Stocks/AAT

AAT

American Assets Trust, Inc.
Real Estate·REIT - Diversified
$23.30
$1.4B market cap
Claude Rating
4/10UNDERWEIGHT
Revenue
$438.2M
Free Cash Flow
$92.6M
Rev Growth
+1.8%
FCF Margin
21.1%
P/FCF
15.4x
EV/FCF
32.6x
Fwd EV/EBITDA
12.8x
Fair Value
$18.50
Upside
-20.6%

American Assets Trust, Inc. is a full service, vertically integrated and self-administered real estate investment trust, or REIT, headquartered in San Diego, California. The company has over 50 years of experience in acquiring, improving, developing and managing premier office, retail, and residential properties throughout the United States in some of the nation's most dynamic, high-barrier-to-entry markets primarily in Southern California, Northern California, Oregon, Washington, Texas and Hawa

2-Year Price History

$22.78+18.6%
$18$20$22$24volJun 24Oct 24Jan 25May 25Sep 25Jan 26May 26

Quarterly Financials & Projections

Quarterly Waterfall ($ M)
PeriodRevEBITDAOpInNIOCFFCFCapExCashDebtSharesROICIntCovEV/EBITDA
Est2028-Q1113.563.0--8.5--23.8-17.0304.5----------
Est2027-Q4112.059.9--5.6--21.8-17.9280.6----------
Est2027-Q3113.062.2--7.9--25.4-17.0258.8----------
Est2027-Q2112.561.3--7.3--25.9-16.9233.4----------
Est2027-Q1111.059.9--6.7--21.1-17.2207.5----------
Est2026-Q4110.557.5--4.4--20.4-18.8186.4----------
Est2026-Q3111.559.7--6.5--23.4-18.4166.0----------
Est2026-Q2110.058.3--6.1--24.2-17.6142.5----------
Act2026-Q1110.658.825.85.138.618.2-20.4118.31,70676.95.4%3.0x11.6x
Act2025-Q4110.156.123.24.240.623.0-17.6129.41,70676.84.8%2.8x10.1x
Act2025-Q3109.657.924.85.940.523.1-17.4138.71,70776.75.0%2.9x9.6x
Act2025-Q2107.959.826.07.149.228.4-20.8143.71,70676.75.2%3.0x9.2x
Act2025-Q1108.6103.872.054.136.920.4-16.5143.91,70676.714.3%5.5x10.2x
Act2024-Q4113.566.230.111.640.621.5-19.2425.72,03176.65.2%2.8x11.7x
Act2024-Q3122.873.337.821.352.428.0-24.4533.02,13160.36.2%4.0x11.0x
Act2024-Q2110.962.830.815.359.343.6-15.7114.91,71360.36.0%3.9x11.2x
Act2024-Q1110.771.430.624.654.843.8-10.998.61,71376.56.0%4.4x11.7x
Act2023-Q4112.560.729.413.538.920.1-18.882.91,71360.25.8%3.7x11.1x
Act2023-Q3111.261.631.115.151.832.0-19.890.01,71376.36.0%3.8x11.3x
Act2023-Q2109.761.831.515.446.226.3-19.984.71,71376.36.1%3.8x11.0x
Act2023-Q1107.866.629.720.752.027.5-24.587.31,71376.35.7%4.2x13.1x
Act2022-Q4106.057.927.112.438.212.7-25.549.61,67476.35.3%4.0x13.3x
Act2022-Q3111.062.631.016.454.829.6-25.363.41,67476.26.0%4.3x--
Act2022-Q2104.259.428.313.646.913.7-33.260.81,67676.25.4%4.1x--
Act2022-Q1101.558.828.313.539.29.3-29.873.61,67676.25.4%4.0x--
Historical Valuation

Multiples vs the company's own history — cheap or rich relative to itself? Historical fiscal years, then TTM, then forward projections (E). Forward rows hold today's price against projected earnings, so the multiple compresses if the company grows into it.

YearPriceRev GrEBITDA %EBITDAEV/EBITDAEV/FCFP/EP/S
202221.6556.5%23913.3×48.5×27.6×3.6×
202319.58+4.4%56.8%25111.1×26.3×17.7×2.6×
202424.14+3.8%59.8%27411.7×23.3×21.8×3.5×
202518.61-4.7%63.6%27810.1×29.6×17.3×2.8×
TTM23.30-3.9%53.1%2330.0×0.0×0.0×0.0×
2027E23.30+2.4%0.5%20.0×0.0×0.0×0.0×

EBITDA in reporting-currency $M. Historical multiples use year-end market cap (split-adjusted price history); TTM & forward years use today's.

AI Analysis

LLM Evaluations

Claude4/10UNDERWEIGHTFV: $18.50

AAT is a well-located but structurally challenged West Coast REIT trading at a significant discount to NAV but for good reason: 47% office revenue concentration in a secular headwind market, elevated leverage at 6.7-7.1x well above the 5.5x target, a dividend payout ratio exceeding FFO in recent quarters, and $425M in 2027 debt maturities that create refinancing risk. The irreplaceable coastal asset base provides a floor, but the stock is a value trap until management can demonstrate meaningful office occupancy gains, deleverage the balance sheet, and prove dividend sustainability. The 8.2% yield looks attractive but is at risk of a cut if office lease-up stalls. Net insider buying is a modest positive signal, but the Rady family governance structure and related-party transactions warrant a discount. At current prices, there is modest downside risk with limited near-term catalysts for re-rating.

