Columbia Pacific Stirs Up Indian Senior Care Market With Serene Purchase
India represents a huge untapped market when it comes to seniors housing, and a Seattle-based company already with significant investments in Asia is looking to capitalize. A subsidiary of Columbia Pacific Advisors (which was founded in 2006 by Alex Washburn, Stan Baty and Dan Baty), Columbia Pacific Management manages an international business that includes hospitals, clinics and senior care facilities in Kenya, Southeast Asia, India and China. Now, the company is making a huge investment in the Indian senior care market, which has an aging population, rising upper- and middle classes and an under-supply of senior care facilities. Columbia Pacific purchased Serene Senior Care and its 735... Read More »
What Are the Memory Care Investors Saying?
On March 9th, we hosted a webinar entitled “Building or Buying Memory Care,” with moderator Steve Monroe and panelists Clint Malin of LTC Properties, Mark Myers of Marcus & Millichap, Michael Stoller of LCB Senior Living and Matthew Turner of MorningStar Senior Living. The panelists covered a range of topics (you can listen to the discussion here) including the risks of overbuilding, effectiveness of memory care conversions and fill-up risk, among others. But our audience also chimed in, answering three poll questions throughout the webinar. First, when asked if they would build stand-alone MC, assisted living with MC or stand-alone AL, 60% preferred the mix, 32% would build... Read More »Ventas Not interested in Brookdale, but Diversicare Soars
We may never know if Ventas was really interested in buying Brookdale Senior Living, but it made little sense. We may never know if Ventas was really interested in buying Brookdale Senior Living, but it was just something we did not think made any sense, so we are glad they publicly said they are not pursuing it. The only thing that made possible sense was to buy a 100 or so properties. But again, would it really be worth it? I still think there are suitors sniffing around, but not at prices that will get shareholders excited. Unless a Chinese investor really wants a large toehold in the U.S. Moving on, have you noticed what has been happening with Diversicare Health Services? Late last... Read More »
Memory Care: Buy or Build?
Investors in seniors housing have been flocking to the memory care market, as the sector has experienced unprecedented growth since the Great Recession. They are attracted to its need-based demand, higher rents, private payors and apparent dearth in supply in a number of markets (though given the amount of construction in the last few years that is becoming less and less true). But those investors that are interested in getting into or expanding their holdings in this market are faced with a question: do they build memory care, or buy? That is the topic of our upcoming webinar this Thursday at 1PM aptly named, “Buying or Building Memory Care.” Our moderator Steve Monroe and panelists Clint... Read More »Post Acute Partners Grows Again in Upstate New York
Post Acute Partners continued its growth in upstate New York, acquiring another not-for-profit skilled nursing facility in the Rochester area. A few years after it closed the acquisition of Elderwood Senior Care and its 16 senior care facilities (nine skilled nursing facilities, five assisted living communities and two independent living communities) all located in New York, the NYC-based firm has acquired seven more facilities, five of them from not-for-profit owners in its bid to become the largest provider of post-acute care services in upstate. Post Acute Partners most recently purchased a 126-bed skilled nursing facility in Lockport for $10 million, or $79,365 per bed. Previously... Read More »In-Hospital Skilled Nursing Facility Sells in Scranton
A 22-bed in-hospital skilled nursing facility in Scranton, Pennsylvania traded hands in what was a unique transaction for a few reasons. First, its size of just 22 beds is far below the industry average. To put it in perspective, the average size of SNFs that sold in 2016, according to the soon-to-be-released 22nd Edition of The Senior Care Acquisition Report, was 122 beds. Second, the facility is located on the fifth floor of the 186-bed acute-care Regional Hospital of Scranton, which helps explain the SNFs small size. And third, a not-for-profit, Allied Services Integrated Health System, purchased the SNF from privately-owned Senior Health Care Solutions, a scenario we typically see... Read More »Brookdale Senior Living Buy-Out in Limbo
It has been far too quiet on the Brookdale Senior Living buy-out front, other than its share price continues to slide as some investors may be giving up on a major capital event or sale of the company at a price point that interests them. The shares are trading at their lowest levels since early January, which, counterintuitively, may make it easier to get a deal done, if that is what the Board wants. We are still sticking with our opinion that only “stupid money” would pay the $20 to $25 per share for the company that several analysts have been saying is the true sum-of-the-parts value, which is why the price needs to come down so that a buyer would be able to offer some sort of premium,... Read More »
