|

August
2007 issue
The Paradox of A Market Peak-
Despite Strong Industry Fundamentals, The Top Is Here
Four years after the recovery began, the
seniors housing and care market is at a market peak. The industry
fundamentals, however, are as strong as ever.
...
Atria Senior Living Lands Deal--
After Months Of Negotiating, Atria Gets Sterling Glen Assets
In a much anticipated transaction, Atria Senior Living has closed on the
purchase of the Sterling Glen properties from Forest City.
...
Assisted Living Market
Carlyle Senior Living sells two properties for a huge profit, plus
several other transactions.
...
Independent Living
Market
Senior Lifestyle Corporation expands into Maryland with a large community.
...
Skilled Nursing Market
Extendicare, Skilled Healthcare Group and Advocat all buy single-state
portfolios, plus nine other deals.
...
Sunrise Put In Play
Sunrise Senior Living announced it is looking into “strategic alternatives”
in what should be a go-private transaction later this year. The accounting
restatement woes continue, however.
...
Sign
up for a trial subscription and get the current issue!
Read more about The
SeniorCare Investor.
Articles Archive
Steve's BLOG on Senior Care
Companies Mentioned in this issue:
August 2007
A
Advocat p13
AEW Capital Management p19
AltaCare Corporation p14
Assisted Living Concepts p12
Athena Health Care Systems p18
Atria Senior Living p1
B
Brandywine Senior Care p9
Brinton Woods Senior Living p14
C
Canyon Creek Development p12
Capital Funding p14
Capital Funding Group p19
Capital Lending & Mortgage Group p19
Capital Senior Living p2
CapitalSource p17
Capmark Finance p19
Carlyle Senior Living p9
Catalyst/Cambridge Healthcare Finance p19
CB Richard Ellis p10
Chartwell Seniors Housing REIT p19
Citigroup Global Markets p17
CLW Health Care Services Group p8
Complete Care p19
E
Eastdil Secured p10
Emeritus Assisted Living p2
Extendicare REIT p12
F
Fannie Mae p11
Forest City Enterprises p1
G
Genesis HealthCare p3
GI Partners p19
H
Hassett Belfer Senior Housing p8
Health Care Property Investors p18
Health Care REIT p19
Hobart Retirement, LLC p19
Holiday Retirement p6
I
IDE Management Group p16
K
KeyBank Real Estate Capital p18
Kindred Healthcare p14
L
LaSalle Bank p14
Laurel Healthcare Providers, LLC p13
Lazard p9
Litchfield Investment Company p19
M
Manor Care p3
Marcus & Millichap p11
Merrill Lynch Capital Healthcare Finance p10, p18
MMA Financial p11
Morgan Stanley Real Estate Fund p18
N
National Assisted Living Nurses Association p8
Nationwide Health Properties p19
O
Omega Healthcare Investors p14
P
Pacific Investment Management p5
Peak Resources p14
Petersen Health Care p16
Plum Healthcare Group p19
R
Red Capital Mortgage p19
S
Senior Care Real Estate Brokerage p11
Senior Housing Investment Advisors p11
Senior Lifestyle Corporation p11
Senior Living Investment Brokerage p10
Senior Management Services of America p13
Skilled Healthcare Group p13
Sterling Glen p1
Stifel Nicolaus p18
Sunrise Senior Living p17
T
Tendercare (Michigan) Inc. p12
The Carlyle Group p5
Trilogy Health Services p14
W
Walton Street Capital p11
Warburg Pincus p9 |
The Paradox of A Market Peak--
Despite Strong Industry Fundamentals, The Top Is Here
Email Editor
The seniors housing and care industry has
had a tremendous run-up in the past three years, with almost everything
going its way. Yes, qualified labor remains a constraint on operational
performance, but ask anyone in the industry and they will most likely tell
you they have never seen it this good—and then they whisper they are
keeping their fingers crossed. Most of them are “knockin’ the leather off
the ball,” from a financial point of view, and they really see nothing on
the horizon to change that. For the most part, they are right.
