Seniors Housing and Skilled Nursing Could Be Investor Favorites

Skilled nursing sectors investor favorites, a new report from Marcus & Millichap predicts.

Third quarter data showed that seniors housing move-ins are rising as more residents become vaccinated, with occupancy rising in both segments from July through September. Rents are also up annually by more than 1% across all four levels of care, led by memory care and assisted living.

Skilled nursing’s recovery was a bit more muted, with occupancy at 76.2% in November, down 1,000 basis points over 2019 numbers. But nationally, the average daily rate has increased or held firm in every quarter for more than a decade.

“But the near-term future is opaque with the pandemic still creating uncertainty,” Marcus & Millichap’s Benjamin Kunde notes. “However, seniors housing and skilled nursing facilities remain a key piece of the care spectrum, and the current environment may present unique favorable circumstances for investors. Temporary hurdles coincide with longer-term tailwinds that are becoming more apparent.”

Development has eased as of late, with less than 48,000 seniors housing units breaking ground in October, a 30% decrease from the typical pace. But Kunde says “robust demand is on the horizon, potentially outpacing supply and powering occupancy improvement.” In particular, aging baby boomers are likely to push a demand surge in the future, and they have money to spend: some estimates say the segment holds more than half of all US wealth.

One potential headwind? Labor shortages, which continue to plague both segments. A study by the American Health Care Association and the National Center for Assisted Living shows that three-fourths of respondents believe the staffing situation for assisted living has gotten worse from midyear through September.

“Many operators are utilizing higher compensation to attract staff, which is costly at a time when insurance fees have increased and infrastructure improvements are needed for virus containment,” Kunde notes. “Furthermore, some operators are allocating funds to ramp up marketing efforts, as many facilities are trying to fill rooms at the same time. Endeavors to entice prospective residents are especially important in the near term, as move-ins should accelerate once a broader return to workplaces reduces the number of people able to provide at-home care.”

Meanwhile, investors who pressed pause during the pandemic have a stash of capital and are reentering the market. Sales volume has matched the 2020 total already, and Kunde predicts that momentum will continue as owners list properties following the end of government stimulus funds which helped keep the industry afloat.

“The cost of capital remains low, and potential interest rate hikes and tax changes on the horizon could drive sales activity in the near term,” Kunde says. “Still, many investors are taking a cautionary approach as various short-term headwinds are lingering. Uncertainty in the marketplace and ongoing price discovery adds a wrinkle to getting deals done.”

 

Source: GlobeSt.

New Health Care Real Estate-Focused REIT Plans To Deploy $2 Billion Over Next 36-48 Months

Since its founding in 2004 as an acquirer and developer of student housing properties, Chicago-based CA Ventures LLC has branched out into other property types, including residential, industrial and senior housing.

Over the years, the firm that was originally known as Campus Acquisition – the “CA” in CA Ventures – grew into what it calls a “global, vertically integrated real estate investment management company with more than $13 billion of assets across North America, South America and Europe.”

In early 2020, the investment firm made its move into healthcare real estate (HRE) with the launching of a medical office and life science division.

In recent months, the company announced that the healthcare division had evolved into a new entity, CA Health and Science Trust Inc. (CAHST), a private real estate investment trust (REIT) focused on acquiring and developing value-add and core-plus medical office and life science facilities across the country.

Leading the private REIT are: as president, Russell Brenner, a 24-year commercial real estate (CRE) veteran with a strong background in acquiring and developing medical office buildings (MOBs) and ambulatory surgery centers (ASCs); and, as chief investment officer, Jesse Ostrow, also a CRE veteran with a strong background in real estate private equity, investment banking and consulting.

The two executives were previously with well-known Chicago-based HRE firms, as Mr. Brenner was a partner from 2012 to 2019 with Stage Equity Partners and Mr. Ostrow was the chief investment officer with MedProperties Group, a medical real estate investment, development and operating platform. He was with the firm from 2011 to 2018.

In announcing the launching of CAHST in September, the REIT also announced an initial equity commitment of up to $245 million from three partners; New York-based Davidson Kempner Capital Management LP, New York-based Monarch Alternative Capital LP and CA Ventures.

The new REIT has certainly gotten off to a fast start.

According to Mr. Brenner: “The REIT plans additional follow-on equity raises in the coming 24 months. With leverage, we will seek to deploy roughly $2 billion over the next 36 to 48 months.”

 

Source: HREI

New 35-Acre Health And Wellness District At Frisco Station Takes A Step Forward

A 35-acre health and wellness district is coming to the nearly $2B Frisco Station development.

An aerial view of the location of a planned health and wellness district at Frisco Station (IMAGE CREDIT: Debra Hale at Hillwood)

Dallas-based Cambridge Holdings just entered into an exclusive agreement with Frisco Station Partnership to develop healthcare and health and wellness-related projects within the fast-growing 242-acre development situated at the crossroads of the Dallas North Tollway and Warren Parkway, near the Dallas Cowboys’ world headquarters, The Star.

Cambridge specializes in the development, financing, acquisition and management of healthcare projects, mixed-use campuses and corporate offices with a focus on sustainable, “healthy, mindful living” development projects.

Though the company didn’t provide exact details of what would be included in the district, it has previously developed dozens of facilities on hospital campuses across North Texas and is behind oneC1TY, a health-focused project in Nashville, Tennessee. The Nashville Post described the 19-acre oneC1TY as a “mixed-use urban node” home to healthcare, life sciences and technology companies and set to eventually comprise more than 1M SF of Class-A research, office, retail, residential and green spaces.

“Cambridge is excited to bring healthcare and the health and wellness component to life at Frisco Station,” Cambridge Chairman and CEO Jean-Claude Saada said in a release. “Our mindful, healthy development principles focused on sustainability and convenient access to fresh food, open space, daily activity and community engagement make the healthy choice the easy choice for people who live, work, and visit. We think these concepts will be embraced in a community like Frisco that is already focused on addressing the total wellbeing of the community and individuals.”

Saada said he hoped to make the district a model for healthy living that would be emulated around the world.

Launched in 2015, Frisco Station was one of the nation’s first communities to be built from the ground up with AT&T’s 5G platform. It is also home to one of the world’s first vertiports to support flying taxis and is partnering in Texas’ first pilot project to test autonomous vehicles on public roadways.

“With Cambridge joining our team, we are reaching the full potential of Frisco Station as a globally recognized Smart, Creative, and Healthy mixed-use neighborhood,” said Trey Sibley, general manager of The Rudman Partnership, one of the three partners in the Frisco Station Partnership, alongside Hillwood and VanTrust Real Estate. “We couldn’t be more pleased to have them join us as we execute what’s considered to be the crown jewel of the project — the place where residents and visitors can experience ways to live healthier, more active and longer lives.”

Frisco Station’s master plan also calls for 2,400 residential urban living units, a 55-acre corporate campus, a dining, shopping and entertainment district, 3M SF of mid- and high-rise office space, and 30 acres of programmed trails, parks and open space.

Source: Bisnow