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Financial report summary
?Risks
- Our operating results are subject to general economic conditions and risks associated with our real estate assets.
- Many factors impact the single-family rental market; and if rents in our markets do not increase sufficiently to keep pace with rising costs of operations, our income and distributable cash could decline.
- Inflation could adversely affect our business and financial results.
- Increasing property taxes, insurance costs, and HOA fees may negatively affect our financial results.
- Our business, results of operations, financial condition, and cash flows may be adversely affected by pandemics and outbreaks of infectious disease.
- We may not be able to effectively manage our growth, and any failure to do so may have an adverse effect on our business and operating results.
- A significant portion of our costs and expenses are fixed, and we may not be able to adapt our cost structure to offset declines in our revenue.
- We recorded net losses in the past and we may experience net losses in the future.
- We are dependent on our executive officers and dedicated associates, and the departure of any of our key associates could materially and adversely affect us. We also face intense competition for the employment of highly skilled managerial, investment, financial, and operational associates. Additionally, our results of operations can be adversely affected by labor shortages, turnover, and labor cost increases.
- Our investments are and may continue to be concentrated in our markets and in the single-family properties sector of the real estate industry, which exposes us to seasonal fluctuations in rental demand and downturns in our markets or in the single-family properties sector.
- We may not be able to effectively control the timing and costs relating to the renovation and maintenance of our properties, which may adversely affect our operating results and ability to make distributions to our stockholders.
- We face significant competition in the leasing market for quality residents, which may limit our ability to lease the single-family homes we own and manage on favorable terms.
- We intend to continue to acquire properties from time to time consistent with our investment strategy even if the rental and housing markets are not as favorable as they have been in the recent past, which could adversely impact anticipated yields.
- Competition in identifying and acquiring our properties could adversely affect our ability to implement our business and growth strategies, which could materially and adversely affect us.
- We depend on our residents and their willingness to meet their lease obligations and renew their leases for substantially all of our revenues. Poor resident selection, defaults, and non-renewals by our residents may adversely affect our reputation, financial performance, and ability to make distributions to our stockholders.
- Our evaluation of properties involves a number of assumptions that may prove inaccurate, which could result in us paying too much for properties we acquire and/or overvaluing our properties or our properties failing to perform as we expect.
- Our dependence upon third parties for key services may have an adverse effect on our operating results or reputation if the third parties fail to perform.
- We are subject to certain risks associated with bulk portfolio acquisitions and dispositions and acquisitions through an auction process.
- Our strategy to acquire homes from third-party homebuilders could subject us to significant risks that could adversely affect our financial condition, cash flows, and operating results, and the strategy may be restricted by governmental regulations and zoning requirements.
- Unoccupied homes could be difficult to lease, which could adversely affect our revenues.
- We rely on information supplied by prospective residents in managing our business.
- Our leases are relatively short-term, exposing us to the risk that we may have to re-lease our properties frequently, which we may be unable to do on attractive terms, on a timely basis, or at all.
- We may not have control over timing and costs arising from renovating our properties, and the cost of maintaining rental properties can be higher than the cost of maintaining owner-occupied homes, which will affect our results of operations and may adversely impact our ability to make distributions to our stockholders.
- Declining real estate valuations and impairment charges could adversely affect our financial condition and operating results.
- Our participation in joint venture investments may limit our ability to invest in certain markets, and we may be adversely affected by our lack of sole decision-making authority, our reliance on joint venture partners’ financial condition, and disputes between us and our joint venture partners.
- We may suffer losses that are not covered by insurance.
- We may have difficulty selling our real estate investments, and our ability to distribute all or a portion of the net proceeds from any such sale to our stockholders may be limited.
- We may encounter challenges in effectively providing the professional property and asset management services we offer to owners of single-family home portfolios on a contractual basis. Our failure to effectively perform professional property and asset management functions or to effectively manage the expanded portfolio of properties we manage could materially and adversely affect us.
- We are employing a business model with a limited track record, which may make our business difficult to evaluate.
- We have a limited operating history and may not be able to operate our business successfully or generate sufficient cash flows to make or sustain distributions to our stockholders.
- Compliance with existing governmental laws, regulations, and covenants (or those that may be enacted in the future) that are applicable to the properties we own and manage on behalf of others, including affordability covenants, permit, license,
- and zoning requirements, may adversely affect our ability to make future acquisitions, renovations, or dispositions, result in significant costs, delays, or losses, and adversely affect our growth strategy.
- Eviction, tenant rights, rent control, and rent stabilization laws, and other similar laws and/or regulations that limit our ability to collect rent, enforce remedies for failure to pay rent, or increase rental rates may negatively impact our rental income and profitability.
- We are subject to regulatory proceedings and litigation (including class actions) and may become a target of legal demands and/or negative publicity from tenant and consumer advocacy organizations, which could directly limit and constrain our operations and may result in significant litigation expenses and reputational harm.
