John Burkart
Thank you, and good morning, everyone. As Shankh mentioned, the momentum that continued to build through the fourth quarter of 2024 has carried into the early part of this year. We reported total portfolio same-store NOI growth of 12.9% driven by another quarter of solid senior housing operating portfolio growth of 21.7%. I'll start with the outpatient medical segment. which remains steady, posting 2.7% year-over-year same-store NOI growth.
Same-store occupancy trended higher on both a year-over-year and sequential basis, coming in at 94.5% and while tenant retention also remains healthy at over 94%.
Now shifting to the senior housing operating portfolio. We continue to be pleased with our performance with Q1 marking the tenth consecutive quarter in which year-over-year same-store NOI growth exceeded 20%. This incredible feet isn't just a function of the attractive demand supply backdrop for senior housing, however.
Welltower's Alpha continues to be driven more so by our best-in-class operating partners and deployment of the Welltower business system our proprietary end-to-end operating platform and our focus on deepening regional density across the portfolio. These initiatives continue to bear significant fruit.
During the quarter, year-over-year same-store revenue growth of 9.6% was clearly the highlight driven by a remarkable 400 basis points of occupancy growth and strong RevPOR growth of nearly 6%. Revenue growth was generally consistent across all three of our regions led by the US at 9.8%, followed by the UK at 9.3% and Canada at 8.3%.
Importantly, we also reported nearly 300 basis points of year-over-year margin expansion during the quarter as revenue continues to solidly outpace unit expense growth. And while NOI margins remain below pre-Covid levels, the inherent operating leverage in our business, combined with widening of our moat through Welltower business system position us well for substantial margin expansion well into the future. Although I tend to keep quiet about various Welltower business system initiatives for proprietary reasons, I have commented on the technology platform, which is foundational to the customer and employee experience as well as driving alpha. These efforts have continued, and we are on pace with our 2025 rollout plans.
Currently, multiple operators have some portion of their assets on our technology platform, and we continue to add assets monthly. -- collaboratively working with our operating partners to address pain points and drive efficiencies in the business. While it's early in the peak leasing season is ahead of us, -- we're pleased with our results thus far.
The need-based and private pay nature of the business has clearly proven its resilience but we'll take nothing for granted, and we'll continue to operate with the same level of dog determination and vigilance across all aspects of operations with a focus on providing a delightful customer experience and driving site-level employee satisfaction higher.
I'd like to take a moment to commend both our internal Welltower team and our world-class operating partners for their efforts in generating our industry-leading results. We remain relentlessly focused on operational excellence as we strive to deliver an unmatched service offering for residents and their families while making our communities the most desirable places to work in the industry.
I'll now turn the call over to Nikhil.
Nikhil Chaudhri
Thanks, John. As we've discussed over the past few quarters, we have observed a noticeable expansion in capital deployment opportunities, resulting not only from debt-driven challenges, but also from pension funds sun liquid and other institutions reducing exposure to commercial real estate. This backdrop has resulted in year-to-date investment activity, which has already surpassed our acquisition volume for all of last year, which in itself was a record year for the company.
In addition, our investment pipeline remains robust with recent capital markets volatility presenting additional opportunities for us. Turning to the quarter. we completed $2.6 billion of new investments in the first quarter. On our last call in February, we had previously announced $2 billion of year-to-date activity -- and since then, in the last 2.5 months, we have expanded our investment activity by $4.2 billion, bringing our total year-to-date balance sheet investment activity to $6.2 billion. This additional activity is comprised of the USD3.2 billion acquisition of Amica Senior Lifestyle announced last month and an additional $1 billion plus of new granular activity.
Of this additional $1 billion, $660 million has already closed in Q1, with the remaining transactions expected to close in the coming months. Zooming in on our Amica transaction, which is expected to close around year-end, we are already incredibly excited to announce our partnership with one of the strongest seniors housing operators in Canada. Alongside Cogir, one of Welltower's most valued growth partners, Amica's inclusion in our portfolio further enhances our partnership with best-in-class operators in the country.
As Shankh mentioned earlier, -- the quality of the Amica portfolio is simply unparalleled as demonstrated by its locations within highly affluent neighborhood and its performance track record. -- This ultra luxury portfolio that is comprised of 38 locations in Vancouver, Victoria and the Greater Toronto area boasts home values of $2 million to $4 million within the immediate vicinity of the communities or 3 to 4x the average home values in those respective provinces. Living in an Amica building is a matter of great pride in prestige for the residents and the service offering and the food quality are truly 5 star.
The total consideration of CAD4.6 billion is comprised of the following components. -- in-place operational assets with an average age of 11 years. These properties include 24 in-service assets with in-place occupancy in the mid-90s. These assets have sustained occupancy at these levels for a long period of time and boost margins in the low to mid-40s. Given their strong reputation -- these assets have demonstrated CAGR RevPOR growth of nearly 7% during the last five years.
