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June 2006 issue
Ventas Versus Kindred
Last month Ventas sent to its primary tenant, Kindred Healthcare, its
long-awaited rent reset notice. While expected, the $111 million increase
in annual rent was not. Now they negotiate, but it will be a tough one for
both sides.
...
Brookdale Buys Again
In its largest deal yet, Brookdale Senior Living surprised the market with
its billion dollar acquisition of American Retirement Corporation.
...
Assisted Living Market
In a relatively quiet month (for small deals), three portfolio
transactions are closed, but June and July will be busier.
...
Skilled Nursing Market
Genesis Healthcare picks up the Sandy River portfolio in Maine.
...
REIT Market
Extendicare decides to convert to Canadian REIT status, but will spin out
Assisted Living Concepts to shareholders and list the shares on the NYSE.
...
10-Q Twilight Zone
Both Genesis Healthcare and Sunrise Senior Living were unable to file
their recent 10-Qs on time, but we are still waiting for Sunrise.
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Articles Archive
Steve's BLOG on Senior Care
Companies Mentioned in this issue:
June 2006
A
Advocat p12
Alterra p8
American Retirement Corporation p1
Aspen Retirement Communities p12
Asset Real Estate & Investment Co. p10
Assisted Living Concepts p12
Atria Senior Living Group p15
B
Balanced Care p14
Beverly Enterprises p9
Brookdale Senior Living p1
C
Cambridge Realty Capital p15
Capital Senior Living p11
CapitalSource p10
Chartwell Seniors Housing REIT p12
CNL Retirement Properties p12
Cypress Senior Living p12
D
Deloitte & Touche LLP p13
E
Emeritus Assisted Living p10
Extendicare Inc. p12
F
Fannie Mae p11
Fortress Investment Group p6
G
GE Healthcare Financial Services p10
Genesis HealthCare Corporation p11
H
Harborside Healthcare p12
Health Care Property Investors p12
Hearthstone Assisted Living p12
Hearthstone Senior Services p12
Holiday Retirement Corp. p15
HUD p11
J
JCH Consulting p11
K
Kindred Healthcare p1
M
Manor Care p8
Mercury Real Estate Advisors p14
N
Nationwide Health Properties p12
O
Oakdale Heights Management Corp. p11
Orix Capital p12
R
Red Mortgage Capital p11
Ryan Beck & Co. p4
S
Sandy River Health System p11
Senior Care Real Estate Investment Trust p13
Senior Living Investment Brokerage p12
Senior Management Concepts p11
Senior Resource Group p15
Sign of the Dove p10
Sunrise Senior Living p10
Symmetry LTC Group p12
T
The Ensign Group p12
The Northbridge Companies p11
V
Ventas p1 |
Ventas Versus Kindred
Email Editor
Within a week of the Centers for
Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) issuing its revised guidelines for
changes in Medicare reimbursement for long-term acute care (LTAC)
hospitals, Ventas (NYSE: VTR) sent its long-awaited (or dreaded)
rent reset proposal notice to Kindred Healthcare (NYSE: KND) with
an opening salvo that shocked a few industry participants, and it didn’t
take long for Kindred to fire back. The rent reset option is a right that
Ventas has had ever since Kindred came out of bankruptcy protection five
years ago and it covers 186 skilled nursing facilities and 39 LTACs in
four Master Leases.
The theory in 2001 was that Ventas
would provide Kindred with some post-bankruptcy rent relief (about a $50
million decrease in its annual rent obligation) to enable KND to
strengthen its financial condition in the first several years after
emerging from Chapter 11. In return, in 2006 Ventas would have a one-time
right to reset the rent, as well as the annual rent escalators, to "market
rates," but in no event could the annual rent be decreased from current
levels. Ventas also received 1.5 million shares of Kindred’s common stock,
which would have been worth more than $60 million in the past year, but we
believe VTR disposed of its Kindred stock in the past two years. The rent
reset issue is now front and center for the two companies and their
investors, so sit back and grab a cup of coffee (or glass of wine) and we
will try to dissect the situation as we see it.
For about the past
year, Ventas has publicly stated that they thought the "market rent" for
the Kindred leases would be at least $35 million higher than current
levels. Ventas shareholders understood this to mean a floor, and we assume
the higher (future) cash flow soon became embedded in VTR’s share price.
On the other side, additional annual rent of at least $35 million became
embedded in KND’s valuation as well, and many REIT and provider analysts
began using this number as a proxy for their valuation models, whether it
was fair or not.
