Self-Storage REIT Highlights
- Pricing Turns Positive: Move-in rates recorded their first year-over-year increase since early 2022, driven by a more constructive pricing environment and easing new-supply pressures.
- Cost Control and Efficiency: Same-store revenue declined 1% while expenses rose just 0.3%, reflecting notable savings in utilities and insurance and limiting NOI decline to about 1.5%.
- Platform Expansion: Added 46 stores to its third-party management platform (bringing the total to 863) and opened a joint-venture development in Port Chester, NY, with another in New Rochelle scheduled for Q4.
- Pricing Momentum Restored: New-customer rates rose more than 3% year-over-year net of discounts and roughly 6% excluding promotions, marking the company’s first sustained stretch of rate growth in nearly three years. October rates continued higher — up a little over 5% as temporary discount testing tapered.
- Occupancy Remains High: Same-store occupancy averaged 94.1% in Q3 (up 30 bps YoY) and ended September at 93.7%, maintaining strong utilization heading into Q4.
- Portfolio Discipline: Management highlighted the planned disposition of 24 former Life Storage assets (22 expected to close by early 2026) and a measured approach to external growth as capital markets normalize.
- Improving Rate Trends: Average revenue per square foot fell just 40 basis points year-over-year, and October contract rates were up 160 bps from 2024, indicating rate stabilization.
- Occupancy Levels Stabilize: October same-store occupancy was 84.3% (-170 bps YoY) but flat month-over-month — a notable sequential improvement after earlier softness.
- Strategic Capital Deployment: Completed two joint-venture acquisitions totaling $32 million and disposed of two non-core assets, redeploying proceeds into preferred-equity investments with structured buy-in rights and higher initial yields.
- Efficiency Through Technology: Digital transformation continues to reshape operations — about 85% of all customer interactions now occur through digital channels, reducing on-site labor hours by over 30%.
- Stable Fundamentals: Management cited steady occupancy and consistent revenue optimization across major markets, with Chicago, Minneapolis, Tampa, Honolulu, and the West Coast standing out as growth leaders.
- Selective Investment Activity: Recent acquisitions carried initial yields around 5.25%, stabilizing in the mid-6% range as the bid-ask gap narrowed and deal flow improved.
- Top-Line Strength: Same-store revenue rose 2.5% year-over-year and NOI grew 1.5%, supported by targeted rate management and marketing efficiency. Operating expenses increased 4.5%, driven by property taxes (+4.8%) and partly offset by lower insurance (-4.5%).
- Occupancy and Rate Inflection: Average same-store occupancy reached 92.6% (up 40 bps YoY) and October ended at 92.5%. While Q3 move-in rates remained below 2024 levels (-8.5%), October rentals rose 9% YoY, signaling clear rate recovery.
- Active Investment Momentum: Acquired approximately $83 million in Class A assets during Q3, an additional $15 million asset after quarter-end, and expanded its managed REIT platform to roughly $972 million in assets under management.
Thoughts from the CEO's
CubeSmart
Christopher P. Marr
President & Chief Executive Officer
“It was a very solid third quarter for Cube, which resulted in guidance increases across our key same-store and earnings metrics. Across all markets, our existing customer KPIs remain strong with key credit and attrition metrics remaining consistent within historical normal ranges. We are continuing to feel diminishing headwinds from new supply as the stores placed in service over the last 3 years lease up and the forward pipeline continues shrinking.”
Extra Space Storage
Joseph D. Margolis
Chief Executive Officer
“Last quarter, we reported that our high occupancy allowed us to begin pushing new customer rates, which inflected positive for the first time in 3 years. This trend continued and accelerated in the third quarter as we achieved new customer rate growth of over 3% year-over-year net of discounts.”
National Storage Affiliates
David Cramer
President & Chief Executive Officer
“We delivered solid results in the third quarter, reflecting sequential improvement in the level of year-over-year same-store revenue growth in 16 of our 21 reported MSAs. Additionally, our core FFO per share result beat consensus estimates. Our focus on driving performance with our upgraded tools, a consolidated platform and an enhanced team is starting to take hold and has continued into the fourth quarter.”
Public Storage
Joseph D. Russell, Jr
President, Chief Executive Officer
“Public Storage’s third quarter results reflect differentiated strategies that continue to drive our outperformance in addition to encouraging industry trends, including operational stabilization, lower competition from new supply and increasing acquisition activity. We are raising our 2025 outlook for the second consecutive quarter based on outperformance in same-store and nonsame-store NOI growth, acquisition volume and core FFO growth per share.”
SmartStop Self Storage
H. Michael Schwartz
President & Chief Executive Officer
“During the quarter, we saw a healthy July and August to close out busy season, but a weaker-than-anticipated September. Industry move-in rates continue to stabilize but are still negative year-over-year, though significantly less negative than the previous 2 years. However, our strategy is working. Website visits are up significantly. Reservations remain strong. In the third quarter, we posted the highest ever lead conversion statistics in our company’s history.”
Macroeconomic Highlights
The broader economic environment in Q3 2025 showed steady improvement, creating a more supportive backdrop for real estate performance across all major sectors. Inflation continued to cool and interest rates stabilized, giving both owners and investors greater clarity around financing and asset values. Limited new development—whether in housing, healthcare, or storage—remained a defining theme, helping strengthen occupancy, restore pricing power, and improve revenue trends. Consumer mobility and household formation showed modest gains, supporting leasing momentum in storage and consistent demand in manufactured housing, while demographic-driven needs continued to underpin healthcare real estate. Although operating costs such as taxes and utilities remain elevated, disciplined management and healthier revenue growth helped offset those pressures. Overall, the quarter reflected a market that is rebalancing, with fundamentals moving in a more constructive direction heading into 2026.
Inflation and the 10-Year Treasury Since 2022