Beyond the stable 24, there are 7 in-place assets that are newly built and currently in lease-up with average in-place occupancy of approximately 70%. Amica has demonstrated an incredible lease-up track record with their last 10 development projects leasing up in just 18 months on average. The next bucket includes 7 projects that are currently under construction and will be acquired at a preset price upon construction completion without Welltower bearing any construction and cost-related risk. These projects are expected to be completed between 2025 and 2017.
The final real estate component includes nine development parcels, which have gone through elongated, multiyear entitlement processes. These parcels comprise of expansion opportunities for existing Amica buildings or de novo developments in the most desirable and supply constrained locations in Vancouver, Victoria and the Greater Toronto area. In addition to these components, the transaction includes the assumption of CAD560 million of CMHC debt priced attractively at 3.6% and an approximately one-third ownership of the Amica management company, along with in a line dried D5. -- contract.
The nondevelopment components of the transaction are underwritten to generate an unlevered IRR in the double-digit range with additional upside expected from the expansion and development projects as their respective business plans are executed over the coming years. Zooming back out to our first quarter activity, 93% of our activity was off market and 75% of this was with repeat counterparties. Our activity was comprised of 26 different transactions with a median size of $55 million. I want to let this sink in. [20] different transactions in 13 weeks are on average, 2 transactions a week.
We acquired 88 properties comprising nearly 10,000 units across all three countries and asset classes that we invested. Just within the US, we invested capital across 23 states in the first quarter with team members sitting across just three offices in the US and one office each in the U.K. and Canada, we're able to invest in a granular manner due to the strength of our data science and machine learning platform.
Our data science solutions, which have been created over the past decade by Swagat and his team provide us with a unique view of the terrain giving us a neighborhood level view of 10-plus million micro markets in the US, allowing us to attain a level of scale, which is truly unprecedented in real estate.
When combined with our investment teams intellectual curiosity, and relentless drive to get it right, not just to be right with the disciplined execution of our high-performing operating partners, backed by the proven strength of the Welltower business system. We are able to get the air just right. This setup enables us to create significant value and consistently deliver strong returns and durable growth for our investors.
I will now pass the call over to Tim to cover our financial results and updated guidance for 2025.
Timothy McHugh
Thank you, Nikhil. My comments today will focus on our first quarter 2025 results. performance of our triple net investment segments, our capital activity, a balance sheet liquidity update; and finally, an increase to our full year 2025 outlook. Welltower reported first quarter net income attributable to common stockholders of $0.40 per diluted share and normalized funds from operations of $1.20 per diluted share, representing 18.8% year-over-year growth.
We also reported year-over-year total portfolio same-store NOI growth of 12.9%. Now turning to the performance of our triple net properties in the quarter. As a reminder, our triple-net lease portfolio covered stats reported a quarter in arrears. So these statistics reflect the trailing 12 months ending 12-31-2024. I -- in our seniors housing triple-net portfolio, same-store NOI increased 5.1% year-over-year and trailing 12-month EBITDAR coverage increased to 1.16x.
Coverage in this portfolio continues to strengthen, now well exceeding pre-pandemic levels. as fundamentals align with those of our operating portfolio, a trend we expect to continue going forward.
Next, same-store NOI in our long-term post-acute portfolio grew 2.8% year-over-year. and trailing 12-month EBITDA coverage is 1.56x. Moving on to capital activity. During the quarter, we funded $2.3 billion of net investment activity with equity and retained cash flow. We issued $2.2 billion back in the quarter, with over 10% of our investment activity funded through the issuance of units directly to sellers-- ultimately ending the quarter with $3.6 billion of cash and lower leverage than we had at year-end. As Shankh mentioned, we ended the quarter with net debt to adjusted EBITDA ratio of 3.33x, the lowest level recorded in Welltower's history.
As a result of our current capital position, and the improvement in the outlook for full year operating results announced last night. We still expect run rate net debt adjusted EBITDA to end the year at 3.5x. And while adding $4.2 billion to our planned 2025 acquisition activity since our initial balance sheet guidance was provided in February. Before we dive into our updated guidance, I want to quickly spotlight or key milestones from this past quarter. The credit upgrades we received from both S&P and Moody's.
A strong balance sheet has always been a pillar of our strategy, not just in terms of lower leverage, but also in the quality of our asset base. Welltower before the onset of the pandemic, we initiated a deliberate transformation of our business, repositioning the portfolio, driving greater alignment in our operating agreements, and building out our asset management capabilities, resulting in a platform with the risk profile is virtually unrecognizable compared to where we started. It's gratifying to see that transformation recognized by both agencies.
