Categories Earnings Call Transcripts, Other Industries
Public Storage (NYSE: PSA) Q1 2020 Earnings Call Transcript
PSA Earnings Call - Final Transcript
Public Storage (PSA) Q1 2020 earnings call dated May. 01, 2020
Corporate Participants:
Ryan C. Burke — Vice President of Investor Services
Joseph D. Russell, Jr. — President, Chief Executive Officer
Tom Boyle — Senior Vice President, Chief Financial Officer
Analysts:
Jeffrey Alan Spector — BofA Merrill Lynch — Analyst
Robert Jeremy Metz — BMO Capital Markets — Analyst
Stephen Thomas Sakwa — Evercore ISI — Analyst
Todd Michael Thomas — KeyBanc Capital Markets Inc. — Analyst
Smedes Rose — Citigroup Inc — Analyst
Jonathan Hughes — Raymond James — Analyst
Ronald Kamdem — Morgan Stanley — Analyst
Todd Jakobsen Stender — Wells Fargo Securities — Analyst
Ki Bin Kim — SunTrust Robinson Humphrey — Analyst
Michael William Mueller — JP Morgan Chase — Analyst
Spenser Bowes Allaway — Green Street Advisors — Analyst
Michael Jason Bilerman — Citigroup Inc — Analyst
Presentation:
Operator
Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for standing by, and welcome to the Public Storage First Quarter 2020 Earnings Call. [Operator Instructions]
It is now my pleasure to turn the floor over to Ryan Burke, Vice President of Investor Relations. Ryan, you may begin.
Ryan C. Burke — Vice President of Investor Services
Thank you, Erica. Good day, everyone. Thank you for joining us for our first quarter 2020 earnings call. I’m here on the line with Joe Russell and Tom Boyle.
Before we begin, we want to remind you that all statements, other than statements of historical fact, included on this call are forward-looking statements that are subject to a number of risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from those projected by the statements. These risks and other factors could adversely affect our business and future results that are described in yesterday’s earnings release and in our reports filed with the SEC.
All forward-looking statements speak only as of today, May 1, 2020. We assume no obligation to update or revise any of the statements, whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise.
A reconciliation to GAAP of the non-GAAP financial measures we provide on this call is included in the earnings release. You can find our press release, SEC reports and an audio replay of this conference call on our website, publicstorage.com. As usual, we do ask that you keep your questions limited to two initially. Of course, after that, please feel free to jump back in queue if you have additional questions.
With that, I’ll turn it over to Joe.
Joseph D. Russell, Jr. — President, Chief Executive Officer
Thank you, Ryan, and thank you for joining us. We wish the best for all of you listening in today, particularly those that have been personally impacted by the pandemic. I want to begin by thanking our employees, customers and business partners for their extraordinary efforts and flexibility as we adapt to this environment. Our focus is simple. Safety is the top priority in everything we do, protecting our employees and customers. We are operating our entire 2,500-plus portfolio in all markets as we are in essential business. The need for self-storage, even in disruptive times like these, is yet, again, being validated.
In that regard, our priorities beyond safety includes servicing new and existing customers as our communities navigate through these challenging times. To do so, we are supporting our frontline employees in several ways to optimize customer service. Protocols are in place that reinforce social distancing, keeping properties clean and offering customers multiple avenues to rent or access their space in a contactless way.
At the start of the pandemic, we also established the PS Cares Fund, which provides childcare coverage, extended pay time off and additional hourly compensation to our entire team of property managers. I can’t overstate how valuable their commitment to Public Storage has been, and will continue to be as they serve our 1.5 million customers.
As Public Storage approaches its 50th year, we have clearly weathered significant economic cycles, and this one will likely rank as one of the most extreme. We have a proven playbook to maneuver through severe economic and natural disasters. Our teams are battle-tested, our product is resilient and we have intentionally crafted a fortress balance sheet to not only survive, but thrive in times like these. At its core, the full Public Storage team is well equipped to not only face what are challenges arise in the near term, but confidently, we will find new ways of applying our unique strength and fortitude to find opportunities.
Now I will hand the call over to the operator for questions.
Questions and Answers:
Operator
[Operator Instructions] Your first question comes from the line of Jeff Spector with Bank of America.
Jeffrey Alan Spector — BofA Merrill Lynch — Analyst
Good afternoon and Hope all of you are doing okay. First question, just trying to tie some of the comments, Joe, you made on the, I guess, fundamentals or what you’re seeing in the market validates the stability of the sector, resilience in the past versus some of the I guess the color around COVID-19 in your press release would seem to be much more cautious. Can you just, I guess, discuss that? That’s my first question.
