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Twenty-Nine Medical Office Building Portfolio Trades

Healthcare Real Estate Capital (“HRE Capital”) acted as a financial advisor to Hammes Partners (“Hammes”) in its disposition of a 29-building portfolio of medical office buildings (the “Portfolio”).

The 1,226,312 square foot Portfolio features modern, well occupied assets with significant remaining average lease term and is geographically diverse, spanning Illinois, Wisconsin, Missouri, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Virginia, Washington D.C., Arizona, Texas, Mississippi, and Georgia.

The Portfolio includes on-campus, off-campus, and adjacent-to-campus locations and was transacted subject to assumption of existing debt.

HRE Capital’s Role

On behalf of Hammes, HRE Capital undertook a tailored effort to identify a well-capitalized investor (“Investor”) seeking a substantial and geographically diverse medical office building portfolio and who was positioned to (i) acquire the Portfolio, (ii) take full responsibility for assumption or prepayment of significant existing debt and (iii) close this sizeable transaction on a truncated timeline in the face of a national pandemic complicating diligence.

Leveraging its unmatched relationships in the sector, HRE Capital approached a pool of credible Investors that would allow Hammes to achieve its previously identified goals. With multiple offers in-hand from different types of Investors, Hammes ultimately selected a private equity real estate Investor with extensive experience in the healthcare real estate sector who provided the most attractive offer.

HRE Capital assisted Hammes in navigating the simultaneous completion of buyer diligence, negotiation of purchase and sale agreement, and assumption of existing debt across multiple lenders to successfully achieve a year end closing.

 

Source: HREI

Q3 Medical Office Building Sales Were $2.2 Billion

After a slow start to the year, medical office building (MOB) sales have picked up in the second and third quarters (Q2 and Q3), providing a strong possibility that the final 2019 volume will top $10 billion for the fifth straight year.

According to two data firms that separately compile their own MOB sales statistics – Arnold, Md.-based Revista and New York-based Real Capital Analytics (RCA) – transaction volume in Q3 topped $2 billion. Both firms’ data shows that year-to-date (YTD) MOB sales through Q3 topped $7.1 billion.

RCA’s data had Q3 MOB sales at $2.35 billion, for a YTD total of $7.28 billion. The firm’s data also indicates that the average capitalization (cap) rate, or the expected first-year yield, in Q3 was 6.7 percent – up from 6.3 percent in Q2 – and the average price per square foot (PSF) of $316, which was down from $326 a quarter earlier.

Revista, which uses different criteria for compiling its MOB sales data than RCA, indicates that Q3 sales totaled $2.2 billion, bringing the YTD total to $7.1 billion. Revista’s data shows that the overall average cap rate for MOB sales was about 6.6 percent in Q3, with the average cap rate for MOB portfolio sales coming in at 6.2 percent and single assets at 6.8 percent. Revista data puts the average PSF for all MOB sales at $323.

Interestingly, Revista data shows that there is still a premium to be paid for on-campus MOBs, which sold for an average of $339 PSF; on the other hand, off-campus facilities had an average PSF of $321.

Revista’s data also indicates the highest quality properties, those in the top 25 percent, sold for average cap rates of 5.8 percent and the absolute highest quality properties selling for cap rates averaging 4.4 percent.

While the YTD MOB sales volume stood at more than $7 billion at the end of Q3, there is a good chance that Q4 will see a strong uptick in volume. This news come by way of a variety of industry professionals as well as 2019’s biggest buyer by far, Toledo, Ohio-based Welltower Inc. (NYSE: WELL).

As HREI reported on Nov. 13, Welltower, which had made MOB investments topping $2 billion YTD through the end of Q3, last week announced that in recent weeks it had entered into five separate definitive agreements to acquire MOBs for a combined total of $1.67 billion.

Welltower’s pending acquisitions, for which it has entered definitive agreements, includes a $787 million purchase of 29 “Class A” MOBs from Milwaukee-based Hammes Partners. In addition, the REIT announced that it is “under contract” to make four other, separate MOB transactions totaling $885 million.

Those purchases, if they close as predicted by the end of year, would bring Welltower’s total 2019 MOB acquisitions to more than $3.5 billion.

Welltower’s deals alone, should they indeed close by the end of the year, would bring the MOB sector’s overall volume for the year, when added to the $7 billion-plus recorded in the first three quarters, to nearly $9 billion and provide a virtual lock that 2019’s volume will exceed $10 billion once again.

 

Source: HREI