering. Second, we raised CAD 500 million with our inaugural Maple bond in June at a sub 4% coupon. These transactions dramatically improved our balance sheet, setting us up for future growth. In June, we received an inaugural rating from DBRS Morningstar of Triple B Mid with a stable trend, and in July received an upgrade from Kroll to Triple B flat with a stable outlook. During the quarter, we acquired approximately $150 million of Class A storage properties on balance sheet, another $75 million in the managed REITs, and put under contract a CAD 97 million portfolio in Alberta.
These on balance sheet acquisitions are primary Class A properties located in top markets with going in yields in the mid 5% range with management upside, while the deals into the managed REITs are more unstabilized, consistent with our communicated acquisition strategy. On the managed REIT front, we grew AUM by $78 million during the quarter and entered into a new retail distribution partnership with Orchard Securities, who we feel is a best-in-class distribution partner for our managed REIT products. We opened three new developments in Canada, all within our managed REITs, including the first purpose-built self-storage property in Montreal in nearly two decades. We also funded loans of $41 million to the managed REITs. Between these loans and our on balance sheet acquisitions, we deployed about $200 million of accretive capital during the quarter.
Additionally, we're proud of SmartStop's inclusion as a member of the Russell 3000 Index in late June. Lastly, but certainly not least, we bolstered our Board of Directors by adding Laura Gotcheva, who's an extremely experienced portfolio manager and REIT investor. Needless to say, it was quite an active quarter. With these accomplishments, we believe we are off to a strong start as a publicly traded company executing on the story we laid out on our IPO roadshow in March. We feel SmartStop is well positioned to succeed and deliver on double-digit FFO share growth this year with a reasonable leverage profile. Turning to the industry, on the operational front, we continue to believe that 2025 will be incrementally better than 2024, but not as strong as a more normalized year in storage.
Likewise, we believe we will see a more normalized rental season as compared to the past two years, but again still not quite a typical rental season. The recovery in storage is happening, but the choppiness in demand continues. As we saw during the quarter, we had a tough April, strong May, and then a weaker than anticipated June. Industry move-in rates continue to stabilize but are largely still negative year over year, though significantly less negative than the previous two years. Occupancies of large operators are in line or better than historical averages, but small operators have lost market share and now are operating at lower occupancies. Our customers' health remains strong. To date, we've seen little to no impact from recent economic volatility in the U.S. and Canada.
Website visits are up significantly, reservations remain strong, delinquencies remain at below average levels, and ECRIs remain healthy without a change in attrition. Canada continues to experience a more positive dynamic despite a softening economy, with less supply per capita, lower institutional competition, and strong demographic growth and slightly different demand drivers. In the U.S., the Greater Toronto Area has become an outperformer versus the U.S., and that trend continues in 2025. In the second quarter, our Toronto portfolio posted 2% same-store revenue growth on a constant currency basis with an ending occupancy of about 93%. With our year-to-date results through the busy season paired with an improving supply picture and steady demand, we remain optimistic on the sector's slow and steady recovery, creating momentum as we head into 2026. Now I'll turn it over to James to discuss the quarter.
Speaker 3
Thank you, Michael. I'll remind everyone that the second quarter was our last partial quarter of being a non-traded REIT, so the impacts from the April IPO are not fully reflected in the financial results. Starting with our operating performance, we are pleased to report that our same store pool posted year-over-year revenue growth of 40 basis points with operating expense growth of 3.5%, leading to an NOI decline of 1.1%. The FX impact from our 13 Canadian same store assets was a headwind of approximately 10 basis points to our overall same store pool as we posted constant currency revenue growth of positive 50 basis points with expense growth of 3.6% and an NOI decline of 1%.
Revenue growth was slightly less than expected for the second quarter, driven by weaker than anticipated demand in June, but we accomplished positive growth for the quarter utilizing less marketing dollars and less concessions while maintaining strong occupancy of over 93%. On the operating expense front, property taxes were up 7.8% with property insurance up 5.9% and marketing expense down 6.3%. We saw muted or negative expense growth in utilities, professional, and administrative expenses. The result was that same store operating expenses were up 3.5% year-over-year, better than our expectation. This combination led to slightly better than expected NOI in the quarter. Our same store pool ended the quarter at 93% occupancy, up 40 basis points year-over-year, while average occupancy was 93.1%, up 90 basis points year-over-year.