Importantly, we have never managed to a rating and there's no finish line here. This is an ongoing deliberate effort to ensure we are optimally positioned for whatever lies ahead. That discipline gives us the strongest possible foundation for uninterrupted compounding through any market environment. Lastly, as I turn to our updated 2025 guidance. We have not included any investment activity in our outlook beyond the $6.2 billion that has been closed or publicly announced to date.
And as a reminder, there is no expected earnings contribution in 2025 from our acquisition of the Amica portfolio. which is expected to close at year-end.
Last night, we updated our full year 2025 outlook for net income attributable to common stockholders of $1.70 to $1.84 per diluted share, and normalized FFO of $4.90 to $5.04 per diluted share or $4.97 at the midpoint. Our normalized FFO guidance represents a $0.10 increase at the midpoint from our prior normalized FFO range. This increase is composed of $0.02 increase from higher NOI in our senior housing operating portfolio, $0.07 increase from accretive capital allocation activity $0.02 increase from FX and income taxes, offset by $0.01 from higher expected G&A in the year.
Underlying this FFO guidance is an estimate of total portfolio year-over-year same-store NOI growth of 10% to 13.5%, driven by subsegment growth of outpatient medical, 2% to 3%, long-term post-acute, 2% to 3% and senior housing triple net 3% to 4%.
And finally, senior housing operating growth of 16.5% to 21.5%. This is driven by the following midpoints of their respective ranges. Revenue growth of 9%, driven by increased expectations for both full year RevPOR and occupancy growth, now at 5% and 350 basis points, respectively, and expense growth of 5.25%.
And with that, I will hand the call back over to Shankh.
Shankh Mitra
Thank you, Tim. Before I open the call up for questions, I wanted to quickly reflect on the current macroeconomic environment. Please note that during our second quarter call last year, we described our base case macro view for next few years. Without fully repeating my comments, I'll summarize them by saying that we appear to be entering a potentially long period of higher inflation and higher interest rate, a stark contrast to the market conditions over the past 40 years.
As a result of that shift, the tailwind, which have lifted asset prices, including that real estate for the past few decades are not just subsiding, but also may well very well turn into a headwind. Additionally, the current macro uncertainty may introduce another layer of complexity in the near term. Cyclical pressure on economic growth unfolding against a backdrop of elevated rates and persistent inflation, that you can observe in the consumer confidence and other high-frequency economic data. While we are not in the business of forecasting economic trends, we are keen observers of market-based signals. Higher interest rates, coupled with significant widening of credit spreads across investment grade, high yield and all asset-based financing markets warrant cautions as it relates to asset prices going forward.
Said in another way, in our world of real estate, we expect higher rates along with wider debt spreads will put downward pressure on asset prices. On our recent calls, while we have repeatedly discussed the wall of debt maturities and lack of credit availability, the other trend we are paying close attention to is on the equity side.
Following the slow return of capital to LPs this cycle and the impact of denominator effects after many years of pension funds and endowments steadily marching towards the Ye Swanson model, many large pools of capitals are reducing their exposure to private assets, including private real estate.
This phenomena has potential to exacerbate the negative credit-driven impact of asset prices, which I just described. We at Welltower are focused on risk, reward and duration when deploying capital. and we perceive a higher level of risk than we did 90 days ago. While we hope that these clouds will pass, we do not believe hope is a strategy. We believe capital allocation is all about positioning, not predicting.
And to that point, I want to thank Tim and our capital markets team for putting us in an enviable position in terms of our balance sheet strength and liquidity to protect our owners' capital on one hand and take advantage of the market opportunities that may arise on the other. Ultimately, we believe that the days of generating returns through financial wizardry and levered beta are over. Instead, as an operating company in a real estate wrapper, we're convinced that the only path to delivering satisfactory returns will be through compounding of cash flow generated by superior operations and supplemented with capital allocation to suboptimized assets, further growing our network effect.
And with that, I will open the call for questions.
Operator
(Operator Instructions)
Vikram Malhotra - Mizuho.
Vikram Malhotra
Morning. Thanks for your question and congrats on the strong internal and external results. I wanted to focus on the platform or the business systems that you've been talking about for a while. I mean you're clearly having very strong internal and external activity. And I'm wondering how the business system overlay now. I think it's been two years.
How does that parlay into both sort of the margins but also CapEx control. Just I guess, accentuating both the magnitude and the duration of the performance. If you could kind of help frame it perhaps with some numbers? Or just give us more details, that would be helpful.
Shankh Mitra
Thank you, Vikram. So the margin expansion possibilities that we have talked about, which is not unique to our asset class just were the last ones from an asset class standpoint you could observe in multifamily in the '90s and 2000 and self-storage industry, single-family rentals and so on and so forth. And that's true institutionalization of these asset classes and with sort of the last one going through this, our asset class is going through this.
