Earnings call transcript: Medical Properties Trust Q3 2025 results disappoint

Published 30/10/2025, 17:44
Earnings call transcript: Medical Properties Trust Q3 2025 results disappoint

Medical Properties Trust (MPW) reported a disappointing third quarter 2025, with earnings per share (EPS) falling short of expectations. The company posted an EPS of -$0.13, significantly missing the forecast of $0.01. Despite the earnings miss, MPW’s revenue slightly exceeded projections, coming in at $237.52 million against a forecast of $235.04 million. In response, the stock rose 5.25% in pre-market trading, closing at $5.08, reflecting investor optimism about future performance and strategic initiatives.

Key Takeaways

  • EPS of -$0.13 missed the forecast of $0.01.
  • Revenue of $237.52 million slightly surpassed expectations.
  • Stock price increased by 5.25% in pre-market trading.
  • Company remains confident in achieving $1 billion annual cash rent by 2026.
  • International operations, particularly in Europe, show strong performance.

Company Performance

Medical Properties Trust faced a challenging third quarter, primarily due to net impairments amounting to approximately $82 million. These impairments were largely linked to Prospect Medical Group and declining asset values. However, the company reported strong international performance, particularly in Europe, where operators like Circle Health are investing in AI and robotics.

Financial Highlights

  • Revenue: $237.52 million, slightly above forecast.
  • EPS: -$0.13, missing expectations by a significant margin.
  • Normalized FFO: $0.13 per share for Q3 2025.
  • Net impairments: Approximately $82 million.

Earnings vs. Forecast

Medical Properties Trust’s actual EPS of -$0.13 was a stark contrast to the forecasted $0.01, resulting in a negative surprise of 1400%. Despite this, revenue exceeded expectations by 1.06%, reflecting resilience in some operational areas.

Market Reaction

Following the earnings release, MPW’s stock price increased by 5.25% to $5.08 in pre-market trading. This rise suggests that investors are optimistic about the company’s strategic direction and its potential to achieve its $1 billion annual cash rent target by 2026. The stock’s performance is notable, given its 52-week range of $3.51 to $6.34.

Outlook & Guidance

Looking ahead, Medical Properties Trust remains confident in its ability to generate over $1 billion in annualized cash rent by the end of 2026. The company is exploring asset sales and strategic opportunities, while also monitoring debt covenants and potential refinancing strategies.

Executive Commentary

  • "We are increasingly confident in our ability to generate total annualized cash rent of more than $1 billion by year end 2026." - Edward K. Aldag Jr., CEO
  • "Demand for hospital real estate is strong across virtually all geographies." - Steven Hamner, CFO

Risks and Challenges

  • Continued financial strain from Prospect Medical Group’s bankruptcy.
  • Potential for further asset impairments impacting financial performance.
  • Market volatility affecting stock performance.
  • Challenges in refinancing and managing debt covenants.
  • Dependence on international operations to drive growth.

Q&A

During the earnings call, analysts inquired about the timing of HSA rent payments and performance, potential buyback strategies, and the Yale New Haven Health settlement. Executives also provided updates on specific facility transitions, highlighting ongoing strategic adjustments.

Medical Properties Trust faces a challenging environment but remains committed to its strategic goals, with a focus on international growth and operational resilience.

Full transcript - Medical Properties Trust Inc (MPW) Q3 2025:

Kayla, Conference Operator: Thank you for standing by. My name is Kayla and I will be your conference operator today. At this time, I’d like to welcome everyone to the Medical Properties Trust third quarter 2025 earnings conference call. All lines have been placed on mute to prevent any background noise during this 60 minute call. After the speaker’s remarks, there will be a question and answer session. If you’d like to ask a question during this time, simply press STAR followed by the number one on your telephone keypad. If you’d like to withdraw your question, press STAR one again. Thank you. I would now like to turn the call over to Charles Lambert, Senior Vice President. Please go ahead.

Charles Lambert, Senior Vice President, Medical Properties Trust: Good morning. Welcome to the Medical Properties Trust conference call to discuss our third quarter 2025 financial results. With me today are Edward K. Aldag Jr., Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer of the Company, Steven Hamner, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer, Kevin Hanna, Senior Vice President, Comptroller and Chief Accounting Officer, Rosa Williams, Senior Vice President of Operations and Secretary, and Jason Fry, Managing Director, Asset Management and Underwriting. Our press release was distributed this morning and furnished on Form 8-K with the Securities and Exchange Commission. If you did not receive a copy, it is available on our website at medicalpropertiestrust.com and in the Investor Relations section. Additionally, we’re hosting a live webcast of today’s call which you can access in that same section.