Our web rates were up approximately 2.4% year-over-year, while our achieved move-in rates were down 2.5% on average for the second quarter as the stabilization of the rate environment slowly but surely continues. For reference, the sequential deceleration in year-over-year revenue growth from the first quarter was expected and was reflected in our full-year guidance driven by comps from last year. Keep in mind our same store revenue growth in 2Q 2024 was positive 1.3%. We did see healthy growth in revenue sequentially over the first quarter of 2025 of about 1%. As we moved into July, we started to see the stabilization of rates take effect as revenue growth has begun to re-accelerate. July ended occupancy at 92.8%, up 80 basis points year-over-year. In-place rates were up 10 basis points year-over-year and up 1.2% month-over-month versus June, and concessions continued to be very muted versus last year.
On the external growth front, we acquired seven properties for $150 million during the quarter, leading to full year acquisitions of $232 million through the end of June. As previously announced, we are under contract to acquire five properties in Canada for approximately $97 million CAD or about $70 million USD. Using today's FX rates, we expect this portfolio to close in late August. Including these under contract properties, we will have fulfilled just over $300 million of our full year acquisition guide of $375 million. At the midpoint and taking a step back to September 30, 2024, we will have added nearly $500 million on balance sheet. These acquisitions, along with the assets acquired to date, are primarily Class A properties located in top 25 MSAs with going in yields in the mid 5% range with management upside.
Further, the properties are primarily in markets in which we already operate and add to our clustering. Turning to the managed REIT platform, our three managed REIT funds, inclusive of 1031 eligible DST programs, increased AUM by $78 million during the quarter with AUM ending at nearly $974 million. We recognized gross fees of $3.7 million, and the managed REITs acquired two properties this quarter, both of which can be characterized as non-stabilized. The managed REITs have a combined portfolio with 48 operating properties and approximately 4 million rentable square feet at quarter end. We also funded $41 million of loans to the managed REITs in June. Between these loans and our on balance sheet acquisition, we deployed about $200 million of capital during the quarter.
The result of all of this is that for the second quarter 2025, we posted fully diluted FFO as adjusted per share in unit of $0.42. Obviously, a quarter with a lot of transactions given the various capital raises, but we are pleased with our second quarter result. We look forward to the rest of the year, which we expect to be more reflective of our go forward earnings run rate. Speaking of the remainder of 2025, last night we updated our guidance for the full year. We are now expecting same store revenue growth in the 1.75% to 2.75% range with operating expense growth in the 4.25% to 5.25% range, resulting in NOI growth of 0.6% to 1.6%.
The other moving pieces as compared to our previous guidance were as follows: better than expected execution on the Canadian Maple bond, partially offset by higher interest rates in the U.S.; better than expected managed REIT EBITDA driven by AUM growth in the first half of the year and better margins; and slightly higher G&A driven by higher than expected performance-based equity components. We did have that baked into the high end of our previous G&A guidance. We also narrowed our acquisitions guidance to $350 million to $400 million, maintaining the midpoint of $375 million. The result of these updates is that we are expecting FFO as adjusted per share of $1.85 to $1.93, up a penny from our previous guidance issued in May. Lastly, turning to the balance sheet, as we covered on our last call, our April IPO raised $931 million of gross proceeds.
The use of those proceeds was primarily to redeem in full the $200 million Series A preferred and paid down debt to the tune of approximately $650 million. We flipped our senior credit facility and 2032 private placement notes to fully unsecured and right-sized our revolver to $600 million of capacity. With the flips on secured and the step down in leverage, our overall costs on the revolver stepped down 65 basis points. During the second quarter in June, we priced our inaugural Maple bond, raising $500 million Canadian or approximately $370 million USD. The notes have a three-year maturity and bear a coupon of 3.91%, which we hedged to an effective interest rate of 3.85%.
Prior to pricing, we were extremely pleased with this execution, which serves to naturally hedge our Canadian FX exposure, term out our floating rate debt at an attractive coupon, and ladder out our debt maturity schedule. Additionally, it allows us to more efficiently return to this market for potentially longer duration bonds in the future. In tandem with the Maple bond issuance, we received an inaugural rating from DBRS Morningstar of BBB Mid, and subsequent to quarter end in July, we received an upgrade from Kroll to BBB flat with a stable outlook. The completion of the SmartStop IPO in April is a transformational step forward with our entrance into the public traded markets. Our Maple bond demonstrates SmartStop's unique access to multiple debt capital markets, giving us the flexibility to be opportunistic in both the U.S. and Canada. With that, operator, we will open it up to questions.
Speaker 1
At this time, I would like to remind everyone in order to ask a question, press Star, then the number one on your telephone keypad. Your first question comes from the line of Jonathan Hughes with Raymond James. Your line is open.
Speaker 2
Hey, good afternoon.
Speaker 3
Good morning out there on the West Coast. Can you talk about the revenue growth volatility last year and what drove that?