I'll tell you whether we're successful in this journey or not and how far we're successful will matter both on our side on Welltower Business System execution as well as our best-in-class operators who are doing this, obviously, this execution on a day-to-day basis on a hand-to-hand combat, frankly. It's a complex business. It's not an easy business to pull off. But we are with our operating partners shoulder to shoulder no matter what. But if you just think about reflecting a little bit on what Welltower business system is or what is it designed to be, it is a complex adaptive system that aims to balance chaos and order and can self-organize based on dynamic feedback loop and adapt to changing conditions.
That's what we are focused on, right? So if you think about just sort of what I mentioned that -- we're not -- we're relied on our operating partners who have great talent pool in these companies. And we're augmenting that talent pool with our talent pool who is coming in to solve their problems, customers' problem, employees end points, et cetera.
So ultimately, the goal of Welltower Business System is to bring system-level thinking to remit bottlenecks, streamline flow and minimize friction in all human interactions that you see in these communities, which is family to residents and obviously, our caregivers and our employees and it's sort in a round robin manner, right? So that's sort of what we are focused on to streamline that row and minimize that friction in all those human interactions and focus solely in areas where scalability creates a strategic advantage. While relying on our operating partner to solve the unremovable complexities that are inherent in our business. So what do we mean by that?
So we are focused on providing Welltower Business System to offer site-level employees that John mentioned, obviously, his early college days of Costco experience last call, was our business system to provide site level employees with real-time actionable business insights and free up valuable time to provide a real human touch to our residents.
And if we think we can do this, we have a long runway of margin expansion in our business.
Operator
John Kilichowski, Wells Fargo.
John Kilichowski
Thank you. Good morning, Shankh, we really enjoyed your annual shareholder letter this year. Something we found particularly interesting was the section on how your data science platform has improved your velocity to market in the transaction process. Would you mind walking us through the process in a bit more detail? And then also maybe giving some color around what percentage of your pipeline do you believe this proprietary technology is directly responsible for?
Shankh Mitra
So I'm not going to walk you through, I wrote in a very detailed format of how general markets sort of structure work in a marketed transaction? But if you go back and read it, you will see the path is sort of it. Real estate is a very glacially moving slow business, right? So if you just think about what the whole process looks like, John, when you say you're a seller, you are looking to sell something, you hire broker, you grow through all this to ultimately you close the deal, that whole process takes about 5 to 10 months depending on whether the counterparty needs financing or not financing and all of those kind of things, right?
So if you just think about in our business, let's just say that focus on just our business, market participants in our business, not most, all of them are focused on sort of NIC 99 or that kind of information, which is sort of -- that's not a great level of information, but that's kind of what you have, level of information that's sort of MSA level information and then sort of that whole process rolls out.
For us, as Nikhil mentioned, our proprietary platform analyses 10-plus million micro market nationwide, leveraging a unique and nonreplicable data sets accumulated over 100-plus senior housing operators over 20 years, right? So this granular machine learning approach powered by a long time series of data across diverse properties and operators enables us to take a neighborhood level view of any asset and provide initial interest within our team within a few minutes and it determines a narrow range of predicted performance within a day. It used to be two to three days.
We have brought it down with significant more compute power within a day, allowing us to provide initial sort of preliminary pricing feedback within a week that we can live with, subsequently to the assets and have a handshake on definitive terms within two weeks that we can -- again, we can stand by. Remember, at Volta, we have Nova walked away from a handshake, right? So it's not just a question, we'll look at our broker pro forma and give people throw people a number. That's how real estate industries work. right?
So ultimately closed that deal in 45 to 60 days. So just think about that velocity to market makes us the first call to more sellers because frankly speaking, and obviously our reputation, that we never walk away from handshake, as fundamentally upended the status quo in this business, the real estate industry, which hasn't changed in decades, right? Because if you're a seller, what do you have to lose. If you don't like your answer within a week, you go do that process anyway, that we described that will take you 5 to 10 months. So think about -- so what are we trying to do -- we're trying to bring down latency that is inherent in a glacially moving industry in a significant way.
And latency is a very important concept when we study network effect. In most industries that moves in that glacial pace, no different in our industry, as I said, in real estate. And that is a very, very thing that we're trying to disrupt by reducing latency in our system by completely turning the velocity to market in his head.
And as latency shrinks, materially, as we talked about -- just talked about, the network effect kicks into high gear, creating a new paradigm of maximum growth maximum gain that simply doesn't occur in businesses and industries that moves at a glacial pace, right? So that's how it works. If you think about the journey of our journey of what we have been able to achieve. And you want to point out to one thing, as Tim mentioned, you can't point out to one thing. This is a long decade long journey of transforming this industry and the transforming the business.
