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Assisted Living Prices Slump; Skilled Nursing Prices Flat
No matter what kind of
senior care facility you operate—skilled nursing, assisted living,
independent living—the past few years have been a very difficult
operating environment. Oddly, however, the financial woes of the senior
care industry seemed to have had little impact on values in the
acquisition market, at least with regard to average prices paid by the
buyers who are still in the market.
In 2000 and 2001,
investors expected the average price per nursing bed sold to be soft, but
after a 10% drop in 2000, the average price actually rose by 4% in 2001.
By 2002, with cuts in Medicaid at the state level, Medicare uncertainty,
the collapse of the liability insurance market and the limited financing
market, prices for SNFs should, by all reason, have been their weakest in
more than 10 years. Instead, they remained at about the same level as in
2001 and more than $5,000 to $10,000 per bed higher than in the early
1990s. We’ll explain the reasons for this unexpected result, but first
we will look at the big decline in prices last year, which occurred in
both the assisted and independent living sectors.
The financial
difficulties encountered by many of the large companies in assisted and
independent living should have resulted in a significant drop in the
average price per unit sold by 2001. Assisted living prices had been
rising for five straight years, fueled in large part by the significant
amounts of capital available for expansion-minded operators as well as
optimistic absorption assumptions associated with the sale of many newly
built facilities. But the anticipated decline did not occur until 2002,
and when it did, it made up for lost time.
Last year, the average
price per assisted living unit sold plunged by more than 23% to $65,200,
compared with $85,500 per unit in 2001. The median price, which for the
past six years has been below the average price, also dropped by more than
23% to $61,000. (These statistics exclude sale/leaseback transactions that
are REIT financings and sales where the seller retains a percentage of the
ownership, such as many of the recent Sunrise Assisted Living
[NYSE: SRZ] sales.)
As operators and
investors are aware, this unprecedented drop in average prices paid does
not represent a collapse of the overall assisted living market. Instead,
it reflects the abundance of distressed properties sold in 2002, by
lenders and operators who, in some cases, finally took whatever price they
could get. Many of these facilities were not able to reach stabilized
occupancy after three years of operation, some of which were still below
70% occupancy.
The biggest seller in
2002 was Alterra Healthcare (AMEX: ALI), which has been suffering
through a two-year process of divesting more than 100 properties in
anticipation of restructuring its balance sheet and emerging from
bankruptcy protection. Other multi-facility sellers include Atria
Senior Quarters, CareMatrix, Regent Assisted Living and
the former Grand Court Lifestyles, which sold a variety of assisted
and independent living facilities.
It is anticipated that
the market will continue to be dominated by these distressed sales for at
least the first half of 2003, with any uptick in the market later this
year dependent on the quality of facilities coming on the market and the
availability of financing. It must be remembered that many factors
influence the price paid per unit, but buyers are still in the range of 8x
to 10x EBITDA for stabilized facilities.
The independent living
market suffered almost as large a drop in average per unit prices paid as
the assisted living market, and for similar reasons. After rising for
seven straight years, IL per unit prices in 2002 declined by 17% to
$81,000 per unit, a level not seen since 1997 in this market segment.
Although not reflected in the lower prices paid, the independent living
market has been the strongest in the overall senior care sector; it has
not been impacted by overbuilding (in at least 10 years), has no
reimbursement issues, and has not suffered as much from the liability
insurance crisis.
The range in prices paid
was consistent with past years, with the top price reaching $200,000 per
unit. The decline in the average price paid merely reflects the quality of
the communities sold: The average occupancy rate for the properties sold
in 2002 was just 80%, while in 2001 almost all of the communities sold had
occupancy rates in excess of 90%.
Getting back to the
skilled nursing facility segment, there is most likely not one operator or
investor who would have bet that the average price per bed sold would not
decline in 2002, especially after the Medicare "cliff" expired
on September 30, 2002. During most of 2002, some buyers assumed that they
would lose at least 50% of the Medicare add-on that has since disappeared,
while others assumed they would lose the entire amount when doing their
projections. The problem is that for most operators, Medicare was still
profitable after September 30—it just covered a smaller proportion of
losses from Medicaid in many states.
What was most surprising
is that the median price per bed in 2002, at $35,700, was the second
highest since we began tracking these statistics in the mid-1980s. Over
the past 10 years the median has ranged between $32,000 per bed and
$35,000 per bed every year except 1999, when it spiked up to $38,000 per
bed. Consequently, from an historical perspective the median in 2002 was
not unusually high; it is just that given the market conditions, where
everything that could go wrong did go wrong, 2002 was not the year that
prices should have firmed up.
Sales in the Northeast
helped keep prices relatively high, with five sales priced at over $60,000
per bed. In addition, the average occupancy for all nursing facilities
that sold for more than $50,000 per bed was just over 92%, which is not
too shabby for an industry that has had its share of difficulty in
attracting customers over the past few years. What this tells us is that
the nursing home market, at least from an acquisition perspective, is not
as weak as most of us had expected, particularly for quality facilities.
By the beginning of April
all of the acquisition statistics will be available in our eighth edition
of The Senior Care Acquisition Report, which also includes the
transaction details of the publicly announced deals in 2002.
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