Retrades have become a relatively common occurrence
in seniors housing M&A.
For those
readers who are fortunate enough to have not experienced this, a retrade is
renegotiating the agreed upon purchase price - oftentimes at the point after
the buyer has completed due diligence and earnest money is about to become
non-refundable.
Retrades are often
linked to some unexpected decline in census or performance, or findings in the
physical plant which will require major expense.
These retrades are much easier to negotiate
than the times a buyer asks for a reduced price and it appears that they didn’t
do their homework on the front end, or never planned on following through on
their offer price which secured the deal.
There are two hurdles that
retrades create:
1.
Seller’s
Sales Expectations: If we are under contract on a facility for $12 million
and before closing the buyer asks for a retrade down to $10.5 million and the
deal falls apart, the Seller will never forget that at one time their facility
was “worth” $12 million, even if all the other market feedback was $10-10.5 million.
The original buyer set an unrealistic sales
expectation that can be very difficult to duplicate.
2.
Wasted
Time: When a buyer retrades to a
lower price, oftentimes our firm already had multiple offers in that lower
range, only now we may be closing in on year-end or other deadlines and/or both
sides have a significant investment into the deal.
What does this
mean for Sellers?
One benefit of working
with Senior Living Investment Brokerage is to utilize our knowledge of who
closes deals at or near the original terms and who “ties” deals up.
However, too many times the reason we have to
deal with a retrade is because the seller “took their hands off the wheel” once
the deal was under contract.
A Seller
needs to run the community as if they weren’t selling- right up until the day
of closing.
What does this
mean for Buyers?
We have already
experienced clients who request that potential buyers put up non-refundable
earnest money at the time of signing the LOI.
That doesn’t fly in today’s market, but we can see things moving that
direction, even if only a “token” amount is non-refundable.
As more and more buyers enter the market,
sellers are looking for ways to differentiate between Lookers and Closers.
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