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May 2007 issue
Manor
Care Surprises Market - But Is A Sale Of The Company Really In The Cards?
Manor Care hires JPMorgan to look at strategic alternatives to enhance
shareholder value, and all the financial buyers are sharpening their pencils
to see what they can afford to pay.
...
Battle For Genesis Escalates - Two Bidders
Up Their Offers, But Outcome Up In The Air
In late April, after Formation Capital and JER Partners increased their bid
for Genesis HealthCare, we thought it was a done deal. But the price keeps
going up.
...
Assisted Living Market
A small, high-end portfolio in the Northeast goes to the highest bidder, and
there were plenty of them.
...
Skilled Nursing Market
We hear that a large California portfolio is coming to market, and a few
small sales closed recently.
...
Financing News
Six months since filing with the SEC, Skilled Healthcare Group is set to
launch its IPO.
...
REITs
CIT Healthcare is launching a new health care REIT, and National Health
Investors enters into merger discussions with a suitor.
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Companies Mentioned in this issue:
May 2007
A
AEW Capital Management p14
Avalon p14
B
Banc of America Securities p12
Benchmark Assisted Living p14
Beverly Enterprises p1, p6
B’nai B’rith International p11
BNP Paribas p12
Brookdale Senior Living p8
C
Capital Senior Living p9
Capmark Finance p12
Care Investment Trust p14
Carlyle Senior Living p9
CIT Group p14
CIT Healthcare p14
Column Financial p12
Commonwealth Assisted Living p12
Credit Suisse p12
D
Deutsche Bank Securities p15
E
Emeritus Assisted Living p12
F
Fannie Mae p9
Farallon Capital Management p6
Fillmore Capital p3, p5
Fillmore Capital Partners p1
Five Arrows Realty Securities IV p12
Formation Capital p1
G
GE Healthcare Financial Services p1
Genesis HealthCare p1
Goldman Sachs p6
GPT Group p14
Granite Investment Grou p15
Greenbrier Development p12
H
Hallmark Holdings p12
Hallmark Investment Corporation p12
Hallmark Senior Housing p12
Harborside Healthcare Corporation p8
Health Care & Retirement Corp. p2
Health Care Property Investors p15
Health Care REIT p15
Holiday Retirement Corporation p4
I
Institutional Shareholder Services, Inc. p5
Investcorp p8
J
JER Partners p1
JPMorgan p2
K
Kaplan Development p8
Kindred Healthcare p8, p11
L
Legend Senior Living p12
Life Care Services p11, p14
Love Funding p12
M
Manor Care p2
Marcus & Millichap p8, p9
Mariner Health Care p2, p10
MMA Realty Capital p12
N
National Health Investors p15
Northbrook p1
O
Omega Healthcare Investors p15
Onex Corp. p12
P
Pruitt Corporation p10
R
Red Mortgage Capital p12
Royal Senior Care p9
S
Senior Care Consultants p15
Senior Living Investment Brokerage p9, p11
SHG Holding Solutions p12
Sims Capital Management p9
Skilled Healthcare Group p12
Stifel Nicolaus p3
Sun Healthcare p8
Sunrise Senior Living p8, p14
Sunrise Senior Living REIT p8
Sunwest Management p9
T
Tara Cares p10
Tenet Healthcare p15
U
UBS Investment Bank p8, p12, p15
V
Ventas p8, p11
W
Wilkinson Corporation p8 |
Battle For Genesis Escalates - Two
Bidders Up Their Offers, But Outcome Up In The Air
Email Editor
During the weeks before the
shareholder vote to approve the sale of Genesis HealthCare (NASDAQ:
GHCI) to a joint venture between Formation Capital and JER
Partners, it became apparent that the necessary votes were not there
for a clear majority to win. The hedge funds wanted to squeeze a little
more money out of the deal, looking for perhaps another 50 cents or $1.00
per share to give their blessing. Some of these hedge funds didn’t even
have a vote, since they purchased their shares subsequent to the
shareholder of record date to vote on the transaction. But that didn’t
mean they couldn’t exert pressure on other shareholders, as well as on
other potential bidders to get into the game.
Feeling the heat, and not
wanting to lose the deal for what would amount to a little over a 1%
increase in the deal value, Formation Capital and JER, days before the
shareholder vote, increased their offer by $1.25 per share to $64.25 per
share. The board this time was unanimous in its support, and the
shareholder vote was pushed out to May 4. One of the problems was that
Institutional Shareholder Services, Inc. (ISS), an independent
shareholder advisory service, recommended to shareholders that they vote
no on the original Formation deal, not because they thought the value was
too low (they thought it was fair), but because of how the process was
handled.
When ISS
recommends a no vote, it can be trouble for most any acquisition. Rather
than potentially lose the vote and have to go through the process all over
again, the Formation group upped the ante by enough to satisfy those
shareholders holding out for a slightly higher price. At this point,
everyone thought it was a done deal; everyone, that is, except the one
buyer left at the altar last January, Fillmore Capital Partners.
On April 25,
Fillmore topped Formation’s bid by a measly 50 cents per share, to $64.75
per share. The premium was so small that many people did not believe it
would constitute a "superior offer" as defined in the merger agreement
with Formation. One blogger (now, who could that be?) referred to it as
"chump change," and not a serious counter-bid. One of the problems was
that the financing was contingent on recapitalizing Fillmore’s Beverly
Enterprises assets, and more than 50% of the "equity" to buy Genesis
was going to come from that recap in the form of borrowed funds.
