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March 2006 issue
ALF And AL Unit Prices Soar - Record
Prices Set In Unprecedented Market
Assisted living and independent living per-unit prices soared in 2005
during a record year of mergers and acquisitions.
...
SNF Bed Prices Stable - Average Price Per
Bed Remains Above $40,000
In the skilled nursing market, prices remained relatively stable with
2004, which was a record year.
...
Recent ALF/IL Transactions
Brookdale Senior Living and American Retirement Corp. announce one large
acquisition apiece, plus a few deals around the country by other buyers.
...
Recent SNF Transactions
Extendicare Inc. is looking at strategic
alternatives, including a possible split-up of the company, and Tandem
Health may opt out of an IPO and go for a sale of the company. In
addition, a few small portfolios are sold.
...
Financing News
Merrill Gardens completes a large private equity placement, plus a few
recent mortgage financings.
...
REITs
LTC Properties sells four ALFs, and rumblings in Canada spell opportunity.
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Companies Mentioned in this issue:
March 2006
A
AEW Capital Management p4
Alden Management p13
All Seniors Care Living Centres p13
American Retirement Corp. p4
Assisted Living Concepts p10
B
Behrman Capital p9
Beverly Enterprises p6
Brandywine Senior Care p12
Brightview Senior Living p13
Brookdale Senior Living p1
C
Cambridge Realty Capital p13
Canyon Creek Development p5
Castle Nursing Homes, Inc. p13
CB Richard Ellis p4
Cypress Senior Living p4
E
Extendicare Health Services p10
Extendicare Inc. p10
F
Fannie Mae p13
Five Star Quality Care p14
Formation Capital p10
G
Greenbrier Development, LLC p12
Greystone Communities p12
H
Health Care Property Investors p4
HealthCare Mergers & Acquisitions, Ltd. p12
HealthSouth Corporation p14
Herbert J. Sims & Company p13
HUD p13
I
Integrated Health, Mariner Health p6
K
Kindred Healthcare p14
KKR p10
L
Lehman Brothers p10
LTC Properties p14
M
Marcus & Millichap p5
Merrill Gardens p12
Merrill Lynch Capital p4
O
Onyx Corp. p6
R
Red Mortgage Capital p13
Resor Financial Group p12
Retirement Residences Real Estate Investment Trust p13
RK Development, LLC p12
Ryan Beck & Co. p14
S
Saint Mary’s Abbey p13
Senior Care Development p12
Senior Housing Properties Trust p14
Senior Lifestyles Corp. p12
Senior Living Investment Brokerage p12
Skilled Healthcare Group p6
Steven D. Bell & Company p5
Sunwest Management p5
T
Tandem Health Care p9
The Blackstone Group p10
The Shelter Group p13
Troyer Advisors, LLC p12
V
Ventas p14
Z
Ziegler Capital Markets Group p12 |
Assisted Living and Independent Living
Prices Soared in 2005
Email Editor
The year 2005 will go down in senior
care market history if not as the most memorable, then certainly as the
most bountiful. Across the board, many records were set in the 2005
seniors housing acquisition market, which includes both assisted and
independent living facilities, as investors rushed into this market sector
and owners capitalized on a unique set of circumstances to cash out at the
highest prices ever paid. In 2004, the froth may have been bubbling up,
but by last year it reached the top and, some might say, began to dribble
down. Even though the acquisition market got off to a strong start in
2006, thanks mostly to Brookdale Senior Living (NYSE: BKD), there
appears to be a certain amount of exhaustion that is settling in, both at
the pace of the deals as well as the prices being paid. All of the
statistics can be found in The Senior Care Acquisition Report, 11 th
Edition, which will be available later this month.
When looking at the seniors
housing market as a whole, which includes IL and AL facilities combined,
the average price per unit paid in 2005 soared to $145,700, representing a
nearly 70% increase from the previous year and a new record. This is based
on a record $3.5 billion of asset sales involving more than 24,000
units sold. For acquisition market statistical purposes, we put CCRCs in
another category, but these sales added another $600 million to the total
volume last year. The combined IL/AL cap rate, fueled by unprecedented
demand from a variety of buyers, plunged by more than 100 basis points to
9.1%, the first time it has been in single digits since we started
tracking the market in the late 1980s.