Occupancy levels have been strong, although a little flat of late, and
demographics will keep demand strong for the next 30 years. The increase
in demand will actually be fairly steady for the next 15 to 20 years, and
then it will ramp up faster than the industry will be able to cope with
(the housing and service product we will want in 20 years, however, is a
discussion for another time). There was some speculation last year that we
would see a mini-splurge in new development soon, primarily because new
construction practically disappeared five years ago. With construction
costs so high, however, and land never easy to find, it hasn’t happened.
In fact, perhaps more dollars are going into the large $100 million to
$300 million campuses than ever before, as opposed to smaller assisted
living facilities, but this will not result in “over-building” as we think
of it, and these do not get built until they are heavily pre-leased.
Perhaps most importantly, these campuses were never the problem in the
1990s.
So what exactly do we mean by the phrase, “The Paradox of a Market Peak”?
The paradox, simply stated, is that despite strong industry fundamentals,
now and for the future, industry valuations and merger and acquisition
activity are at a market top when, in theory, they should just keep on
marching upward. Just as much of the three-year run-up had more to do with
“external” reasons than industry fundamentals and performance, the change
in atmosphere will also have more to do with these external factors.
Before you shoot the messenger, grab a cup of coffee (or glass of wine, if
it is early evening) and listen to the theory.
Our entire industry emerged from a period of extreme trauma in the 2000 to
2002 period, an era brought on by overbuilding, excessive leverage,
inexperienced management, herd mentality capital and, quite frankly, ego
(assisted living sector). In addition, there was a problem with changes in
reimbursement, plenty of acquisitions done for the sake of covering up
previous bad acquisitions and to make earnings comparisons irrelevant, too
much capital and a liability insurance crisis (skilled nursing sector).
Everyone knew it would improve at some point, but no one really knew to
what extent.
Then there was the schizophrenia in terms of defining the industry. Is it
real estate or a health care services business, or both? There has been a
big push over the last 10 years to get seniors housing classified as a
distinct real estate class in the minds of investors, much like office
buildings, retail, multifamily and hotels. While this makes sense from an
investment perspective, and for the goal of trying to attract
institutional money, there are some perils as well. Because there are such
large differences between skilled nursing, assisted living and independent
living, especially with regard to the health care service aspect,
investors have developed their own appetites for the various sectors
within the asset class. This push for “legitimacy” has largely worked,
given the dramatic rise of institutional equity now in the seniors housing
and care market, but it also may result in an increase in the volatility
of our market.
Let’s take a look at some of the signals for a market peak, both within
our industry and outside of it. For the most part, publicly traded
assisted/independent living stocks peaked this past spring. Their rise
since the bottom of the market was the result of a combination of low
values (three years ago), improving industry fundamentals, a rising stock
market in general and a certain amount of takeover premium embedded in
some of the stocks. Take the case of Capital Senior Living (NYSE:
CSU), a company that has been reporting improved operating fundamentals
and growth, but with a major shareholder that gave up, after more than a
year, on its quest to have the company auctioned off to the highest
bidder. The stock has dropped by 25% in three months, when there has been
no negative news. Emeritus Assisted Living (AMEX: ESC), which most
likely got way ahead of itself, has plunged by more than 35% since it
peaked six weeks ago. The overall market was rising during most of this
time period, and both companies seemed to have nothing but positive news.
The publicly traded skilled nursing companies, or what’s left of them,
have experienced a similar fate. With the obvious exceptions of Genesis
HealthCare, which is now a private company with the recent
going-private transaction completed in early July, and the recently
announced purchase of Manor Care (NYSE: HCR), the remainder have
all peaked as well. HCR even dropped a few points in late July with the
growing fears of private equity firms either being unable to close their
deals or having to put in more equity and pay more for the debt (but more
on that later).
Finally, we recently wrote that every health care REIT dropped in value in
June and, with the exception of two that were in takeover discussions,
they are all off their peaks from late last winter, and many of them are
significantly down from those peaks. Why the dismal performance? The
simple answer is rising interest rates. But the reality is that they have
not risen so much to have this large an impact, and they have not had the
same impact on the other REIT sectors. The other answer is the current,
and prolonged, softness in the housing market and its potential impact on
seniors housing occupancy, but providers are not really feeling that…yet.