During the course of this call, we will make projections and certain other statements that may be considered forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. These forward-looking statements are subject to known and unknown risks, uncertainties, and other factors that may cause our financial results and future events to differ materially from those expressed in or underlying such forward-looking statements. We refer you to the Company’s reports filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission for discussion of the factors that could cause the Company’s actual results or future events to differ materially from those expressed in this call. The information being provided today is as of this date only, and except as required by the federal securities laws, the Company does not undertake a duty to update any such information.

In addition, during the course of the conference call, we will describe certain non-GAAP financial measures which should be considered in addition to, as and not in lieu of, comparable GAAP financial measures. Please note that in our press release, Medical Properties Trust has reconciled all non-GAAP financial measures to the most directly comparable GAAP measures in accordance with Reg. G requirements. You can also refer to our website at medicalpropertiestrust.com for the most directly comparable financial measures and related reconciliations. I will now turn the call over to our Chief Executive Officer, Ed Aldag.

Edward K. Aldag Jr., Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer, Medical Properties Trust: Thank you, Charles, and thanks to all of you for joining us this morning on our third quarter 2025 earnings call. Before you hear from the rest of the team, I’ll spend a few minutes discussing recent strategic updates, including a few notable developments during the quarter in the Prospect bankruptcy process. First, across all asset types, our tenants are delivering exceptional performance. General acute care operators reported a more than $200 million increase in EBITDARM year over year, with tenants such as LifePoint Health and ScionHealth delivering double-digit % revenue increases during the quarter. Post-acute operators reported a $50 million EBITDARM increase versus the same quarter last year. That includes Ernest Health up 17%, Vibra up 33%, and Median up 7%. Finally, in our Behavioral Health portfolio, EBITDARM increased $10 million year over year. Rosa will share more details on this performance trend across our portfolio shortly.

In August, NOR Health Care Systems in California was named the successful bidder for Prospect’s six California facilities. We promptly agreed to a new lease agreement with NOR, the terms of which are broadly similar to those agreed to with the other operators in our transitional portfolio. All rent will be deferred for the first six months, ramping to 50% for an additional six months, and then reaching total stabilized annual rent of $45 million per year thereafter. More recently, we reached a settlement agreement with Yale New Haven Health and Prospect whereby Prospect will receive $45 million from Yale. This payment from Yale will be additive to the ultimate proceeds that Prospect receives for these properties. Prospect has already entered into an agreement to sell two of its Connecticut facilities to another operator and is actively engaged in negotiation with buyers around the third hospital.

Finally, our portfolio of new tenants continues to ramp monthly rent on schedule, with a few exceptions that are mentioned in our press release. We have collected all rent due from these operators through October, including 100% of rent from HSA. In August, we sold two facilities from this portfolio in Phoenix, Arizona to a tenant for approximately $50 million pursuant to a purchase option in the lease. We continue to own approximately 15 acres of land in the area. We are increasingly confident in our ability to generate total annualized cash rent of more than $1 billion by year end 2026.

Notably, this $1 billion target does not reflect any rent contributions from any of the California Prospect properties, reflecting this confidence as well as our strong belief that our share price remains significantly undervalued, and our Board of Directors has authorized a new $150 million share repurchase program that we intend to deploy opportunistically. Furthermore, I want to call your attention to a comprehensive reaffirmation of our business model presentation posted to our website earlier this week. In this presentation we directly address a range of false narratives that critics have been spreading about our business model. We believe it is important that shareholders, operators, journalists, and lawmakers all have a complete understanding of the truth around MPT. There remains a dynamic macro policy environment, making the permanent and flexible capital solutions that Medical Properties Trust offers more important now than ever.

Rosa Williams, Senior Vice President of Operations and Secretary, Medical Properties Trust: Rosa, thank you, Ed. As always, I will cover some highlights from the quarter across our diverse global portfolio, beginning with Europe. As a reminder, international operators comprise approximately 50% of our total portfolio. We continue to be pleased with the consistency of coverages exceeding two times across this portfolio. This performance reflects these operators’ strategic focus on high quality patient care as well as continuous expansion of access to care within their communities. In the UK, Circle Health repeatedly ranks among the highest of all healthcare operators in patient satisfaction, maintaining a reputation score well above its next closest competitor. Circle Health continues to make significant investments in advanced technologies, including AI and robotics, strengthening its competitive advantages and reinforcing its position as one of the leading healthcare providers in the UK market.

