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August 2003 issue Where is the Senior Care
Investment Market Headed?
Find out in this 90-minute audio conference from The SeniorCare
Investor Sept. 9, 1pm EST
Click here to
order Conference CD Senior Care
Dominates Health Services M&A Market
For the third quarter in a row, senior
care leads all health
care services in merger and acquisition activity. With 52
publicly announced deals in the first two quarters of 2003,
senior care may have the most activity this year since 1998.
Topping July’s transactions is Emeritus Assisted Living’s
winning bid for Alterra.
The IL/ALF Market
A nonprofit in Utah buys three
retirement communities, and
Salt Lake City-based Senior Management Concepts will manage
them. Several other smaller deals closed, and LifeTrust
America picks up six new management contracts. See page 4
Skilled Nursing Market
After running several chains, Don
Finney buys his first
company, and newcomer Pacer Health Corporation is eyeing a
1,000-bed deal in California. See page 6
A Bowl of Cherries?
With strong cash flow, Manor Care is
not in the pits. See
page 8
REITs
No new business, but values rise. See
page 8
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Read the past headlines.
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Senior Care Dominates Health
Services M&A Market While every other segment of
the health care services
market has seen a below-average amount of merger and acquisition activity
so far in 2003, the senior care market is experiencing a level of deal
activity not seen since 1998. In the second quarter of this year, there
were 25 senior care acquisitions announced, representing almost 30% of the
activity in the entire health services sector. In comparison, the hospital
segment, historically one of the most active of all segments, has had only
four announced transactions in each of the past two quarters, a level of
passivity not seen in more than 15 years.
In the overall health care
market, the biotechnology, pharmaceutical and medical device segments
continue to dominate the merger and acquisition activity, with a combined
53% of the 221 announced transactions in the second quarter and 70% of the
$18.1 billion spent for these transactions, based on revealed prices.
In the first half of 2003
there have been almost as many announced senior care acquisitions (52) as
in all of 2002 (69), and the second half of this year is expected to be
just as active. The market continues to be dominated by single-facility
transactions, many of which are a result of companies still trying to shed
their troubled assets or exit from specific states that do not fit in with
a new strategic direction.
Even though most of this
activity centers on the assisted living market, there remain many buyers
who believe that the skilled nursing market has hit bottom and that now is
the time to buy. The problem for many of these buyers is that the lending
pool remains relatively dry and that the expensive, but available, money
usually wants the larger deals. With few large transactions in the market,
the smaller ones may begin to be more appetizing, but that will also
involve a change in mind-set for these lenders.
Speaking of large
transactions, the big news of the summer (so far) was the late July
announcement of Emeritus Assisted Living’s (AMEX: ESC) winning bid
to buy Alterra Healthcare (OTCBB: ATHCQ) for cash consideration of
approximately $76 million, subject to certain adjustments. The deal is
conditioned on the court’s confirmation of Alterra’s reorganization plan
as well as many regulatory approvals, and the transaction is not expected
to close until late this year. Emeritus is putting up at least $6.9
million of the purchase price, with Fortress Investment Group LLC
financing the remainder.
The entity that is buying
Alterra will be a majority-owned subsidiary of Emeritus, and Fortress will
have the minority equity interest. Other than its equity interest, it is
not yet clear how Fortress will earn a return on its $69.1 million funding
for the transaction. With its equity investment in Brookdale Living
Communities, Fortress has now become one of the leading investors in
the senior care market. There were apparently two other bidders, with the
runner-up being an entity related to Five Star Quality Care (AMEX:
FVE). A late entrant in the bidding was a group made up of Bain Capital
and one of its portfolio companies, Epoch Senior Living.
The auction of Alterra was
handled by Cohen & Steers, and the rumor in the market had been
that the asking price was $55 million. This was not an actual asking
price, but merely the minimum equity that the court, with the help of the
company’s advisors, decided was necessary for Alterra to emerge from
bankruptcy, either as an independent company or as part of another
company. The $76 million that will be received will be used to fund the
reorganization and provide working capital, as well as to fund a
distribution to Alterra’s unsecured creditors. But most creditors will not
be receiving much at all, especially the owners of the $440 million of
various convertible securities.