And then
during the first quarter this year, CMS floated a trial balloon for
proposed changes in LTAC Medicare reimbursement for short stay "outlier"
patients, which alone could have reduced KND’s annual LTAC revenues by up
to 11% and caused a severe shortfall in projected cash flow. Obviously,
this presented Kindred with an opportunity to portray the rent reset as
potentially a nonevent, because the profitability of the LTAC division
would likely revert back to where it was five years ago (or worse) when
the Ventas rents were reduced in the first place. It also put Ventas in a
little bind, as it could not present its reset notice until CMS clarified
the final reimbursement regulations. And Kindred was in the uncomfortable
position of lobbying CMS for a much smaller cut in the rates, knowing that
for each percentage point gain in revenues it might get back, there could
be a not quite as large offsetting increase in rent charged as a result of
VTR’s reset. Easy come, easy go, as they say, but Kindred had to take one
step at a time, and minimizing the revenue reduction was goal number one,
especially since it has other LTACs not owned by Ventas.
In early May
CMS finally came out with its final rules, and while less painful than the
trial balloon, KND reported that it would result in an approximately $46
million decrease in its LTAC Medicare revenues (remember, not all of its
LTACs are owned by VTR). When other changes are added, including the
change in the DRG re-weighting rules and the elimination of the market
basket adjustment, KND stated that the total reduction to its LTAC
Medicare revenues would be at least $125 million in one year (for all of
its LTACs). What was not disclosed was where costs could be lowered, if
any, and how the company would change its patient mix, which doesn’t
happen overnight, to minimize the revenue and cash flow shortfall.
It didn’t
take Ventas long to digest the final Medicare changes, and just one week
later the REIT fired off its rent reset notice to Kindred. The proposed
increase was a bit of a shock (and this is an understatement) to the
market, as Ventas started the negotiations with a proposed annual rent
increase of approximately $111 million, just a tad above the "at least $35
million" increase the market was expecting. This would represent a 54%
increase in the rent paid to Ventas, and a 39% increase in KND’s overall
rent obligation. For comparative purposes, the $50 million rent reduction
five years ago represented about a 22% rent cut for Ventas and a 19%
overall rent decrease for Kindred.
Kindred’s
return volley was to state that its appraisers had determined that the
current rents are already "well above fair market" and that even without
an increase, "it may be financially and strategically beneficial for us
not to renew one or more of these bundles of leased properties" that are
part of one Master Lease that expires in 2008. Well, this certainly set
the stage for some tough discussions.
Of course,
Ventas investors were pleased, because anything above $35 million would be
gravy in their minds. But investors are not that naive, and given that
Ventas’ shares barely moved on the reset news, no one is expecting a $111
million rent increase. Similarly, Kindred’s shares dropped by just 6% but
have gained most of that back in a generally negative market environment.
The second part of the reset notice was the proposed change in the annual
rent escalator to 3.0%, which represents a slight reduction from the 3.5%
annual increases currently in place. We will get to that later.
Kindred and
Ventas have 30 days, until June 8, to negotiate a new annual rent and
escalator. If they don’t come to an agreement, they have until July 8 to
each designate an appraiser, who in turn will have 10 days to agree on a
third appraiser to actually do the valuation work. If they can’t agree,
then the American Arbitration Association will appoint one, and that
appraiser will have just 60 days to render an opinion. This process seems
flawed, since Kindred has stated it has already used five independent
appraisal firms in the past year or so to evaluate all the properties it
currently leases from Ventas, and Ventas has also hired appraisal firms to
do the same work. Since we can probably count on one hand the number of
appraisal firms that are qualified (okay, maybe a few extra fingers too)
and have the depth to do this volume of work in 60 days, who is left? Why
wouldn’t any of the firms that have already done consulting work, for
either company, be conflicted out of the process? The easy answer is that
there wouldn’t be anyone left. And, who’s to say the one that gets picked
will actually want to do the work and be in the hot seat of the industry.
They may politely decline, or decide to double their rate, which would be
the smart thing to do since we assume it won’t be competitively bid.
The appraisal
process is flawed in another way. Nine out of 10 times (if not more), an
appraiser is asked to value a property, not what rent a willing tenant
would pay to a willing landlord. The subjectivity of a "market rental
rate" is significant, and more so than the subjectivity of a full property
valuation. Appraisers are not used to looking at what a market "coverage
ratio" would be for leases, and when they look at "market" leases, do they
really know what went on behind the scenes? For example, how often have we
seen an aggressive lease (meaning low initial coverage) and thought, are
they out of their minds? What we, and the appraiser, may not know is that
a particular deal may be done with an existing tenant for relationship
purposes, or perhaps there are other assets cross-collateralized to
protect the landlord in case the low-coverage leases run into problems.