Joseph D. Russell, Jr. — President, Chief Executive Officer
Yes. Sure, Jeff. So again, we’re obviously in an environment that is new and different for everybody. We’ve all been through a number of economic cycles of different degrees, as I mentioned. We, in particular, from time to time go through what we call natural disasters, hurricanes and otherwise. This is clearly even different than those because it’s health- and science-related. The predictability of this environment is to be determined at best with a lot of information none of us have dealt with before. When we do look back at prior cycles, again, our product type has played through very well, and in even the great recession, we were pleasantly surprised by, again, the resiliency and the adaptability and relevance of the property type itself. On one hand, we clearly know that there continues to be a high degree of need and usage of the product. This month or last month, April, we moved in 82,000 customers into our portfolio. Now again, that’s down. But on the flip side, there’s vibrancy there. There’s need. We see it also with the amount of activity at our properties that we can now track holistically because we have a centralized access system. So again, whether it’s at a raw consumer level and/or anything that tiers into service-oriented from a business that may or may not be facility, even the type of activity that’s going on with this COVID economy, there is a true and, I think, valid need for the product itself. So we are looking at the future with a fair degree of caution because, frankly, we just don’t know what’s going to play through. And I don’t know how realistic you can predict anything because we’re six weeks into this, and there’s just going to be a number of things as we’re discovering day-to-day, week-to-week, that this environment will create even additional types of pressure points that we haven’t seen before.
Now again, other things, though, are somewhat similar so far to what we’ve seen with extreme economic cycles. So in the Great Recession, our delinquency hovered around, again, a 2% factor or so through the month of April, very similar. So our customer base, even through the month of April, from a collection and payment standpoint was consistent even on a year-over-year basis. So it’s a mixture. And it’s just something that we’re going to, again, continue to react to. We’ve got great tools to be nimble. We’ve got great analytics to continue to address, again, whatever continues to surface or does surface that we need to address and address through different tactics, strategies, etc. So that would basically be an overview of how, again, we’re looking at this environment and clearly in a position that the predictability of it is still unknown.
Jeffrey Alan Spector — BofA Merrill Lynch — Analyst
That’s very helpful. And my second question then, if we could talk about the strength of the balance sheet and opportunities. I think you discussed this quickly in your opening remarks. Are you seeing what are you seeing today? And how should we think about this? And how can PSA take advantage during this downturn verse I think one of the regrets was not being a bit more aggressive during the world financial crisis.
Joseph D. Russell, Jr. — President, Chief Executive Officer
Sure. Well, Tom can talk a little bit more specifically about the balance sheet as it stands today. So I’ll let him do that in a sec. But again, looking at extreme cycles like this one is likely to be. There is evidence. It’s very early, but it won’t be surprising if, again, a number of owners that have come into the sector, particularly over the last three or four years, where we’ve seen an abundance of new supply come into the market, particularly with owner owners and ownership structures that may not be well suited to deal with something like this. There could be, again, a predictable effect, which would be more ability to capture assets, again a price point that we think is very different and much more attractive than it’s been over the last, say, three or four years. We’re starting to hear, again, some rumblings around assets that I would say are underwater, where they’ve been funded through a certain level of debt and the valuations are below that value. And so we’re starting, again, to hear some of that out in the market. Again, it’s early, but it wouldn’t be surprising to us. And the ability for us to, in particular, take advantage of an environment that could create that additional level of transaction activity. The balance sheet’s ready for it, and it’s ready in a meaningful way. So we’ll see how that plays through. And I’ll hand it over to Tom. He can give you a little bit more color on where the balance sheet stands today.
Tom Boyle — Senior Vice President, Chief Financial Officer
Yes. Thanks, Joe. Yes, the balance sheet’s in great shape, as we’ve discussed on previous quarterly calls. And we we’re sitting right now with debt-to-EBITDA, just to touch over 1 times fixed charge coverage around 8 times and over $700 million in cash on the balance sheet. So we feel very good about our financial and liquidity position to take advantage of potential opportunity, should it arise. As Joe mentioned, we’re starting to see the early signs of that.
Jeffrey Alan Spector — BofA Merrill Lynch — Analyst
Thank you.
Operator
Your next question is from Jeremy Metz with BMO Capital Markets.
Robert Jeremy Metz — BMO Capital Markets — Analyst
Joe, Tom, I was wondering if you could just give a little more color on the trends and what happened in April in terms of occupancy and where you ended turnover move-in rents. And then it sounded like delinquencies were 2% for April, and that was in line with last year. Was that right as well?
Tom Boyle — Senior Vice President, Chief Financial Officer
Sure, Jeremy. I’ll walk through a number of those points. It’s Tom. So stepping back, looking at activity through the quarter and then into April, we had a pretty good quarter on move-ins, which really began in January, February, we were up, call it, 5%, 10% on move-ins in January. In March, we saw a meaningful increase in demand as customers pulled forward activity that would typically occur later in the second quarter, most notably college students and others ahead of stay-at-home owners. One week in March, for instance, move-ins were up about 20%, to give you a context. But then that volume started to decline significantly as folks were encouraged to stay home. Overall search volumes have come down. Inbound sales calls are down about 25% in April. Web visits are down about 7% in April. Overall, move-in activity through the month of April was down 17%, despite decreases in rental rates of circa 20% to drive volume across the country.
So for those customers that have a storage need, we’re providing space with enhanced precautions in our properties and utilizing our e-rental online lease, somewhat encouraging. As Joe mentioned, over 80% of last year’s seasonal activity we experienced in April, which speaks to demand for the product even in tough times.
Trends modestly improved as we moved through April. So the last week of April, for instance, move-in volumes were down about 11%. But again, it reduced rental rates. Somewhat offsetting the decline in move-ins was an anticipated decline in move-outs. So move-out volumes, not take into account auction related move-outs was down 9% in the month of April. We’re watching this metric closely, and anticipate that as stay-at-home orders are lifted, we may see an increase in pent-up move-out volume. We’ve talked about in the past that in 2009, there was a shift in consumer behavior with longer length of stay customers moving out. We have not seen that to date. Our existing tenants continue to perform well and move-outs remain down.