Health care REIT fundamentals are still strong, and the seniors housing
and care industry obviously is still in good shape. In addition, in a
little fact that health care REITs don’t talk about much, the theoretical
value of any seniors housing and care properties they have purchased from
1995 to 2004 has increased dramatically because of a combination of the
increased cash flow (in most cases) and the significant drop in cap rates
(in all cases) over the past three years. And with an average dividend
yield that is 200 basis points higher than the average of all the other
REIT sectors combined, investors should be pouncing on them for yield
alone, but they aren’t. The peaks in assisted living, skilled nursing and
health care REIT publicly traded stocks all occurred before the subprime
mortgage meltdown.
As everyone knows, real estate can be very cyclical, and while seniors
housing does not have the same cyclical elements, once it is established
as one of the classes of “real estate,” it will join in the real estate
investment cycles whether it likes it or not. And during the past several
years, as seniors housing was gaining acceptance in the investment
community, the spread between seniors housing cap rates and every other
real estate asset class was criticized as being too wide, representing a
tremendous investment opportunity. Yes, there were some business risk
aspects that many other types of real estate did not have, but they did
not merit the wide spread, or so the argument went. While this was
convincing, and in many regards true, what was not asked was whether the
low cap rates on other real estate classes were justified, and
sustainable, over the long term. If you can buy multifamily at a 4% cap
rate, what a great deal seniors housing is at a 6% cap rate. But is 4% for
multifamily such a great deal over the long term?
The point is that cap rates for seniors housing have dropped to record
lows when cap rates for other real estate are also at historic lows
because of a strong economy for five straight years, continued low
interest rates and an extremely liquid capital market with too much money
to invest. What we don’t know is what will happen to seniors housing cap
rates, and their spread relative to other real estate classes, when
interest rates rise, the economy softens and money is no longer so loose.
Quite frankly, our guess is that most of us do not want to know.
Speaking of cap rates, it is obvious that cap rate compression in seniors
housing and care, which many believe was long overdue, has been driving
value for a few years. As properties bought three or four years ago are
now being flipped, we are able to see how much of that increased value has
come from rising cash flow compared with a decline in cap rates. While it
will be different for every case, our best estimate at this point in time
is that, all other things equal, approximately 40% of the increased value
is derived from the increased cash flow, while the remainder comes from
the lower cap rate. In the skilled nursing sector, a smaller percentage of
the increased value would come from the cap rate decline because, on
average, cap rates have dropped less. We have all known that declining cap
rates drive value, but when the current valuations are so dependent on
this low cap rate environment, someone is going to be stuck holding the
bag when (and if) cap rates across all real estate sectors rise.
Unfortunately, it may take a downturn in the traditional real estate
market to find out where the real spread should be between those sectors
and seniors housing and care, with the understanding that it could always
be a moving target.
Now is as good a time as any to talk about the current disruption in the
bond and leveraged bank loan markets as it relates generally to the merger
and acquisition market and the private equity that is spurring much of the
deal-making, and specifically to seniors housing. Just the fact that
several of the largest and best-known private equity firms are having
trouble selling some of the debt for their deals at terms originally
contemplated is a shock to many. Up until recently, the private equity
firms could almost dictate the terms of the substantial debt component in
their deals, usually with low interest rates and liberal terms (with
toggle notes and covenant-lite debt becoming common cocktail conversation
pieces). Perhaps the most amusing description of what was done to sell the
debt came from Bill Gross, manager of the world’s largest bond fund,
Pacific Investment Management, who referred to “the make-up, those
six-inch heels and a ‘tramp stamp’” for the debt on some of the deals.
While a bit severe, and we assume tongue-in-cheek, the point was clearly
made.
As investors started flocking to safety, the yield spread between
treasuries and corporate bonds widened and is now the widest it has been
since July 2002. This means that the cost of debt on all of the leveraged
deals will be going up, reducing the economics of the acquisitions, at
least in the short term. In addition, as debt investors began to reject
the terms that had been imposed on them, they also demanded lower leverage
on some of the transactions, which means that private equity firms will
have to put up more equity. While they certainly have the equity to do so,
it also contributes to a reduction in their returns, at least in the short
term. We keep on referring to the “short term” because no one knows how
long this panic in the debt markets will continue, and there is obviously
the possibility that the market will return to “normal” in a few months,
whatever normal really means. In the meantime, there is some $300 billion
of bonds and loans that need to be priced for pending leveraged buyouts by
private equity firms, and that is an unprecedented amount in normal times,
let alone this time of turmoil where the buyers don’t know what they want
to buy. And it goes without saying that when “private” equity firms decide
it is time to go public, we have reached a top of some sort.