Our Sulis Bath Hospital in the UK is the first independent hospital to receive accreditation as an elective surgical hub deemed by the NHS and the Royal College of Surgeons of England. This recognition highlights the hospital’s high standards in clinical performance, operational efficiency, and patient care. With coverages consistently above two times, Priory Group has demonstrated its ability to adapt its service lines to the needs of each market, allowing for flexibility as the NHS mental health model evolves. Priory Group continues to explore technological opportunities such as its partnership with Siomix and to launch an innovative digital pathway that aims to revolutionize access to personalized mental health care. In Germany, Median continues to report strong negotiated reimbursement rates and occupancy trends, enabling them to meaningfully outperform prior year revenue and earnings.

In Switzerland, Swiss Medical has launched integrated care models in each of the French, German, and Italian speaking regions, with these new platforms successfully supplementing Swiss Medical’s strong organic growth. EBITDAR grew more than 10% trailing 12 month year over year. In Spain, EMED continues to progress construction on new hospitals in Alicante and Barcelona, with scheduled openings during 2026, with over 70% of construction completed. Turning to our U.S. portfolio, Ernest Health has continued increasing consolidated coverage every quarter over the past year, with legacy IRFs reporting strong results and new developments rapidly ramping. As such, consolidated EBITDARM coverage is now approaching 2.4 times. LifePoint Health continues to deliver high margin growth at a steady, stable rate versus the rapid acceleration observed in 2024.

Kahnema Memorial continues to be the most significant growth driver within Medical Properties Trust’s LifePoint Health portfolio, with trailing 12-month admissions increasing 15% year over year. Surgery Partners’ three facilities delivered another quarter of strong performance with consolidated EBITDARM coverage above six times. Our hospital in Wisconsin recently completed a much-anticipated expansion to their operating suite to accommodate additional surgeons wanting to bring cases to this respected facility. HSA continues to improve operations and staffing across markets, with Q2 and Q3 EBITDARM coverage approaching one time on fully ramped rent, which, as a reminder, does not fully ramp until September of 2026. Summer seasonality drove softer volumes in the third quarter, but revenue remained strong due to a higher patient acuity mix. Medical Properties Trust has committed to funding approximately $40 million over the next two years for necessary infrastructure and other capital improvement projects, including HVAC and elevator replacements.

The vast majority of this amount is for a newly constructed seven-story parking deck. These costs will be added to the lease base upon which the tenants will owe rent. Honor Health launched its rebranding in Arizona by renaming Mountain Vista to Four Peaks Medical Center. In addition, NOR Health Care Systems remains focused on physician recruitment, executing its self-funded CapEx strategy, and upgrading facilities ahead of anticipated volume recovery. Quorum Health’s Odessa facility continues to improve performance with stronger than expected admissions and surgical volumes. In August, Odessa Regional announced that it achieved Silver certification as a Cribs for Kids National Safe Sleep Hospital, demonstrating adherence to rigorous guidelines established by the Cribs for Kids National Safe Sleep Hospital Certification Program. Insight Health reopened ER services at Trumbull, Ohio earlier this month with plans to slowly open more services as volumes come back, along with physicians and staff.

Prime Healthcare’s MPT facilities continue to show improved performance with EBITDARM coverage over two times as volumes and ER conversion rates have increased across the portfolio. Prime received credit rating upgrades from Fitch, Moody’s, and S&P during the third quarter. Pipeline Health continues to demonstrate growth with EBITDARM coverage over two times. Additionally, they are opening new service lines for patients at all four hospitals. In summary, we are very encouraged by performance trends across our portfolio. Our portfolio of new tenants continues to ramp monthly rent payments, and we remain well positioned to generate significant cash flow from our 388 properties and approximately 39,000 licensed beds around the world, enabling us to create value for shareholders moving forward. Kevin, thank you. Rosa.