Speaker 0
How that impacted your management of rate and occupancy in the quarter.
Speaker 3
Into the back half of this year? Yes, this is James. Thanks Jonathan. Just to touch base and to kind of go back in time to 2024, keep in mind, as we said in our opening remarks, that from a same store perspective we were cycling a much tougher comp here in the second quarter, and that was baked into our guidance that we would see that deceleration. That comp was positive 130 basis points in the second quarter of last year. The comps do get easier as we go through the rest of the year here.
Speaker 2
Yeah, Jonathan, it's David Corak. I'll just add on a couple things about the second quarter and sort of balancing the rate and the occupancy versus what we did last year. I'd point you to the comments that we made on the last earnings call about this balance, right, and the optionality that we have to push rate in certain markets where we saw the occupancy strength and while we saw the demand strength, and that's what we did during the quarter. When you break out the individual months, April had a really tough comp, as we discussed on the last earnings call. May was a really strong month overall for us on pretty much every metric that we look at. We started strong in June, but then demand favored off about 10 days in and we pulled back on rates.
We also did run a pretty successful 4th of July sale in late June. You can see some of that in the rate data in June. When you look at the quarter, move-in rates for the quarter were down about 2.5% year over year. Web rates were up about 2%. I will say our concession numbers are down very nicely from last year. That's one major change that's occurred over last year. Concessions were down roughly 20% and growing. Balancing the rate and occupancy during the quarter, pushing rate in certain markets where we saw the green light, the end result was obviously we grew occupancy both sequentially and over the year. We did all that with advertising spend down 6% over 6% year over year.
The other thing I'd mention, when you just look at the comps from last year, if we step back and look at year to date first half of 2025, our move-in rates are down.
Speaker 3
About 4% year over year.
Speaker 2
For comparison, the same period in 2024, they were down roughly 11 or 12% year over year. Still negative on a year over year basis, but a much easier negative to overcome than the previous year or three years.
Speaker 3
Thank you. I appreciate all that color. Just one more, could you kind of help us walk through or bridge the big moving pieces in guidance to get from the $0.42 per share of FFO in the second quarter to the implied guidance of $0.53 a share in 3Q and 4Q. Thanks. Yeah, happy to.
Speaker 2
Let me walk through the major pieces. I'll start on the capital side and then go to operations and manage rates, etc.
Speaker 3
On the capital side, the easiest.
Speaker 2
Thing to really point to is the Maple bond transaction and the uses of proceeds on that deal. We paid off a CAD denominated loan that was priced at 6.42%, acquired a $108 million portfolio with a 5% plus mid 5% going in yield, and then we paid down our revolver by over $200 million. That revolver was priced at 5.8% at the time in 2Q, you add all that up with paying that off with 3.91% debt.
Speaker 3
That's about $2 million per quarter in accretion.
Speaker 2
Right. We did all that in very late June, so there's very little benefit of that in the second quarter results. Keeping on the capital side, the revolver will be priced at unsecured levels now, whereas in the first, the second quarter of the year, we only got that benefit for about two thirds of the quarter. SOFR is obviously expected to continue to drop based on the curve.
Speaker 3
The second quarter levels.
Speaker 2
We also took on two pieces of what I will call below market debt in the quarter with a 5.15% loan, the Houston loan, and then the 3.45% BC loan. Both are really attractive pieces of debt. We're also in the process of recapping the debt on the 10 joint venture properties. Those properties are underlevered and the rates on the current debt are in the high fives. I think 5.7% during the second quarter. I think given where the Maple bond priced, everyone has a sense of where Canadian interest rates are these days. Not only will there be proceeds out of that deal to us, but certainly some interest rate savings on that piece. Lastly, on the capital side, I'll remind everyone that we have a 75 basis point step down coming on the $150 million U.S. private placement. That'll occur on October 1.
Flipping to the operations side, we certainly expect all three of our pools, that is the same store pool, the non-same store pool, and the joint venture, to post sequential growth in net operating income versus the second quarter and certainly the first quarter. On the managed REIT side, obviously average AUM in the third quarter and fourth quarter will be higher than in the second quarter. I'll note the loan balance there is roughly $45 to $50 million higher as we go into the second half of the year versus the first half of the year. We also have additional accretive growth coming. If you look at the implied external growth, I would highlight the Canadian five pack, which will be sort of a high five going-in cap rate, and that should close at the end of this month.
Lastly, on the G&A front, obviously a lot of noise in there. On the G&A line in the second quarter, the run rate on G&A is lower to the tune of about $1 million per quarter as we head into the third quarter. When you add all of these pieces up, it obviously becomes quite material. Jonathan, I hope that answers that question for you.