In the case of the pending acquisition of Manor Care by The Carlyle
Group, our guess is that the term sheet for the debt, if it were
re-priced today, would be at least 40 to 50 basis points higher than when
the deal was first announced. That would “only” amount to an increased
cost of $20 to $25 million annually, which really would not put a dent in
Carlyle’s ability to close the deal or run Manor Care. It will, however,
affect other deals in the coming months. Seniors housing does have an
advantage in the credit markets because the debt is secured by real
estate, and in many cases attractive real estate, but spreads are spreads,
and if they widen for unsecured debt they will widen for secured debt as
well. The problem now is that many of the buyers have disappeared,
preferring to wait on the sidelines to see if this credit crisis will blow
over soon or take on a life of its own and snowball into something far
larger and more devastating. While it is unlikely that will happen, if
another shoe drops (any shoe), whatever confidence that is left in the
market could easily evaporate.
Finally, the surge in seniors housing merger and acquisition activity was
spurred on in part by the significant increase in high-quality properties
and portfolios that came onto the market in 2005 and 2006, a quality level
that had really never before been seen. Was it the declining cap rates
that did it, or did this new supply of quality product help push cap rates
down? A little bit of both is the best guess. What has changed in the past
two to three years is that the potential supply of these high-end
properties and portfolios has decreased. Yes, there are still some very
valuable portfolios out there, but only a certain percentage will come to
market each year, and we believe that we have already seen a heavier than
normal volume of these portfolios.
This has two consequences. First, if there is a decline in the overall
quality of what comes to market, even low cap rates will not keep average
values from falling (remember, we are speaking of the value of what is
sold). Second, there are not many other large portfolios around like Manor
Care and Holiday Retirement that keep the interest of private
equity firms, and the same goes for those that are even one-tenth that
size. The point is that unless there are some very quick re-trades,
capital will flow to where it can best be deployed, and deployed in size.
So, with the opportunities beginning to diminish by next year, it is quite
possible that we will not see the same availability of capital, and when
the supply goes down, the cost usually goes up.
So getting back to the paradox, there is actually nothing wrong with the
seniors housing industry right now. In fact, a new independent/assisted
living community or CCRC in a great market may be one of the best “real
estate” investments you can make today. Demand will increase, cash flows
should grow and it will be increasingly difficult for new competition to
come into the market. But can it get any better from a valuation
perspective when today (well, yesterday actually) everything is going the
right way? Possible, but not likely. So while the industry itself should
have smooth sailing for quite a while, it is just the acquisition market,
and valuations, that should take a breather for reasons that have little
to do with financial and operating performance. Just like the stock market
in general, which is trading at its lowest multiple of earnings in 16
years and still getting pummeled in late July for reasons that have
nothing to do with earnings forecasts, the seniors housing industry, from
a valuation perspective, will have to deal with external factors in an
otherwise very promising environment. And like corporate earnings in
general, seniors housing earnings should be stable and growing, and it
will be a great business to be in.
The skilled nursing sector, despite its continued stability, is another
story altogether, because all you need is to have Congress take a swipe at
Medicare reimbursement, and there goes the necessary cash flow to pay off,
for example, Carlyle’s debt on the Manor Care purchase. But if there is
one private equity firm that the industry would want to have a stake in
the skilled nursing business, it is Carlyle, with its vast Washington,
D.C. contacts. While their influence can not be underestimated, Medicare
reimbursement, combined with a “tired” physical plant for the overall
industry, presents sufficient concern. The future of the skilled nursing
industry will most likely be in repositioning a large percentage of the
assets, some into higher acuity services and others into lower acuity.
|
|
FREE TRIAL
TO THE
SENIORCARE
INVESTOR!
If you like this article, there’s lots more
waiting for you in The SeniorCare Investor. It’s the
bible of what's going on in senior care M&A today.
Sign up for two free months right now! There’s no
obligation, no writing “cancel” on a bill. Happy reading!
|
|