As Joe mentioned, we have seen less overall activity of properties, so not just move-ins and move-outs, which is customer visits to the property. Our new centralized access system gives us insights into what’s going on at the properties. And April activity was down about 20% versus March.
In terms of occupancy, we ended the first quarter up about 60, 70 basis points in occupancy. As we disclosed, part of that was attributable to the fact that we had postponed auctions of delinquent customers. We’ve continued to do that through the month of April. So our occupancy at the end of April was up about 30 basis points. But if you take into account the fact that we have some customers with us that we may have otherwise auctioned in prior years, our occupancy would be down on a year-over-year basis. Still up seasonally on an absolute basis, but down on a year-over-year basis.
Moving to collections, which is the third prong of your commentary. As noted in press release and as Joe just highlighted, April rent collections were very consistent with prior year. And that is consistent with what we saw in 2009. We’ve collected about 95% of our April rent at this point, which is right in line with where we were last year at this time. So as the duration of this pandemic elongates and we react to where we go from here, it could very likely put more pressure on the consumer, and we’ll have to monitor that as we go forward. But at this point, collections are very much in line.
Robert Jeremy Metz — BMO Capital Markets — Analyst
That’s great color. And for my second question, I’m going to double up a little bit here. I just wanted to see, Tom, if you could expand a little more from what you’ve seen in April, but kind of talk about it from a regional perspective, how is Texas performance, just given the falloff in energy, Southern California, given the closures, Florida, what about areas that are starting to reopen? What are you starting to see there? And then just if I could add on, is just on the business-customer side, it sounds like they’re pretty steady right now, but when do you expect to start hearing from them? And what sort of trajectory are you seeing there or would you foresee there?
Tom Boyle — Senior Vice President, Chief Financial Officer
Yes. Thanks, Jeremy. So there are regional trends that are worth speaking to. I think the high level takeaway is that the Northeast has been more impacted, and we’ve seen slower rates of move-ins in the Northeast. Also slow rates of move-outs, but slow rates of move-ins. And so as you look at New York or Boston or Philadelphia, and really, you can expand that up and down the East Coast because I would put Miami probably in that category as well. Along the West Coast, move-in volumes have been more similar with prior year, still down, but down more in the 5% to 10% range in many of those markets versus higher in the Northeast. And then that extends through the Southwest and into Texas. Houston is a market that certainly with the combination of the pandemic as well as with what’s going on with oil prices, one that we and we suspect others are watching closely. We have seen move-in volumes hold up reasonably well in Houston but we have cut rate in order to drive that volume more meaningfully in Houston than we have in other markets in Texas and the West Coast that I highlighted.
Operator
Your next question is from Steve Sakwa with Evercore.
Stephen Thomas Sakwa — Evercore ISI — Analyst
Thanks, good morning. I know that the industry has kind of gone to a temporary hold on existing customer rent increases, which has really been kind of the single driver of revenue growth for the industry. I’m just curious, what is the timetable on that? I assume that, that’s still in place for May. And how long do you think that, that might be on hold for?
Tom Boyle — Senior Vice President, Chief Financial Officer
Sure. So we thought it made sense and it was appropriate to pause that program as we move through March. And we did not send existing tenant rate increases out for June one billing. And so that will continue through the second quarter. Stepping back, existing tenant rate increases in a more normal time are managed at a very granular level using data analytics to drive what we send, when we send it and the magnitude. That will be an important part of where we go from here and how we restart at the appropriate time, recognizing that consumer behavior could be a little bit different post this event than what it was before. But we’ll be using the same tools that we have in the past in order to determine those rental rate increases and the appropriate time with which to send them.
Stephen Thomas Sakwa — Evercore ISI — Analyst
Yes. And Tom, just as a follow-up, is there something is there a guidepost? Is it about the amount of country that’s open? I mean what sort of guidepost should we be looking for to kind of determine when those may be appropriate?
Tom Boyle — Senior Vice President, Chief Financial Officer
Yes. I’d say it’s a number of different things. Certainly, the situations that are going on in the local economies got consumer behavior that we’re seeing. And we’ll react to a number of those things as we see them. At this point, we thought it prudent not to send them out at the end of April for June one effective.
Stephen Thomas Sakwa — Evercore ISI — Analyst
Okay. And then you mentioned in the press release increasing kind of hourly wages by $3, at least it sounded like, at least for the second quarter. Maybe just talk about expenses overall. I think maybe online marketing costs were still up. But just how are those trending? And how do you expect employee costs to kind of trend through the balance of the year?
Joseph D. Russell, Jr. — President, Chief Executive Officer
Yes. Steve, first on, personnel-related expense, that will be elevated through Q2 by virtue of the things that we’ve discussed about. We put some information on that in the Q as well. And again, we’ll continue to moderate and understand, again, how we need to react to the overall environment going forward into the second half of the year. And we’re looking at all expense levels across the company as a whole. The burden of tax increases is still with us. We don’t really have a way to predict that going one direction or another at the moment other than it’s just continuing to be elevated. And Tom can give you a little bit more color on another component of our expense tied to advertising. So again, that’s been a vibrant tool for us. We’re going to continue to use it aggressively. But again, it’s going to be a factor in the mix as well. We continue to look at all of our operational expenses, whether, again it’s tied to vendor contracts, the amount of maintenance capital that we’re putting into the portfolio, etc. So it’s definitely something that we continue to focus on and look for ways of in this environment to optimizing overall cost levels. And then Tom, if you want to give a little bit more color on what we’re doing with advertising and marketing spend.
