No Summer Vacation From Deal Flow
August used to be the month for vacations, but for some, not this year. August is supposed to be a sleepy month. But as soon as I left on a summer vacation, the biggest deal of the year was announced, and we had a series of uneven earnings reports from the few remaining public companies. The large acquisition by Welltower was a bit of a surprise because we thought that deal had died late last year. And it did, a few times. And with a sub-6% in-place cap rate with occupancy for the portfolio so low, Welltower is obviously counting on a change in management to spruce up the cash flow. Great locations yes, but we thought the Big Three were taking a break from the high-priced portfolios. I... Read More »Meridian primes Continuum for HUD
Continuum Healthcare has been busy growing its portfolio and is now looking for permanent financing for the six of its skilled nursing facilities in New Jersey and Pennsylvania they acquired over the last three years. In the meantime, Meridian Capital Group has arranged $135.5 million in bridge financing for the facilities. The loan came with a four-year term, six months interest-only, under 15% recourse, and was provided by a balance sheet and mezzanine lender. Ari Adlerstein, Ari Dobkin and Josh Simpson of Meridian handled the transaction, and expect to take out the bridge financing with a HUD refinance in two years. Built between 1979 and 1999, the skilled nursing portfolio features 920... Read More »
A team effort
We wrote in the August issue of The SeniorCare Investor of Birchwood Health Care Properties’ acquisition of four skilled nursing facilities and a hospice care and home health company in Oklahoma, and that HJ Sims had financed a $5.25 million subordinate loan to fund the deal. Now, RED Capital Partners has just announced that it closed a $12.7 million balance sheet acquisition loan for Birchwood’s take-over of the 361-bed portfolio. The transaction was unique, in that the ancillary home health and hospice business provided credit support for the bridge-to-HUD loan. Read More »Leaving the Lone Star State
Civitas Senior Living is expanding its operations outside of Texas for the first time, as it is set to break ground on a senior living community in Louisville, Kentucky. Civitas has been one of the more active developers/acquirers in Texas (and that’s saying something). In 2015 alone, the company opened five new assisted living/memory care communities, and, after forming a new post-acute care division, also acquired two skilled nursing facilities plus an assisted living community in the town of Jefferson, Texas. Then, at the beginning of 2016, Civitas purchased two former Brookdale Senior Living properties in Harlingen, and currently has four communities set to open soon in Texas. After... Read More »Rocky Mountain Expansion
Legacy Retirement Communities is slowly expanding out of its home state of Utah, where it already operates nine senior living communities. After opening its first out-of-state community in 2009 in Arizona, the company plans to open its second this fall in Las Vegas, Nevada. Now, Legacy has its eye on another state, having just acquired 6.73 acres in Castle Pines, Colorado for $2.1 million, or nearly $7 per square foot. Legacy plans to build a 178-unit senior living community with independent living, assisted living and memory care services. Pamela Pyms of Pyms Capital Resources represented the seller, Pinark LLC, in this transaction. Read More »
Two Texas-sized SNFs sell
Blueprint Healthcare Real Estate Advisors’ most recent deal in Texas involved two large skilled nursing facilities, and some 438 beds, for a purchase price of $27.5 million, or $62,785 per bed. The facilities were owned by a well-known family in the Texas skilled nursing world that has been operating since the mid-1970s. The leads on this transaction, Tim Cobb, Steve Thomes and Joshua Salzman, Esq., faced some problems with the uncertainty of the Texas Minimum Payment Amount Program, but eventually sold the facilities to a Los Angeles-based real estate private equity firm with an operating partner. Read More »
Fall from Grace
Ten years ago, when a 143-bed skilled nursing facility in Liberty, Missouri sold as part of a portfolio to a large undisclosed operator, it was one of the more successful facilities in Clay County. Built in 1992, it is located next to Liberty Hospital and so had a steady stream of referrals. However, after nearly a decade of neglectful ownership, the facility was only 77% occupied by the end of 2014. Genesis Healthcare bought the facility in early 2015 but inherited some operational challenges, and CMS moved to close it by that summer. In the midst of those troubles, Liberty Hospital was developing a CCRC on an adjacent lot, which would include an 80-bed skilled nursing unit. Patrick... Read More »
Development Alive and Well in New Zealand
A 300-unit CCRC is planned for Queenstown, more known for its youth, extreme sports and tourists. Read More »
Mainstreet goes to Liverpool
Most people know Mainstreet as a developer in the post-acute care world, and a prolific one at that. After all, it’s the company’s high-end, amenity-rich transitional care developments that have made a big splash in the industry. But Mainstreet’s most recent acquisition involved a senior living community, which features 186 independent and assisted living units. The community is located just outside of Syracuse, New York, in the town of Liverpool, and was built in phases in 1992 and 1996. Owned and operated by a locally-based manager, The Hearth, the community also carried the Enriched Housing Program licensure designation. The Hearth will lease the community back from Mainstreet, which... Read More »
