Your Guide to Retirement Living:  Home | Senior | Director | Vendor | Job Seeker | Health Professional | Contact Us
A complete guide to retirement homes, retirement communities, and retirement living in the United States and Canada. A complete guide to retirement homes, retirement communities, and retirement living in the United States and Canada.

Retirement News !

Retirement News : Seniors : Skilled Nursing and Assisted Living Facility Prices Soar in 2004 ...

Skilled Nursing and Assisted Living Facility Prices Soar in 2004 ...

Date Added: 10-03-2005

After a five-year period when
many of the national skilled nursing and assisted living facility companies
suffered through bankruptcies, over-building and the divestiture of many
underperforming properties, the senior care acquisition market finally broke
out of the doldrums with surging demand pushing prices to new levels,
according to a report to be published by Irving Levin Associates, Inc., a
research and publishing firm that tracks mergers and acquisitions in the
seniors housing and health care markets.
    The average sales price paid for skilled nursing facilities in 2004
reached a 10-year high of  $44,600 per bed, according to Levin's report, The
Senior Care Acquisition Report, Tenth Edition.  This represented an increase
of more than 40% compared with 2003, when the average price per bed hit a 10-
year low.  The median price per bed increased by 34% to $36,000 per bed in
2004.
    "The sharp jump in the average price per bed was the result of an increase
in higher quality, more profitable nursing facilities coming on to the market
in the past year.  With higher Medicare rates in place, the value of most
nursing facilities increased," stated Stephen M. Monroe, editor of the Report.
"Excluding the plunge in prices in 2003, the average and median increased in
2004 by 16% and 1%, respectively, over the levels in 2002," continued Mr.
Monroe.
    In the assisted living market, the average price paid per unit rose by 31%
in 2004 to just over $95,000 per unit, while the median jumped by a more
modest 18% to $75,000 per unit.  The increase in the average price comes on
top of an 11% increase in 2003.  "Just like the skilled nursing side of the
business, higher quality, newer and stabilized assisted living facilities came
on the market in 2004, and buyers pounced, driving up per-unit prices,"
commented Mr. Monroe.  "This class of real estate is becoming more acceptable
to institutional investors, who are snatching up the better quality properties
in search of higher yields than other real estate types."
    In the independent living market, the average price paid decreased to
$71,500 per unit in a market mostly defined by the absence of quality
communities for sale.  "The independent living acquisition market is actually
quite strong from the demand side, but many of the sellers of high-end
properties remained on the sidelines last year," stated Mr. Monroe.

    The Senior Care Acquisition Report, Tenth Edition, contains statistics on
the nursing home, assisted living and retirement housing merger and
acquisition market, including prices per bed or unit, capitalization rates and
income multiples, in more than 100 pages.  The statistics are based on more
than $1.3 billion of seniors housing asset sales in 2004.  It also includes
transaction information on each of the publicly announced senior care, home
health care and hospice acquisitions in 2004.

For More Information: http://www.prnewswire.com/cgi-bin/stories.pl?ACCT=109&STORY=/www/story/03-09-2005/0003159516&EDATE=


 

 

 

 



Google

WWW RetirementHomes.com
© RetirementHomes.com 2004. All rights reserved. Retirement Homes & Communities - USA/Canada