Kevin Hanna, Senior Vice President, Comptroller and Chief Accounting Officer, Medical Properties Trust: Today we reported normalized FFO of $0.13 per share for the third quarter of 2025. The normalized FFO result would have been $0.01 higher if not for the payment of September rent by cash basis HSA on October 1. These results fully reflect the full quarter dilutive impact of not only our first quarter secured bonds, the second quarter Median joint venture refinancing, and higher G&A expense versus the second quarter. This also impacted GAAP results, primarily driven by higher stock compensation expense resulting from the change in the fair market value of 2024 and 2025 performance-based equity compensation, of which no shares have been earned or vested.

As of September 30, 2025, our earnings from equity interest were higher in the quarter as changes in German tax policy resulted in a net deferred tax benefit to our German JV and as the value of the underlying real estate in the CommonSpirit joint venture continues to adjust upwards. Neither of these items are included in our normalized FFO results. We recorded approximately $82 million in net impairments, the majority of which related to Prospect Medical Group and the decline in expected proceeds of certain Pennsylvania and Rhode Island assets. We continue to expect that cash proceeds from both the settlement with Yale New Haven Health in Connecticut and the sale of the Connecticut facilities will be more than sufficient to repay MPT’s outstanding DIP loan balances. Despite this expectation, accounting rules require that we record impairments to our Prospect carrying values.

There are other immaterial adjustments to carrying values during the quarter, including routine adjustments to marketable securities that were disclosed as non-cash fair value adjustments in our reporting. I will now hand the call over to Steve to discuss our liquidity and capital strategy moving forward.

Steven Hamner, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer, Medical Properties Trust: Steve, thank you, Kevin. I’ll wrap up quickly with just a few points, none of which will be surprising, and then we can take any questions. First, a quick summary of the strategies we have been executing for repaying and otherwise addressing future maturities. We’ve sold at significant gains and financed at above book values many billions of dollars in highly attractive hospital assets. Almost without exception, these transactions have provided clear validation of our underwriting rigor and the resulting asset values. Access to these values has given us the assurance and flexibility to repay and refinance several billion dollars of debt in 2025 alone. The secured notes we issued in February are now trading at significant premiums, and our most recent transaction financed more than $2 billion of German rehabilitation hospitals at a 5.1% coupon.

This access to capital has also given us the ability to re-tenant and begin collecting what is now scheduled to be an incremental $200 million plus in annual cash rent from new operators, resolve the issues around Prospect bankruptcies, and address debt maturing in 2027 and beyond, all of which we are doing successfully, along with our clear visibility into rent ramping to a scheduled incremental $200 million plus, the upcoming 2026 annual escalations, cash payment of our roughly $100 million DIP loan, and periodic asset sales similar to what we have reported in the last few quarters. We also have reason to expect even more liquidity. Specifically, and while there is no certainty, Prospect is expected to generate proceeds in excess of the $100 million balance of our DIP loan. A substantial majority of any such proceeds will flow to Medical Properties Trust.

We are evaluating the sale or lease of several assets which are not currently yielding meaningful returns, and we also continue to evaluate sales of earning assets and portfolios for attractive gains. For example, Evis Victoria, our co-owner of Infracor and the parent of Infracor’s Swiss Medical network lessee, is currently exploring various strategic options for its affiliates, including Infracor, to support their long-term development. Infracor is considering various opportunities to open up its capital or even list on a stock market in order to meet the growing demand for sale and leaseback solutions in the public and private hospital market in Switzerland. As this and other market indicators demonstrate, demand for hospital real estate is strong across virtually all geographies.

Our cost of capital is still higher than we expect it will be, but as we have previously said, we may make modest acquisitions when strategically important, but as Ed pointed out, repurchasing our own common stock is among our very best and most accretive uses of capital, and for that reason we announced this morning that we have implemented a $150 million strategic stock repurchase plan that will make available some of this expected growing liquidity to capture that permanent value. This announcement demonstrates our conviction that recent prices of our common stock do not reflect our assets’ underlying value and we have therefore not issued any shares under our recently implemented At the Market Offering program. We reestablished that program and the long-term opportunistic flexibility it provides us in August shortly after the effectiveness of our new three-year shelf registration statement.

Importantly, some of our unsecured notes outstanding still trade at discounts in today’s markets and nothing we may consider with respect to share repurchase or ATM programs rules out continuation of possible debt refinancing or redemption strategies. We have conclusively demonstrated that we have the asset values to accomplish these strategies. Moreover, as you would expect, we carefully monitor and plan for the maintenance of all debt covenants as we look into possible future capital transactions. We consciously designed and negotiated these covenants to provide us the opportunistic flexibility to execute these strategies, and we are confident that we will do so. With that, I will turn the call back to the operator to queue any questions. Kayla.