But if you want to point out one thing, that will be reducing that latency, right? That's how you sort of go into a paradigm of maximum growth maximum gain and that sort of created another level of network effect that kicks into the high year.
Operator
[Pharaoh Grenath], Bank of America.
Hi, good morning. Thank you for taking the question. I was curious, just getting your current size, how can you frame how you continue to think about of sustained growth going forward?
Shankh Mitra
[Pharaoh], that's a really, really good question. If Welltower was a spread investing vehicle that is relied on financial engineering, I would say growth at some point should be a problem. -- size under growth should be somewhat inversely correlated at some point. And I don't know what that is, frankly speaking, and you can see different industries have come to different conclusions.
However, if we can see, as I've mentioned before, we have changed this company, which frankly was that what exactly were describing, it was a real estate deal shop, which was reliant on capital markets and frankly speaking, cost of capital.
We have -- it was a decade-long effort for us to change this company into an operating company in a real estate wrapper.
So if you just think about it as an operating company, the opposite trend actually happens due to network effect that I was just talking about to John's question earlier. As we have grown, just think about that for a second, right? We capture more and more data and two of our key competitive advantage, our data science platform and Welltower Business System continues to strengthen, further expanding our more and driving a wider performance gap between ourselves and our competitors. So you think about that what you are describing, which happens in some of these kind of levered beta spread investing vehicles, you will see as they go bigger their performance spread to market actually shrinks.
If you go back and see that we had our Investor Day in 2018, and there, in that Investor Day, I talked about this topic and I said that despite our outperformance to our competitors up to leading up to that point, that will widen. And if you just see what happened since then, it has widened our market, our performance to market has widened, and that happened because we had transformed this company from a real estate deal shop to an operating company and a real estate wrapper and I would like to tell you that's unique. It's not. If you just look at all operating companies, you will see they have achieved success because of their success. Look at Home Depot, look at Costco, look at Amazon, not in spite of their success.
And that's because of the network effect, and that's because of the impact these companies have and the data capture and everything else I talked about to John's question earlier, where your size becomes positive to your growth, not negative, but it's an extraordinarily important question. Thank you.
Operator
Omotayo Okusanya, Deutsche Bank.
Jonathan Hughes, Raymond James Financial, Inc.
Jonathan Hughes
Hi, good morning. Thank you for the prepared remarks and commentary. Tim, you reiterated the 3.5 leverage target by year-end. That's up from 3.3 today, so flying a levering up in the next few quarters. I guess, why utilize debt when your cost of equity is arguably lower and would be more accretive and it never has to be refinanced. I'm just trying to better understand that near-term leverage target and how you think about the right capital structure or target capital structure on a longer-term or normalized basis? Thank you.
Shankh Mitra
Jonathan, before Tim gives you an answer. I'll just say that we fundamentally disagree with your assumption that our cost of equity is lower than our cost of debt. Our cost of equity is much higher than you think. And that's probably because we think our potential growth in our long-term business is much higher, right? You got to think about your cost of equity on a long-term arc, not just your spot cost of equity.
Anyway Tim?
Timothy McHugh
Yeah, Jonathan, I'd just say the -- what's driving our view on leverage higher is putting the cash to work off the balance sheet. It's not the assumption that we're issuing debt. It's just part of the mechanics of the cash coming off the balance sheet, putting it to work. With the guidance we provided last night, we're fully funded for all the capital activity. In fact, we're even paying off $1.25 billion in debt in those assumptions.
Operator
Ronald Kamdem, Morgan Stanley.
Ronald Kamdem
Just my question is, look, clearly, occupancy jumped off the pace this quarter. And you guys put a couple of slides in the presentation, including the acceleration from January, February to March. I guess I'd love to sort of -- I know occupancy and pricing matters, but just staying on the occupancy front, just internally, what are expectations sort of long term for your markets? And then is this pace sustainable? Could it accelerate?
Just how are you guys thinking about that? Would love some high-level color.
Shankh Mitra
Ron, I would just say our expectation of what we think occupancy growth this year, as Tim just described to you, so I have nothing to add to that. Long term, we believe that as we sort of optimize this business with fewer and fewer operating partners who increasingly have a much greater regional density. We believe that frictional vacancy is a lot lower than we thought, and John talked about this in the call as you lead 2, 3 calls ago. And so we believe we have a long journey in front of us to a much higher level of occupancy. And obviously, I'm not talking about optics.
I'm talking about the current portfolio because remember, Nikhil continues to add a lot of underoccupied buildings.
So we think we have a long journey in front of us. And but we're just think about this year, right? We're giving you our best guess. Remember, it's a guess. And our business is a June to October type of a business, right?
It summer leasing system business. We'll go through summer, and we'll tell you what we see. But if we didn't feel good about the current face some activity, current phase of sort of future resident engagement, we would not have raised guidance in Q1 for both occupancy and rates, right? But that's what we see today. We'll see what tomorrow brings us.
