Thank you for standing by. At this time, I would like to welcome everyone to the NexPoint Residential Trust Q1 2023 Conference Call. All lines have been placed on mute to prevent any background noise. After the speaker's remarks, there will be a question-and-answer session. If you would like to ask a question during this time, simply press star followed by the number one on your telephone keypad. If you would like to withdraw your question, again, press star one. Thank you. Kristen Thomas, you may begin your conference.
Thank you. Good day, everyone, and welcome to NexPoint Residential Trust conference call to review the company's results for the first quarter, March 31, 2023. On the call today are Brian Mitts, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer; Matt McGraner, Executive Vice President and Chief Investment Officer; and Bonner McDermett, Vice President, Asset and Investment Management. As a reminder, this call is being webcast through the company's website at nxrt.nexpoint.com. Before we begin, I would like to remind everyone that this conference call contains forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 that are based on management's current expectations, assumptions, and beliefs.
Listeners should not place undue reliance on any forward-looking statements and are encouraged to review the company's most recent annual report on Form 10-K and the company's other filings with the SEC for a more complete discussion of risk and other factors that could affect any forward-looking statements. The statements made during the conference call speak only as of today's date and except as required by law, NXRT does not undertake any obligation to publicly update or revise any forward-looking statements. This conference call also includes an analysis of non-GAAP financial measures. For a more complete discussion of these non-GAAP financial measures, see the company's earnings release that was filed earlier today. I would now like to turn the call over to Brian Mitts. Please go ahead, Brian.
Thank you, Kristen. Welcome to everyone joining us this morning. Appreciate your time. I'm Brian Mitts. As Kristen mentioned, I'm joined here with Matt McGraner and Bonner McDermett. I'm gonna kick off the call and cover our Q1 results, give our updated NAV, and then update our guidance for the remainder of the year. I'll turn it over to Matt and Bonner after that to discuss specifics on the leasing environment and metrics driving our performance and guidance. Let's start with the Q1 results, which are as follows.
Net loss for the first quarter was $3.9 million or $0.15 per diluted share on total revenue of $69.2 million as compared to a net loss of $4.7 million or $0.18 per diluted share in the same period in 2022 on total revenue of $60.8 million, which represents a 14% increase in revenue. For the first quarter, NOI was $41.1 million on 40 properties as compared to $36.7 million for the first quarter of 2022 on 39 properties, representing a 12.2% increase in NOI. For the quarter, year-over-year rent growth on renewals averaged 4.8% across the portfolio, and year-over-year rent growth on new leases averaged 2.8%.
Given where rental rates are in our markets for Class B apartments and equivalent SFR product, we believe there's still room for future outsized rent growth for the remainder of the year. For the quarter, same-store rent increased 13.3% and same-store occupancy was down 3% - 94%. This coupled with an increase in same-store expenses of 15.1% led to an increase in same-store NOI of 9.4% as compared to Q1 2022. Compared to Q4 2022, rents for this quarter on the same-store portfolio were up 0.6% quarter-over-quarter. We reported Q1 Core FFO of $18.5 million or $0.71 per diluted share compared to $0.77 per diluted share in Q1 2022.
For the quarter, we completed 494 full and partial renovations and leased 565 renovated units, achieving an average monthly rent premium of $153, excuse me, and 21.2% ROI during the quarter. Inception to date in the portfolio, we've completed 8,127 full and partial upgrades, which represents 54% of our current units, 4,914 kitchen upgrades and washer and dryer installments, and 10,423 technology package installations, achieving an average monthly rent premium of $153, $47 and $45 respectively, and an ROI of 21.8%, 65.6%, and 37.4% respectively.
During the first quarter, we refinanced the Venue on Camelback and paid down $17.5 million of the corporate credit facility through the refinancing proceeds and available cash. As of March 31st, the balance on the corporate credit facility is $57 million. With the sales of Old Farm and Stone Creek in Houston, which we expect this quarter, we'll use some of those expected net proceeds of $63 million to pay down the remainder of the corporate facility. Moving to NAV, based on our current estimate, estimates of cap rates in our markets and forward NOI, we are reporting a NAV range per share as follows: $66.66 on the low end, $76.82 on the high end, and $71.74 at the midpoint.
These are based on average cap rates ranging from 5% on the low end to 5.3% on the high end, which remains flat from last quarter and has increased approximately 65 basis points from Q3 of 2022. Moving to full-year guidance, we're updating guidance as follows. On Core FFO, we are guiding $2.92 on the low end, $3.20 on the high end, with a midpoint of $3.06. For rental income, we're estimating 10.5% increase on the low end, 12.1% increase on the high end for a midpoint of 11.3% increase.
For same store NOI, we are estimating 9.2% growth on the low end, 12.8% growth on the high end, and 11% for the midpoint. To add some additional transparency and clarity and information, we are showing the components to interest expense, as that's obviously driving some of our results and our guidance. We estimate total interest expense for the year at $65.2 million on the low end, $63.2 million on the high end, and $64.2 million at the midpoint. With that completes my remarks. I'll turn it over to Matt and then Bonner for some commentary on the portfolio and lease environment.
