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March 2007 issue
SNF Beds Hit Record Price - AL And IL Prices Close To Records Set In 2005
In 2006, the average price paid for skilled nursing beds set a new record,
while assisted and independent living per-unit prices were close to the
records set in 2005.
...
Buying The Sunrise REIT Assets - Ventas and
HCPI Battle It Out For The Prize
After a series of letters and press releases, the battle for the Sunrise
Senior Living REIT assets may all come down to a court decision, or a vote
by shareholders.
...
Other REIT News
Healthcare Realty Trust decides to sell off its senior care assets, but opts
not to go the auction route. Is a sale of the rest of the company possible?
...
Recent Skilled Nursing Deals
In an unusually active month, we have nine separate nursing facility
transactions to report on, with much of the activity in the Midwest.
...
Assisted Living Market
The market is still focused on the large transactions, but a few small ones
managed to get done.
...
Independent Living Market
As the market waits for news of the Holiday Retirement sale, one of the
highest-priced sales ever closes in Arizona.
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Companies Mentioned in this issue:
March 2007
A
Advocat p15
AEW Senior Housing p11
Alterra p11
B
Beverly Enterprises p14
Brinton Woods Senior Living p9
C
Cambridge Realty Capital p15
Canyon Creek Development p10
CB Richard Ellis p11
E
Elant at Fishkill, Inc. p8
Elant, Inc. p8
F
Fillmore Capital Partners p12
Formation Capital p5
G
GE Healthcare Financial Services p5
Genesis Healthcare p9
Goldman, Sachs p12
H
Healthcare Transactions Group p9
Heavenrich & Company p9
Herbert J. Sims & Co. p8
Holiday Retirement Corporation p6
J
JER Partners p12
K
Kindred Healthcare p9
L
Laurel Health Care p5
Lorien Health Systems p9
Love Funding Corporation p8
M
Madison Dearborn Partners p12
Marcus & Millichap p7
Miller’s Merry Manor p15
N
National Affordable Housing Trust p15
National Church Residences p15
S
Senior Lifestyle Corporation p11
Senior Living Investment Brokerage p7
Senturian Senior Housing Brokerage p10
Sun Healthcare Group p9
T
Tandem Health Care p5
The Ensign Group p9
The Ryerson Company p11
W
Walton Street Capital p11
Wilkinson Corporation p9
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SNF Beds Hit Record Price - AL And IL
Prices Close To Records Set In 2005
Email Editor
For the second year in a row, we
have experienced a senior care acquisition market characterized by depth,
demand, desire and a lot of dollars (but no defaults). In 2005, when
owners couldn’t believe the prices buyers were paying, and at what seemed
to be such low cap rates at the time, they sighed and asked, "If not now,
when?" So they put their properties on the market and watched the bidding
frenzy push prices even higher. The market players saw quality, in
abundance, like they had never seen before, and this helped drive the
market to new heights because of the premium placed on the "best of the
class" properties.
But the market remained as strong, if not stronger
in 2006, and cap rates continued to decline across the board. It was the
cap rate decline, more than anything else, that kept prices high, and this
can be interpreted as either higher demand for limited product or a
willingness to accept a lower return for this class of real estate than in
prior years. We believe it to be both.
In 2005, it was the assisted and
independent living markets that took center stage with their record
per-unit prices dominating the news. In 2006, however, the skilled nursing
facility market continued to strengthen and, after a slight dip in the
average price per bed in 2005, skilled nursing beds hit a record high of
an average price of $47,400 per bed, or 10% higher than the prior year. To
highlight the importance of this, and how far the market has come, this
level is 50% higher than the average price per bed in 2003, just three
short years ago.
As most readers know, our statistics are
based on arm’s- length transactions that are sales of properties and
portfolios that include both the real estate and the business operations.
Portfolio sales that include ancillary business subsidiaries, such as
rehab, hospice or pharmacy, or leased and managed properties in the total
purchase price are excluded because they include assets that are priced
differently from the typical facility sale. For these reasons,
transactions such as the sale of Laurel Health Care and Tandem
Health Care, as well as the purchase by GE Healthcare Financial
Services of six skilled nursing portfolios from Formation Capital
are not included in our statistical analysis. The "implied" price per bed
for all three of these transactions would be higher than the $47,400
average price per bed we calculated for 2006, which would take the market
average even higher, but such sales take place every year. In a similar
vein, the average price per skilled nursing bed in sale/leaseback
transactions with REITs is higher than the market average, but most of
these are considered to be financing transactions and not arm’s- length
sales.
For most of the past 20 years, "real
estate" investors have avoided the skilled nursing market because of the
various regulation, reimbursement, litigation and labor issues. In other
words, it is more business than real estate, even though the physical
plant has a higher percentage of the total value. But attitudes are
changing, helped by the double-digit cap rates for skilled nursing
facilities, a level that is all but gone for assisted and independent
living facilities of good quality and disappeared long ago for other types
of real estate. So in a period of low interest rates, and relatively low
yields on alternative investments, investors in search of "yield" have
naturally begun to gravitate towards the skilled nursing sector. And since
it is not difficult to find operators to lease or manage the facilities,
non-traditional real estate investors are feeling more secure in a health
care environment that is totally alien to them. Consequently, barring a
sudden change in Medicare reimbursement policies, or a major recession
shifting state budget surpluses into deficits, SNF bed values should
remain strong, and we may finally be seeing a large capital commitment to
renovate some of the existing stock.
In the assisted living market, the
average price per unit dropped by 5% in 2006 to $132,900 per unit. The
significance of this decline is minimal, however, since demand last year
was as strong, or stronger, than in 2005. The only difference was in the
supply of higher-end properties and portfolios, which diminished somewhat
in 2006. After the rush to sell in 2005 by providers who had been on the
sidelines for several years, we were not sure what the inventory of
properties for sale would be in 2006, so the results were in some ways
better than we anticipated. The average price per unit was helped by the
continued decline in cap rates in 2006, especially for the more
high-profile portfolios. But there are still plenty of transactions that
sell at cap rates in the 9% to 11% range; it is just that the more
publicized ones tend to be in the 6% to 8% range, and that is what
everyone focuses on and remembers.
As it gets more expensive to build
assisted living facilities, and as they get larger, both in terms of
number of units and total square footage per unit, the prices will most
likely continue to escalate. In late 2006, a transaction was announced
(but not closed yet) where the price was above $400,000 per unit, and it
is likely that we will see more sales in the $250,000 per unit to $400,000
per unit range in the next five years as properties built in this decade
come onto the market. It should be remembered, however, that these
higher-end facilities will always be balanced by those in the $75,000 per
unit to $125,000 per unit range, and some below that. And a low price does
not mean a "bad" facility; rather, it could be in an area where real
estate prices in general are low, income levels are low, or both.
Regardless, demand will remain very strong for above-average assisted
living facilities for many years.
The independent living market, which saw
the average price per unit more than double in 2005, was just as strong in
2006 with an average price of $145,700 per unit, about unchanged from the
prior year, but with the median price increasing by nearly 2%. The only
problem in this market is the dearth of properties for sale, as the demand
is almost unlimited, especially for those communities with excess land to
add cottages, assisted living, skilled nursing, or all three. The sale of
the Holiday Retirement Corporation portfolio for an estimated
$185,000 per unit and a sub-6% cap rate, a transaction that was scheduled
to close February 28, has any owner of retirement housing properties
scratching his head and deciding whether they want to retire. As we have
said for several years, the market has been strong for the IL communities,
it has just been the supply of these properties for sale that has kept the
market limited. The outlook for 2007 and beyond is just as strong as last
year.
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