Inflation and the 10-Year Treasury Since 1962

Q3 2025 Self-Storage REIT Data Overview
| Same Store Ending Occupancy | Same Store YoY Rental Revenue Increase | Same Store YoY Expense Increase | Same Store YoY NOI Increase | Same Store Achieved Rate | Acquisitions | ||||||||
| 2025 | 2024 | 2025 | 2024 | 2025 | 2024 | 2025 | 2024 | 2025 | 2024 | % Change | 2025 | 2024 | |
| CUBE | 89.00% | 90.20% | -0.90% | -1.30% | 0.30% | 5.30% | -1.50% | -3.10% | $23.93 | $23.97 | -0.2% | 0 | 0 |
| EXR | 93.70% | 94.30% | 0.00% | -0.10% | 5.80% | 1.90% | -2.50% | -1.00% | $19.90 | $21.84 | -8.9% | 1 | 11 |
| NSA | 84.50% | 85.60% | -2.24% | -3.94% | 4.90% | 1.20% | -5.68% | -5.30% | $15.67 | $15.67 | 0.0% | 2 | 18 |
| PSA | 90.70% | 91.40% | 0.10% | -1.30% | -0.60% | 3.80% | 0.20% | -2.60% | $22.88 | $23.04 | -0.7% | 49 | 3 |
| SMA | 92.40% | 92.60% | 2.49% | -0.41% | 4.52% | 6.30% | 1.52% | -3.30% | $20.35 | $20.25 | 0.5% | 6 | 2 |
Q3 2025 Self-Storage Operating Fundamentals
Self-Storage Rental Rates
Self-storage rental rates strengthened across several major public operators during the third quarter of 2025, marking the first meaningful period of positive pricing momentum in nearly three years. Extra Space Storage reported new-customer rate growth of more than 3% year-over-year net of discounts, or roughly 6% when excluding promotions, with October rates up a little over 5% as temporary discount testing wound down. CubeSmart achieved its first year-over-year increase in move-in rates since early 2022, supported by a more constructive pricing environment and easing new-supply pressures. Public Storage focused primarily on digital transformation and operational efficiencies rather than providing detailed rate data, though management noted consistent performance and revenue optimization across its portfolio. National Storage Affiliates reported that average revenue per square foot declined by just 40 basis points compared to last year—an improvement from the first half of 2025—and that October contract rates were 160 basis points higher year-over-year. SmartStop Self Storage recorded web rates down 3.9% and move-in rates down 8.5% during the quarter; however, October rentals increased 9% year-over-year, signaling a clear inflection point. Collectively, operators pointed to stabilizing rate conditions heading into late 2025, with pricing discipline improving and promotional activity moderating across most portfolios.
Achieved Rates (Same Store)