Catalyst Successful lease-up of La Jolla Commons Tower III to >70% occupancy and office portfolio reaching 87%+ would validate the deleveraging thesis and potentially trigger a re-rating. Alternatively, a strategic asset sale (retail or multifamily) to accelerate debt paydown could unlock value.
Risk The $425M 2027 debt maturity wall combined with 6.7x leverage creates refinancing risk in a higher-rate environment; if office lease-up disappoints, AAT may face a dilutive equity raise or dividend cut to manage the balance sheet.
Trend
STABLE
Mgmt
6/10
Quarter
4/10
Exp. Move
-3.0%

Latest Earnings Call

Transcript Summary

American Assets Trust (AAT) delivered solid Q1 2026 results with FFO of $0.51 per share. The company significantly strengthened its balance sheet by upsizing its credit facility to $500 million and extending debt maturities to 2030, ensuring liquidity through 2027. The office portfolio showed momentum with 237,000 square feet of leasing, though occupancy guidance was tempered to the lower end of 85-88% due to a surprise Q4 vacancy from Genentech. High-quality assets like La Jolla Commons Tower III and the spec suite program remain primary growth drivers. Retail performance remains near full occupancy at 98% with record rents. Multifamily saw a 3% NOI increase, effectively navigating supply headwinds in San Diego and Portland. The Waikiki Beach Walk mixed-use asset experienced a softer hotel performance as Japanese tourism continues to recover slowly amidst currency fluctuations. AAT maintained its $0.34 dividend, despite a high Q1 payout ratio of 111% attributed to leasing-related CapEx, which management expects to normalize by year-end. The company reaffirmed its 2026 FFO guidance range of $1.96-$2.10, banking on its high-quality coastal portfolio and disciplined capital allocation to navigate current market volatility.

Valuation & Metrics

Market Stats

Price$23.30
Market Cap$1.4B
Enterprise Value$3.0B
P/S Ratio3.3x
P/FCF15.4x
EV/FCF32.6x
FCF Margin (TTM)21.1%
FCF Yield6.5%
Dividend Yield (TTM)7.3%
Annual Dilution0.2%
CurrencyUSD

TTM Financial Snapshot

Revenue$438.2M
Net Income$22.4M
Free Cash Flow$92.6M

Revenue Growth (YoY)+1.8%
EBITDA Margin53.1%
Net Margin5.1%
FCF Margin21.1%
CapEx % of Revenue17.4%
SBC % of Revenue1.3%
ROIC5.1%
WC Change % Rev3.3%
Interest Coverage2.9x

DCF Fair Value Estimate

$1.25
-94.6% upside
Fair Enterprise Value$960M
− Net Debt$1.6B
= Fair Equity$96M
Revenue Growth1.8% → 2.0%
FCF Margin21.1% → 20.0%
Discount Rate14.0%
Terminal EV/FCF14.0x

Forward Outlook & Risk

Short Interest

Short % of Float3.6%
Short Shares1.7M
Days to Cover5.6
Change (vs Prior)+2.8%
Short % Float History
3.60%+0.90pp
2.0%2.5%3.0%3.5%04-3007-1509-1511-1401-1504-30

Options

Call IV (ATM)--
Put IV (ATM)--
ATM Spread--
Call $OI (near money)$78K
Put $OI (near money)$2K
ATM ExpiryJuly 17, 2026 (56D)
ATM Strike$22.5
Major Expirations1
Near-money chain · July 17, 2026
StrikeCall Bid/AskCall OIPut Bid/AskPut OI
$12.50$8.00/$12.300--/$0.953
$15.00$5.50/$9.900--/$4.203
$17.50$3.00/$7.400--/$0.954
$20.00$2.70/$2.95275$0.05/$0.252
$22.50--/$2.351--/$2.353
$25.00--/$0.754$1.10/$5.000
$30.00--/$0.950$5.60/$10.000
$35.00--/$4.200$10.50/$15.000
Snapshot: 2026-05-22

Forward Projections & Estimates

NTM Revenue Growth+1.1%
Forward FCF Margin20.1%
Forward EBITDA Margin53.1%
Forward P/FCF16.1x
Forward EV/FCF33.9x
Forward Int. Coverage3.1x
Model Risk Score6/10
Bankruptcy Odds8%
Est. Borrow Rate6.8%
Terminal EV/FCF14.0x
LT Growth2.0%
LT FCF Margin20.0%

Employees

Headcount230
Revenue / Employee$1,905,170
Gross Profit / Employee$1,157,535
2022: 216 → 2023: 228 → 2024: 226 → 2025: 232 (2% CAGR)

Institutional Ownership

Headline & net flow

NET BUYING

In Q1 2026 so far (quarter still filing), institutions are net buyers — bought 10.3% of float, sold 4.6%. 2 filers moved >1% of shares (2 buying, 0 selling).