The assisted living
market has had an unusual track record the past few years. Even as the
sector was improving, it was hard for the acquisition market to shake off
the remnants of the overbuilding in the late 1990s and its depressing
impact on values and the acquisition environment in general. Buyers were
looking for deals, purchasing new facilities at sometimes significant
discounts to replacement cost. There are still plenty of non-stabilized
properties that become available for sale, but what changed was the
heightened demand for quality properties with strong cash flow combined
with the sudden flow of high-end properties and portfolios to the market
that in prior years remained on the sidelines. It was as if each new sale,
at yet a lower cap rate and higher per-unit valuation than the previous
deal, brought two more quality portfolios to the market in an
auction-style sales process that itself added fuel to the bidding fire.
The end
result of this was a nearly 50% increase in the average price per unit
sold last year to a record $140,300 per unit. The median jumped by more
than 50%, but with plenty of less attractive and older facilities on the
market, the new record median was "just" $115,600 per unit. By the middle
of 2005 we already had a strong indication that records would be set,
based on what had closed and what we knew would close by year-end, but the
levels reached are simply remarkable and have raised the visibility of the
sector among more traditional real estate investors, who were attracted to
the quality of properties available, the increased depth of management
teams and the higher yields despite the drop in cap rates.
Obviously it
was the demand, and the prices paid, for the portfolio transactions that
drove the pricing statistics in 2005. In our report, we will break out
portfolio sales from the rest of the market, and we expect that
differential to be huge. But as stated above, with the overall market cap
rate declining to record lows, the average assisted living cap rate also
plunged by more than 100 basis points from the previous year to 9.7%. Even
though there were many sales in the 7% to 8% range, there were also
properties that were not in as much demand, were not performing well or
were in fair to poor markets and, because they were single facility sales,
the big portfolio buyers were not interested. Many of these sales were in
the 10% to11% cap rate range, and it is unlikely they will drop to single
digits in the near future.
In the
independent living market, which had really suffered from a lack of
high-end properties on the market, record per-unit prices were also
reached in 2005. And what a difference a year makes, when in 2004, despite
a vastly improved market with new investors plowing their capital into
acquisitions, independent living average per-unit prices actually declined
by 20% when every indicator pointed to a year for a big increase. The only
missing ingredient in 2004 was the lack of quality properties to drive
average acquisition pricing up. That all changed by 2005.
Last year, as
a result of some of the highest quality communities and portfolios seen on
the market, the average IL price more than doubled to $150,500 per unit.
Even though some underperforming properties were also on the market, as in
all years, the median also more than doubled to $129,800 per unit.
Single-digit cap rates had been common for years in the independent living
market, viewed as the closest to traditional multifamily housing with the
least amount of operational risk, but in 2005 they also dropped by more
than 100 basis points to just 8.3%. Despite the decline, average IL cap
rates still remain 250 to 350 basis points above multifamily housing, and
that is attracting investors who are growing weary of 5% to 6% cash
yields. It is interesting to note that the spread between the average
assisted living cap rate and the average independent living cap rate
remained at 140 basis points for the second year in a row, showing some
level of consistency.
While it is
possible that the average prices paid this year will be close to the
record levels set in 2005, it is unlikely simply because the volume of
high quality portfolios available for sale will drop. To keep up last
year’s pace, there would have to be a lot of long-term industry players
willing to say good-bye in the next 10 months, and we just don’t see that
happening, despite the current cap rate environment. What has already
happened, and is expected to continue this year, is owners of lesser
quality assets expecting to achieve premium pricing in the market, and
perhaps holding out for the top dollar that may not be coming. Cap rates,
on the other hand, should stay about where they were in 2005, unless the
quality of assets sold deteriorates this year—then a modest increase could
be expected, all other things being equal. |
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