Self-Storage Occupancy
Portfolio occupancy remained stable across the sector in Q3 2025 despite a competitive demand environment. Extra Space Storage reported same-store occupancy averaging 94.1% for the quarter, up 30 basis points year-over-year, and ending September at 93.7%. CubeSmart averaged 89.9%, down 80 basis points year-over-year but sequentially improving through October. Public Storage cited continued strong utilization supported by steady existing-customer behavior and market-level revenue growth, highlighting regions such as Chicago, Minneapolis, Tampa, Honolulu, and the West Coast as outperformers. National Storage Affiliates reported October occupancy at 84.3%, down 170 basis points from the prior year but flat month-over-month, indicating early stabilization. SmartStop Self Storage maintained one of the highest occupancy levels in the sector, averaging 92.6% in Q3 and ending October at 92.5%, up 40 basis points from last year. Overall, operators described occupancy trends as steady to slightly down year-over-year, with encouraging signs of sequential improvement into Q4.
Period Ending Occupancy (Same Store)

Self-Storage Income & Expenses
Revenue and expense trends varied by operator but generally reflected disciplined cost management. CubeSmart reported same-store revenue down 1% year-over-year with expenses up just 0.3%, supported by favorable variances in utilities and insurance, resulting in a 1.5% NOI decline. National Storage Affiliates’ same-store rental revenue declined 2.24%, largely reflecting lower occupancy, while expenses rose 4.9%, driven by property taxes, utilities, and a roughly 29% increase in marketing investment, partly offset by lower insurance costs. SmartStop Self Storage delivered same-store rental revenue growth of 2.49% and NOI growth of 1.5%, with operating expenses up 4.5%, including property taxes up 4.8% and insurance down 4.5%. Extra Space and Public Storage emphasized continued investment in marketing, technology, and customer acquisition, with Public Storage noting that its digital initiatives have reduced labor hours by more than 30% while maintaining strong service levels.
YoY Rental Income Growth (Same Store)

YoY Expense Growth (Same Store)

YoY NOI Growth (Same Store)

Self-Storage Investment & Transaction Activity
Investment and transaction activity increased modestly in Q3 2025 as capital markets stabilized and select operators pursued relationship-driven acquisitions. Extra Space Storage discussed its planned disposition of 24 former Life Storage properties, 22 of which are expected to close by early 2026, and noted continued balance-sheet discipline rather than large new portfolio buys. CubeSmart expanded its management platform by adding 46 stores, bringing its total to 863, and opened a joint venture development in Port Chester, New York, with another slated in New Rochelle in Q4. National Storage Affiliates completed two joint-venture acquisitions totaling $32 million and sold two non-core assets, redeploying proceeds into preferred-equity investments with higher initial yields and structured buy-in rights. SmartStop Self Storage deployed approximately $83 million in Class A acquisitions during the quarter, acquired an additional $15 million property after quarter-end, and increased loans and preferred investments to its managed REITs by about $20 million. Public Storage reported continued deployment into both stabilized and lease-up assets, with going-in yields around 5.25% on a mix of properties expected to stabilize in the mid-6% range.
Acquisition Dollar Amount History

*Excludes PSA Acquisition of ezStorage in Q2 2021 for $1.8 Billion
*Excludes PSA Acquisition of All Storage in Q4 2021 for $1.5 Billion
*Excludes PSA Acquisition of Simply Storage in Q3 2023 for $2.2 Billion
*Excludes EXR Acquisition of Life Storage in Q3 2023 for $11.6 Billion
Under Construction NRSF as a % of Existing Inventory - September 2025

* Source: Yardi Matrix
NRSF Delivered as a % of Starting Inventory - Last 36 & 12 Months - September 2025

* Source: Yardi Matrix
Self-Storage Cap Rates & Bid-Ask Spread
Transaction markets showed early signs of recovery in Q3 as pricing expectations between buyers and sellers began to align. Public Storage noted that acquisition yields on recent investments averaged around 5.25%, stabilizing into the mid-6% range, consistent with prior quarters. CubeSmart management commented that the market had become “a little more constructive” as seller expectations adjusted, narrowing the gap between buyers and sellers and allowing transactions to progress. Across the sector, participants described deal flow as selective but improving, with higher-quality assets attracting renewed interest and less distressed selling pressure than earlier in the cycle.
Implied Cap Rate History

*The implied cap rate data indicates the market value of each REIT.
The implied capitalization rate is a culmination of the company value and total debt of each company divided by its NOI.
Enterprise Value History

