Meet the Decision-Makers, Make Connections

In a new an era of delivering community and care to seniors, no other industry event offers the level of access like the 2022 NIC Spring Conference.

2022 NIC Spring Conference: Care & Housing for Older Adults | March 23-March 25, Omni Dallas Hotel

As the sector enters a new era of delivering community and care to a growing -and aging- population of older adults, no other industry event offers the level of access to decision-makers, ideas, and connections that you need to be successful like you’ll find at the 2022 NIC Spring Conference.
Senior housing and care executives represent ~70% of attendees who will be convening in Dallas this March to explore new models of community and care, build strategic partnerships and business opportunities as they shape a new era.

Operators will be looking for efficiencies, labor solutions and innovation, while capital providers will be looking for deals. Healthcare and services providers will be looking for potential new partnerships or acquisition opportunities.

Not Yet Registered?

Act now to ensure you have a seat at the table! Register and view conference details to jump start your planning. Your registration confirmation email will provide details to reserve your hotel accommodations at the Dallas Omni. Register before the Early Bird deadline of January 26, to save! [Note: Registrations must be received by the NIC Registrar no later than January 26 at 11:59 PM ET to qualify for Early Bird savings.]

To review the professional categories for registration, please visit our rates and registration page.

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Networking and Connections

This year’s Spring Conference offers an array of networking resources—designed to help attendees focus on what matters most to them—developing connections and new business partnerships to keep your business ahead of the curve.

First Time Attending a NIC Spring Conference? Jump right in!

This is your chance to network with fellow first-time attendees, meet NIC Leadership, and hear tips on how to make the most of your experience—before, during, and after the conference.

Prior to the conference, first-time attendees are invited to a webinar designed to help navigate the event and the conference’s mobile app, which gives attendees access to the Attendee Listing, the “who’s who” of industry leaders. The conference mobile app offers an array of helpful resources, including floor maps, speaker bios, and Meet-Up points to help get to your meetings on time.

At the conference, attendees are invited to join the First-time Attendee gathering to hear directly from and meet NIC senior staff and volunteer leaders.

Braindate® – Another Efficient Way to Connect, Network, and Learn

Back by popular demand are Braindates®, 1-on-1 or small group conversations that provide attendees additional opportunities to network and connect with peers and new acquaintances. Available beginning Tuesday, March 1, registered attendees will be able to download the Braindate® app, where they can sign up to facilitate a discussion related to topics based on areas of expertise or interests and browse other Braindate® discussions they’d like to participate in. Look for notifications from NIC soon.

 

Inform Your Strategy with Stand-Alone, Not-to-be-Missed Educational Sessions

The NIC Spring Conference educational sessions have been carefully curated to offer relevant, timely, and actionable programming—to help capital providers, operators, and their partners in care and services stay on top of where the industry is headed, and where their opportunities lie today, as they adjust and adapt to markets experiencing rapid change and disruption.

Stand-alone sessions span all three days of the conference, with formats including keynote and panel presentations, and more intimate facilitated deep dive and peer-to-peer small group discussions.

Featuring admired experts and respected business leaders, topics will include:

  • Building Back Occupancy
  • How to Increase NOI
  • Policy and Macroeconomic Outlook
  • Service Markets for Older Adults
  • The Middle Market
  • Equity and Debt Financing
  • Active Adult
  • Staffing and Labor

Check our 2022 NIC Spring Conference website frequently for program updates—including speaker announcements and exciting details regarding discussion formats. Make sure to sign up for emails and important notifications from NIC.

We’ll see YOU at “The NIC.”

March 23-March 25
Dallas Omni, Dallas, TX
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U.S. Jobless Rate Falls to 3.9% in December

The Labor Department reported that the jobless rate fell 0.3 percentage point to 3.9% in December, down 2.8 percentage points from year-earlier levels.

The Labor Department reported that the jobless rate fell 0.3 percentage point to 3.9% in December, down 2.8 percentage points from year-earlier levels. The jobless rate is now 0.4 percentage points above the pre-pandemic level of 3.5% seen in February 2020, and well below the 14.7% peak seen in April 2020.

The supply of labor as measured by the labor force rose by 168,000 in December, while household measure of employment rose by more than 651,000 in December. These factors pushed the jobless rate lower to 3.9%. This rate is below the Fed’s estimate of its longer-term unemployment equilibrium level.