Speaker 0
It does.
Speaker 3
I appreciate all the detail. I'll hop off. Thanks for the time. Thanks.
Speaker 1
Your next question comes from the line of Todd Thomas with KeyBanc Capital Markets. Your line is open.
Speaker 3
Yeah, hi, thanks. First, I just wanted to see, are.
Speaker 2
You able to share July occupancy?
Speaker 0
Rent trends, any color on July specifically?
Speaker 3
Yeah, sure.
Speaker 2
Todd, it's David again. July ended the month occupancy 92.8%. That is up 80 basis points year over year. That occupancy gap actually widened in July. As James mentioned, in place rates were up slightly. The interesting thing about July, and I mentioned this earlier, is concessions are down. They're down about 25% year over year. We continue to use that lever a lot less and we're using the advertising lever a lot less. When you add up all three of these data points, we're only seven days into August here, but it looks like revenue growth in July on a year over year basis is pushing 2%. When you look at that, the re-acceleration is already taking effect. It looks like August is shaping up to be a better month than July in terms of the move in rates because I know you're going to ask this as well.
They were down about 10% year over year in July, but are actually flat year over year to date in August. The occupancy gap sitting here seven days into August continues to be strong around 90 basis points year over year. Keep in mind that the comps are getting a little bit easier for us as we enter the second half of the year.
Speaker 0
Okay, it sounds like.
Speaker 3
June was the weaker month.
Speaker 0
It may have started off okay, but I think you said about 10 days.
Speaker 3
Demand started to taper off. Looking back, any sort of insight around more specifically what happened in June? It sounds like July trends have.
Speaker 2
Recovered some ground and maybe are holding.
Speaker 3
A little bit here early on in August. You know, really a couple of weeks in June. Any insight around that period specifically? Yeah, Todd, this is James. I'll jump in there and say, first of all, I think what we saw was just a little bit more competitive pressure on the pricing side. Obviously, we were still able to maintain strong occupancies over the course of June, but we had to get a little more competitive on the rate front. Obviously, it's a market by market analysis, but it's pretty consistent with what you've heard across the entire industry. What we feel strongly about and what we feel comfortable about in terms of our outlook for the rest of the year is, as David mentioned, kind of the re-acceleration that we're seeing on a year over year basis, also coupled with we're still seeing really strong activity, right.
Some other metrics. For the month of July, we were actually up 6.5% from a rental perspective. We are still seeing that demand come in and part of that is from the Fourth of July sale. We're still seeing a lot of activity. We're not having to push as hard on the marketing lever as we get more efficient on that front, and we are seeing reductions in the overall promotional dollars we're offering.
Speaker 0
Todd, I'll just add that obviously the housing market remains an. There hasn't been any pickup there. I think one thing that's different this year is that rates have stabilized and we've been able to hold rate and even drive it, as we've said, in certain markets without sacrificing occupancy. Last year we would sacrifice occupancy when we started to push rates. In addition, we want to underscore that we are doing that today with lower discounts and promotions. That's not something that we've been able to say for 2 years. For an example, the first half, 2020, our achieved rate is up 50 basis points at the 92.7% occupancy. In our second quarter, occupancy is up at 93%. That concession aspect that David talked about I think is incredibly important. That first half of the year we're down 20%. The second quarter we're down 25%.
When we take a look at this competitive rate environment, we've been very clear that the market has bottomed. The market is recovering, it's slow, it's steady, it's methodical and it's not a hockey stick. I think we've been very, very clear with that. Also, just taking a look at our website traffic, which is something that is incredibly important, the second quarter traffic has been up mid teens year over year. June and July, our traffic's up 32% and 45%. The reality is the demand's there and it's just a matter of who's going to be capturing the demand. We feel pretty comfortable from that perspective.
Speaker 3
All right, great. That's helpful.
Speaker 0
Thank you.
Speaker 3
Excellent.
Speaker 1
Your next question comes from the line of Wes Golladay with Baird. Your line is open.
Speaker 3
Hey everyone. I just kind of pick a big picture.
Speaker 0
I understand the comp story, but it does also sound like demand is picking up.
Speaker 3
Up based on the commentary. I am just curious if you think that.
Speaker 0
We may have had a soft patch just due to the uncertainty around the terrorists, the big beautiful bill. I think people are getting back to, you know, lives as normal and we just had this little call.
Speaker 3
Is that two month soft patch, does that have any factor in anything?
Speaker 2
Yeah, I mean, look, it's Corak. I do think that as we got through the summer months, you saw the volatility in demand.
Speaker 3
Right.
Speaker 2
Certain months were good, certain months were not good.
Speaker 3
Right.