Operator
Austin Wurschmidt, KeyBanc.
Austin Wurschmidt
Great, thanks, Shankh, just kind of wanted to hit on your comments that you wrapped up in the prepared remarks. You discussed this period of potentially higher inflation with cyclical pressure on economic growth. as well as the potential for a negative impact on asset prices from the Reliance on credit over the last few decades. I guess with many seniors utilizing savings and equity from their homes and retirement in that backdrop, how do you think senior housing performs based on what you outlined? Thanks.
Shankh Mitra
That's a really, really good question. Why don't I start on jump in as you see fit. We have a pretty good case study of how that might turn out. We can see, obviously, a lot of senior wealth is not in the equity market, right? Clearly, a majority of them actually not.
And they are in other fixed income or housing type assets -- and we believe that we don't see a case of why housing prices will collapse like it has during GFC. But let's just say that we're wrong and you can see even during global financial crisis, which was driven by housing and even and housing collapsed 50%, and you could see even then how the asset class has held up, right?
So look, the thing is the future is uncertain by definition, and it's a redundant statement, but it's a very important one. And we fundamentally believe that life is about positioning, not predicting. And given where we are, with the near term, we go into -- I believe that the asset class will hold up better than all real estate and many, many other industries. We'll see what happens. And as you have seen from our track record that if there is disruption, and again, that's not my base case view, there will be disruption.
But if there's disruption, you know how well behave, we're perfectly predictable. That's why we have a terrific balance sheet for, right?
And if there is disruption, you will see, obviously, that will put more pressure in asset prices, more pressure on people who have 60%, 70%, 80% leverage. Our leverage is what right? And we will go lean into it. We are very optimistic about our business for the next 5, 10, 15, 20, 30 years. And frankly speaking, will welcome disruption, but that's not our base case scenario.
Operator
Seth Bergey, Citi.
Seth Bergey
Hi, good morning. You kind of mentioned in the opening remarks that the pipeline is expanding given the capital markets dislocation, -- can you kind of quantify the expansion and kind of what portion of that expansion would be of the type of assets that you would be interested in potentially acquiring?
Shankh Mitra
Seth, we are not going to sit here and try to speculate on what our pipeline may or may not do. We do believe that when this kind of capital markets disruption happened, people who absolutely looking for liquidity, whether that's equity driven or debt driven that Nikhil talked about, we'll need to access liquidity. And if it is that their expectation is commensurate with today's reality of rates and spreads. We'll provide them that liquidity? And if not, we'll not.
We are not in the business of doing deals. We're an operating company. We only add assets in in our markets and in our micro markets where we feel we can build regional density. So if we can, we will do it. If not, we'll just sit here and wait.
Nikhil Chaudhri
Yeah. I think the only thing I'd add to that is, we talked earlier about what Welltower's pace of execution is versus what the conventional market time line is to bring a transaction home and that 6 to 10 months that we talked about, just think about what has happened in the last 6 to 10 months between Fed rate cuts, the election, liberation date -- and so just think about sellers that chose to work with somebody else, and they did not have ultimate price certainty from then to until now. And just given how macro has changed, imagine the ups and downs, then the deal fatigue that they've gone through. And so there's a lot of broken deals. And when there's broken deals, we get the call.
So we're actively looking at a lot, but as Shankh mentioned, we are squarely focused on playing in places that we have high conviction in our end markets that we already have a lot of scale.
Operator
Richard Anderson, Wedbush.
Richard Anderson
Hey, thanks and good morning, Great quarter, of course. So Shankh, you said something fewer operating partners that are deeper more densified in their geographies, I'm paraphrasing, but something like that. So where do you see that sort of that optimal sort of cadence in terms of how big of a pie chart of operating partners is the right number for you guys, call it, three, five years from now. And out of curiosity, do you sense any sort of pushback given the current climate doing business with operators in Canada and the UK what are some of the sort of variables as it relates to that ultimate plan to reduce your operator -- the number of your operators in your portfolio? Thanks.
Shankh Mitra
Yeah. That's a very good question. It's a question that we reflect on our shop all the time. So let's just take a step back and think about -- so the -- if you are looking for a numeric cancer, I'll just say it's fewer -- and that sort of is no question that we are focusing on regional density, focusing more and more concentrating on our existing partners who have performed really well. There is no question that every year we look at obviously, a lot of new operating teams.
And we added one or two and then obviously a lot of people also fall the wayside. But generally speaking, I will say, is there a pushback? Look, we're fair people. We're entirely focused on performance, we're entirely focused on outlook of how some of our operating sort of partners that think about the future, right? This is all about the future.
