UH
UNIVERSAL HEALTH REALTY INCOME TRUST (UHT)·Q1 2025 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q1 2025 delivered stable revenue ($24.55M) and flat diluted EPS ($0.34) while net income margin expanded vs Q4 2024; FFO per diluted share declined modestly YoY to $0.86 as property-level income and higher interest expense weighed on results .
- Management flagged increased borrowing costs and constrained capital market access due to higher rates; line-of-credit borrowings stood at $349.5M with $75.5M available capacity at quarter end .
- No formal revenue/EPS guidance was provided; dividend policy remained constructive with a Q1 dividend of $0.735 and a subsequent June increase to $0.740, signaling confidence in cash flow durability .
- Wall Street consensus estimates (S&P Global) for Q1 2025 EPS/revenue were not available; target price consensus stood at $43.00 based on 1 estimate*.
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Net income margin improved sequentially to ~19.5% from ~18.9% in Q4 2024, driven by lower operating expenses vs Q4 and steady rent and financing lease income .
- Liquidity remained solid with $75.5M undrawn under the $425M revolver (matures 9/30/2028; two optional six‑month extensions), supporting ongoing portfolio initiatives .
- Shareholder cash returns remained consistent; Q1 dividend of $0.735, followed by a June quarterly increase to $0.740 reflecting incremental confidence in distributable cash .
Management quote: “FFO…were $11.9 million, or $.86 per diluted share…The decrease…was due primarily to the…decrease in our net income during the first quarter of 2025, as compared to the first quarter of 2024.”
What Went Wrong
- YoY net income fell $0.5M and diluted EPS declined to $0.34 from $0.38, primarily due to lower aggregate property-level income and higher interest expense from increased average borrowings and effective borrowing rate under the credit agreement .
- Revenues declined modestly YoY and sequentially, with lease revenue from UHS facilities down vs Q1 2024 ($8.33M vs $8.66M) and non-related party lease revenue slightly lower ($14.33M vs $14.49M) .
- Interest rate environment remains a headwind; management explicitly noted substantially increased borrowing costs and reduced ability to access capital markets on favorable terms, posing risks to future results .
Financial Results
Segment revenue breakdown (REIT revenue categories):
Balance sheet and KPIs:
Vs Wall Street estimates:
Values with asterisk retrieved from S&P Global.
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Note: A Q1 2025 earnings call transcript for UHT could not be identified after searching IR and news sources; UHT press releases and 8-Ks provide qualitative context .
Management Commentary
- “Net income was $4.8 million, or $.34 per diluted share…The decrease…consisted of…(i) a decrease of $401,000…from an aggregate net decrease in the income generated at various properties, and; (ii) a decrease of $122,000…from an increase in interest expense due primarily to increases in our average outstanding borrowings and average effective borrowing rate…” .
- “FFO were $11.9 million, or $.86 per diluted share…The decrease…was due primarily to the above-mentioned decrease in our net income…” .
- “As of March 31, 2025…we had $75.5 million of available borrowing capacity, net of $349.5 million of borrowings…option to extend…for up to two additional six-month periods.” .
- “The increase in interest rates has substantially increased our borrowings costs and reduced our ability to access the capital markets on favorable terms.” .
Q&A Highlights
- A Q1 2025 earnings call transcript for UHT was not available via company filings, IR site, or major transcript aggregators; analysis is based on the press release and 8‑K furnished materials .
Estimates Context
- S&P Global consensus for Q1 2025 EPS and revenue was not available for UHT; coverage appears limited for this small-cap healthcare REIT*.
- Consensus target price stood at $43.00 based on 1 estimate*, suggesting sparse analyst coverage and limited external estimate anchors.
Values retrieved from S&P Global.
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Revenue and EPS were steady sequentially with expanding net margin; FFO per share declined YoY but remained resilient, underscoring durable rent and financing lease cash flows .
- Interest expense headwinds from higher average borrowings/effective rate are the primary earnings pressure point; revolver size/maturity and swap strategy partially mitigate rate exposure .
- Dividend policy remains a key signal: stable payout in Q1 and a subsequent increase to $0.740 supports an income-focused thesis and may act as a near-term catalyst .
- Limited Street coverage reduces estimate-driven volatility; trading likely reacts to dividend moves, liquidity metrics, and rate trajectory rather than quarterly “beats/misses”*.
- Portfolio-level income variability (property occupancy/bonus rents) can drive quarter-to-quarter results; monitor lease-up at assets like Sierra Medical Plaza and progress on vacant properties .
- Macro risks—tenant labor shortages, payer mix shifts, tariffs/materials costs—remain top-of-mind and are reiterated each quarter; watch tenant operating health, especially UHS-related facilities .
- Liquidity appears adequate with $75.5M revolver capacity at quarter end; balance sheet flexibility supports ongoing investment needs amid higher rate costs .