Thanks, Brian. Let me start by going over our first quarter same-store operational results. Rental revenue growth continued to outperform across the board with year-over-year growth in Dallas, Phoenix, Atlanta, and our Florida markets in the 12%-17% range, with Tampa notching growth north of 20%. First quarter same-store NOI growth continued at a strong pace in our markets, with the portfolio averaging 9.4%, driven by 11.6% growth in total revenues. We have started to see expense growth moderate also with controllable expense up just 40 basis points quarter-over-quarter, and total operating expenses up 2.2% quarter-over-quarter. Six of our 10 same-store markets achieved year-over-year NOI growth of 8.4% or greater, with our Q1 same-store NOI margin registering a healthy 59.8%.
The portfolio experienced continued positive revenue growth in Q1, with 9 out of our 10 markets achieving growth of at least 7.5% or better. Our top 5 markets were Tampa at 20.9%, South Florida at 15.3%, Nashville at 13.3%, Phoenix at 13.1%, and Orlando at 12.6%. Renewal conversions were 60.5% for the quarter, with 6 out of our 11 markets executing renewal rate growth of at least 3.5%. Our top 5 markets were Raleigh at 7.7%, Dallas-Fort Worth at 6.9%, South Florida at 6.6%, Tampa at 5.8%, and Orlando at 5.7%.
On the occupancy front, we're pleased to report, as Brian mentioned, that Q1 same-store occupancy remained over 94%, positioning us well as we enter the peak leasing season. As of this morning, the portfolio is 96.5% leased, with a healthy 60-day trend of 91.6%. Year to date in 2023, market conditions have continued to spur our shift in operational focus towards maximizing resident retention, reducing our exposure to rising turnover costs, and further centralization of our labor. Through Q1 2023, we have seen new supply, albeit primarily within the Class A stock, continue to deliver in our markets. We are encouraged by the placement of our assets relative to the submarkets most directly hit with this new competition.
RealPage projects supply inventory for our markets over the next three years to rise by just 7.5%, with most of that delivering this year and early next. Deliveries peak in 2023 and then start to moderate in 2024, and then literally fall off a cliff thereafter to just 2,700 units estimated in 2025 in our submarkets. We illustrate this supply picture on page five of our supplemental. Our internal conclusion is we are currently still enjoying relative pricing power between our upgraded housing products versus new supply and/or SFR assets, and expect this paradigm to be particularly acute in the second half of 2024 and 2025 when deliveries significantly drop. On the transaction front, we expect to complete the disposition of Old Farm and Stone Creek during the quarter.
As previously mentioned, we'll use the sales proceeds to retire the full remaining balance on the revolver. We continue to actively monitor the capital markets for opportunities and to stay close to any movements on cap rates in our markets. We continue to see many institutional investors on the sidelines and we will wait for clarity around the interest rate environment and more recently, the regional banking stress. We've seen cap rate expansion, however, flatten over the last several months. On average, we're seeing nominal cap rate ranges between 4.75% and 5% depending on class, location, and vintage.
We're also monitoring a couple large acquisitions expected to clear a 4.9 cap for a large portfolio of assets similar to NXRT's, which is a positive read-through to our NAV of $70-$75 a share, versus the current market price in the low $40s. In closing, we're off to a strong start in 2023 through late April. We are expecting to see continued strength in middle market rental housing, particularly in our markets, and we maintain optimism that 2023 will further demonstrate our ability to produce outsized growth in NOI earnings and dividend growth. That's all I have for prepared remarks. Thanks to our teams here at NexPoint and BH for continuing to execute. Turn it back over to you, Brian.
Let's go to questions.
To ask a question, please press star one. Please limit yourself to one question and one follow-up. Your first question is from Omotayo Okusanya of Credit Suisse. Please go ahead. Your line is open.
Hi. Yes, good morning, team. Just wanted to focus on guidance for a second. Your interest expense guidance you go up about $3.something million, which is about $0.13. The midpoint of your guidance was only kind of lowered by $0.03. Could you just talk a little bit about where that remaining $0.10, where that pickup comes from, given that the midpoint of your same-store NOI growth was essentially unchanged at 11%?
I can speak to the interest side. W e've talked about this on past calls and individually with some of the analysts. There's kind of some noise that runs through this. You see on the guidance slide, we have a mark-to-market that shows fair value of the rate caps. That's moving through there and obviously creates about a $3 million or so increase to interest expense for the quarter. I'll let Bonner talk about sort of where the remainder of that differential comes in.
W e continue to see sort of changes in the mark-to-market piece of this, which we try to estimate to the best of our ability, just given the changes in the forward curve and volatility of interest rate movements makes it a little bit challenging. We're trying to tighten that up and add a little transparency here. Go ahead.