Tom Boyle — Senior Vice President, Chief Financial Officer
Sure. Thanks, Joe. I’ll just briefly touch on that because that’s a lever that we pulled pretty hard through 2019 and in the first quarter. And in the first quarter, like we saw last year, we saw pretty good demand response from that. And that’s continued through in April. So we’re going to continue pushing pretty hard on advertising as we continue to see a great response to the Public Storage brand online. And so would anticipate that, that spend remains somewhat elevated as we seek to drive volume to our website, call center and the properties.
Operator
Our next question is from Todd Thomas with KeyBanc.
Todd Michael Thomas — KeyBanc Capital Markets Inc. — Analyst
Thanks for the April trends. That information is helpful. It sounds like you haven’t yet seen an increase in move-outs, though. And I’m just curious, if you look back at prior cycles, and I realize this is a different environment than what you’ve seen in prior cycles. But any sense what kind of lag you might expect to see between job loss and move-outs?
Tom Boyle — Senior Vice President, Chief Financial Officer
Sure. Todd, I think looking back at 2009 as a guide, as I look at move-in, move-out trends in 2009, they were more gradual as they came on than what we’ve seen to date. So to give you a context, we did see a material increase in move-outs. But as you look at the quarters in which they took place in the fourth quarter of 2008, in the first quarter of 2009, the magnitude of those were in the mid-single digits, which as you compare that to the orders of magnitude that we’re seeing in the sharp decrease in move-ins and move-outs already at this juncture given the pandemic, it’s a different reaction given the fact that folks are being encouraged to stay at home, and we’re all kind of awaiting scientific research and developments. So I think it’s hard to point back at that and say it’s a perfect analogue, to be honest. But it did happen with increased move-outs pretty quickly on the back of declines in employment in the fourth quarter of 2008.
I think one of the biggest drivers now is not just job loss as it relates to move-outs, but it’s also the fact that there are customers who are staying at home and maybe don’t want to come visit our properties to move out right now because they feel good about the safety and security of their goods at our properties. So we’ll see where we go from here, but your point that you made is the right one, which is we have not seen any noticeable shift to date and, in fact, move-ins move-outs are down.
Todd Michael Thomas — KeyBanc Capital Markets Inc. — Analyst
Okay. That’s helpful. And then the rent reductions for new move-in customers that you mentioned, Tom, I think, 20%. Is that across the platform on average? And can you talk about whether or not you anticipate needing to change pricing going forward here based on either call volumes or site visits and just, I guess, rentals and conversions overall?
Tom Boyle — Senior Vice President, Chief Financial Officer
Yes. Sure. We do actively manage our pricing on a day-to-day basis across the country at a unit size and property level basis. And so as you would expect, my comments around volumes being different by region, pricing strategy is different by region as well. And so there’s some regions in the country where pricing is only down, call it, 5% year-over-year. And there’s others where pricing is down 30%. And so there’s a good mix there, and we’re managing that dynamically in order to drive both volume as well as revenue outcome.
Todd Michael Thomas — KeyBanc Capital Markets Inc. — Analyst
Okay. But normally in the peak leasing season, which there’d be a few large net move-in months in a row, you’d be raising rates, right? So you’re discounting and lowering rents here, do you expect to be able to begin to take that pressure off a little bit and be able to move rents higher on a seasonal basis at all throughout the spring and summer months?
Tom Boyle — Senior Vice President, Chief Financial Officer
Well, I think, looking at last year as a guidepost is probably thrown out the window. We manage our pricing, advertising, promotion strategies on a real-time basis at all times, regardless of what’s going on. And certainly, we’re reacting to different signals that are coming in this year than what we saw last year. Your point on seasonality, we’ve already seen an impact to the seasonality to date, which is the college students that with colleges going to e-learning, and shutting down physical presence in the month of March, we saw that activity pull forward. As we move into the month of May and June, you’d have other seasonal use cases that would come up, whether we see those this year, I think, is to be determined and may very well differ materially by region and jurisdiction given how things are managed with stay-at-home orders this year. So I think it’s too early to comment too much on what seasonality may play out through the second and third quarters. But we’ll be managing real time as we always do.
Operator
Your next question is from Smedes Rose with Citi.
Smedes Rose — Citigroup Inc — Analyst
I wanted to just ask you going back to the compensation increases that you put in place for the second quarter, and you noted that you might extend them. And I was just wondering, is the decision around potentially extending them to do with shutdowns and disruption from this pandemic? Or is it more just a reflection of kind of competition for that level of work or at the property level? Or kind of, I guess, what are the issues that would help you make that decision?