Speaker 2
It was, to use the hockey term, you know, the puck kid going off the backboard.
Speaker 3
That's not all right.
Speaker 2
The thing is that when.
Speaker 3
When we went into June, we.
Speaker 2
Felt good about where the rate environment was, we felt good about occupancy and pulled back. It's really hard to attribute exactly what happened to that demand. We've been very clear on that from the get go that it's really hard to say to point to one thing or another. Obviously, the beauty of self-storage is that there are a lot of different demand drivers out there. I like to call it a soft patch and we'll see where the rest of the year shakes out. We are feeling better as we head into the back half of the year.
Speaker 0
I just say that from a, you know, tariff big, beautiful big bill. I mean from a customer standpoint, I can't say that at this point we're seeing any impact to date in our key metrics that we follow, whether it's in the U.S. or Canada. I think the demand is actually better now than it was last year and it's actually better than 2019. Consumer behavior in terms of acceptance, ecri, bad debt, length of stay, all of these are, there's no significant changes. I do think it's probably a little bit too early to tell, but as we said before, we do kind of see that people are adjusting to the new normal. The new normal is rates are not going back to zero.
You talk to enough people, if in fact you live in Vegas and your grandkids are in North Carolina, you're not waiting until rates go back to zero to go move back to spend time with your grandkids. We're starting to see, I think, a little bit of, a little bit small signs of changes from a positive perspective of maybe people in motion.
Speaker 2
Okay.
Speaker 0
Just one final one.
Speaker 3
On the agreement with Orchard Securities, can you talk about what that means?
Speaker 0
For the company, versus original plans maybe three or four months ago, you anticipate raising more money, better terms.
Speaker 3
you provide a little bit more discussion on that? Yeah, absolutely.
Speaker 0
You know, we felt it was a good time to kind of change partners. Specifically, Orchard Securities, I think, is a good fit for us with respect to some of the 1031 Delaware statutory trust programs that we currently have in the market. I think to your point is we are also able to kind of negotiate a lower cost deal that we believe will help our overall shareholders out. I think all in all, it's a good, you do take a few steps back in these types of transition to new firms. Nonetheless, we have launched our second Delaware statutory trust program and we actually just started to see equity start to flow in this week. Obviously, you know, July, August tend to be pretty slow months.
We, you know, feel pretty good about the relationship, pretty good about the positioning and the continued growth in that, in that area of our business.
Speaker 3
Yeah. Wes, just to speak, dive a little bit deeper into the Managed REIT guidance in terms of what the update we did. Obviously, that transition to Orchard Securities is a big part of the reason, a good chunk of the reason as to why we moved up our EBITDA guidance because of that lower cost deal that Michael talked about. We are saving and getting more efficient on that line item as a result of this transaction. That, coupled with us getting some acquisitions and opening up properties as we outlined in the second quarter, and the underlying performance of the Managed REIT properties driving incremental fees over the course of the rest of the year, all three of those components are a result of us kind of moving our Managed REIT guidance higher last night. Great. Thanks for the time, everyone. Thank you.
Speaker 1
Your next question comes from the line of Nicholas Ulico with Scotiabank. Your line is open.
Speaker 3
Thanks. You know, sticking with the managed REIT business, can you just give us a feel for, at what point in the year you think you may have some more visibility on how to think about the forward AUM of the business as we're thinking about potential impact in 2026.
Speaker 0
Right now, we're at almost $1 billion of asset under management within those programs. Obviously, they're very beneficial with respect to additional economies of scale, property management fees, tenant insurance, asset management fees, and some acquisition fees. We achieved about $4 million in revenue in the second quarter, which was a little bit higher than I think we had guided. I think that we're going to see how this year goes with respect to some of the macro volatility and any recycling event that may occur, which we think is more of a 2026. I think it's a little too early for us to give any significant color, but as we move through the third and fourth quarter, I think we'll have a better picture.
Speaker 3
Okay, thanks, Michael. My second question is just going back to the guidance on same store revenue. I know you guys just look at this sort of total revenue, but in.
Speaker 0
terms of the components, is it right?
Speaker 3
To think that the adjustment low on same store revenue growth was more of a rate, an occupancy issue? Thanks. If we take a step back on, you know, how did we arrive at our second quarter same store revenue, that the tightening of that range.
Speaker 2
Right.
Speaker 3
We lowered the top end by about 75 basis points while also increasing the bottom end by 25 basis points. A lot of that was in part by what we saw in the second quarter and what got baked into the second quarter because of that June that we talked about. I think it's safe to say, and while we don't guide and specifically partition out the attribution from occupancy and rate, because we're so dynamic in real time and across all of our markets, I think it's safe to say that we still feel really good about where we are from an occupancy perspective. We did see a little bit of weakness on that move-in rate in the month of June, and that's what's driving the change in the overall, the tightening of that revenue range from our previous guidance. All right, thanks, teams.