Net flow · Q1 2026still filing
+5.7% of float (net)
Bought 10.3% · Sold 4.6%
166 filers reported (last quarter: 228)

Ownership composition

Active
47.5%(+0.1% YoY)
218 filers
hedge / family / endowment
Retail funds
Fidelity, Schwab, 401(k)
Passive
31.0%(-3.5% YoY)
12 filers
Vanguard, iShares, SPDR
Market makers
0.3%(-0.7% YoY)
5 filers
Citadel, Susquehanna
Insiders
1.8%
Form 4 — latest per insider
0%25%50%75%100%2022-062023-032023-122024-092025-062026-03
ActiveRetail fundsPassiveMarket makersRetail direct

Top holders

Fund$ valueCost basisΔ QoQΔ YoYα lifeFund AUM
BlackRock, Inc.Passive$174M$24.11+$2.5M−$9.5M-0.2%$5.69T
AMERICAN ASSETS INC$136M$23.36+$0+$0+0.8%$290M
VANGUARD PORTFOLIO MANAGEMENT LLCPassive$99.4M$18.41+$99.4M+$99.4M$1.91T
Senvest Management, LLC$65.9M$18.49+$11.9M+$65.9M-4.5%$2.98B
STATE STREET CORPPassive$52.4M$25.64−$977K+$333K-0.2%$2.89T
VANGUARD CAPITAL MANAGEMENT LLCPassive$39.0M$18.41+$39.0M+$39.0M$4.04T
LSV ASSET MANAGEMENT$36.4M$18.68+$2.4M+$666K+0.0%$46.40B
American Assets Investment Management, LLC$27.2M$28.06+$0+$37K+0.6%$1.32B
GEODE CAPITAL MANAGEMENT, LLCPassive$24.6M$19.50+$232K+$323K+2.3%$1.61T
JPMORGAN CHASE & CO$23.5M$19.87−$1.6M+$10.1M-0.2%$1.47T
CHARLES SCHWAB INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT INC$23.2M$19.33+$3.3M−$3.9M+0.7%$645.81B
ARROWSTREET CAPITAL, LIMITED PARTNERSHIP$17.7M$21.83−$1.4M−$4.4M+0.1%$184.72B
AMERIPRISE FINANCIAL INC$17.5M$20.64−$6.1M−$4.1M-0.1%$430.96B
MORGAN STANLEY$16.3M$20.58−$1.3M−$4.6M-0.3%$1.65T
ALGERT GLOBAL LLC$15.0M$18.07+$4.7M+$11.5M+0.1%$6.63B
PRIVATE MANAGEMENT GROUP INC$14.8M$18.41+$14.8M+$14.8M-0.5%$3.47B
Invesco Ltd.$14.8M$20.57+$2.9M+$8.7M-0.2%$652.04B
NORTHERN TRUST CORPPassive$14.3M$19.66+$115K−$1.1M-0.2%$755.34B
DIMENSIONAL FUND ADVISORS LPPassive$11.4M$17.90−$1.9M−$1.6M-0.4%$480.92B
FULLER & THALER ASSET MANAGEMENT, INC.$11.0M$19.16+$3.5M+$7.5M-0.1%$29.55B
Cost basis is a volume-weighted estimate from accumulation periods within our 13F history; holders who built their position before our window started will show a stale basis. % above the cost basis is the unrealized gain at the current price.

Trading behavior

Smart-money alpha (lifetime, %/qtr)NEUTRAL
Holders
-1.26%
avg per quarter
Holders (ex-self)
-0.44%
excl. this stock
Buyers (this Q)
-0.84%
90 buyers · $0.22B in
Sellers (this Q)
-0.73%
94 sellers · $0.06B out
alpha coverage: 86% of $ has a lifetime-alpha record
Holder behavior on this stocksource: stock
On big dips (−10%+)
+5.2%
how holders react when this stock falls
On quiet Qs
+2.2%
−10% to +10% baseline
On rallies (+10%+)
-28.1%
how they react when this stock rises
Holders' portfolio flow this Q
+1.6%
inflows — adds are organic
Sellers' portfolio flow this Q
+4.5%
Sellers grew AUM elsewhere — opinionated cut of this stock.
▸ Compare to holder-profile behavior (across all their stocks)
Holder dip (any stock)
-1.9%
Holder mid (any stock)
-1.8%
Holder rally (any stock)
-3.8%

Top Holders Over Time

5-year share-count history (top 10 holders by peak, incl. exited) + price

04.7M9.3M14.0M18.7M$15$19$23$26$302021-062022-062023-062024-062025-062026-03
hover the chart for per-quarter detailprice (right axis)
AMERICAN ASSETS INC7.4MPRINCIPAL FINANCIAL GROUP INC299KFMR LLC319KCRAMER ROSENTHAL MCGLYNN LLCSenvest Management, LLC3.6MMACQUARIE GROUP LTD29KAmerican Assets Investment Management, LLC1.5MLSV ASSET MANAGEMENT2.0MT. Rowe Price Investment Management, Inc.AMERIPRISE FINANCIAL INC953K