Joseph D. Russell, Jr. — President, Chief Executive Officer
Yes. Smedes, yes, I wouldn’t take that as we intend to do any of the things you’re talking about. It’s really we felt comfortable in the near term that the range of issues that our employee base was facing, we thought the right thing to do was to elevate their level of overall compensation and other tools they had at their disposal that we could help fund, whether it was childcare or extended time off, etc. So again, because of the unpredictability going into the second half of this year, and frankly, even for the rest of this quarter, I mean, we’ll see how things go. I’ll tell you, though, that the variety of wage rates we have nationally is something that we constantly do evaluate. We look at, again, the relative pay for the scope and the applicability of skill for the type of compensation that we have, and we think we’re aligned in that regard. And again, that’s just something that will continue to be fluid. Clearly, one of the things that we have the ability to do, and we clearly thought it was the right thing to do was to, again, give additional support to our frontline workers, in particular. They’re, as I mentioned in my opening comments, a critical part of our overall operational strategies and taking care of customers, etc. So it’s just something that we’ll continue to evaluate, again in an environment that has a lot of unpredictability even around the way even some of the stimulus packages are working and other things that are at everybody’s potential access. But at the same time, knowing that we have the ability to give additional support, and we thought it was the right thing to do.
Smedes Rose — Citigroup Inc — Analyst
Yes. No, it makes sense. I mean the other thing I just wanted to ask you for the behavior or sort of pricing behavior of facilities that are still in lease-up, has PSA taken a more aggressive approach on rates there just to kind of gain whatever kind of market share there is available? Or what’s happening, I guess, specifically at those properties versus your stabilized assets?
Tom Boyle — Senior Vice President, Chief Financial Officer
Yes. Smedes, those properties continue to lease-up. We have reacted to the new pricing environment and have lowered pricing on many of those as well. But again, depending on the level of volume and interest going on in those individual markets that surround the trade areas of those properties, but they’ve continued to lease-up through the month of April, which we’re encouraged by, albeit at lower pricing.
Smedes Rose — Citigroup Inc — Analyst
Thank you.
Tom Boyle — Senior Vice President, Chief Financial Officer
Thank you.
Operator
Your next question is from Jonathan Hughes with Raymond James.
Jonathan Hughes — Raymond James — Analyst
First off, thanks for the outlook commentary in yesterday’s release. I found it to be very helpful. Could you just remind us of your average length of stay, which I believe is a bit higher than your peers? And do you think that makes them more or less price sensitive to renewal rate increases whenever those are, of course, slated to resume?
Tom Boyle — Senior Vice President, Chief Financial Officer
Sure. Our average length of stay is right around 10 months. And that’s really a barbell between some customers that have use cases for storage that are very short-term in nature, be it between apartments, etc. And those customers that are using the space for longer-term needs, be it storing seasonal goods, businesses, an extension of folks’ homes, etc. And in terms of sensitivity to rate increases, there’s lots of different factors that play into that. Stickiness of customers, once you get past really that one year mark is quite sticky. And that’s remained the case through the month of April. And we’ll have to evaluate what consumer behavior may change and business behavior may change as we move through navigating this pandemic. But at this point, no changes.
Jonathan Hughes — Raymond James — Analyst
Maybe another maybe a similar question. I mean what percentage of your customers have been there for over a year and over two years?
Tom Boyle — Senior Vice President, Chief Financial Officer
Yes. About 60% of our customers, a little less than 60% of our customers have been with us for longer than a year and a little over 40% of our customers have been with us for longer than 2.
Jonathan Hughes — Raymond James — Analyst
Okay. And what percentage of those are on AutoPay? Almost all?
Tom Boyle — Senior Vice President, Chief Financial Officer
Yes. A good percentage AutoPay for us is around 50% of the tenant base. And we haven’t seen any change in AutoPay sign-ups or any cancellation trends. It’s very consistent.
Jonathan Hughes — Raymond James — Analyst
Got it. I’m going to sneak in one more. Have you looked at expanding the size of your credit facility, you’d be able to take advantage of acquisition opportunities? Or do you feel you have enough capacity with free cash flow and what your cash and revolver capacity for any opportunities you pursue?
Tom Boyle — Senior Vice President, Chief Financial Officer
Yes, sure. I think we feel very good about out of the current liquidity with over $700 million in cash on the balance sheet, entirely undrawn revolver and access to capital markets given our uniquely low leverage and a high coverage. And so we feel very good about the firepower we have in order to fund potential opportunities. And we await that opportunity in the next several quarters.
Jonathan Hughes — Raymond James — Analyst
All right. Got it. Thanks for that.
Operator
Your next question is from Ronald Kamdem with Morgan Stanley.
Ronald Kamdem — Morgan Stanley — Analyst
Just a couple of quick ones. Thanks for the disclosure, I thought that was very helpful. The first is just can you just talk about maybe sort of the small business tenant in the portfolio, just high level sort of what are the exposure and how are they bearing in this environment to the extent that you can?
Tom Boyle — Senior Vice President, Chief Financial Officer
Sure. So small business customers are a component of our tenant base. They typically are good paying customers as it relates to collections, and that’s continued through the month of April. And the one notable trend I would highlight is we have seen a decrease in move-in volume, more pronounced for business customers than we have for individual consumers, particularly over the last four weeks. So that’s not surprising in this environment, given the fact that many businesses are not open and operational. And folks are being encouraged to stay at home. So I wouldn’t point to anything concerning there, but we have seen a decline in move-in volume more so.
Ronald Kamdem — Morgan Stanley — Analyst
And what percent of the business customer in the portfolio is it?