Speaker 1
Your next question comes from the line of Ki Bin Kim with Truist. Your line is open.
Speaker 3
Thank you.
Speaker 0
Can you just talk about the Toronto operations? I know you have some kind of volatile comps in that market, but your
Speaker 3
Same store revenue cadence dropped to like 2% from the prior quarter.
Speaker 0
Can you just talk about the comps and just overall what your views are in the Toronto market and how, which it seems like a weak housing market, might affect that market going forward.
Speaker 3
Thank you.
Speaker 2
Hey, even so, as you know, Canada is a very different environment than U.S. from a storage perspective, different demand drivers, etc. It's been a nice outperformer for us on a constant currency basis. To your point, same store revenue growth was up 2% in the second quarter and about 4, 4.5% year to date. The comp was obviously much harder in the second quarter. It was 4.3% in Q2 2024. A lot harder to overcome that comp, but still the 2% was a solid print for us in the second quarter. If you look at our JV properties that would meet the definition of same store, they actually did even better than that. We always like to incorporate that as well. We're sitting here today in July with occupancy on our 13 same store Toronto assets at 92.8%, down a little bit from last year.
Speaker 0
Move in.
Speaker 2
Rates were down about 5% in the second quarter, but the overall demand remains pretty strong. I'm going to turn it over to Michael to give some higher level thoughts on Canada.
Speaker 0
Yeah, I mean I want to kind of address economy and demand in Canada. In terms of the economy, we have not seen any weakness with changes due to kind of the immigration policy tariffs. From our boots on the ground, we're hearing that it feels like a recession up in Canada right now. Despite that, our rentals have been up 10% in the second quarter and they're up 17% in July. Given our operational advantages up there and other positive storage related trends, we feel pretty good about the short, medium, and the long term prospects of where we're at within the Canadian economy. In addition, if in fact the Canadian economy gets into a significant recession, we do believe that it's going to fundamentally react in the same way that it does in the U.S.
You're going to probably cycle out of some people that are a little bit more price sensitive, but then you're going to be cycling in people that need that storage because of the recessionary environment. In addition to that, the demand drivers though are exactly pretty much the same as the U.S. They are different and they're different from the perspective that demand is more structurally rooted in space constraints, urban densification, immigration patterns, lifestyle needs. The weights on those compared to the U.S. are different. We believe and we see more stronger demand from life stages, transitions in Canada, divorce, death, downsizing, seasonal needs because most, you know, Canada still four seasons, and urban constraints, living in much smaller spaces in denser overall aggregate environments. Overall, you have a significantly under supplied market in concert with that.
We were in Toronto for 13 years before we started to bridge and outside of some of the other major metropolitan cities. We're starting to see obviously some really nice success in acquisitions but also aggregate performance with that diversification. Thank you for that. Michael, switching topics a little bit here on your managed REIT platform.
Speaker 3
Can you just kind of remind.
Speaker 0
Us and maybe walk us through what kind of KPIs you're setting for yourself for third party, third party equity growth, especially as we start to look into 2026. I do believe when we worked on your, when we all collected.
Speaker 3
We worked on our IPO, there was.
Speaker 0
Some growth that you expected in the fee business.
Speaker 3
How does that tie into like how much AUM you want to grow? You can just provide some simple KPIs for us. Thank you. Yeah. Kevin, this is James just to speak to kind of some of the metrics. Obviously, the metrics we are guiding to are two of the key ones we're focused on, right? Whether that be managed REIT EBITDA, which we put out a range for, as well as the AUM growth. The equity is a leading indicator for that AUM growth. Remember, AUM sequencing versus equity raise in a lot of cases tends to be mismatched, coupled with the fact that we've got some other events that are going to occur.
David alluded to the lockup of the retail shareholders expiring on October 1, whatever recycle is going to occur as a result of that, which again is very difficult to forecast and foresee at this time. We're going to be monitoring the equity raise. DST programs, right, those are discrete programs that have defined overall equity raises. We've got three programs in the market, one's $30 million, one's $62 million, and one's $54 million. Once those are done, the equity raise for that program stops and then we're trying to backfill with more product. Overall, we're trying to drive AUM growth because it's a very attractive business and a very accretive business to us to supplement and scale our platform. Good, thank you.
Speaker 1
Your next question comes from the line of Michael Mueller with J.P. Morgan. Your line is open.