Analyst Coverage

Analyst Coverage
Price Targets
Last Quarter (1 analysts)$18.00-2270.0%
Last Year (3 analysts)$18.00-2270.0%
Current Price$23.30
Analyst Ratings
4
4
3
Buy: 4Hold: 4Sell: 3Consensus: Buy
Consensus Estimates
QuarterRevenueEBITDANet IncEPSEPS Range# Analysts
2025 Q3106M75M7M$0.09$0.09 – $0.091
2025 Q4109M77M6M$0.08$0.08 – $0.081
2026 Q1110M78M8M$0.11$0.11 – $0.111
2026 Q2110M78M9M$0.12$0.12 – $0.121
2026 Q3111M79M8M$0.11$0.11 – $0.111
2026 Q4113M80M9M$0.12$0.12 – $0.121
2027 Q1113M80M9M$0.12$0.12 – $0.121
2027 Q2114M81M8M$0.11$0.11 – $0.111
2027 Q3115M81M8M$0.10$0.10 – $0.101
2027 Q4117M83M8M$0.11$0.11 – $0.111

Corporate

Executive Compensation (2023-2025)

Direct Pay$56.5M
Incentive & Other$12.8M
Total Compensation$69.4M
% of Revenue5.2%

Insider Trading (last 12mo)

Open-market only (Form 4 P-Purchase + S-Sale). Excludes grants, option exercises, tax withholding, gifts.
Major holders (≥10% beneficial owners)
Buys ($, 12mo)
$12.94M
17 txns · 1 insider · 638,881 sh
Sells ($, 12mo)
$0
0 txns · 0 insiders · 0 sh
Recent transactions
DateSideInsiderTitleSharesPriceDollarsOwned $
2026-05-22BUYRADY ERNEST Sdirector, 10 percent owner, officer: Executive Chairman10,000$22.67$227K$187.53M
2026-05-21BUYRADY ERNEST Sdirector, 10 percent owner, officer: Executive Chairman56,656$21.70$1.23M$179.29M
2026-05-20BUYRADY ERNEST Sdirector, 10 percent owner, officer: Executive Chairman4,880$21.32$104K$174.94M
2026-05-19BUYRADY ERNEST Sdirector, 10 percent owner, officer: Executive Chairman17,319$21.15$366K$173.44M
2026-05-18BUYRADY ERNEST Sdirector, 10 percent owner, officer: Executive Chairman71,168$21.00$1.49M$171.85M
2026-05-15BUYRADY ERNEST Sdirector, 10 percent owner, officer: Executive Chairman29,360$20.79$610K$25.14M
2026-05-14BUYRADY ERNEST Sdirector, 10 percent owner, officer: Executive Chairman78,000$21.09$1.65M$24.88M
2026-05-13BUYRADY ERNEST Sdirector, 10 percent owner, officer: Executive Chairman78,000$20.99$1.64M$23.12M
2026-05-12BUYRADY ERNEST Sdirector, 10 percent owner, officer: Executive Chairman14,640$21.01$308K$21.51M
2026-02-26BUYRADY ERNEST Sdirector, 10 percent owner, officer: Executive Chairman5,151$20.06$103K$162.78M
2026-02-25BUYRADY ERNEST Sdirector, 10 percent owner, officer: Executive Chairman5,597$19.52$109K$158.30M
2026-02-24BUYRADY ERNEST Sdirector, 10 percent owner, officer: Executive Chairman54,716$19.28$1.05M$156.30M
2026-02-23BUYRADY ERNEST Sdirector, 10 percent owner, officer: Executive Chairman50,000$19.50$975K$157.52M
2026-02-20BUYRADY ERNEST Sdirector, 10 percent owner, officer: Executive Chairman3,528$19.37$68K$155.50M
2026-02-19BUYRADY ERNEST Sdirector, 10 percent owner, officer: Executive Chairman57,898$18.83$1.09M$151.10M
2026-02-18BUYRADY ERNEST Sdirector, 10 percent owner, officer: Executive Chairman100,000$18.81$1.88M$149.85M
2026-02-17BUYRADY ERNEST Sdirector, 10 percent owner, officer: Executive Chairman1,968$18.53$36K$145.77M

Order Flow (FINRA, ~3w lag)

18.6%retail-1.6pp
18.8%dark+0.7pp
week of 2026-04-13
10%20%30%40%24-1125-0225-0525-0825-1126-0226-04retail (non-ATS)dark (ATS)
Off-exchange volume from FINRA. Retail = non-ATS (wholesaler PFOF + broker internalization). Dark = ATS (dark-pool crossing networks, institutional). Lit-exchange = remainder.

Revenue Breakdown

Revenue Segments

By Product (2026-Q1)
Office Segment$52.4M+3%
Retail Segment$23.3M-5%
Multifamily Segment$18.2M+8%
Mixed Use Segment$16.7M+3%

Filing Risk Analysis

Filing Risk Scores

American Assets Trust: A Vacuous Shell of Metadata Offering Zero Forensic Visibility

Overall Risk
1/10
Fraud
1/10
Dilution
1/10
Insolvency
1/10
Earnings Overstated
1/10
Hidden Liabilities
1/10
Legal
1/10
Audit Warnings
1/10
Hidden Upside
1/10
Contextually Acceptable
10/10

Counter-Thesis

Counter-Thesis & Recent News

📰 Recent News

AAT reported a significant earnings miss for Q1 2026 on April 29, 2026, with EPS of $0.08 falling short of the $0.11 analyst consensus. This follow-on to a January 2026 downgrade by Morgan Stanley from 'Equalweight' to 'Underweight' highlights ongoing financial underperformance. Additionally, the company adjusted its year-end 2026 office leasing targets to the 'lower end' of its 85%-88% range following a large 67,000-square-foot vacancy from Genentech (Source: Investing.com, Seeking Alpha).

