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Financing structures may have fixed interest rates, lock borrowers out of prepaying debt or lock them into debt covenants. Yet a property's strategic plans, the local and national economies, and other internal and external credit factors are far from fixed or locked. Changes in the markets, in the financial sector itself, or to the property can provide impetus to update a debt structure through a refinance.
So when the closing documents are signed and placed on a shelf, the next step in a financing may be to watch out for refinancing opportunities. A senior living provider that conscientiously evaluates the lending landscape will create opportunities to improve its current financial position and its future financial flexibility. Identifying these opportunities requires understanding why a property might refinance.
REDUCE INTEREST RATE
The cost of borrowing is most obviously expressed by the interest rate paid on debt, making it one of the easiest opportunities to see. Refinancing a $10 million, 30-year loan from 7.5 percent to 6.5 percent would save $2.4 million in interest over the life of the loan, or $1 million in today's dollars given a present value discount of 3 percent, all other elements remaining equal. Despite market turmoil, interest rates remain at attractive levels.
CHANGE AMORTIZATION
Reducing debt service payments through a longer amortization can free up funds for other projects. Improving cash flow and liquidity can positively impact the financial ratios that contribute to an organization's ability to access future capital. Properties financed with federal programs will have to ensure that any use of debt service savings complies with the program.
MITIGATE RISK
Campuses that provide services at multiple levels of care may benefit from insulating facilities with higher operational risk by carving them into separate debt elements. Lenders perceive certain facilities as riskier than others, meaning that those facilities will be financed at higher interest rates. If a campus has properties of varying risk financed together in one portfolio, the higher-risk elements may drive up the interest rate on the entire debt structure.
For example, a continuing care retirement community may choose to separate, or carve out, the financing of a nursing facility that depends on governmental reimbursement from the financing of an independent living community with private-pay residents. Similarly, a community with one building with lower occupancy may choose to finance that building separately.
Refinancing with federal mortgage insurance through the Department of Housing and Urban Development can be particularly appealing in this situation. Depending on their goals, borrowers may choose the HUD/FHA Section 232 program for new construction or substantial rehabilitation, or the Section 232/223(f) program for refinancing or acquiring existing projects that do not require substantial rehabilitation. Both are non-recourse, meaning that neither the property owner nor the campus as a whole would be financially liable for debt carved out under the program.
EXTRACT EQUITY
Multi-facility owners may want to refinance to take advantage of high senior living valuations and low interest rates. By refinancing through an equity extraction program, owners of stabilized long-term care facilities can leverage up their properties without restriction on the use of the funds.
One such program allows borrowers to borrow up to 85 percent of a property's value at interest rates comparable to those available from local banks, which may allow leverage up to only 75 percent before an additional, higher-interest mezzanine financing loan is required. Private programs specifically designed for equity extraction allow borrowers to achieve in one loan a leverage level that would usually require two. This reduction in administrative burden is compounded if owners choose to leverage up multiple properties.
Equity extraction can facilitate additional investment in existing properties, provide capital for new construction projects, or be otherwise used as the owner desires.
Senior living valuations remain at high levels and demand for services is anticipated to continue increasing. But with the unstable market conditions of 2008 and uncertainty about the market direction in 2009, it can be difficult to access capital to develop or renovate projects to meet this need. Extracting equity from existing properties can help savvy multi-property owners use their existing facilities as a financial resource to facilitate future development.
CHANGE COVENANTS
Debt covenants are minimum financial requirements that a borrower agrees to with a lender. The lender may require that the property maintain a certain liquidity or coverage ratios, for example. Dropping below the agreed-upon levels may trigger a default and may result in increased fees and more onerous requirements. Weaker credits typically face stricter debt covenants to protect investors against default. Strict debt covenants can severely hamper a senior living campus, impeding its ability to spend on renovation or otherwise hindering flexibility.
As a property's credit profile changes, however, it may be able refinance with new and more accommodating terms. For example, improved occupancy following a renovation may improve the credit profile. A change in the bank's financial situation, too, may give a property leverage to ease the clauses attached to its financial structure. Short of a complete refinance, a property also may be able to renegotiate covenants with the existing lender.
If a letter of credit structure is being used, a replacement letter of credit, or renewing through a different bank, also could ease debt covenants without a complete refinance. With the Federal Home Loan Bank's ability to back member community banks' letters of credit, borrowers now have the option to seek credit enhancement from local banks, rather than only from highly-rated regional or national banks that may be hesitant to extend credit enhancements in this tumultuous market.
Be wary, however, in tight credit markets: covenants may actually be stricter on a new debt issuance. In these markets, HUD, again, can often offer less restrictive financial covenants, but they come with federal oversight.
CHANGE THE STRUCTURE
Sometimes, though rarely, macro issues within the capital markets can cause a financial structure to become very inefficient, as evidenced in early 2008 when the auction-rate bond market failed. Many borrowers that used these structures were forced to refinance to reduce interest rates that had spiked to as high as 15 to 20 percent when the auctions failed. Also in 2008, some local banks called their term loans to raise cash, causing long-term care facilities to seek refinancing options. A balloon payment also may prompt a refinance, where the property has a large lump sum to pay off in a short period of time.
Beyond changing the financing structure, senior living borrowers may also use refinances to change the organization of the campus itself. Refinancing can combine multiple buildings or properties under a single debt issuance, reducing administrative burden. Refinancing also can untie collateral that may be obligated in a debt issuance. If a property has expanded several times, but all new construction was obligated to old debt, a refinance can separate that collateral from the debt obligation, allowing it to be obligated toward future financings. This can help properties prepare for future projects by improving the campus' liquidity position and making collateral available for new debt.
ADDITIONAL CONSIDERATIONS
Borrowers should not consider themselves pinned into a structure once it is in place. In fact, most debt issuances are either refinanced or paid off early rather than being carried to term. But refinancing costs money, and that cost depends on the financial strategy used. HUD costs can be as much as 3 to 5 percent of the refinance and this money must be paid up front. Non-federal programs may have lower up-front costs, but may not offer the covenant flexibility or long-term fixed interest rates of HUD. The property's goals, financial strength, bank position and general market conditions all will affect the efficiency of refinancing.
Constant evaluation of the property's long-term and short-term goals, and regular conversations with attorneys and investment bankers familiar with market conditions, will help borrowers shift their strategies to take advantage of market conditions, and internal and external credit factors.
Kass Matt is a vice president with Lancaster Pollard, an investment banking, mortgage banking and investment advisory. Contact Matt (614) 224-8800 or kmatt@lancasterpollard.com.
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