Headwinds in the Self-Storage Market
Operators continued to face challenges related to elevated operating costs and uneven leasing demand in select markets. Property taxes and utilities remained key expense drivers, while marketing spend increased across several portfolios as companies sought to sustain occupancy and long-term revenue optimization. CubeSmart and Extra Space both noted localized softness in leasing activity during September following a strong summer season, though October results reflected renewed demand. National Storage Affiliates cited lingering effects from the absence of one-time hurricane-related demand in 2024, while SmartStop reported slower September leasing before rebounding later in the quarter. Financing access remained constrained, limiting transaction volume relative to historical norms, though delinquency rates stayed below pre-pandemic averages, reflecting stable tenant fundamentals.
Tailwinds in the Self-Storage Market
Despite near-term challenges, operators expressed confidence that 2025 represented the cyclical low point for the sector, with fundamentals expected to strengthen through 2026. A consistent theme across all calls was the continued decline in new supply, with development pipelines shrinking well below historical averages, which should support rent recovery and pricing stability. Management teams also highlighted the potential for interest-rate cuts in 2026 as a key catalyst for transaction activity, improved financing, and greater housing mobility—all favorable for storage demand. Technology-driven efficiency remained another tailwind: Public Storage reported that 85% of all customer interactions are now digital and that automation initiatives have reduced labor hours by over 30%, while Extra Space, CubeSmart, and SmartStop each credited data-driven pricing and marketing systems for improved revenue management. As a result, operators entered late 2025 with a cautiously optimistic outlook characterized by stabilizing rates, disciplined expense control, moderating new supply, and an improving transaction environment heading into 2026.
Q3 2025 Self-Storage REIT Data by MSA
| Average Occupancy Same Store | Achieved Rate Same Store | |||||||||||||
| CUBE | EXR | NSA | PSA | SMA | Average | CUBE | EXR | NSA | PSA | SMA | Average | |||
| Asheville, NC | - | - | - | - | 93.40% | 93.40% | Asheville, NC | - | - | - | - | $17.36 | $17.36 | |
| Atlanta, GA | 88.10% | 94.30% | 81.80% | 89.10% | - | 88.33% | Atlanta, GA | $15.69 | $16.06 | $12.78 | $16.03 | - | $15.14 | |
| Austin, TX | 88.90% | 94.40% | 84.50% | - | - | 89.27% | Austin, TX | $17.03 | $15.92 | $16.10 | - | - | $16.35 | |
| Baltimore, MD | 91.70% | - | - | 94.00% | - | 92.85% | Baltimore, MD | $23.14 | - | - | $23.44 | - | $23.29 | |
| Bend, OR | - | - | 91.10% | - | - | 91.10% | Bend, OR | - | - | $15.27 | - | - | $15.27 | |
| Boston, MA | 89.60% | 93.80% | - | 94.30% | - | 92.57% | Boston, MA | $27.12 | $25.36 | - | $29.49 | - | $27.32 | |
| Bridgeport, CT | 91.20% | - | - | - | - | 91.20% | Bridgeport, CT | $28.74 | - | - | - | - | $28.74 | |
| Brownsville, TX | - | - | 89.20% | - | - | 89.20% | Brownsville, TX | - | - | $13.18 | - | - | $13.18 | |
