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Why MOBs Offer Healthy Investor Appeal

The health-care sector has largely rebounded from the lockdowns that halted all but the most necessary doctor’s visits and procedures in 2020.

Most health systems reported that they were within 5 percent of pre-pandemic utilization volumes last year, according to Cushman & Wakefield’s most recent healthcare and medical office report.

That’s good news for medical office real estate, as is the expected 7.3 percent growth in outpatient services through 2026, reported Cushman & Wakefield, citing data from the Advisory Board, a healthcare research and analytical organization based in Washington, D.C.

Additionally, medical office buildings have an average occupancy rate of 92 percent, which represents gradual improvement since occupancy dipped in 2020. It’s also clear that while the growth of telehealth fulfilled a need during the lockdown, many ailments and checkups still require an in-person visit. Investors expect MOBs to register 2 percent to 4 percent rent growth this year, according to a JLL survey released in February. That would be consistent with the past two years, which have produced average rent increases of about 2.3 percent, JLL notes, and compares favorably with the 1.9 percent uptick for office rents over the same stretch.

As a result, investors are viewing medical office as a safe haven in a disrupted environment. Not only have rising interest rates cast general uncertainty on property values, but the slow return of employees to the workplace is also raising questions about demand for the office sector as a whole.

“We’re receiving a lot of calls from office owners who are looking for ways to deploy capital into medical office,” said Andrew Milne, senior managing director for JLL Capital Markets. “It isn’t a new trend, but a lot more are rethinking their traditional office portfolios.”

As with most asset categories, higher capital costs have made it challenging to deploy capital into medical office. MOB investors pulled back in the second half of 2022 as the bid-ask spread emerged and lending largely dried up, noted Lorie Damon, an executive managing director with Cushman & Wakefield’s health-care advisory unit. Still, the market remains liquid for trusted borrowers who bring attractive deals to the table.

“The limited capacity for accessing debt right now has certainly impacted medical office as well as every other property sector, but deals are getting done,” said Damon. “Health-care performs really well in recessionary times, because people still get pregnant and still get sick.”

Pressure On Values

Some $19.3 billion in medical office buildings traded in 2022, a $1 billion increase over the prior year, according to New York-based MSCI Real Assets. However, it’s worth noting that a single deal, Healthcare Realty Trust’s acquisition of Healthcare Trust of America, accounted for nearly $8 billion of that total. In the second half of 2022, rising capital costs and recession fears cut MOB transaction volume sharply year-over-year.

Though that REIT deal was a dominant factor in investment volume, private buyers accounted for 72 percent of all transactions in 2022, reported MSCI Real Assets. Health-care REITs pulled out of the market early last year as stock prices fell, observers say. The REITs ended the year down more than 22 percent, according to NAREIT, although they generated total returns of nearly 13 percent in January.

Sources: Revista, CBRE Econometric Advisors, CBRE research

Sources: Revista, CBRE Econometric Advisors, CBRE Research

The dive in health-care REIT values further indicates that a repricing is underway and trickling down to the private market. The median cap rate for medical office ticked up to 5.9 percent by the end of the year, according to research by CBRE and Revista. Gauging true value change is difficult, however, because core asset owners who may have wanted to dispose of properties last year ended up holding onto them, limiting the dataset to value-add and core plus transactions, Cushman & Wakefield noted.

“But in San Francisco, cap rates for surgery centers with credit tenants have climbed to as much as 6.5 percent, or about 200 basis points higher than before the pandemic,” said Edward Del Beccaro, executive vice president and the San Francisco Bay Area regional manager with TRI Commercial/CORFAC International.

Many sellers still hope that interest rates will come down and that prior pricing power returns, he added, but he anticipates that the Federal Reserve will raise the benchmark federal funds an additional 100 basis points in 2023.

“Medical office cap rates will be under further pressure to move higher, and I don’t see them going down at all in 2023,” Del Becarro predicted. “But as inflation is tamed and the market settles out, I think medical office will be one of the winners.”

Stabilizing Market

Some observers anticipate a rebound in investment sales activity this year as debt markets stabilize. After some fluctuation during the fall and winter, the yield on the 10-year Treasury reached nearly 4 percent by the end of February. That has generally translated into interest rates between 5.5 percent and 7 percent or more for medical office. Some lenders had reached capacity as last year drew to a close, but lending has ticked up with new allocations for 2023, reported Warren Hitchcock, senior vice president & managing director with Northmarq.

At the same time, the amount of leverage available has dwindled. But some developers can still find favorable terms. A year ago, Hitchcock secured bank financing for 85 percent of cost for a project that was more than 80 percent preleased. Later in the year, a similar deal still managed to muster a loan for 75 percent of cost.

“Not every lender understands medical office,” Hitchcock added. “But the lenders that do know it and understand it are aggressive on it.”

Lender Interest Grows

“Indeed, just as medical office space is attracting a wider group in investors, more lenders are gravitating toward it,” said Lee Asher, vice chairman with CBRE’s Healthcare and Life Sciences Capital Markets. “Among other attractions, medical tenants deliver solid rent coverage thanks to strong earnings before rent costs and other expenses. What’s more, rent makes up only 5 percent of operating expenses for medical tenants, which is typically much lower than occupiers in other property categories. Because physicians want to remain near their patients, tenant retention also tends to be high.”