Alternatively, a high coverage lease could be done because the landlord
was aggressive on some others for the same customer. It is the overall
credit they are looking at in these instances, not the actual rentals. So
are these "market" rentals and "market" lease coverage ratios? You don’t
really know. That is one of the reasons we do not use sale/leaseback
transactions in our acquisition market statistics when the lessee is also
the seller, because the price might be higher with a lower coverage, or
the price might be lower with a higher coverage, or there may be other
guarantees involved driving the ultimate structure and price.
In the Ventas-Kindred
case, Ventas derived its $111 million rent increase by assuming a skilled
nursing facility EBITDAR-to-rent coverage of between 1.1x and 1.2x. Most
REITs don’t disclose the rent coverage ratios on their deals anymore (and
many don’t individually disclose deals unless they are material), but in
looking back in our records the range recently was from 1.1x (yes, they do
exist) to 1.8x, with the average more in the range of 1.3x to 1.4x. The
main reason is risk— reimbursement risk, regulatory risk, liability risk,
35- year-old property risk—and most landlords want a bit more wiggle room
when the intellectually-challenged residents of our nation’s capital
decide it’s time to play with the rules (again). And once again, we don’t
know if these are "market" leases.
We are,
however, seeing initial coverage ratios between 1.0x and 1.2x for assisted
and independent living facilities, where government reimbursement does not
play a role and they can charge market rates to their private pay
clientele, but these properties tend to have been built in the past 10
years on average, not in the 1960s and 1970s. And according to Ryan
Beck & Co., as of the end of last year the average EBITDAR coverage
ratio for the SNF portfolios of four other REITs was 1.6x, 1.6x, 1.5x and
1.3x, but these are mostly mature leases and not going-in coverages.
Regarding the
annual rent escalators, the recent market seems to suggest 2.0% to 2.5%
for nursing facilities. Ventas knows it has a good thing going with its
current 3.5% annual increase, which is why it was willing to offer a
slight decrease to 3.0%. But our guess is it is doubtful that any
appraiser will come up with many recent comparables to justify that.
For the
LTACs, Ventas has set EBITDAR-to-rent market coverage ratios at about 1.4x
to 1.5x. Unfortunately, we don’t have enough information on LTAC lease
rates to determine how realistic that range is, but we hear that 2.0x or
higher is more in the market. The larger dispute, however, will center
around what is being leased, the real estate, or the real estate and the
business, where the business value often exceeds the "real estate" value
with LTACs. Ventas believes this argument is largely irrelevant, while
Kindred believes this is crucial to an appropriate valuation and lease
rate on the real estate.
As part
of our analysis, we decided to look at how Kindred is doing today compared
with five years ago when it was given a break on its leases with Ventas to
get back on its financial feet, using the first quarter results of both
2001 and 2006 (this is company-wide and not just the Ventas-owned assets).
In the quarter five years ago, KND’s skilled nursing division had a net
operating income (NOI, and before rent) of $70.5 million, which dropped
31% to $48.6 million in the first quarter this year. The LTAC division had
a quarterly NOI of $54.8 million five years ago, which almost doubled to
$104.0 million in the 2006 first quarter. Combined, the NOI increased 22%
from $125.3 million in the first quarter of 2001 to $152.6 million in this
year’s first quarter. The operating margin of the SNF division dropped
significantly to 10.1% in the five-year time period, while the margin of
the LTAC division increased from 20.1% to 24.2%.
So what does
all this mean? If an NOI of $125.3 million was low enough to warrant a
temporary rent reduction, it would seem that a $111 million annual rent
increase on the Ventas-owned assets would put Kindred in a similar
financial condition as when it emerged from bankruptcy protection five
years ago, but without applying the negative impact of the recent Medicare
reimbursement changes for LTACs. One would then have to question the
reason for the rent break five years ago, but we don’t want to go there.
In addition,
total rent in the first quarter five years ago (before the rent reduction)
was about 60% of the total SNF/LTAC net operating income, which dropped to
46% within a year after the rent reduction. In the first quarter of 2006,
total rent was 47% of the SNF/LTAC net operating income, which would go to
65% if the full $111 million went into effect. While we have just picked
two points in time, and other quarters would probably look different, they
represent the numbers for the last quarter before emerging from bankruptcy
and the most recent quarter, which seem to have some degree of objective
relevance.
There is
another side of the argument, and this relates to the definition of fair
market rental under the Master Leases. Apparently, the new lease rates are
to be based on what a willing lessee would pay, and what a willing
landlord would accept, in a transaction between unrelated parties. Using
this definition, Ventas has made the argument (put in our simplistic
terms) that regarding the skilled nursing facilities, Kindred’s operating
margins are below where they should be, and another operator would be
willing to pay a higher rent because they would have a higher cash flow.