Concerns about rising wage costs are supported by this report. Average hourly earnings for all employees on private nonfarm payrolls rose by $0.19 in December to $31.31, a gain of 4.7% from a year earlier.
2022-01-07 07_57_12-Civilian unemployment rate

The household survey data supports the Fed’s view that the labor market is at or close to maximum employment and will provide further evidence that a shift in monetary policy away from being accommodative to a more restrictive stance is appropriate. Indeed, at its most recent and final meeting of the year in December, the Fed changed course sharply as it shifted away from dovish policies of low interest rates and Quantitative Easing (QE) to support overall growth to one that is more hawkish to deliberately fight inflation by slowing its monthly bond buying program and raising interest rates. Reflecting this new tone, it is likely that the Fed will raise short-term interest rates in 2022, possibly three times and further in 2023. The Fed’s bond buying program will also “taper” much more quickly than initially announced, meaning that purchases could now end in February 2022 or sooner, thereby doing less to stimulate the economy which would theoretically and eventually slow price gains as demand wanes. The exact timing depends upon when officials judge the labor market is back at “maximum employment,” with Fed Chair Jerome Powell arguing that the economy has made “rapid progress” towards that goal. The December jobs report will add evidence that this goal has been achieved or is very close to being achieved.

Separately and from a different survey, the Labor Department reported that nonfarm payrolls rose by 199,000 in December 2021. The consensus had been for an increase of 447,000. This was a sharp slowdown from October when jobs increased by 648,000 (originally reported as 546,000) and from November when jobs grew by an upwardly revised 249,000 (originally reported as 210,000). On average, job growth averaged 537,000 in 2021. Nonfarm payrolls have now increased by 18.8 million since their pandemic trough in April 2020 but are still down by 3.6 million or 2.3% from their pre-pandemic level in February 2020.

The potential negative impact of the newly identified omicron variant on jobs is likely not reflected in the December data because the survey week occurred prior to the big surge in omicron-linked cases. But the data show that the labor market continues to be affected by the delta variant especially in the service sector. Indeed, leisure and hospitality payrolls edged up by a muted 54,000, following large gains of 200,000 per month earlier in the year.
2022-01-07 08_01_39-Employment by industry, monthly changes

Health care lost 3,100 jobs in December. And within health care, nursing and residential care facilities lost 6,100 jobs. Losses were offset by gains in residential mental health facilities. Jobs have been on the decline in nursing care since 2011.

The underemployment rate or the U-6 jobless rate was 7.3%, down from 7.7% in November 2021. This figure includes those who have quit looking for a job because they are discouraged about their prospects and people working part-time but desiring a full work week.

The labor force participation rate was unchanged at 61.9% in December but remains 1.5 percentage points lower than in February 2020. The employment to population ratio increased by 0.1 percentage point to 59.5% in December but is 1.7 percentage points below its February 2020 level.

Utilizing Dementia Medicare Data for More Informed Underwriting

The aging U.S. population and growing incidence of dementia make understanding the local prevalence of this disease important for planning senior housing.

The aging of the U.S. population and the growing incidence of dementia make understanding the local prevalence of this disease more important than ever for planning senior housing projects.

Data show that degenerative brain diseases such as Alzheimer’s are more prevalent in certain parts of the country than others and understanding these patterns can make feasibility analyses more precise and reliable as well as allow for a better targeting of supply and demand. This blog presents selected portions of a longer analysis that we’ve published as a white paper. Analysis was conducted using NIC MAP Vision data.

Memory Care – Memory care is a senior housing product type that is specifically designed for residents with dementia. Properties where memory care is offered may have a secured/locked environment, design features that highlight sunlight, staff that has specialized training about dementia, spaces where residents can move about safely, and interactive activity stations for residents, among other features. Memory care in this article uses the segment type designation from NIC MAP, meaning that the inventory used in this analysis are memory care units that can be located at any type of property.

Memory Care Medicare Beneficiary Penetration Rate – For this analysis, the memory care Medicare beneficiary penetration rate is calculated as the sum of the number of memory care units in a market divided by the total number of Medicare beneficiaries with Alzheimer’s or dementia in that market.

