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Uneven seniors housing recovery takes shape

Is the seniors housing market stabilizing? The latest data offers conflicting signals as occupancies continue to decline while rents cling to slightly positive gains, according to newly released figures from the National Investment Center for the Seniors Housing & Care Industry (NIC).

Construction activity continues to slow, which could mean higher occupancies ahead. Still, it may take several more quarters to burn off excess inventory. A big supply of new buildings in some metros could be a drag on those markets for the remainder of the year.

“We're looking at a choppy recovery,” says Michael Hargrave, vice president of NIC based in Annapolis, Md.

Occupancies at seniors housing properties had mostly been falling since the first quarter of 2007. But occupancies turned up unexpectedly in the third quarter of 2009, hitting 88.5% across the top 31 markets tracked by NIC and raising hopes that a recovery was under way. Then occupancies fell again in the fourth quarter to 88.2%, according to the latest NIC report.

All property types suffered an occupancy decline in the fourth quarter. Occupancies at independent living buildings fell to 88.2% compared with 88.5% in the third quarter. Assisted living occupancies fell by 10 basis points to 88.2%. Nursing homes saw the biggest fourth-quarter decline to 88.7% from 89.1% in the previous quarter.

Absorption remains fickle

The occupancy dip came with a slowdown in demand. Some 950 units were absorbed in the quarter, about average for the sector. But in the third quarter, 3,978 units were absorbed. “That's huge,” says Hargrave.

The big number could be due to pent-up demand from seniors who no longer could put off a move, he adds. But that doesn't explain why demand dropped in the fourth quarter. Hargrave says it's up for debate how strong demand will be in the months ahead.

New inventory also pushed occupancies lower. About 2,300 units were added in the fourth quarter, far outstripping demand. “This is a bottom-finding process,” notes Hargrave.

The construction pipeline is emptying, however, which should help boost occupancies going forward. There are about 8,700 new units under way, equal to about 1.8% of the existing inventory.

By comparison, in the first quarter of 2008 there were 20,000 units under way, or 4.2% of the existing inventory. “Supply will not be as much of a challenge this year as it was in the last few years,” says Hargrave.

Bucking the trend

But some markets will struggle with too much seniors housing, including Denver, Atlanta, Dallas, Boston and Portland, Ore. Developers typically target cities with high population growth rates and few barriers to entry.

In Denver, the percentage of new construction to existing inventory hit a high of 31.7% in the first quarter of 2008. Denver's current occupancy rate at independent living buildings is 83.5%. Markets with a lot of new construction may not hit bottom until the third or fourth quarter. “It's clear that some markets are under more stress,” says Hargrave.

About 47% of building operators did not raise rents in the fourth quarter, but asking rents overall are up slightly. Year-over-year asking rents at independent buildings rose 1.6% to $2,659 a month. Assisted living rents are up 1.7% to $3,536.

Nursing home rents rose 3% to an average of $7,830 a month. “The good news is that rents are growing,” says Hargrave.

Seniors housing compares well to other commercial real estate sectors, says Hargrave, citing the MBA Quarterly Data Book that shows a decline of asking rents at office and multifamily properties.

According to a third-quarter 2009 report by the National Council of Real Estate Investment Fiduciaries (NCREIF), its database of seniors housing properties has outperformed the NCREIF Property Index (NPI) of all property types both for income and appreciation for more than five years. Total returns for seniors housing over the last six years is 14.43%, compared with 7.18% for the NPI.

Seniors housing has been resilient during the recession because older people who need help often must move into a building with services, notes Hargrave. “Seniors housing could turn out to be a defensive investment in tough times.”

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