🐻 Bear Case

The core bear thesis rests on stagnant growth and unsustainable capital management. Analysts project flat Funds From Operations (FFO) growth through 2028, significantly trailing the REIT sector average of 5.3%. The dividend payout ratio reached a concerning 111% of available funds in Q1 2026, raising serious questions about long-term sustainability. Furthermore, AAT's high leverage of 6.7x remains well above its stated target of 5.5x, with $425 million in debt maturities looming in 2027 (Source: Morgan Stanley, Simply Wall St).

🚩 Red Flags

AAT suffers from high geographic and tenant concentration, with two tenants (Google and LPL Holdings) accounting for a combined 17.6% of office annualized base rent. Weak interest coverage remains a persistent risk, as earnings are not robustly covering interest payments. The sudden drop in trailing net profit margin to 4.2% (down from 17.7% a year prior) suggests that repositioning efforts are not yet translating into accounting profits (Source: Fitch Ratings, Simply Wall St).

⚔️ Competitive Threats

The REIT is struggling against structural West Coast office headwinds, with Class A vacancies rising sharply in its key markets—up 560 basis points in Bellevue and 280 basis points in Portland. In the multifamily segment, San Diego assets are facing significant competitive pressure from new supply gluts, which has led to declining occupancy and weakened pricing power (Source: Morgan Stanley, FinancialContent).

💬 Customer Sentiment

Customer and investor sentiment is increasingly cautious. Tourism-driven demand for AAT's Waikiki mixed-use assets has recovered slower than management anticipated due to international currency dynamics. In the office sector, the 'flight to quality' has not yet stabilized AAT’s portfolio, as evidenced by its 82% occupancy rate compared to more robust performance in other diversified REITs (Source: Seeking Alpha, Investing.com).