And that is nothing to do with frankly speaking. There are two types of operators, right? You think about what we call Gen 1 operators in our business, people who have been around with our company, with George Chapman and others, and they're absolutely killed it. Tim Bacano would be a great example. right? Then there are operators that I grew up in this business with who are sort of, say, Gen 2 operators who have built the business as with us such as Matthew at Coseer or say Dan at story points, right?
So these are the operators that I grew up in the business with a tremendous amount of respect for what they do and how they do it.
And frankly speaking, the outlook for the future, do want to get better every day, do new things, try things, fail fast and move the business forward. do we find new operating partners sort of who share that view. Amica would be a very good example of that, right. Amica is an exceptionally good operator, we have founded Care UK and UK.
would be a great example of that, right? The exceptional team. But generally speaking, our view is as the business has grown, we want to reduce complexity by focusing on think about what we're trying to do. We're trying to deploy at our business system across, grow with our operators. And so it is that it's a moving target.
We have not seen any pushback, obviously, from all these sort of UK and Canada. In fact, we can Canadian businesses are growing fabulously, and we expect that both of those business will continue to grow significantly.
But that's kind of what I have to say at this point in time. I always sort of think about in current context of assets we have. But remember, our assets, Nikhil, is making our job harder every day by growing the asset base significantly. And we'll see where these things land, but philosophically, we want to be with people who -- right or wrong. This is not -- we're not pointing out that were right somebody else is wrong.
It's just like we're philosophically aligned with us on where we're trying to take the business. And so that's kind of a very important point is we want to be with people who are shoulder to shoulder with us no matter what.
Operator
Nicholas Yulico, Scotiabank.
Nicholas Yulico
Hi, good morning, everyone. Just a couple of questions on senior housing. First, given that we are in a more uncertain macro environment, I was hoping to get a feel for how leading indicators for senior housing looked in April such as maybe tour volume, leads, conversions into move-ins, how those are tracking versus a year ago? And then in terms of the guidance and the decision to raise the revenue guidance in senior housing clearly, you have some confidence in the business.
But maybe just give us a feel about how, again, the macro environment might have impacted that guidance? And do you even build in some cushion there, preventing and, let's say, there would have been an even bigger raise in sort of a more clear economic environment? Thanks.
Shankh Mitra
Let me try to start and Tim will really give an answer to your question. So you just think about it I have very clearly stated, I think, last year that 90 days, a short enough time frame for a company of our size and scale to even comment on things, let alone talk about month-to-month what's happening, right? So clearly, we have walked away from all monthly sort of what's going on this month, this week. We really honestly not focused on that. Having said that, Nick, the fundamental premise of your question is the right one.
We know how April up to this point has progressed. And frankly speaking, if we didn't feel good about that data, we wouldn't give you sort of in Q1, we would not have raised both occupancy and rate assumption, which, again, I want to make it abundantly clear, that's our guess, right? It's an educated guess, but it's a guess. We've not done it as sitting at the end of April. So what we see, we really like what we see, but we have no dilution of certainty. Remember, this business is a June to October business, and we need to see how June to October plays out, and we'll tell you as we see.
Tim?
Timothy McHugh
Yeah. I'll just add to that, Nick, I like the way you asked that on the guidance side. Clearly, when you provide projections or forecasts, the having more uncertainty and an outlook drives a little bit of a wider range of outcomes. And so that's always factored in. That being said, the biggest piece of it, the anchor to is what Jon just said, what are we actually seeing in the business?
And if we're not seeing trends change, that's going to drive the biggest piece. We don't see it as kind of part of our job here to make -- to forecast what may or may not happen beyond what we're seeing and then taking a reasonable range of outcomes into it.
So I think your view that some sort of increased uncertainty would be taken into account would be correct. And I think Sean's comments on current business shows no signs of weakness goes along with that.
Operator
Michael Carroll, RBC Capital Markets.
Michael Carroll
I just wanted to touch on like how you guys view the spread between RevPOR and ExPOR. I know the current spread has been solid and is well above or at least higher versus historical levels. how can that trend going forward? I mean is it fair to assume that it could stay at this level just because I know there's some sensitivity to push rate -- or does like the Welltower business system rollouts kind of changed that formula a little bit and there is some room for that to continue to expand?
John Burkart
I think we've been pretty clear. Our expectations are to grow margin over time. And so that definitely indicates that we continue to outgrow revenue out past per unit expenses. So yes, we see a lot of run rate with that. I'm not going to repeat what Sean said earlier, but Welltower business system, what goes on their enables us to drive that margin for many years into the future.
Operator
Juan Sanabria, BMO Capital Markets.
Juan Sanabria
Good morning. Hoping you could talk a little bit about the skilled nursing investments you made in the quarter, it looks like it was about $1.2 billion. Is that fee simple? Was the loan investments if you could talk about kind of the coverage there or just the portfolio of assets maybe that was driving that? Thank you.