Tom Boyle — Senior Vice President, Chief Financial Officer
Yes. So there’s a variety of different businesses that use our space. We have about 5%, 6% of customers that are true businesses that sign business leases with us. And then we have appreciably more customers that are business users that, by survey, indicate something more like 15%, 20% of our customer base, which is sales reps and others that use our space. And those customers so yes, that gives you a sense of the composition.
Ronald Kamdem — Morgan Stanley — Analyst
Very helpful. Just another quick one. Just looking at late charges and administrative fees, just saw it was down 3.5% year-over-year. Is that is there a thought, either this go round or did you do this last cycle as well in terms of trying to deal with customers and potentially waiving some late fees? Or is there sort of no change in strategy there?
Tom Boyle — Senior Vice President, Chief Financial Officer
Yes. Sure. So one of the things that we did was provide some incremental customer accommodation for those impacted by the pandemic. I would highlight that our operational teams have dealt with crisis situations over the past several years and are well equipped to deal with situations that materially impact local communities. And so while that’s historically happened in very tight geographies, in this case, it really happened across the country. But our operational team pivoted to that stance very quickly and effectively. And so we are waiving fees, reducing rent in some instances and working with delinquent customers across the country for those impacted by the COVID pandemic. We already talked about the fact that we’ve paused auctions and existing tenant rate increases as well. But I’ve been really impressed by our operations team’s ability to move into crisis mode and to help those that have been impacted to date. And that is a driver of some of the fees that you highlight and would expect that to be the case as we move through the second quarter as well.
Ronald Kamdem — Morgan Stanley — Analyst
Great. One more, if I may. Just was noticing that I think Minneapolis was looked like it was added this in the Q this quarter in terms of markets you called out with supply. Hopefully, I got that right. But can you just maybe provide a little bit more color on maybe what’s happening there to warrant that call out?
Joseph D. Russell, Jr. — President, Chief Executive Officer
Yes, sure, Ronald. Minneapolis is a market that first of all, we have significant market share and presence. So over the last two years, we’ve boosted that by doing three things: We’ve added to our own portfolio through acquisitions, ground-up development and redevelopment in a market that we hadn’t actually had a lot of investment activity for some time. We like and see, I think, very good long-term traction relative to the market itself and the additional inventory and new properties that we put into that market. All told, for us directly is about 10,000 units. And lease-up there is going well on the new properties. We’re not seeing a like-for-like additional magnitude of new development going into the market, but there’s some. But we felt it was relevant to call it out because, again, our same store is not progressing as well as some other markets have been in the near term, but we feel like the stabilization that will take place over the next one to two years as, again, we see good absorption of the new product. And any of the things that are happening in our existing properties correct as well. So again, the markets, I think, well placed for future growth. And we’re really pleased with the additive scale and the range of new assets, either directly built and/or acquired that we put into that market.
Ryan C. Burke — Vice President of Investor Services
It’s Ryan Burke. We got have a number of analysts left that want to ask questions. So please do try to keep it to 2, and then feel free to jump back in queue.
Ronald Kamdem — Morgan Stanley — Analyst
Sure. Thank you.
Ryan C. Burke — Vice President of Investor Services
Thanks Ron
Operator
Your next question is from Todd Stender with Wells Fargo.
Todd Jakobsen Stender — Wells Fargo Securities — Analyst
Just to flesh out that rent relief question that you may offer tenants if they ask. Is it deferred? Is it the expectation that you’ll receive it later on? Maybe just trying to flesh that out. Is it a maintenance ability to maintain occupancy, so you’ll give a rent holiday, how are you looking at that?
Tom Boyle — Senior Vice President, Chief Financial Officer
Yes. I would say, first off, it’s been a relatively modest amount of requests that have come in for things like that. We have a little bit of a different business than many other real estate asset types that may have long-term leases and maybe talking about blend and extends and things like that, we have month-to-month leases. So as we think about customers and their rents, and navigating this environment, obviously, one of the choices that customers have is they have the ability to move out. And so extending payment plans or otherwise are a little bit less applicable for our product type than others, but we have a variety of different tools to work with customers impacted by this pandemic.
Todd Jakobsen Stender — Wells Fargo Securities — Analyst
Right. Understood. And then perhaps your stance on share buybacks. As you look at the stock come inside of maybe our NAV estimate. Are you looking at putting cash to work should the stock decline?
Tom Boyle — Senior Vice President, Chief Financial Officer
Sure. Stock buybacks are something that, one, we have authorization from the Board to undertake; and two, it’s part of our regular capital allocation dialogue. We are hopeful and optimistic that this pandemic could create a different business environment, different acquisition pricing environment. Which could allow us to use our balance sheet to grow the portfolio in an attractive manner. And we will see how that plays out. And in addition to that, stock buybacks are another tool that we have to allocate capital. At this point, we have not bought back any stock.
Todd Jakobsen Stender — Wells Fargo Securities — Analyst
Okay, that’s helpful. Thank you.
Operator
[Operator Instructions] Your next question is from Ki Bin Kim with SunTrust.
Ki Bin Kim — SunTrust Robinson Humphrey — Analyst
I just wanted to clarify a couple of comments you guys made earlier. You said April at the end of April, occupancy was up 30 basis points, but that included some units that were haven’t been auctioned off yet. So if you look at it maybe from a paying occupancy standpoint, how does April look year-over-year?