Full Earnings Call Transcript

Full Earnings Call Transcript — Q1 • 2026-04-29

Operator: Good morning, and welcome to the American Assets Trust First Quarter 2026 Earnings Call. [Operator Instructions] Please note this event is being recorded. I would now like to turn the call over to Meleana Leaverton, Associate General Counsel of American Assets Trust. Please go ahead.
Meleana Leaverton: Thank you, and good morning. The statements made on this earnings call include forward-looking statements based on current expectations, which statements are subject to risks and uncertainties discussed in the company's filings with the SEC. You are cautioned not to place undue reliance on these forward-looking statements as actual events could cause the company's results to differ materially from these forward-looking statements. Yesterday afternoon, American Assets Trust's earnings release and supplemental information were furnished to the SEC on Form 8-K. Both are now available on the Investors section of its website, americanassetstrust.com. It is now my pleasure to turn the call over to Adam Wyll, President and CEO of American Assets Trust.
Adam Wyll: Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us today. At American Assets Trust, we continue to approach this market with the same mindset that has guided us across cycles, patient, disciplined and with a long-term focus. That mindset, combined with the quality of our assets and our platform, guides how we allocate capital, manage risk and run our business. We started 2026 in line with our expectations, generating $0.51 of FFO per diluted share and continuing to make progress against the priorities we laid out last quarter. Across the portfolio, we saw encouraging activity, most notably in office leasing, while our retail assets remained highly leased and consistent, our multifamily teams operated well through a competitive supply environment, and Waikiki Beach Walk delivered steady results against a still mixed tourism backdrop. Before turning to the portfolio, I want to highlight a significant balance sheet accomplishment. On April 1, we successfully completed the recast and upsize of our unsecured credit facility. We increased our revolving line of credit from $400 million to $500 million and extended the maturity of the revolver and our $100 million term loan to April 1, 2030. Altogether, this facility provides us with $600 million of total unsecured borrowing capacity. This outcome reflects the quality of our portfolio, the strength of our banking relationships and the confidence of our lender group has in our credit. Importantly, it gives us enhanced financial flexibility and runway as we execute our leasing and operating objectives now with no debt maturities until 2027. That added capacity is particularly valuable in the current market. While the macro backdrop remains uneven, our tenants are generally well capitalized and the markets where we operate continue to benefit from diversified economies, strong demographics and meaningful barriers to new supply. Those structural advantages matter, particularly during periods when the broader landscape is less predictable. One topic that has generated considerable discussion in our office segment is artificial intelligence. AI is driving investment, business formation and growth across technology, infrastructure and innovation-oriented companies, along with the professional and advisory ecosystem that supports them. While its impact on office demand will vary by industry, we believe the net effect in our markets has been constructive. At the same time, the bar for office space keeps rising. When companies make office commitments today, they are focused on location, amenities, flexibility, ownership quality and the ability to attract talent, attributes that define our coastal office portfolio. On our own platform, we are investing in technology to improve how we operate from work order management and preventative maintenance analytics to tenant communication tools while also building the data foundation for future AI capabilities. We are early in this effort, but we believe it can become a differentiator as we improve the tenant experience and our operating margins. In office, the momentum we flagged last quarter carried forward. Demand concentrates at the top of the market and well-located, well-amenitized buildings with strong ownership. That is where we compete. Our office portfolio ended the quarter 84.5% leased and our same-store office portfolio ended the quarter 86% leased. Same-store office cash NOI came in essentially flat year-over-year, modestly ahead of our internal expectations, reflecting the known move-outs we've previously discussed. During the quarter, we executed approximately 237,000 square feet of office leases with comparable cash leasing spreads of 4.8% and straight-line leasing spreads at 10.6%. Meanwhile, of our 14 noncomparable leases in Q1, which are now separately disclosed in our supplemental, 12 were new tenants, 9 of which were in our spec suite program, underscoring the role that program is playing in converting demand into executed leases. We entered the second quarter on solid footing, including approximately 244,000 square feet of previously signed leases not yet commenced, another 122,000 square feet in lease documentation and a proposal pipeline of over 200,000 square feet. At La Jolla Commons Tower III, the building is currently 49% leased with proposals out on another 30% of the building. The UTC submarket has limited large block availabilities outside of Tower III and with no meaningful new supply on the horizon, we believe we are in a strong position to capture large tenant requirements in the submarket, including several active requirements we are tracking today. At One Beach Street, the building is currently 36% leased. While one larger opportunity we referenced last quarter did not move forward, our leasing focus has shifted toward building a broader pipeline of smaller and midsized tenants. We already have permits in hand and work underway to advance our spec suite build-out, positioning us to capture tenants seeking high-quality, move-in-ready space. Prospect activity has improved and the execution across the portfolio has been strong. We remain confident that the trajectory of our office portfolio, including our progress towards stabilizing Tower III and One Beach will translate into increased cash flow as these leases convert to revenue. Last quarter, I mentioned our goal of ending the year between 85% and 88% leased across our office portfolio. Since then, we learned that Genentech at Lloyd District, approximately 67,000 square feet reversed course on a short-term renewal and will be vacating in Q4. The space itself is turnkey and modern, and we believe it will show well in the market. However, the vacancy was not in our assumptions last quarter. And as a result, we are now targeting the lower end of that range. We have some work to do, but reaching that level would still represent a meaningful step forward. Retail remains a source of consistent, reliable performance. Our retail portfolio ended the quarter 98% leased, and we executed approximately 39,000 square feet of leasing during the period with average base rents reaching a new portfolio record of $30 per square foot. Same-store cash NOI was modestly below the prior year period, primarily due to the temporary impact of vacancies from 2 former Party City spaces and a former Discount Tire space. The Discount Tire space in 1 of the 2 Party City spaces are already re-leased with