| Charleston, SC | 88.70% | 94.40% | - | - | - | 91.55% | Charleston, SC | $15.87 | $19.38 | - | - | - | $17.63 | |
| Charlotte, NC | 88.10% | 93.00% | - | 90.20% | - | 90.43% | Charlotte, NC | $18.36 | $16.99 | - | $15.84 | - | $17.06 | |
| Chicago, IL | 92.00% | 94.30% | - | 93.50% | 92.90% | 93.18% | Chicago, IL | $20.10 | $21.13 | - | $21.36 | $16.38 | $19.74 | |
| Cincinnati, OH | - | 93.80% | - | - | - | 93.80% | Cincinnati, OH | - | $14.30 | - | - | - | $14.30 | |
| Cleveland, OH | 89.90% | 93.90% | - | - | - | 91.90% | Cleveland, OH | $17.02 | $13.82 | - | - | - | $15.42 | |
| Colorado Springs, CO | - | - | 87.70% | - | - | 87.70% | Colorado Springs, CO | - | - | $13.40 | - | - | $13.40 | |
| Columbus, OH | 89.90% | 94.90% | - | - | - | 92.40% | Columbus, OH | $13.79 | $13.55 | - | - | - | $13.67 | |
| Dallas, TX | 90.40% | 94.20% | 80.80% | 90.00% | - | 88.85% | Dallas, TX | $17.97 | $17.01 | $13.98 | $17.45 | - | $16.60 | |
| DC | 91.20% | 95.20% | - | 93.90% | - | 93.43% | DC | $27.97 | $24.11 | - | $27.70 | - | $26.59 | |
| Denver, CO | 90.90% | 91.30% | - | 92.60% | 92.00% | 91.70% | Denver, CO | $18.88 | $18.72 | - | $19.42 | $18.75 | $18.94 | |
| Detroit, MI | - | - | - | 94.00% | - | 94.00% | Detroit, MI | - | - | - | $18.19 | - | $18.19 | |
| Ft Myers, FL | 86.10% | 92.50% | - | - | - | 89.30% | Ft Myers, FL | $19.42 | $14.91 | - | - | - | $17.17 | |
| Hawaii, HI | - | 93.40% | - | 95.30% | - | 94.35% | Hawaii, HI | - | $46.56 | - | $56.03 | - | $51.30 | |
| Hartford, CT | 88.40% | 93.50% | - | - | - | 90.95% | Hartford, CT | $17.92 | $19.52 | - | - | - | $18.72 | |
| Houston, TX | 90.70% | 93.20% | 86.40% | 90.40% | 93.20% | 90.78% | Houston, TX | $17.93 | $16.06 | $13.40 | $17.02 | $19.45 | $16.77 | |
| Hunstville, AL | - | 93.40% | - | - | - | 93.40% | Hunstville, AL | - | $10.00 | - | - | - | $10.00 | |
| Indianapolis. IN | - | 92.90% | - | - | - | 92.90% | Indianapolis. IN | - | $12.18 | - | - | - | $12.18 | |
| Jacksonville, FL | 91.10% | 95.10% | - | - | - | 93.10% | Jacksonville, FL | $20.98 | $16.28 | - | - | - | $18.63 | |
| Las Vegas, NV | 91.70% | 94.60% | 86.90% | - | 92.80% | 91.50% | Las Vegas, NV | $18.35 | $15.78 | $14.09 | - | $18.23 | $16.61 | |
| Los Angeles, CA | 91.60% | 94.10% | 84.00% | 94.80% | 93.50% | 91.60% | Los Angeles, CA | $27.99 | $28.09 | $25.50 | $35.80 | $25.74 | $28.62 | |
| Louisville, KY | - | 93.80% | - | - | - | 93.80% | Louisville, KY | - | $12.04 | - | - | - | $12.04 | |
| Memphis, TN | - | 94.90% | - | - | - | 94.90% | Memphis, TN | - | $11.22 | - | - | - | $11.22 | |
| McAllen, TX | - | - | 88.90% | - | - | 88.90% | McAllen, TX | - | - | $13.28 | - | - | $13.28 | |
| Miami, FL | 91.30% | 94.40% | - | 92.00% | 92.80% | 92.63% | Miami, FL | $25.76 | $27.09 | - | $30.35 | $25.92 | $27.28 | |
| Minneapolis, MN | - | - | - | 94.00% | - | 94.00% | Minneapolis, MN | - | - | - | $16.98 | - | $16.98 | |
| Nantucket, MA | - | .- | - | - | 90.80% | 90.80% | Nantucket, MA | - | .- | - | - | $44.77 | $44.77 | |
| Nashville, TN | 87.20% | - | - | - | - | 87.20% | Nashville, TN | $17.32 | - | - | - | - | $17.32 | |
| New York, NY | 90.80% | 94.30% | - | 93.50% | - | 92.87% | New York, NY | $38.45 | $28.52 | - | $33.17 | - | $33.38 | |