Tom Boyle — Senior Vice President, Chief Financial Officer
Well, we finished April down about 40, 50 basis points in occupancy, if you take out those units that may have been auctioned in the previous year.
Ki Bin Kim — SunTrust Robinson Humphrey — Analyst
Okay. And in terms of move-in rates, you ended the first quarter down 4.2%. How did that trend in April?
Tom Boyle — Senior Vice President, Chief Financial Officer
Yes. Ki, I’ve already commented on that in terms of the range of different move-in rates by different markets. On average, it’s down around 20%.
Operator
Your next question is from Mike Mueller with JP Morgan.
Michael William Mueller — JP Morgan Chase — Analyst
In terms of the planned capital spending that you talked about, the case for property upgrades and everything, is there going to be any disruption to that or any notable change to the budget of the amounts?
Tom Boyle — Senior Vice President, Chief Financial Officer
So yes, Mike, we obviously reset that from what we spoke to a quarter ago, where we were looking at something along the lines of $250 million or so. And we have reset that to about $175 million. So there’s some things in the mix there that have led to the reduction. One, is a number of the capital projects that we launched into 2019 carried into this year, along with some of our strategic investments around what we call our Property of Tomorrow initiative. We’ve tapered that down, knowing that we’re going to be looking at delays from an approval and/or permitting basis in one regard through the next few months based on what we’re seeing at the moment as cities have shut down many of their own staffing levels and/or sets of approvals that come through when you’re doing work along those lines, coupled with the fact that we think we’re going to go into a much more beneficial arena even for bidding and continuing from a scale standpoint, the transition of properties to our Gen five standard that the Property of Tomorrow program is aligned with. So that was one component.
A number of other things that also we were intending to do through this year, not in any way related to functionality of properties or anything else, but it just makes sense based on availability and predictability of not only vendor effectiveness, but even from a cost standpoint, we think we’re going to be much better suited to do more of that going into 2021. On the flip side of that, we still are anticipating about $175 million that will happen this year, and it ties to things that we will continue to do, as we always do, keeping our properties highly functional, doing repairs, doing everything that we can to facilitate a high degree of customer move-ins and high occupancy. We also still are doing a few things that vendor friction aside, that we think we can still do in this environment that would also relate to upgrades to LED and energy efficiency. We’re putting solar on a number of properties. So that’s really what’s led to the reset on our expectation for 2020.
Operator
Your next question is from Spenser Allaway with Green Street Advisors.
Spenser Bowes Allaway — Green Street Advisors — Analyst
Actually all of my questions have been asked.
Operator
Your next question is from Parker Decrane with Citi.
Michael Jason Bilerman — Citigroup Inc — Analyst
It’s Michael Bilerman here. So just a couple of questions. The first is more strategic this pandemic is going to change the way we live, work and play, both in the near term, but certainly over a longer term. Have you given thought about the live part of it? And if there is going to be a shift of population out of urban dense cities into more suburban house living, even a modest shift, but it could certainly accelerate. How does that change the dynamics of demand for your product?
Joseph D. Russell, Jr. — President, Chief Executive Officer
Yes, Michael. We’ll see how that does play through. Obviously, we have the benefit with 2,500 locations, 38 states. We’ve got a sizable portfolio, both urban and suburban-related. It’s too soon to tell yet if one is being benefited versus the other. So we’ll assess that and see what kinds of trends might play through just on, again, how the population shifts one direction or another from, as you mentioned, pure urban desirability to something that may be more desirable from a suburban standpoint. But don’t know yet, but we’ve got plenty of tentacles out there as we continue to see the type of impact that this environment may create in that regard. It’s not coming through yet. Meaningful other than Tom mentioned that we have seen a little bit more of an impact in the Northeast. And I think you can make sense of that really more from a health standpoint and a science standpoint because that’s frankly where the most dramatic impact to the COVID virus has been so far. And again, many of those communities are in major lockdowns. So we’ll see. And we play in both arenas very actively, continually as we speak. We’re making development decisions, both in suburban and urban markets. We use a lot of demographic data to point us even on a very micro basis where to locate and invest in properties where we think we can continue to see good demand.
Michael Jason Bilerman — Citigroup Inc — Analyst
Right. And I think about the shift that you made into some extraordinarily larger facilities in more urban markets, is there anything you can glean from those during this pandemic yet?
Tom Boyle — Senior Vice President, Chief Financial Officer
It’s tough to Michael, it’s really tough to isolate what longer-term trends will be based on the last six weeks that we’ve been navigating this pandemic because I think the bigger driver of activity over the past six weeks has been people dealing with this crisis and navigating it both for their personal use as well as for their business. And I’m not sure that, that’s indicative of what the longer-term impact that you’re pointing to. It could be 3, 4, 5, 10, 15 years down the road as it relates to customers’ affinity towards urban living versus suburban or ex-urb living. The last six weeks wouldn’t point to anything notable and they’ve been a very unique six weeks in our history.
Joseph D. Russell, Jr. — President, Chief Executive Officer
Yes. And I think the other thing is, again, the reason we think through and design and either build or invest in our larger assets, whether, again, they’re in urban or suburban markets, it’s highly correlated to, again, demographic data, which is both population-based and it’s competitive-based. So some of our very largest properties even through the last few weeks are doing just as well as they’ve done historically. So it’s way too soon to tell.