cash rents expected to commence later this year. Tenant health across the retail portfolio is strong. Leasing demand is solid, and our centers benefit from affluent supply-constrained trade areas with limited new competition. Less than 3% of our retail square footage expires this year, and we are actively engaged on upcoming rollover. While we are closely monitoring the consumer in an uncertain economic climate, we believe the demographics surrounding our retail assets support a resilient spending base and a steady cash flow profile. In multifamily, same-store cash NOI increased 3% year-over-year, a solid result given the competitive supply landscape in San Diego and Portland. Excluding the RV Park, our multifamily portfolio ended the quarter 96% leased. In San Diego, our apartment communities ended the quarter 98% leased. And excluding our newest acquisition, Genesee Park, net effective rents in San Diego were up just over 1% compared to the prior year period. In Portland, Hassalo on Eighth ended the quarter at 93% leased, up an additional 4% from a year ago. Net effective rents were essentially flat, which we view as a reasonable outcome in the current Portland market. The recovery remains gradual and our focus right now is on protecting occupancy while positioning for better growth as supply moderates. As we have noted, 2026 is more of a stabilization year for multifamily than a recovery year, and we are focused on optimizing pricing, maintaining occupancy and tightly managing controllable expenses. At Waikiki Beach Walk, our retail component continued to perform well year-over-year, partially offsetting softness on the hotel side with overall mixed-use cash NOI down modestly versus the prior year period. We believe in the long-term value of this irreplaceable fee simple asset and are focused on driving performance across both the hotel and retail components. Finally, I'm pleased to share that our Board has approved a quarterly dividend of $0.34 per share payable on June 18 to shareholders of record as of June 4. While our payout ratio remained elevated in the quarter, much of that reflects leasing-related capital tied to signed leases and our spec suite program, both of which are intended to drive occupancy and future NOI growth. We continue to have conviction in the long-term cash flow profile of the portfolio and are comfortable maintaining the current dividend at this point in time. Bob will provide more detail on the payout ratio and its expected moderation in just a moment. In closing, we are pleased with how we have begun 2026. We are converting leasing activity into future revenue, strengthening our balance sheet and executing against the plan we laid out entering 2026. Our priorities for the year are unchanged, advanced office leasing, protect the steady cash flow from our retail and multifamily platforms and remain disciplined in how we allocate capital. At our core, we own irreplaceable coastal real estate. We operate through a vertically integrated platform, and we manage this business with a long-term perspective. We are in a good position, and our focus is on converting that position into earnings growth. With that, I will turn the call over to Bob, who will walk through the financial results in more detail.
Robert Barton: Thanks, Adam, and good morning, everyone. Last night, we reported first quarter 2026 FFO per share of $0.51 and net income attributable to common stockholders of $0.08 per share. FFO increased $0.04 per share compared to the fourth quarter of 2025, driven primarily by lower G&A expense. Incremental rental income at Pacific Ridge Apartments and 14 Acres as well as lower operating expenses at La Jolla Commons. As we expected, same-store cash NOI across all sectors was flat year-over-year in Q1. Breaking that down by segment as compared to Q1 2025, office same-store NOI was essentially flat, primarily due to the expiration of CLEAResult at First & Main in April of 2025. The space has been partially backfilled. Retail NOI declined 0.7%, driven by the known vacancies Adam mentioned at Gateway Marketplace and Solana Beach Towne Centre, both of which have now been addressed through executed leasing. Multifamily NOI increased 3%, driven by higher rental income and improved occupancy, particularly at Pacific Ridge and Hassalo on Eighth. Mixed-use NOI declined 2.7% as a year-over-year increase of 2% of the retail component was offset by lower ADR and higher operating expenses at Embassy Suites Waikiki, where in Q1, occupancy improved to 92% from 85%. RevPAR increased 2% to $305. ADR softened by 6% to $332 and NOI was approximately $2.4 million versus $2.6 million last year. Turning to liquidity and leverage. We ended the quarter with approximately $518 million of liquidity, including $118 million of cash and $400 million available on our revolving credit facility. As Adam mentioned, we closed the recast and upsized the credit facility on April 1, extending both the $500 million revolver and $100 million term loan to April 2030. Net debt-to-EBITDA was 6.9x on a trailing 12-month basis. Our long-term target remains 5.5x or below. Interest and fixed charge coverage were both 3.0x. Turning to the dividend. Our first quarter dividend payout ratio was approximately 111%, driven primarily by the timing of leasing-related capital expenditures, including tenant improvements, leasing commissions and our spec suite program, along with normal recurring capital needs. Importantly, a meaningful portion of this capital is tied to leases that have already been signed or spaces that we are proactively preparing to meet current tenant demand. As those leases commence and convert to cash rent, we expect the payout ratio to moderate. For the remaining 3 quarters of the year, we currently expect the payout ratio to trend in the low to mid-90% range with the full year payout ratio likely landing in the upper 90% range. Since our IPO in 2011, our payout ratio has generally been approximately 65% to 85%, and we continue to view that as an appropriate long-term range for the business. In the interim, given our liquidity position, our visibility into signed lease commencements and our confidence in the long-term cash flow profile of the portfolio, management and the Board are comfortable maintaining the current dividend. As always, we will continue to evaluate the dividend each quarter in the context of operating performance, leasing progress, capital requirements and broader market conditions. Turning to 2026 guidance. We are reaffirming our full year FFO guidance range of $1.96 to $2.10 per share with a midpoint of $2.03. This reflects continued stability across our diversified portfolio, supported by leasing activity, contractual rent growth and disciplined cost management. Based on our current outlook, we believe we are well positioned to achieve our full year objectives with potential to trend towards the upper end of the range if several factors align. Number one, retail tenants currently reserved for bad debt continue to pay their rents. Number two, office lease commencements occur ahead of expectations. Number three, multifamily outperforms expectations on occupancy and/or rent growth; and number four, tourism demand improves, supporting performance at Embassy Suites Waikiki. As a reminder, our guidance excludes the impact of future acquisitions, dispositions, capital markets activity or debt refinancings not yet announced. We remain committed to transparency, and we'll continue to provide clear insight into both our results and assumptions. Additionally, all non-GAAP metrics discussed today are reconciled in our earnings materials. I'll now turn the call back over to the operator for Q&A.