While we don’t know what Ventas would improve, it is probably true that a
local or small regional operator would have significantly lower liability
and workers’ compensation insurance costs. We have seen in some of
Kindred’s divestitures that a breakeven nursing facility can become
profitable the next day with a new owner just because of lower insurance
costs, and in some states that can be a big swing. This does make us a
little nervous on the "fair market" side of things, because you now
qualify the type of buyer (small with lower insurance costs), as opposed
to looking at the current operations, but appraisers do this all the time
with costs. So from a purely objective perspective, we can understand why
Ventas believes it should receive higher rents, but since Kindred is not a
small operator with low insurance costs, we equally understand why its
cost structure is not going to change soon and that it will be at a
financial disadvantage with higher rents.
Getting back
to the surprise $111 million annual rent increase that Ventas proposed, we
have to assume it was a strategic negotiating ploy, and perhaps a
brilliant one at that, because why start at $35 million when you can only
go lower? Unfortunately, a $111 million increase would have dropped
Kindred’s first quarter pre-tax income from $35 million to $7 million,
which seems a tad harsh, especially for a company with over $1.0 billion
in quarterly revenues. And think of the psychological damage done. The
appraisers are thinking Ventas is at $111 million while Kindred has argued
that the rents are already at market or above market today. Splitting the
difference yields a $55 million increase, which is significantly above the
"at least $35 million" used for the past year and would be a win for
Ventas. We don’t think that will happen, but when the subjective (or
tweaking) part of the appraisal process occurs, the stance taken by both
sides will certainly be lingering in the back (if not the front) of the
mind of the appraiser. In other words, the $35 million increase is already
embedded in both companies’ stock valuations (or so we assume), and the
appraiser probably knows it. Will Ventas management cry if they don’t get
the $111 million increase? Hardly. Will Kindred management cry if it ends
up between $35 million and $55 million? Most definitely.
At least
three analysts have come out with "guesstimates" of where the new rents
will be, and they are $20.5 million, a minimum of $30 million and a range
of $25 million to $50 million. We have no inside information on the Ventas
facilities, but our bet would be an increase between $20 and $35 million,
with a rent escalator between 2.0% and 2.5%, not because that is where we
think the numbers are (we really don’t know the details and were not asked
for an opinion), but because we think the designated appraiser will feel
the need to justify some increase. The reality, however, is that the
stakes are just too high for both sides to go the appraiser route, and
even though their starting positions appear to be too far apart to sit
down at the table and hammer out an agreement with any degree of civility
before June 8, that would be the least risky course for both sides.
One option
that was discussed in the market last year, but one that we haven’t heard
lately, is for Ventas to accept a lump-sum cash payment from Kindred, with
no annual rent increases but with the escalators remaining above 3.0%.
This would keep a large ("at least $35 million") annual rent increase out
of Kindred’s future earnings stream in perpetuity, helping the stock
valuation, and the cash payment would be a one-time charge, something that
corporate America has grown quite fond of in recent years. For Ventas, it
would have a large sum of cash to invest or pay down debt, and it would
lock in an attractive growth rate on the assets operated by its largest
tenant, something which would go a long way towards increasing VTR’s
annual dividend rate every year. This would be face-saving for both sides
as well, because it changes the nature of the negotiation, and no one
loses. Unless they have already gone down that path, with just a week to
go it is probably too late. Unless, of course, the appraiser comes up with
a valuation and then does a net present value equivalent option for the
two sides to masticate. Hmmm.
That being
said, with all of the public opinions expressed in the past several
months, there is little likelihood the designated appraiser would come up
with a zero increase, and we give a $111 million increase a 0% chance of
happening (although if we had to bet on one option or the other, we would
take the zero increase, since the other is two to three times the highest
estimates previously discussed in the market). But there is a breakeven
point for Ventas between a smaller than hoped for annual increase with
lower escalators on the one hand, and no rent increase but keeping the
above-market 3.5% escalators on the other hand (which produces an
attractive annual cash flow increase). The biggest issue will be the LTACs,
because of their higher cash flow and the impact of the reimbursement
changes, and because there is a larger potential discrepancy between what
the real estate is "worth" and what rent a tenant would be willing to pay
for the right to operate that real estate as an LTAC and obtain the
business cash flow. Ventas and Kindred strongly disagree on this issue,
but the interpretation can result in a difference in rent for the LTAC
portfolio of millions of dollars. And that’s real money. |
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