Nikhil Chaudhri
Yeah, an -- so there was a couple of different transactions, but -- and in this particular quarter, look, we use the skilled nursing business as a credit business for us. sometimes that comes in the form of a debt investment, sometimes it comes in the form of a triple net lease investment, but they're both underwritten from a credit investment perspective.
The large transaction this quarter has a lot of things that we're really excited about. So the first thing is it was a broken transaction there was some softness in the market, dealer, Welltower was able to come in and come in with a dual-path solution. One was we brought an operator to the table that the deal was lacking.
And then the other was obviously a certainty to close. So first thing is we leverage that the fact that it was a broken deal to get a favorable price adjustment to the tune of a couple of hundred million bucks in our favor. Then the operator that we brought in is an operator, we have an existing book of business of it Aspire that has done an incredibly good job for us. And with Aspire, we bought a turnaround portfolio towards the end '23 and their performance in just a matter of five, six quarters has been quite incredible. It took a portfolio that was on an EBITDAR basis losing, call it, $15 million and improved cash flow, so significantly that today, that EBITDA is north of $90 million.
So given -- and there was the scaled portfolio just given the dollars we're talking about here. So given their strength in the quality of execution, this portfolio given its size made a lot of sense for them. And from a performance perspective, in place, this portfolio is generating enough cash flow to cover rent 10, year 1 or in place. And that's said occupancy in the mid-60s. So we have an operator that has a proven track record of improving performance pretty substantially.
But in this case, unlike the Florida case, you have significant in-place cash flow that covers. And on top of that, there is additional credit enhancements in terms of guarantees and there's north of $0.5 billion worth of net worth. That is in assets outside of skilled making that is sitting behind this transaction to support, right?
So you've got quality assets, checks, quality operator check, in-place cash flow with room to the upside check and additional credit protection check, right? So that's the setup here. And you just found on a great transaction that was broken?
Shankh Mitra
All investments, once your question and that is in the bucket that is made in the quarter of what people no.
Operator
Wes Golladay, Baird.
Wes Golladay
Hey, good morning, everyone. You talked about your outlook for development in Canada. And once you close Amica, do you envision any starts next year?
Nikhil Chaudhri
Yeah. So look, as I mentioned in the prepared remarks, there is nine development parcels that we're acquiring as part of the transaction. And they've had extended multiyear five, six, seven year entitlement processes. Now some of those are expansions. The other are de novo projects.
As you can imagine, expansions are easier to pencil just given that the operating cost load that you're going to add to the incremental units is, in most cases, de minimis or a fraction of what you would have for a de novo project. So those projects continue to make a lot of sense and will develop. And the handful that are de novo, they are in the highest quality, highest rent market, and those will evaluate, right?
We'll evaluate to see if once the dust settles a bit on tariffs and cost certainty, we'll see if it makes sense to start them today or in the future, but just given that there's a bunch of expansion projects, we'll certainly expect to see some starts next year.
Operator
Emily Meckler, Green Street.
Emily Meckler
Good morning. Thanks for the time. What percentage of the properties as Welltower's operating platform been rolled out to? And have you received any pushback from operators that has maybe delayed the rollout?
John Burkart
Starting with the pushback. The answer is no. The -- we work with our operators, listen to them. They have great feedback. As Shankh said, it's shoulder to shoulder.
And so we iterate with them on how to move forward with the platform. As far as for the percentage, I don't give out the details. And when I talk about the platform, there's broad look at the platform. We're really working with all the different operators with different aspects of our platform.
So I'm not going to give much more detail than that. But the reception has been fantastic. -- and appreciative and at this point, quite successful.
Shankh Mitra
Emily, I'll just add. Mike asked this question on the last call, I think, John, you said that the whole rollout will be a two to three year process. So you derive any conclusion that you want from this percent as percent, but it's a real businesses are not driven from Excel spreadsheet. And so we'll see where we get to.
Operator
Michael Mueller, JP Morgan.
Michael Mueller
Yeah, hi. The same-store show portfolio, it looks like it's about 88% occupied but what portion of it is stabilized or close to it? And how is RevPOR growth in those assets been compared to the 6% average.
Shankh Mitra
I mentioned, Mike, in my prepared remarks that 90%-plus occupied part of the portfolio, which is a SIM was like 40% to 50% about 50%. That has grown RevPOR 7%-plus. And the other end of that, I believe, Tim said like less than 80% cohort, I think Tim said last quarter, it was like roughly one-fourth of the portfolio wherever is lucky flat. I think it was up 1% or 2%, something like that. So it's just sort of that sort of you think about the gradient of that, everything is in between, right?
It's simple demand supply of how many units you need to sell versus if you fold.
Operator
There are no further questions at this time. This does conclude today's conference call, and you may now disconnect.