Total Medicare Beneficiaries with Alzheimer’s or Dementia – The total Medicare beneficiaries with Alzheimer’s or dementia in a market area. These data are sourced from the Medicare Chronic Conditions Data Warehouse. NIC MAP Vision has access to these data from Medicare, and these data points are tied to the geographic location of the beneficiary. These data are accessible at a local level in the Vision LTC portal and are as of 2019, which is the most recent vintage of data available.

The number of people diagnosed with dementia is projected to grow

The number of people in the United States estimated to have Alzheimer’s disease in 2021 is 6.25 million, which is projected to grow to 7.16 million in 2025 and reach 12.73 million in 2050.2 Barring major medical breakthroughs like finding a cure for dementia, this means that the pool of potential residents for memory care is expected to see major increases in the coming years.

Methodology

NIC MAP Vision provides Vision LTC subscribers with data from Medicare in the Vision LTC portal. These data are provided to NIC MAP Vision by Medicare in a process where the individual beneficiaries are kept anonymous. As discussed in a recent NIC Insider interview with Beth Mace and Arick Morton, CEO of NIC MAP Vision, underwriters no longer have to rely on national or state level data on dementia and can utilize local data when planning a product offering or evaluating a market.

This analysis focuses on the 31 NIC MAP Primary Markets. We looked at the number of dementia Medicare beneficiaries as a share of the population over 65 in each of the metro areas to investigate differing rates of dementia in local geographic population cohorts. Although most senior housing feasibility studies typically use older populations as a measure of potential demand, 65 is the current age at which someone can qualify for Medicare. In order to not overestimate the possible number of dementia or Alzheimer’s Medicare Beneficiaries in relation to the population in the selected metropolitan areas, this analysis uses population 65+.

Using memory care segment supply data from NIC MAP and dementia Medicare beneficiaries data from Vision LTC, we also calculate how many memory care units there are per dementia Medicare beneficiaries in each of the metropolitan markets.

Selected findings from the white paper

There are differing levels of dementia incidence by metro area and differing levels of inventory, meaning there may be imbalances in some markets and not in others, and individual markets may have varying levels of need as well as utilization of memory care units (as measured by occupancy rates). This finding may also extend to more granular areas than at the metro level.

Dementia Medicare beneficiaries by metro area

Dementia Medicare beneficiaries are not evenly distributed across the U.S. Some markets have notably higher proportions of dementia Medicare beneficiaries than others. The Miami, FL metro area has the largest share of dementia Medicare beneficiaries as a share of the population 65+ at 16.6%. Detroit has the second highest level of dementia Medicare beneficiaries as a share of the total population 65+ at 13.4%. At the other end of the spectrum are Portland Oregon, Phoenix and Seattle, all less than 8.0%. The white paper provides further information for this portion of the analysis.

MC unit per MB and occ

Memory care units per Medicare beneficiary

Juxtaposing the need for dementia care by metropolitan market against the supply of memory care units shows that there are supply/demand gaps. For example, while Miami has the highest need for dementia care as measured by its large share of beneficiaries with dementia, it has the second lowest number of memory care units per dementia Medicare beneficiary at 1.52%. Detroit also ranks low in the number of memory care units per dementia Medicare beneficiary at 3.1%, the sixth lowest of the 31 Primary Markets.

Both Miami (72.5% occupancy) and Detroit (72.1% occupancy) face pressured memory care occupancy in the third quarter of 2021. Atlanta has the lowest memory care occupancy of the 31 Primary Markets at 70.9%. Portland has the highest memory care occupancy of the Primary Markets at 84.1%. While occupancy is likely still recovering from pandemic lows, San Francisco (83.7%), San Jose (83.6%), and Minneapolis (82.1%) also have relatively high memory care occupancies among the Primary Markets. The Primary Markets has a memory care segment occupancy of 76.8%, with 16 metros of the 31 metros below the average and 15 metros above.

Additional metros are explored in more detail and additional graphs are reported in the white paper analysis. We encourage NIC Notes readers to download the full paper.

Conclusions

Understanding local incidences of dementia can help inform plans for new projects or expansions. This analysis demonstrates that there are local variations in both the availability of memory care supply and of the dementia Medicare beneficiaries in the Primary Markets.

This analysis also  demonstrates that there are metros where there are higher levels of memory care units available to serve dementia Medicare beneficiaries, and there are other metros where there are many dementia Medicare beneficiaries and proportionately lower levels of supply available. This analysis is at the metropolitan market level, and deeper dives into smaller geographic regions in these metro areas could show more detailed information of local dynamics.