Another issue
was timing, and despite Fillmore’s protests to the contrary, they would be
at least a month or two behind Formation in the regulatory approval
process. We had heard people say that the cost to shareholders of a delay
could be as high as 60 cents per share per month; our calculation was
closer to 25 cents per share per month. One investor, Farallon Capital
Management, decided it didn’t want to wait, and on April 19 and 20 it
unloaded about 1.9 million shares in dozens of trades between $63.10 and
$63.63 per share. On April 27, ISS came out with an updated recommendation
to vote for the revised Formation deal, noting that the risks inherent in
Fillmore’s slightly higher offer were not worth 50 cents per share.
Obviously
Fillmore got the message, but we were surprised that they listened. Late
Sunday night on April 29, Genesis received a revised offer from Fillmore,
increasing its bid from the prior week by 50 cents per share to $65.25 per
share, or $1.00 above Formation’s bid. But the new bid had an unusual
twist; the price would increase by just over one penny per day ($0.01073
per share) beginning August 15 if the deal was not closed, or the
equivalent of about 32 cents per share per month. It was believed that
Formation would be able to close sometime between July 1 and July 31, so
this amendment was obviously meant to put to rest the timing issue. We
have not seen the letter from Fillmore, so we don’t know if Fillmore has
submitted a firm financing proposal with lenders in place. Formation,
however, has its financing commitment in place.
The Genesis
board and its advisor, Goldman Sachs, had to wonder why Fillmore
pursued this two-step dance as opposed to belly dancing up to the bar with
the higher offer a week ago. And it had to present a few questions. Since
Fillmore has not had much time to review non-public financial and
operating information, will their higher price stand the test of due
diligence? And if the bidding rises, how does it impact the recap of the
Beverly assets, which are of lesser quality than the Genesis properties?
And if Formation and JER should decide to match the offer, at an increased
cost of $20 million, will the Genesis board be back where it was last
January, with two offers at the same price?
Well, that is
exactly where it stands as we go to print. On May 1, Formation and JER
upped their offer to match Fillmore at $65.25 per share, and taking a
lesson from Fillmore, if Formation does not complete the transaction by
July 31, their purchase price will increase by $0.01609 per share per day,
or about 48 cents per month, significantly better than the Fillmore
monthly increase and almost double our estimate. Our guess is that it
really is a moot point for Formation, because they expect to have it
closed by then anyway. As a result of the two new offers on the table, the
board postponed the annual shareholder meeting and vote until May 11, but
still maintained its recommendation to vote in favor of the Formation/JER
transaction.
So the
question remains, what will the shareholders do? The news of the new
Formation bid sent Genesis shares up nearly 2% to a new high of $64.93 per
share, indicating that they are sure one of them will win at a price no
lower than $65.25 per share. Before the Formation announcement on May 1,
Genesis shares had actually traded down a bit, indicating that investors
may not have been fully on board with the Fillmore deal. With the price
now the same from both buyers, but a better "timing premium" from
Formation, we assume that ISS will stick with its support for the
Formation bid. Under the merger agreement, Formation has the right to
match any competing offers, so this could go on until someone cries
"uncle." We just hope this is not drawn out in 50-cent increments and
"fractions of a penny" timing premiums. One thing is sure, there is no
"easy button" on this one. Who knows, at some point Manor Care could start
looking cheap.
In the other
rather raucous takeover battle, Ventas (NYSE: VTR) closed on its
acquisition of the Sunrise Senior Living REIT (TSX: SZR.UN) assets
on April 26 at a total cost of approximately $1.96 billion. The
acquisition includes 77 assisted living facilities with approximately
6,200 units, and Sunrise Senior Living (NYSE: SRZ), which has an
average 15% ownership interest in the real estate, is the manager for all
of the properties. The grossed-up deal value is about $370,000 per unit,
and the cap rate on estimated 2007 earnings (using 85% of EBITDA) is about
5.7%. Currently, the transaction is dilutive for Ventas, but as part of
the purchase, Ventas picked up some exclusive development arrangements
with Sunrise (the operator) which should help turn the overall deal
accretive sometime next year, and increase the pro forma cap rate. But the
acquisition also had strategic importance for Ventas as it tries to
increase its proportion of private pay revenues and decrease the
percentage of income from Kindred Healthcare (NYSE: KND).
Sun
Healthcare (NASDAQ: SUNH) closed on its
acquisition of Harborside Healthcare Corporation on April 19,
paying approximately $349.4 million in cash and assuming net debt of about
$275 million. Based on a 2006 pro forma adjusted EBITDA for Harborside of
$74.5 million, the acquisition was about 8.4x EBITDA; the multiple was
about 6.7x 2006 pro forma adjusted EBITDAR. Revenues were just over $650
million. This was a significant strategic acquisition for Sun and it will
increase its proportion of owned facilities. The flip side of that is that
with the Harborside assets, Sun becomes a more attractive takeover
candidate itself in this market. Jon Santemma of UBS Investment Bank
was the lead advisor to Investcorp, Harborside’s owner, in the
transaction.
Also in late
April, Brookdale Senior Living (NYSE: BKD) closed on its previously
announced acquisition of two retirement communities in Ohio and North
Carolina with a total of 675 units. BKD had been leasing and operating the
facilities, and paid $101 million, or $149,600 per unit. |
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