| Norfolk, VA | - | 95.60% | - | - | - | 95.60% | Norfolk, VA | - | $17.16 | - | - | - | $17.16 | |
| OKC, OK | - | - | 82.70% | - | - | 82.70% | OKC, OK | - | - | $11.05 | - | - | $11.05 | |
| Orlando, FL | 90.70% | 94.00% | 83.50% | 89.90% | - | 89.53% | Orlando, FL | $17.12 | $16.19 | $15.37 | $18.69 | - | $16.84 | |
| Philadelphia, PA | 90.60% | 95.00% | - | 92.60% | - | 92.73% | Philadelphia, PA | $20.50 | $19.53 | - | $20.67 | - | $20.23 | |
| Phoenix, AZ | 87.40% | 93.80% | 78.70% | 91.50% | 93.20% | 88.92% | Phoenix, AZ | $16.79 | $17.11 | $15.91 | $19.50 | $17.96 | $17.45 | |
| Portland. OR | - | 94.60% | 89.60% | 92.70% | - | 92.30% | Portland. OR | - | $20.87 | $18.97 | $21.85 | - | $20.56 | |
| Port St. Lucie, FL | - | - | - | - | 93.00% | 93.00% | Port St. Lucie, FL | - | - | - | - | $18.94 | $18.94 | |
| Providence, RI | 89.30% | - | - | - | - | 89.30% | Providence, RI | $19.45 | - | - | - | - | $19.45 | |
| Raleigh, NC | - | 96.00% | - | - | - | 96.00% | Raleigh, NC | - | $16.44 | - | - | - | $16.44 | |
| Richmond, VA | - | 96.00% | - | - | - | 96.00% | Richmond, VA | - | $19.14 | - | - | - | $19.14 | |
| Riverside, CA | 88.60% | - | 83.70% | - | 92.70% | 88.33% | Riverside, CA | $19.52 | - | $16.24 | - | $21.87 | $19.21 | |
| Sacramento, CA | 85.40% | 92.70% | - | 91.90% | - | 90.00% | Sacramento, CA | $17.78 | $19.01 | - | $22.01 | - | $19.60 | |
| San Antonio, TX | 89.90% | 94.10% | 83.70% | - | - | 89.23% | San Antonio, TX | $15.77 | $15.11 | $14.73 | - | - | $15.20 | |
| San Diego, CA | 89.00% | 93.80% | - | 94.40% | 92.80% | 92.50% | San Diego, CA | $26.94 | $27.45 | - | $30.72 | $26.93 | $28.01 | |
| San Fransisco, CA | - | 94.40% | - | 94.20% | 92.30% | 93.63% | San Fransisco, CA | - | $35.29 | - | $33.91 | $22.84 | $30.68 | |
| Sarasota, FL | - | 93.00% | 84.80% | - | - | 88.90% | Sarasota, FL | - | $16.31 | $19.64 | - | - | $17.98 | |
| Seattle, WA | - | 94.10% | - | 92.60% | 93.50% | 93.40% | Seattle, WA | - | $21.94 | - | $26.82 | $20.89 | $23.22 | |
| St. Louis, MO | - | 94.20% | - | - | - | 94.20% | St. Louis, MO | - | $14.94 | - | - | - | $14.94 | |
| Tampa, FL | 89.80% | 93.00% | - | 91.00% | 93.00% | 91.70% | Tampa, FL | $21.92 | $19.43 | - | $19.37 | $19.56 | $20.07 | |
| Toronto, Canada | - | - | - | - | 92.00% | 92.00% | Toronto, Canada | - | - | - | - | $21.70 | $21.70 | |
| Toucson, AZ | 86.10% | - | - | - | - | 86.10% | Toucson, AZ | $16.54 | - | - | - | - | $16.54 | |
| Tulsa, OK | - | - | 81.50% | - | - | 81.50% | Tulsa, OK | - | - | $11.29 | - | - | $11.29 | |
| West Palm Beach, FL | - | 94.60% | - | 91.00% | - | 92.80% | West Palm Beach, FL | - | $19.82 | - | $25.95 | - | $22.89 | |
| Wichita, KS | - | - | 90.90% | - | - | 90.90% | Wichita, KS | - | - | $12.96 | - | - | $12.96 | |
| Other | 87.70% | 94.20% | 84.90% | 91.80% | 91.90% | 90.10% | Other | $18.85 | $16.23 | $15.25 | $16.41 | $17.81 | $16.91 | |
| Total | 89.90% | 94.10% | 85.00% | 92.20% | 92.60% | 90.76% | Total | $22.99 | $19.90 | $15.67 | $22.67 | $20.35 | $20.32 | |
Contributors
Steven Paul
Senior Financial Analyst
Aaron Sanchez
Managing Director
Scott Schoettlin
Senior Managing Director