VisionLTC subscribers can use the VisionLTC platform to conduct a more localized analysis, drilling down into smaller market areas.

Selected caveats and limitations

This section provides some of the caveats and limitations of the analysis that the whitepaper explains in further detail. For full description of the limitations, please see the full publication. This analysis does not account for utilization rates of home care services, which may also have differing levels of popularity and utilization between markets. The analysis also does not factor in income assumptions for the dementia Medicare beneficiaries or their children (although the Vision LTC portal does have some income data available to subscribers as well for evaluating local income levels). The analysis also does not account for potential regional differences in availability and involvement of family caregivers.

There is also the possibility that some of the totals of dementia Medicare beneficiaries could have notable declines due to loss of life from the pandemic when the data are updated with 2020 figures, as we know many older people with dementia have been severely impacted by the virus. As a result, some of the penetration rates of memory care units per dementia Medicare beneficiaries may be understated here compared to what the 2020 numbers may be due to declines from loss of life from COVID-19.

The NIC MAP Metro areas and the Vision LTC metro areas may not have the exact same geographic boundaries for all metro areas, though they should generally be the same or very similar. This is because the two services use different years of the Census’ boundaries for metros. Visual inspection of the boundaries for each of the Primary Markets did not illustrate notable differences at time of writing, but this difference may be important for any future analysis on a smaller market outside of the Primary Markets.

Sources

1 Alzheimer’s Association

2 Rajan KB, Weuve J, Barnes LL, McAninch EA, Wilson RS, Evans DA. Population estimate of people with clinical AD and mild cognitive impairment in the United States (2020-2060). Alzheimer’s Dement. 2021; 1-10.

VisionLTC, powered by NIC MAP Vision

NIC MAP, powered by NIC MAP Vision 

Low Level of Skilled Nursing Occupancy Persists in October

Skilled nursing property occupancy increased 28 basis points in October to 75.4%, reversing a similarly- sized decline in September.

“In many parts of the country the occupancy challenge is not a demand issue, but a labor supply issue” – Bill Kauffman

NIC MAP® Data Service, powered by NIC MAP Vision, released its latest Skilled Nursing Monthly Report on December 30, 2021. The report includes key monthly data points from January 2012 through October 2021.
Here are some key takeaways from the report:

Skilled nursing property occupancy increased 28 basis points in October to 75.4%, reversing a similarly- sized decline in September. The occupancy rate is now 382 basis points above the low point reached in January 2021 (71.6%.) The cautious optimism for a recovery in occupancy at the beginning of 2021 was challenged by the rapid spread of the contagious COVID-19 Delta variant over the summer. Another factor that became more evident as 2021 progressed was the severe labor shortage in the sector, which has continued to cause many properties to limit admissions and subsequently slowed the recovery in occupancy. The question remains as to how fast the industry can increase occupancy to a sustainable level as staffing shortages are likely to remain challenging in 2022. Additional challenges may be on the horizon with the arrival of the fall/winter season and as the new Omicron variant becomes dominant. Occupancy remains very low compared to February 2020 pre-pandemic levels of 85.8% (10.4 percentage points.)

SNF Occupancy Blog Slide - October 2021_cropped

 

Managed Medicare revenue per patient day (RPPD) resumed its downtrend in October and fell 0.2% to $448.69. It is now down 3.3% from year-earlier levels and has been declining since NIC began reporting this data in 2012. This persistent decline in managed Medicare RPPD continues to result in an expanded reimbursement differential between Medicare fee-for-service and managed Medicare, which has accelerated during the pandemic. Medicare fee-for-service RPPD ended October 2021 at $570.25 and managed Medicare ended at $448.69, representing a $121.57 difference. Pre-pandemic, in February of 2020, the differential was $96. Meanwhile, Managed Medicare revenue mix held relatively steady from September to October at 10.4%. It is down from its 2021 high of 11.2% in February but is up from the pandemic low set in May 2020 of 8.4%. Managed Medicare admissions to skilled nursing properties have increased from pandemic lows when elective surgeries were suspended, but they are likely lower than before the pandemic.