Michael Jason Bilerman — Citigroup Inc — Analyst
And then second question, just in terms of operations, and thank you for the detail in the Q and the press release. You talked about same-store NOI being negative for the rest of the year, given the pressures on revenues and certainly, the investments you’re making in your employee base and to keep your facility safe and clean, and so about the revenue and expense impact. If you look to the last two recessions that we’ve gone through, in the early 2000s, same-store NOI across the self-storage sector was down high single digit year-over-year on a quarterly basis. If you go back to the ’09, ’10 time frame, it was down 4% to 6% on a quarterly year-over-year basis. How should we what type of goalposts should investors think about in terms of the rate of decline? I think you talked about it will be a much quicker impact to your business than the prior recessions, just given all these stay-at-home orders and a complete halt in the economy. Should we be gearing up for a high single digit, maybe even a double-digit decline given the expense drag? Is that where our mind should be at by the end of the year?
Joseph D. Russell, Jr. — President, Chief Executive Officer
Well, Michael, first of all, you know well, we don’t guide, even in, “normal times” And it’s the crystal ball. I mean we clearly don’t know what direction this could play through. You’re right. I mean it has been a severe and very dramatic change. Jobless claims are down at $30 million. I mean that’s a massive shock to the entire economy. I don’t know how long it’s going to take for that to correct. I don’t know how long it will play through. What kind of impact it could have on our broad customer base. GDP growth is going to be ugly. From a predictability standpoint this quarter, in particular. So we’ll see.
Tom Boyle — Senior Vice President, Chief Financial Officer
Yes. And Michael, you’re obviously pointing to the right historical benchmarks, but I’m not sure that they’re really analogous to my points earlier and to Joe’s comments. So we provide some line-by-line detail as to what we’re seeing at this point. As we move forward through 2020, a lot of what we see will be driven by science and political decisions, of which is difficult to underwrite. And we try to provide you the color and the context around what the drivers are, but we’ll see as we go here.
Michael Jason Bilerman — Citigroup Inc — Analyst
Yes. I know you don’t provide guidance, and that’s why I said I appreciate the details and taking all the questions on the call about impacts. You did put out there a negative number. I just didn’t know whether you could at least goalpost a little bit about how negative well, I’m not sure. Yes that’s what I’m trying to frame.
Joseph D. Russell, Jr. — President, Chief Executive Officer
Well, the thing is, since eight quarters, it’s kind of in between 1% and 2%, so.
Tom Boyle — Senior Vice President, Chief Financial Officer
Right. Yes. Same-store revenue growth is between 1% and 2% for the last eight quarters. And I think over that last eight quarters, same-store NOI has probably been with maybe the exception of the third quarter of last year, between 0 and 1%.
Joseph D. Russell, Jr. — President, Chief Executive Officer
Yes.
Tom Boyle — Senior Vice President, Chief Financial Officer
So certainly, we’re not in that environment that we were in over the last eight quarters. We’re seeing a decline in move-in volumes. Our existing tenants are performing well at this point, but we’ll remain to see where they go from here and collections have been solid in April.
Michael Jason Bilerman — Citigroup Inc — Analyst
Thanks for the time.
Tom Boyle — Senior Vice President, Chief Financial Officer
Great, thank you.
Operator
Your next question is from Jeremy Metz with BMO Capital Markets.
Robert Jeremy Metz — BMO Capital Markets — Analyst
Just one quick follow-up. Joe and Tom, you guys both commented earlier on capital allocations. You mentioned acquisitions. You had a question about stock buybacks in there somewhere. Just wondering how you’re thinking about the marginal dollar there versus reinvesting in your existing portfolio, just given the pullback that we saw outlined in the Q for the capex program.
Joseph D. Russell, Jr. — President, Chief Executive Officer
Yes, Jeremy, like always, as Tom alluded to, I mean that’s stock buybacks in and of itself from a capital allocation decisions, something that again, has always been an alternative. We’ll continue to assess it. I couldn’t, at this point, guide you to, okay, where is it stack rank? Or how are we benchmarking it against our uses of capital at the moment? The thing that’s on the horizon likely, though, that we’ve already talked to is with the potential impact to a number of owners that have put anywhere from, say, 1,500 to 2,000 properties collectively into our sector over the last three or four years. A lot of those investments are not going to come close to the pro forma expectations or underwriting hurdles that they had put forth. So we would anticipate, but we’ll see that like other big corrections that this too will lead to an opportunity for us to allocate capital in that direction, but to be determined. So we’ve got a variety of different capital allocation options, and we’ll continue to assess them as this thing plays through.
Robert Jeremy Metz — BMO Capital Markets — Analyst
Yes. No, that’s right. I think I was just trying to think through high grading the portfolio externally versus focusing on the internal, which you guys have made a big priority in recent years. So appreciate it.
Operator
And there are no further questions at this time. I’ll turn the call back over to Mr. Ryan Burke for any closing remarks.
Ryan C. Burke — Vice President of Investor Services
Thanks to all of you for joining us today. We certainly hope the best for everyone as we continue to manage through this interesting environment.
Joseph D. Russell, Jr. — President, Chief Executive Officer
Thanks all. Stay safe.
Tom Boyle — Senior Vice President, Chief Financial Officer
Thank you.
Operator
[Operator Closing Remarks]
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