Mainstreet Equity Achieves Tenth Consecutive Quarter of Double-digit Growth in Q2

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CALGARY, Alberta, May 07, 2024--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Mainstreet posted our tenth consecutive quarter of double-digit, year-over-year growth across all key operating metrics in Q2 2024. Funds from operations ("FFO") before current corporate tax increased 46%, near the fastest rate in Mainstreet history. Net operating income ("NOI") rose 23%, same-asset NOI grew 17%, rental revenues increased 19%, and operating margins improved to 61%.

Bob Dhillon, Founder and Chief Executive Officer of Mainstreet, said, "Our latest results yet again demonstrate the success of Mainstreet’s value-add business model, continuing our more than 20-year legacy of delivering non-dilutive organic growth to shareholders." He added, "In this time of structural housing undersupply, Mainstreet remains a proud provider of affordable, quality, renovated living for middle-class Canadians."

We believe these highly positive results are consistent with the proven success of Mainstreet’s value-added business model. Since Mainstreet began trading on the TSX in 2000, we have expanded our portfolio from a handful of rental units to close to 18,000 units (YTD), allowing the Corporation to organically build a $3.2 billion asset base with no equity dilution. Over that period, Mainstreet has stuck to a countercyclical strategy of leveraging low cost of capital and our sizable liquidity position ($396 million) to acquire underperforming rental properties at attractive prices.

Our solid operating performance and Q2 results are underpinned by a few distinct drivers that we believe will continue to create opportunity for Mainstreet’s continued 100% organic, non-dilutive growth.

  • Housing shortages: Fundamentally, an imbalance between supply and demand in Canada’s housing market appears poised to persist for years. According to CMHC estimates, the country needs to build more than 3.5 million new homes by 2030 in order to close the current housing supply gap, as explosive population growth drives demand to new highs.

  • Structural rental supply gaps: That broader housing imbalance has filtered down into the purpose-built rental space. Canada’s entire rental universe consists of around 2.3 million apartments (CMHC), which is less than the 2.49 million people the country added to its population in the last three years alone (Statistics Canada). Supply of new purpose-built rental housing, meanwhile, remained flat over that same three-year period, with just 133,204 apartments added. That has helped push vacancy rates to record lows (1.5%, according to CMHC data) with little indication the market can swiftly return to balance. A combination of high interest rates, rising construction costs, longer construction periods and red tape for apartment builders—as well as a sharp rise in the rental rates that would be required to justify new development—suggest new supply will be limited and slow to enter the market, and will therefore continue to lag demand.