(Reuters) - The second-largest
U.S. nursing home operator, HCR ManorCare, will file for Chapter 11
protection in the coming days and transfer ownership to its landlord,
Quality Care Properties Inc (QCP.N), the latest sign of distress in the senior housing industry.
Quality
Care, a real estate investment trust, announced the agreement on
Friday, saying it would become the full owner of Toledo, Ohio-based
ManorCare’s skilled nursing, assisted living, hospice and homecare
businesses across the United States.
Shares of Quality Care, which will give up its REIT status, jumped 23.4 percent to $15.55 on the New York Stock Exchange.
HCR
ManorCare had owed its landlord more than $300 million in rent,
according to regulatory filings. It is one of several large U.S. nursing
home chains that have struggled to keep up with rent payments due to
changing Medicaid and Medicare reimbursements for nursing homes, rising
costs and low occupancy rates.
“This
agreement facilitates a consensual resolution that provides stability
and flexibility for the business. We see this as the best available
opportunity to improve a challenging situation,” Quality Care Chief
Executive Mark Ordan said.
Reuters first reported the deal, citing sources, earlier on Friday.
ManorCare is owned by private equity firm Carlyle Group (CG.O),
which bought the chain in a 2007 leveraged buyout for $6.3 billion. In a
move to unlock value, it sold the properties to real estate investment
trust HCP Inc (HCP.N) for $6.1 billion in 2010.
HCP
spun off the ManorCare properties to Quality Care in 2016 as a sector
downturn made it difficult for HCR ManorCare to keep up rent payments
agreed under a master lease.
“The lease had very real implications on HCR’s health and
ability to deal with the headwinds that the industry is facing,” Fitch
analyst Britton Costa said.
HCR ManorCare’s Chapter 11
filing will not impact patient care or the operations of its
subsidiaries, which are not filing for bankruptcy, its landlord said in a
statement.
Quality Care will put its own management
team in place at ManorCare after bankruptcy court approval, which is
expected in the second quarter. The companies did not provide any
financial details as part of the deal, which is expected to close in the
third quarter.
Full Article & Source:
Nursing home chain HCR ManorCare to sell itself in bankruptcy
1 comment:
This doesn't sound good to me.
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