Kayla, Conference Operator: At this time I’d like to remind everyone, in order to ask a question, press star, then the number one on your telephone keypad. Please limit to one question and one follow-up. Your first question comes from the line of Mike Mueller with J.P. Morgan. Your line is open.

Yeah, hi. I guess on the buyback the question’s here. How do you weigh looking at a buyback versus using the capital to either, you know, pay down debt, buy back other debt, just given where the leverage level is today and, you know, even on a pro forma basis where it’ll be? I guess the follow up to that is in terms of funding a buyback, would you only, you know, use asset sales or would you use cash on hand or tap the credit line? Can you just put that whole buyback into perspective for us?

Steven Hamner, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer, Medical Properties Trust: Sure, Mike. We first of all have a number of opportunities and we’ve been talking about these for several quarters and that’s reinvesting the business with, as I mentioned, and as we’ve done on a very limited basis, strategically buying new assets. We certainly recognize the trading volumes and levels of some of the unsecured bonds that could provide attractive opportunities for tendering or repurchasing on either small or large scale. We recognize, as we’ve just conceded, that we think our shares are significantly undervalued. We have all of those options. We have resources available. We will continue to evaluate the opportunities and the timing of those opportunities and the sources of that capital. I can’t say I doubt we’re going to borrow money, incremental money, in order to fund a buyback.

We mentioned a few of the increasing, possibly increasing cash resources that we’ll have, including some assets that are currently not earning much, if anything, and possibly some of the well received earning assets that we’ve demonstrated. Just as in the last several billion dollars of asset sales, we expect any additional asset sale earning asset sales would also be at very attractive profitable gains. All of that is available and as we’ve been doing for a couple of years now, we evaluate periodically, constantly, in fact, what’s the best use of the available capital that we have.

Got it.

Rosa Williams, Senior Vice President of Operations and Secretary, Medical Properties Trust: Okay.

Appreciate it.

Thank.

Steven Hamner, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer, Medical Properties Trust: You.

Kayla, Conference Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Michael Carroll with RBC Capital Markets. Please go ahead.

Rosa Williams, Senior Vice President of Operations and Secretary, Medical Properties Trust: Yeah, thanks.

I just want to follow up with Mike’s questions related to the buyback. Can you kind of highlight the timing of this, of when some of these purchases could occur? I know you have a big debt maturity in 2027. You still are pooling money on the line of credit to meet some of the debt covenants. You’re still kind of cash flow negative, at least in terms of some of the investment you made. I guess post that, do we need to have all that kind of resolved before you.

Steven Hamner, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer, Medical Properties Trust: Start to buy back stock, or are.

You willing to do that in the near term?

Edward K. Aldag Jr., Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer, Medical Properties Trust: Yeah, Mike, I think you should assume it will start immediately.

Steven Hamner, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer, Medical Properties Trust: Okay.

Rosa Williams, Senior Vice President of Operations and Secretary, Medical Properties Trust: Ed, can you give us.

An update on HSA? I know you had some positive commentaries on their progress and the ramp up that they’ve been doing. Maybe provide some details on what drove the late September rent payment. Is that a concern that, like, does that cause you any concerns of their ability to pay the ramped up rent over time? Can you provide some color on that?

Sure.

Edward K. Aldag Jr., Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer, Medical Properties Trust: They continue to perform very well. The biggest improvements in Florida come from recruiting the doctors back to the facilities that left during the Steward debacle. They also have been extremely successful, probably exceeding even our expectations in Texas from the standpoint of their cash delay in October and September.

Steven Hamner, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer, Medical Properties Trust: Excuse me.

Edward K. Aldag Jr., Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer, Medical Properties Trust: We believe the final steps of getting the TSA in order, getting the money repaid to the lender that they had for the DIP loan in Florida, are complete. We do not expect any additional issues.

Steven Hamner, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer, Medical Properties Trust: Now, I’ll just point out one last thing. Remember, September, the rent actually doubled, and they paid twice in September, actually on October 1, what they had been paying. I think we made clear in the press release they’ve already paid October rent. Okay, great, thanks.

Kayla, Conference Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Farrell Granoff with Bank of America. Please go ahead.