So what does Emeritus get
from the transaction, besides the potential of more headaches? The reality
is that no one truly knows yet. The stated number of facilities and
resident capacity that ESC will take over are approximately 300 and
13,000, respectively, but the situation is still somewhat fluid, with many
moving parts. In addition to Alterra’s planned divestitures, there are
other facilities that ESC management may not want and some that, we have
heard, it wants to keep that had been on the disposal list. More details
will be forthcoming in mid-August when Alterra files a disclosure
statement which will contain, among other things, pro forma financial
statements with certain assumptions.
What we do know is that as
of March 31, 2003, Alterra had $43.1 million of senior debt secured by
nine facilities and another $308.2 million of senior debt secured by 93
facilities with 4,689 beds ($65,700 per bed). In addition, there were six
leased portfolios comprising 225 facilities with 9,609 beds. The lease
expense in the first quarter was $15.1 million, but it is unclear how many
facilities this relates to. Obviously, some of the remaining facilities
will be divested or returned to their creditors before emerging from
bankruptcy to get to the 300-facility number that has been used publicly,
and there are other facilities that are already under contract for sale
that are expected to close in the next several months.
On an operating basis,
Alterra’s EBITDARM margin in the first quarter of 2003 was 33% on total
revenue of $107 million, compared with just over 35% in the previous
year’s first quarter. The decline is understandable given that
management’s time has been taken up by the restructuring activities, and
at the local level, it is not easy to operate when the parent company is
under such financial stress. In a few weeks we will know what the
post-reorganization margin is forecast to be.
What is unclear is where
Emeritus is deriving its projected $800 million in combined operating
revenues when the two companies are merged. In the first quarter of this
year the combined revenues of the two companies were $154 million, which
is just over $600 million on an annual basis. The only thing that makes
sense is that ESC is including the actual operating revenues of their
managed facilities in this $800 million total, which based on the
annualized management fees are close to $200 million.
It is very difficult
to try to determine any cash flow multiples or per unit valuations on the
transaction until more details are released regarding pro forma financials
and assumed debt and leases. But if anyone thinks that Sunrise Assisted
Living’s (NYSE: SRZ) purchase of Marriott Senior Living Services
will be difficult to assimilate, they haven’t seen anything yet.
Alterra is more than
double the size of Emeritus, and while Marriott was having some
operational and fill-up difficulties, these were nothing compared with
managing through a huge financial restructuring and bankruptcy. In
addition, Emeritus will have to assume management responsibilities for
approximately 300 separate facilities, compared with less than 130 that
SRZ took over. One saving grace is that Alterra will bring Emeritus into
only five new states (38 in total), so there appears to be significant
geographic overlap. But it is highly debatable whether it makes sense to
be in that many states in the first place (did someone say something about
this being a local business?).
The risk profiles of the
Emeritus/Alterra and Sunrise/Marriott transactions are also vastly
different. Sunrise did not increase its debt or lease commitments, and
added significant new management fee revenue with little, if any, downside
or financial risk. Emeritus, on the other hand, is already highly
leveraged with debt and lease commitments, and will be even more so. We
don’t know, however, whether Emeritus, the parent, will be on the hook for
Alterra’s debt and leases it assumes. Just because Alterra will become a
consolidated, majority-owned subsidiary does mean that Emeritus guarantees
its obligations (and our guess is that it will not).
For the assisted living
industry, it would have been preferable for Alterra to emerge from
bankruptcy as an independent company, probably even smaller than what
Emeritus will take over. While everyone will be rooting for Emeritus to
succeed, if it fails, and the Alterra portfolio defaults again on its
obligations, it will be a disaster for the reputation of assisted living
in the market. The jaundiced view is that if Dan Baty, the CEO of
Emeritus, has been unable to turn a profit with 185 facilities, why should
he do any better with 500? Sure, there may be some economies, and overhead
expense will probably be targeted, but there may also be some diseconomies
when you get to be that big. All one needs to do is look at the nursing
home industry, which took a decade to figure out that operating in 38
states just doesn’t make any sense.
As more
details are released we will continue our analysis and may even be
convinced to change our mind on the acquisition. Investors, however, have
already taken a more upbeat view of the deal, pushing ESC’s share price up
35% since the beginning of July. The good news is that if Emeritus ever
does start making money, it will never have to pay any taxes. Why? It will
be picking up approximately $400 million of net operating loss
carryforwards with the Alterra acquisition, which is on top of its own
NOLs. That alone may be worth more than today’s equity valuation of
Emeritus. There always is a bright side to everything.
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