Americold Realty Trust — Financial Results
Occupancy Fell and Revenue Slipped Across the Core Warehouse Business
| Metric | 2025 | 2024 | Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| Total Warehouse Revenue | $2,377M | $2,417M | -1.6% |
| Same-Store Economic Occupancy | 76.6% | 79.6% | -300 bps |
| Same-Store Physical Occupancy | 65.4% | 68.9% | -350 bps |
| Same-Store Contribution NOI | $791M | $813M | -2.7% |
Economic occupancy (the share of warehouse space either physically filled or contractually reserved) dropped 3 percentage points on a like-for-like basis. Management attributes this to a more competitive cold-storage market, cautious consumer spending, and shifts in food production volumes. The silver lining: revenue earned per occupied pallet (the standard unit of storage) rose about 1.5% on a constant-currency basis, meaning Americold is getting better pricing even as volume softens.
Debt Load Jumped Sharply, Pushing Leverage to a 6.8x Ratio
| Metric | Dec 2025 | Dec 2024 | Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gross Debt | $4,335M | $3,475M | +$860M |
| Net Debt | $4,198M | $3,428M | +$770M |
| Core EBITDA | $618M | $634M | -2.5% |
| Net Debt / Core EBITDA | 6.8x | 5.4x | +1.4x |
Americold issued $400 million in new bonds at 5.60% in April 2025 and drew on a $250 million short-term term loan in December 2025, while Core EBITDA (operating earnings stripped of one-time items) actually declined slightly. The combined effect pushed the leverage ratio — a standard measure of how many years of earnings it would take to pay off debt — from 5.4x to 6.8x. The company holds investment-grade credit ratings from three agencies, but this leverage increase is worth watching.
Capital Spending More Than Doubled as Growth Projects Accelerated
| Category | 2025 | 2024 |
|---|---|---|
| Expansion, Development & Integration | $360M | $129M |
| Organic Growth | $143M | $85M |
| Maintenance | $63M | $81M |
| Total CapEx | $698M | $310M |
The company spent $698 million on capital expenditures (investments in physical assets) in 2025, more than double the prior year. The biggest driver was a surge in expansion and development spending, including a $108 million acquisition of a Houston warehouse. This aggressive investment is the primary reason debt rose — Americold is betting that adding capacity now will pay off in future revenue.
Impairment Charges and Real Estate Losses Signal Active Portfolio Pruning
Americold recorded $47.1 million in impairment charges (write-downs on assets whose value has fallen below book value) in 2025, up from $33.1 million in 2024, tied to planned warehouse exits. On top of that, exiting two leased facilities that had been structured as failed sale-leaseback arrangements (a financing technique where a property is sold and leased back, but treated as debt rather than a true sale) triggered a $55.9 million loss. Together these charges weigh heavily on reported net loss, though they are largely non-cash.
Project Orion Is Winding Down but Costs Are Shifting, Not Disappearing
Americold's $227.7 million technology overhaul — replacing core business software globally — is largely complete in North America and Asia-Pacific. However, costs are now flowing through a different line: amortization (the gradual expensing of a long-term asset) of deferred project costs hit $15.1 million in 2025 versus $4.2 million in 2024, and will continue for up to ten years. Meanwhile, ongoing transformation activities still cost $30.8 million in 2025. The European rollout remains in progress, so additional costs lie ahead.
Operating Cash Flow Declined While the Dividend Was Raised
| Metric | 2025 | 2024 |
|---|---|---|
| Operating Cash Flow | $360M | $412M |
| Dividends Paid | $261M | $252M |
| Dividend per Share (Q4) | $0.23 | ~$0.219 |
Cash generated from day-to-day operations fell $52 million, or 12.7%, largely due to non-routine charges and softer segment performance. Despite this, the board raised the quarterly dividend (the cash payment to shareholders) by 5%. As a REIT (a structure requiring it to distribute at least 90% of taxable income), Americold relies heavily on debt and equity markets — not retained earnings — to fund growth, making the combination of rising debt and falling operating cash flow a key tension for investors to monitor.