Speaker 3
Yeah, hi. I guess following up on the distribution questions, considering you switched the partner, should we look at that as a sign that you're kind of doubling down on.
Speaker 0
The managed REIT platform and it's really.
Speaker 2
Kind of a vehicle that you want.
Speaker 3
To be in the longer term maybe compared to what you were thinking a year or so ago?
Speaker 0
I think we've been very clear that we think that there's benefits to the managed REITs in the short and probably the mid term, the long term. I don't foresee us being in the managed REIT business over the long term as, with the dislocation in the stock market a few years ago, the managed REIT business helped us continue to grow off balance sheet. No, I would say that it's just a transition to a partner to capitalize on some programs that we have on the market to get some additional economies of scale, which all then create some future growth for SmartStop in the future.
Speaker 3
Got it. Okay. How should we be thinking of and what's in the pipeline in terms of forward acquisitions?
Speaker 0
I guess split between the buckets.
Speaker 3
You know, being focused on building out scale in existing markets versus kind of moving into newer markets on a go forward basis.
Speaker 0
Let me just step back. Obviously, I want to emphasize that we were incredibly disciplined during the increase in interest rates. We only bought one asset in the past six or nine months. We saw, I think, a lot of great opportunities out there in pricing and product. We bought approximately $500 million of high quality self-storage properties since September of last year. We're still seeing a lot of attractive opportunities out there on the stabilized front, both in the U.S. and Canada. The deals that we closed and that we have in contract are just great examples of those mid 5% cap rates with nice management upside. We're just encouraged by the pipeline, the consistent deal flow, and sellers that are far more rational and reasonable than they were a few years ago. There are larger portfolios out there.
We've been primarily focusing on the onesies and twosies, which we believe we can create some additional value. We've acquired or have under contract about $300 million. Our guide was $375 million. That's really meaningful growth for us. It is enough for us to move that needle. That's obviously because of our size, and deals in the pipeline, we haven't seen a lot of movement in the bid and ask spread. I think it's been pretty consistent. We'll see how that occurs and shakes out over the next few months. From a Canadian perspective, I think that we're seeing a healthy amount of opportunities that would make sense for us, and obviously, the lower interest rate environment there helps out dramatically. In addition, the buyer pools are much different in Canada than in the U.S.
I think overall we feel pretty comfortable and confident about where we're at and fulfilling our guide.
Speaker 3
Yeah, I'll just add to that. If you look at what we've acquired both kind of leading into the month of December, the back half of 2024 and year to date here in 2025, I think it's representative of the opportunities we're seeing and what we're going to target. We are going to be focusing, not exclusively, but we will be focusing on acquiring to build out the scale and add to the clusters that we've been talking about. The Houston portfolio we acquired in June, you know, that takes us up materially into double digits operating in that market. The Alberta portfolio that we've got under contract and we've disclosed, we already have three operating assets in the Edmonton market and have performed quite well.
Our platform works in that market and we're excited to scale and other opportunities to kind of add onesie twosies in the markets that we already have some exposure to and want to increase and reach that critical mass. Got it. Okay, thank you.
Speaker 1
Your next question comes from the line of Spencer Glencore with Green Street. Your line is open.
Speaker 0
Thank you.
Speaker 1
I realize Alberta is a smaller market for you guys, but can you just provide a little color on the market, just in terms of existing supply landscape? As you think about looking to expand any existing properties or look at additional acquisitions in the province, do you have any concerns over this being an economically sensitive market, just given its dependence on energy?
Speaker 3
Yeah, Spencer, great, great question. First of all, we've been in the Edmonton market operating within the managed REITs for coming up on three years now. We've experienced multiple busy seasons in that market. As I said earlier, our platform continues to work. I think what we're excited about is continuing to expand in the major CMAs across Canada. Obviously, we have a strong and storied track record in the Greater Toronto Area. We're already operating within the Montreal and Vancouver markets and expanding our presence in the Alberta market. The supply story in both the major metros, Edmonton and Calgary, continues to be attractive, especially relative to the U.S. There is new supply in Calgary, but you know what? We're excited about entering that market. Edmonton is actually relatively low. It's still sub 3 square foot per capita in that particular market.
More importantly, this gives us an opportunity to get the eight operating assets all within a reasonable drive time, which will help us be much more efficient in terms of operating.
Speaker 0
You just have to also add that with less sophisticated operators and leveraging our platform, I think it's a recipe for really nice growth in those markets in various economic times.
Speaker 1
Okay, great. Have there been any deal opportunities or underwriting in terms of the Maritime Provinces? I just know that there's a substantial amount of supply in those markets, especially on the residential side. Potentially a good indicator for future demand.