Tayo, I'm happy to step in here. As we look at, we essentially reaffirm the midpoint of same-store NOI at 11%. As we look at the numbers here through almost the end of April, we have visibility through May and into June on the renewal front. We've got some line of sight there. We think that ultimately, we're picking up a couple cents a share from our original forecast on NOI. Then there's an accumulation of a few several smaller updates to our corporate forecast that offset that $0.13 on interest expense you're talking about. Lines, corporate G&A, stock comp, deferred financing, cost amortization.
W e can dig in a little bit deeper offline and really give you the best color there. I think that, a little bit stronger forecast for NOI for the year. W e're seeing some swings. Obviously, the rate curve has gone pretty wild to start the year. We had a view two months ago of where rates were going. W e continue to have our own view and then look at the forward curve as well, and that has an impact. Ultimately, I think that we feel good about hitting 11% this year. We're on track to hit currently a little bit ahead of midpoint there.
Y ou're picking up a little bit of benefit from that.
Just to reiterate then, the pickup of that $0.10 to close the gap is mainly based on some improvement in kinda like the non-same store pool and as well as some G&A improvements.
There's another component here too that we should mention that the timing of the Houston dispositions, we're currently looking now towards a June close there. We're picking up a couple additional months of NOI for those assets as well, to get to the full-year picture. It's a bunch of little incremental improvements that offset that interest, that full picture on interest expense, which includes that mark-to-market at the fair value of the rate caps, which is the most dramatic move of any of those in interest expense.
Thank you.
Your next question is from Kyle Katorincek of Janney. Please go ahead. Your line is open.
Good morning, guys. Same-store expense was 15.1% for the first quarter. The point of guidance is currently 10.6%. That assumes each of the remaining quarters are gonna average around 9%. Are you expecting significant property tax relief or any one-time items to positively impact expense growth in the remainder of 2023, or just easier comps?
I'll start, Bonner, you can add to this. We are expecting some real estate tax relief and then a moderation of turn costs as we've turned a large part of the rent roll in the first quarter. We expect that to moderate in the back half of the year. Adding to that too is we did a little bit better on our insurance renewal than we thought. Just recently, I think we locked it in in the last month or so. Bonner, do you have anything to add?
Just on that, on that point. We have an April 1 renewal. I t was a tough market out there, but I think that we saw some pretty significant savings. We came into the year conservative on our assumptions there, and W e're in the single digits on premium increase where we were modeling 20%-25%. There's some savings for the back 9 months of the year in interest expense. Additionally, as you look at Q1 same store, one of the, one of the most significant single line items in there is a 2021 tax settlement that impacted 2022's Q1 same store real estate taxes. We didn't get that same settlement here in 2023 yet.
We still have several active cases, litigation for 2022 values. We are feeling better about our positioning in particular on taxes given the rise, rising rates decline in values. I think that we have a better case for some tax relief this year. Then going back to your point, we really saw a run-up in R&M and turn costs really in the second quarter last year. We started flowing through more of the evictions post-moratorium. We've seen an elevation in that, turn in R&M expense that I think that as we get into the Q2 comp, we'll normalize more, quarter-over-quarter.
We feel better about expense inflation for the balance of the year.
T hank you for that. I also had a quick question. Quarter-over-quarter, you saw a 260 basis point drop in Charlotte occupancy, and then around a 170 basis point drop in Atlanta. What drove those markets?
In Atlanta, we had a fire at our Rockledge asset, that's a portion there. Additionally, at The Preserve at Terrell Mill in Atlanta, we've been having just a little bit more difficult renewal discussions. I think that we've moderated pricing. T hose are quarter-ending numbers as of 3/31. Our revenue management team's working to kind of backfill demand there at those assets. In Charlotte, our Timber Creek asset also dealt with a casualty event and has dealt with a little bit of waning demand. We've been toggling revenue management, making sure that the pricing's dialed in to build that occupancy back up.
Thank you very much.
Your next question is from Omotayo Okusanya of Credit Suisse. Please go ahead. Your line is open.
Yes. Just going back to rents again for the quarter, taking a look at new rents for some of your markets, and I've seen it's Vegas, it actually turned negative. Just curious what kind of was going on in the markets? Is it a lot of new supply? Is it job growth slowing on the demand side? What made rent growth turn negative in those markets?
Hey, Tay, it's Matt. The Phoenix is a supply story. There's a quite a bit of deliveries going on in Phoenix right now. That's a component. The other component is, it's a really tough comp. Those rents last year, well, really first half of last year, we were seeing, you know, 15%-25% increases. I think that's the story in Phoenix. Vegas is seasonality and weaker demand than we inspected. There's several assets, particularly in around Bella Solara and Torreyana that are heavily giving heavy concessions to the market. We had to buy some occupancy on those two assets.
Thank you.
You got it.
There are no further questions at this time. I will now turn the call over to the team for closing remarks.
Appreciate everyone's time and questions. Feel free to reach out to us if you have additional questions. Happy to answer them. Until then, we'll see you next quarter. Thank you.
This concludes today's conference call. Thank you for your participation. You may now disconnect.