Thank you. Good morning. I was just wondering if you could add a little commentary around the Yale New Haven hospitals. I saw the update with having at least two with greater line of sight of a potential close. Is there anything else that you can share? Also, the potential third, if there’s been further interest.

Edward K. Aldag Jr., Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer, Medical Properties Trust: Think you’re going to need to repeat that. No one around the table heard it.

Kevin Hanna, Senior Vice President, Comptroller and Chief Accounting Officer, Medical Properties Trust: First part of your question.

Sorry about that. I was just asking about the Yale New Haven hospitals and the progress on having those either released or sold under the binding agreements, or is that involved as well as the third property?

Steven Hamner, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer, Medical Properties Trust: Yeah, sure.

Edward K. Aldag Jr., Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer, Medical Properties Trust: The two facilities are under binding agreement. We expect those to close hopefully before year end, if not shortly thereafter. The other one, we hope to have a binding agreement imminently with another buyer.

Okay, thank you. I saw a little bit of commentary on the NHS restructuring and impacting of the referral on the behavioral providers. Does that grant you any concern on the future health of that sector for Priory for their EBITDARM coverage? Or does that maybe add a little target if that could be something to dispose of and use for capital funding?

Rosa Williams, Senior Vice President of Operations and Secretary, Medical Properties Trust: We talked about this in the last quarter, and perhaps the one before too. NHS, as they did with acute care a few years back, want to try to keep as much of their mix of patients in their own hospitals. Now they’re doing the same thing with behavioral. It’s our belief that they ultimately will realize the benefit of having independent hospitals to treat some of those patients because the resources are needed in the independent sector to assist with getting the volume of patients treated. We think it’s short term and will come back around. In the meantime, Priory has, as evidenced by their two times coverage, been able to put operational items in place to continue to perform very well.

Edward K. Aldag Jr., Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer, Medical Properties Trust: The operator there does not expect to see a significant decrease in their coverage.

Okay, thank you so much.

Kayla, Conference Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Omotayo Okusanya with Georgia Bank. Your line is open.

Yes. Good morning everyone. In terms of the rent collections in the quarter, I think in the press release you did mention that there was maybe not as much of collection as you expected in Pennsylvania and Ohio. Curious if that relates to Insight in particular and if you could just kind of give us an update on that, on that asset transition.

Edward K. Aldag Jr., Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer, Medical Properties Trust: Yes, Omotayo. It’s almost exclusively the Ohio facility, as you probably know. You probably read, they were delayed in reopening the facility. That has gotten open. Senator Moreno has been very helpful in that. We expect that to change. We have delayed when we expect their actual full rent to begin. I believe that’s moved to January, and then in Pennsylvania, that’s a very, very small amount of money. The facility continues to improve, and not exactly sure when that one will start paying rent.

Steven Hamner, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer, Medical Properties Trust: That’s a $30,000 a month rent payment.

Gotcha. Okay, that’s helpful. Just kind of looking through the stuff, it looks like there was some additional, you know, about $20 million of new loans in the quarter. Just kind of curious if you could talk us through what, you know, who that was to, if it’s to any of the kind of, I guess, operators of the assets in transition.

Edward K. Aldag Jr., Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer, Medical Properties Trust: There were two loans to operators, one being Insight, and that was for CapEx and for reopening cost, and then there was a loan to the facility in Pennsylvania, Tenor, and that, too, was for CapEx.

Gotcha. That’s helpful. Another one for me. The eight assets you took back, 23 assets, 15 released. Eight were out there. You were looking at what to ultimately do with those eight assets, including some of the developments. Could you just walk us through the status of those eight and what’s happening? Tyler?

I’m not sure exactly. The eight, I guess the two big ones would be the one in Massachusetts in Norwood, and then the other one in Texas in Texarkana. Both of those facilities remain under construction. Other than that, about all I can say at this particular point, because of various NDAs, we are in negotiations with people about those facilities.

Gotcha. Thank you.

Kayla, Conference Operator: I will now turn the call back over to Edward K. Aldag Jr. for closing remarks.

Edward K. Aldag Jr., Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer, Medical Properties Trust: Thank you very much, and thank you all for joining us. As always, if you have any questions, please don’t hesitate to reach out to Drew, and we’ll get back with you.

Kayla, Conference Operator: Ladies and gentlemen, that concludes today’s call. Thank you all for joining. You may now disconnect.

This article was generated with the support of AI and reviewed by an editor. For more information see our T&C.

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