Speaker 3
Yeah. What I'll say is we see everything in Canada, and our major focus is the top six CMAs. Right. We want to be in those top six markets, which is the Greater Toronto Area, Vancouver, Montreal, Edmonton, Calgary, and Ottawa. That's our focus. We still look at those, and they come across our desk. To your point, if there's not the population density, then we're not going to be penciling those deals and looking to acquire them. There's a lot of ripe opportunities for us to grow in the major markets in Canada first. Great.
Speaker 1
Thank you very much. Your next question comes from the line of Matt Cornack with National Bank. Your line is open.
Speaker 0
Hey guys, sorry to keep on the Canada theme here, but there's been some pretty sizable transactions in Toronto as well as west at ridiculously low cap rates, it looks like. Does that make it more difficult for.
Speaker 2
You to acquire, and have you thought.
Speaker 0
Of maybe kind of doing some capital recycling within the existing portfolio, given where.
Speaker 3
Some of those assets have traded?
Speaker 0
I think that's good news, bad news, right? Good news is I saw the opportunity in 2010 and we've built upon and we've created an amazing portfolio. I think the bad news is that cap rates in some of those deals were incredibly low. I believe one of them was a 2.25% cap rate. However, from my understanding, that buyer is not trying to buy anymore. They're trying to just figure out day-to-day operations with what they're doing. I think from our perspective, it's really a marathon, not a sprint. I think we've built just a high-quality portfolio in Toronto and we're now starting to build a high-quality portfolio in the major metropolitan cities. I think that there's just a tremendous amount of additional growth that we can achieve in undersupplied markets that have a lack of, I think, some sophisticated institutional markets.
I think from our perspective, we're in a growth mode. We have a very strong pipeline of development deals. Primarily, I'll probably go on our managed REITs because they'd be dilutive to SmartStop. I think that there will always be certain times in cycles where you can point to was that a potential recycling event. I can now look back and say, you know what, you look back and say if you had recycled, you would have probably sold a lot less than what the value of that real estate and the additional cash flow on a go-forward basis.
Speaker 3
I think the other thing as it relates to this question that's important to keep in mind is in a way we did capital recycle. We levered up in Canadian dollars through the Maple bond. We leveraged the portfolio that we've created thus far in the Greater Toronto Area at very attractive financing, and we brought it back across border and deployed it at mid to high 5% cap rate deals that we acquired in the U.S. That is an attractive opportunity for us to in essence resale capital without actually selling assets. Makes sense, maybe switching to the States.
Speaker 0
As we think of kind of a
Speaker 3
Rebound in the space.
Speaker 0
Is there a single kind of forward-looking indicator or catalyst, whether it's housing market transactions or something to that effect, that we should be looking for to kind of give us comfort that we are in fact inflecting and that demand?
Speaker 3
Is going to pick up?
Speaker 0
I mean, look, I don't want to beat a dead horse, but I think the first thing is you got.
Speaker 3
To focus on supply.
Speaker 0
Okay. We had a 10-year cycle; supply should have been a five-year. Then Covid hit and became 10 years. I think that we're first focusing on supply, and we're starting to see obviously real absorption accruing. It's going slow. We all want it to happen now. We all want it to be a hockey stick, but it's not. The good news with that is it's going to keep developers on the sideline for a much longer period of time. As we get through this choppiness, I can see some better days ahead for storage because of that supply being, I think, going to be more muted than maybe we all think in the future. First, I want to focus on supply. In addition, yes, it would be nice to have a robust full housing recovery in the U.S., and I think we're all waiting for it, we're all prepared.
I find what's interesting, without the housing recovery, how we've actually performed. Storage operators now have better technology, better sophistication, better access to data. I think in our just small portfolio, we're making out 3 million pricing changes on a monthly basis. We are modifying our approach based on supply and overall aggregate demand. One, we're going to focus on supply. Two, we're going to focus on our portfolio and optimize the best we can. We showed that we would focus more on rate than promotions and discounts. Yes, when that next driver, whatever that is, is it housing rentals, is it Covid, is it hurricanes, earthquakes, whatever that additional driver for storage, SmartStop Self Storage REIT is prepared to capture the upside in those environments.
Speaker 3
Great, thanks. Appreciate the color. Thanks, Bob.
Speaker 1
There are no further questions at this time. H. Michael Schwartz, I turn the call back over to you.
Speaker 0
Thank you, operator. It's been an amazing first four months as a publicly traded company. We look forward to the next two quarters in 2026. Thank you for your time and your interest in SmartStop Self Storage REIT.
Speaker 3
Smarter way to store.
Speaker 0
Have a great day.
Speaker 1
This concludes today's conference call. You may now disconnect.