- Contingent or unknown liabilities could adversely affect our financial condition, cash flows, and operating results.
- Title defects could lead to material losses on our investments in our properties.
- A significant number of the single-family residential properties we own and manage on behalf of others are part of HOAs, and we and our residents are subject to the rules and regulations of such HOAs, which are subject to change and which may be arbitrary or restrictive, and violations of such rules may subject us to additional fees and penalties and litigation with such HOAs, which would be costly.
- Leasing fraud could adversely affect our business, financial condition, and results of operations.
- Eminent domain could lead to material losses on our investments in our properties.
- We are highly dependent on information systems, and systems failures could significantly disrupt our business, which may, in turn, negatively affect us and the value of our common stock.
- Security breaches and other disruptions could compromise our information systems and expose us to liability, which would cause our business and reputation to suffer.
- Climate change and related environmental issues, related legislative and regulatory responses to climate change, and the transition to a lower-carbon economy may adversely affect our business.
- We are subject to risks from natural disasters such as earthquakes, wildfires, and severe weather.
- Environmentally hazardous conditions may adversely affect us.
- We are subject to increasing scrutiny from investors and others regarding our environmental, social, governance, or sustainability responsibilities, which could result in additional costs or risks and adversely impact our reputation, associate retention, and ability to raise capital from such investors.
- Our cash flows and operating results could be adversely affected by required payments of debt or related interest and other risks of our debt financing.
- We utilize a significant amount of indebtedness in the operation of our business.
- We may be unable to obtain financing through the debt and equity markets, which would have a material adverse effect on our growth strategy and our financial condition and results of operations.
- Secured indebtedness exposes us to the possibility of foreclosure on our ownership interests in our rental homes.
- Covenants in our debt agreements may restrict our operating activities and adversely affect our financial condition.
- We have and may continue to utilize non-recourse long-term mortgage loans, and such structures may expose us to certain risks not prevalent in other debt financings, which could affect the availability and attractiveness of this financing option or otherwise result in losses to us.
- Offerings of additional debt securities or equity securities that rank senior to our common stock may adversely affect the market price of our common stock.
- Failure to hedge effectively against interest rate increases may adversely affect our results of operations and our ability to make distributions to our stockholders.
- Provisions of Maryland law may limit the ability of a third party to acquire control of us by requiring our board of directors or stockholders to approve proposals to acquire our company or effect a change in control.
- Our board of directors may approve the issuance of stock, including preferred stock, with terms that may discourage a third party from acquiring us.
- Our rights and the rights of our stockholders to take action against our directors and officers are limited.
- If we do not maintain our qualification as a REIT, we will be subject to tax as a regular domestic corporation and could face a substantial tax liability.
- REITs, in certain circumstances, may incur tax liabilities that would reduce our cash flows.
- Complying with REIT requirements may cause us to forgo otherwise attractive opportunities, limit our expansion opportunities, and/or force us to liquidate or restructure otherwise attractive investments.
- The 100% prohibited transactions tax may limit our ability to engage in sale transactions.
- Complying with REIT requirements may limit our ability to hedge effectively and may cause us to incur tax liabilities.
- Even if we qualify to be subject to United States federal income tax as a REIT, we could be subject to tax on any unrealized net built-in gains in certain assets.
- Our charter does not permit any person to own more than 9.8% of our outstanding common stock or of our outstanding stock of all classes or series, and attempts to acquire our common stock or our stock of all other classes or series in excess of these 9.8% limits would not be effective without an exemption from these limits by our board of directors.
- The cash available for distribution to stockholders may not be sufficient to pay dividends at expected levels, nor can we assure you of our ability to make distributions in the future. We may use borrowed funds or our own funds to make distributions.
- We may choose to make distributions in our own stock that require you to pay income taxes in excess of any cash distributions.
- We may be subject to adverse legislative or regulatory tax changes that could increase our tax liability, reduce our operating flexibility, and reduce the price of our common stock.
- Our ownership of TRSs is subject to limitations, and our transactions with our TRSs will cause us to be subject to a 100% excise tax on certain income or deductions if those transactions are not conducted on arm’s-length terms.
Management Discussion
- As of December 31, 2023 and 2022, we owned 84,567 and 83,113 single-family rental homes, respectively, in our total portfolio. During the years ended December 31, 2023 and 2022, we acquired 2,877 and 1,423 homes, respectively, and sold 1,423 and 691 homes, respectively. During the years ended December 31, 2023 and 2022, we owned an average of 83,722 and 82,929 single-family rental homes, respectively.
- We believe presenting information about the portion of our total portfolio that has been fully operational for the entirety of both a given reporting period and its prior year comparison period provides investors with meaningful information about the performance of our comparable homes across periods and about trends in our organic business. To do so, we provide information regarding the performance of our Same Store portfolio.
- As of December 31, 2023, our Same Store portfolio consisted of 75,775 single-family rental homes.