Operator: [Operator Instructions] The first question comes from Todd Thomas from KeyBanc.
Sean Kataoka Glass: This is Sean Glass on for Todd. You previously discussed some known move-outs in the office portfolio. I think there was an expectation that there could be 300 to 400 basis points of occupancy from expected vacates. Have any tenant decisions shifted or changed since year-end? And could you remind us what's embedded in guidance for the office portfolio's year-end lease rate?
Unknown Executive: Well, as Adam said, the one new one is Genentech, which will occur in Q4 of this year. On the positive side, we have 3 known move-outs that are in lease documentation at City Center Bellevue specifically. So that's 28,000 feet of move-outs that are already in lease documentation. So that's the latest. And one thing of note that of the -- I'm tracking 173,000 feet right now, 17 deals, 8 of those or about 60,000 feet are relocations due to expansion. So we're expanding tenants and they're getting space back. So that's -- those are good news givebacks of tenants that have already expanded. We're just getting the -- once the TIs are done, we're getting their spaces back. So it's not all bad news.
Adam Wyll: And Sean, we mentioned in the script that we're targeting mid-80% full portfolio occupancy or lease percentage by the end of the year, which is achievable if momentum continues as it is right now, but we're going to give you guys a range so we have a little bit of flexibility to figure out how it shakes out.
Sean Kataoka Glass: That's great color. I wanted to ask about La Jolla specifically, some very good traction there on the leasing. Can you talk about the pipeline a little, whether any additional leases are out for signature or anything documentation? And maybe some color on where you might expect La Jolla to be at year-end?
Unknown Executive: So it is the premier offering, it's not only UTC, but Del Mar Heights as well in terms of available spaces and I'm speaking of Tower III specifically. Right now, we're in proposals with 2 full floor users and 2 multi-floor users. And we don't have that many floors to lease. So it's a good situation. We're in space planning with every one of them. The competition is very narrow. So we expect to make one or more of those, and that would account for the remainder of the full floors. On the spec suite program, we only have one suite left on the fourth floor. We've already pre-leased the fifth floor spec suite, and those aren't going to be completed until September of this year. So the traction is good. And the traction is with well-capitalized professional service firms like the tenants that you want in this sort of building. So we're pleased with that.
Sean Kataoka Glass: Okay. If I could slip one more in on One Beach, I mean, some good traction there, too. Could you talk a little about -- you touched on the AI demand or otherwise and also where you think that might be at year-end? And maybe you could touch on the one large opportunity that didn't pencil if that changes the equation at all?
Unknown Executive: Well, for that large deal, we gave ourselves a 30-day window on which to vet it. There were some complexities to it due to the use dealing with exiting, dealing with traffic and such. And it ended up not panning out. We spent 45 days on it, but we pivoted very quickly back to the spec suite program, which is underway, and Jerry and his team will complete that construction around September [indiscernible] yesterday. Keep in mind, we pre-leased that third floor before we had started construction on that floor. So we expect to have similar results. I can't give you the exact timing, but we're optimistic.
Operator: The next question comes from Haendel St. Juste from Mizuho.
Ravi Vaidya: This is Ravi Vaidya on the line for Haendel. I hope you are doing well. I wanted to ask a bit about the signed and non-occupied pipeline in both office and retail. Can you give some -- maybe some numbers as to how -- when you think leases will begin cash flowing for those 2 verticals? And maybe regarding detail about the timing and when over the next couple of years for both office and retail?
Adam Wyll: Yes. So Ravi, it's Adam. Yes, as I mentioned in my script, we have about 0.25 million square feet on the office portfolio signed not commenced. And I think about $0.07 is reflected in 2026 guidance, but about 100,000 square feet in that signed but not commenced won't hit meaningfully until next year. So you're looking at about $0.07 per share or so, call it, $5-plus million that will hit this year. I don't have the retail numbers in front of me. I don't think there's much on that front, though.
Ravi Vaidya: Got it. That's super helpful. I wanted to ask about the hotel in Hawaii. I noticed the occupancy came up quite a bit as you discussed in your script, but it was mostly offset by rate. What can we see regarding demand for tourism, foot traffic and how that asset is positioned from both seeing demand from Japanese and American tourists right now?
Robert Barton: Yes, Ravi, this is Bob here. It's still slow right now. But what's interesting in terms of the rates, we still outperform our competitive set, which consists of just under 10 hotels, including Beach Walk properties. I mean, for example, we -- our occupancy was 91%, but our comp was 79%. Our ADR was $300 plus, and there was another $300. RevPAR were $300 plus and our comp set significantly under $300. So it's -- everybody is feeling the impact from the statistics that I'm seeing is that we're the #1 hotel in Waikiki. Two things happened during March. One is that, I don't know if you heard about it, but there was a Kona -- from the Kona Island got over to Waikiki and there was 2 huge rainstorms. It was 2 Kona rainstorms, one on March 16, another one on March 24. significant flooding, dumping over to get this, over 2 trillion gallons of rain or 2 years of rain in 2 storms overall. So everybody in town felt that impact on that. Secondly is that the Japanese yen, we're still following the more wealthy clientele from Japan continue to come. But if you notice, Japan yen has got up to the JPY 160 range. I think it dipped to JPY 159. So it continues to stay up there, and they have to work through that issue. So there's a lot of little things that are impacting that. Also, you have operating expenses going up. But all in all, it's the #1 performing Embassy Suites in the world. It continues to be.
Unknown Executive: Ravi, just to layer on that. As you know, Waikiki is very sensitive to tourism, especially international demand. And as Bob was mentioning, the Japanese aren't there as much as they used to be. It used to be closer to 40% of tourism in Waikiki, now it's about 20%. So it's slow incremental progress. Recovery has been slower than anticipated and the affordability pressures are really weighing on the results. So still, it remains a high barrier to entry, globally relevant market, and we view the asset well positioned for the long term.
Operator: This concludes our question-and-answer session. I would like to turn the conference back over to Adam Wyll for closing remarks.
Adam Wyll: Yes. Thanks, everybody, for calling and joining us today or listening on record later. We appreciate your interest, and we'll be transparent as possible going forward. Take care.
Operator: The conference has now concluded. Thank you for attending today's presentation. You may now disconnect.