Meanwhile, on the equity side, medical office assets that come to the market are still fetching multiple offers even though some buyers are still on the sidelines, reported John Chun, a managing director on JLL’s Capital Markets team. But to those investors who are active, the retreat of treasury rates along with a decline in corporate bond spreads and SOFR swap rates (secured financing overnight rate) are providing more certainty to the market than was present just a few months ago.

“It’s still a very fluid and liquid market,” Chun said. “And we’re starting to see all-in interest rates decrease to a level that should benefit medical office deals this year.”

 

Source: Commercial Property Executive

AEW JV Acquires Eight Medical Buildings In Seven States Across The Southern And Midwestern U.S.

A joint venture between AEW Capital Management and Flagship Healthcare Trust have completed the acquisition of eight medical buildings totaling 145,561 square feet in seven states across the Southern and Midwestern U.S. in a series of compounding transactions.

The purchase was financed through a loan by Fifth Third Bank, who had secured a senior credit facility for the buyers. Following the acquisition, Flagship will provide property and asset management services for the portfolio.

The facilities, which consist entirely of ambulatory surgery centers, are located in Texas, Arizona, Michigan, Illinois, Missouri, Tennessee and Florida. Nearly all of the tenants leasing space within the portfolio specialize in health care, with three quarters of them in top five national surgery centers and health systems.

Two of the properties in the portfolio include the Kleimen Evangelista Eye Center, located at 350 E Interstate 20 in Arlington, Texas, and the Joliet Surgery Center, located at 998 129th Infantry Dr. in Joliet, Ill.

The Kleiman Evangelista Eye Center was built in 2015, and was previously owned by the Inland Real Estate Group, who had purchased it in 2017, according to CommercialEdge information. The property totals 27,500 square feet and is fully occupied by a leading Texas ophthalmology provider. Situated the Interstate 20 highway, the facility can be quickly accesses by patients throughout the suburbs of Arlington, as well as the larger Dallas-Fort Worth area.

Fifth Third Bank Executive Managing Director Michael Perillo oversaw the financing of the transaction.

The Medical Office Mires

Health-care and life science facilities remain a resilient commercial real estate investment, with investors eager to get their hands on these properties. The sector recorded more than $2.9 billion in transactions in the second quarter of 2022, according to data from a report from the Brown Gibbons Lang & Co. While that marks a slight decrease from the $3.3 billion in the same period of 2021, it significantly outranks activity in other office markets.

Market Street Health Properties and Sixth Street recently created a platform to invest $300 million in medical office buildings around the nation.

 

Source: Commercial Property Executive

Nation’s Top MOB Markets Include Texas And The Midwest, And They Just Keep Growing

Medical office buildings have proven to be a resilient asset class through the pandemic.

That’s because most tenants require these spaces to treat patients in person, providing a more stable tenant base for the asset class. And yet, these buildings are in short supply across the U.S.

Why? The buildings are more complicated to operate than a traditional office space—and more complicated to build—but investment in these facilities is growing, especially in Texas and the Midwest.

Using data provided by CRE research and listing platform CommercialEdge, 42Floors looked at the 25 biggest CRE markets across the U.S. and analyzed MOB construction activity between 2012 and 2021 to see how the asset class has gained interest for investment firms.

Overall, the top 25 medical office space markets in the U.S. grew 13% since 2012, adding more than 52.7 million square feet. Breaking it down, Los Angeles led the country for MOB square footage with more than 1,000 MOBs totaling more than 41 million square feet, which is far more than any other single market in the country, according to 42Floors.

That said, Houston ranked the second-largest MOB market in the U.S., which added 4.3 million square feet of medical office space over the decade, growing 15% to its current total of just over 33 million square feet. Dallas-Fort Worth, too, saw similar growth, based on the report, landing next on the list, adding 4.6 million square feet to its current 33-million-square-foot medical office footprint—16% growth since 2012.

Lower-tier markets with aging populations also saw some of the most growth during the decade, based on the report, like the Twin Cities. Minneapolis-St. Paul ranked No. 15 in the U.S. with 231 buildings totaling nearly 16 million square feet but has grown 24% in the last 10 years, adding three million square feet. That’s almost as much as was added in Los Angeles during the same period, which can be attributed to the city’s always-expanding 65-and-older demographic.

Finally, 42Floors found that Chicago’s market consisted of 28.8 million square feet across 427 buildings—the fourth largest MOB market. Chicago added more than 4.3 million square feet of medical office space and experienced 18% growth since 2012.

As for current developments in the Midwest, Chicago, Madison, Wis.; and Milwaukee will see three large projects delivered within the next two years:

• Chicago’s Joan & Paul Rubschlager Building at Rush (480,000 square feet) will be completed in Q3 of 2022;

• The Eastpark Medical Center in Madison (469,000 square feet) will be completed in Q1 of 2024;

• ThriveOn King in Milwaukee (455,000 square feet) will be completed in Q4 of 2023.

These three buildings will add more than 1.4 million square feet of medical office space to the region, based on the report.

 

Source: RE Journals