Medicare revenue mix increased from September to October. However, it has also been trending down since January 2021, dropping 455 basis points to 20.2%. This suggests that utilization of the 3-Day Rule waiver fell as COVID-19 cases declined relative to the month of January. The 3-Day Rule waiver was implemented by Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) to eliminate the need to transfer positive COVID-19 patients back to the hospital to qualify for a Medicare-paid skilled nursing stay, hence increasing the Medicare census at properties. Medicare RPPD increased from $566 in September to $570 in October. Some of this increase is likely a result of the increase in Medicare rates to skilled nursing properties for fiscal year 2022. However, it has decreased 0.8% from one year ago which is most likely due to less reimbursement needed for COVID-19 positive patients. During the pandemic, there has been support from the federal government to increase Medicare fee-for-service reimbursements for COVID-19 positive patients requiring isolation. Resident COVID-19 cases are now lower compared to October 2020, according to NIC’s Skilled Nursing COVID-19 Tracker. 

Medicaid RPPD increased from September to end October at $249. Medicaid RPPD was trending downward from January 2021 through June but started to increase in July which suggests additional reimbursement for COVID-19 positive patients as the Delta variant spread over the summer. Medicaid reimbursement has increased more than usual as many states acted to increase reimbursement related to COVID-19. This latest monthly data shows a 5.2% increase since February 2020, prior to the pandemic. Covering the cost of care for Medicaid patients is still a major concern as reimbursement does not cover the cost in many states. Nursing home wage growth is elevated, as is inflation as measured by the Consumer Price Index (CPI,) and staffing shortages are a significant challenge around the country. Expectations are that wage growth will remain elevated as staffing challenges persist into 2022.

To get more trends from the latest data download the Skilled Nursing Monthly Report. There is no charge for this report.

The report provides aggregate data at the national level from a sampling of skilled nursing operators with multiple properties in the United States. NIC continues to grow its database of participating operators to provide data at localized levels in the future. Operators who are interested in participating can complete a participation form. NIC maintains strict confidentiality of all data it receives.

Amid Uncertainty, Debt Is Available for Qualified Borrowers

Though rising inflation and a new COVID variant may cloud the recovery, the right borrowers have a variety of financing options.

Though rising inflation and a new COVID variant may cloud the recovery, the right borrowers have a variety of financing options. Traditional lenders are cautiously making loans. Government sponsored lenders are dialing back restrictions. And new debt sources are filling the capital gap, which should help boost deal-making activity going forward.

“There will be more transactions next year,” predicted Kelly Sheehy, principal and managing director, healthcare, at Artemis Real Estate Partners. “Debt will be available.”

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Sheehy and other lenders discussed debt market trends during a panel discussion at the recent 2021 NIC Fall Conference in Houston. The panel acknowledged the ongoing uncertainty around COVID-19 and its impact on the industry, along with the prospect of rising interest rates. But they were mostly upbeat that lenders and borrowers will continue to work their way through the issues with a better understanding of how to adapt to a variety of changing circumstances.

Lenders are monitoring occupancies carefully. Continuing care retirement communities and independent living properties are performing relatively well because they weren’t subjected to move-in restrictions. The assisted living and memory care segments, which had a fair amount of new inventory, are still catching up.

Nobody planned for the Delta variant which caused an occupancy slowdown. However, regions of the country with relatively high vaccination rates are experiencing higher occupancy rates in the lenders’ portfolios than those with low vaccination rates. The impact of the Omicron variant is still unclear.

Permanent financing from Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and HUD is available for the right borrowers. HUD lending totaled $3.9 billion for fiscal year 2021, only down slightly from 2020 volume. Current activity is being driven by refinancings, according to Lee Delaveris, vice president, KeyBank Real Estate Capital. He expects 2021 volume at agency lenders—Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac—to be well off 2020 numbers when year-end figures are reported in December. Though the agencies are funding some loans, Delaveris noted growing competition for the best deals from life insurance companies and community banks. “There is not a lack of capital for stabilized properties,” he said.

Panel moderator Aaron Becker, senior managing director at Lument, asked how underwriting has changed.

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“The challenge is to figure out whether the properties were performing prior to COVID to determine a new stabilization rate,” said Imran Javaid, managing director at BMO Harris Bank. “We cannot underwrite to current occupancy,” he said, explaining that a new stabilization rate is determined in collaboration with the borrower. “It’s not a hard and fast number,” he added.

In fairness to borrowers, Kelly noted that more than 1,000 new properties were delivered from 2017-2020. “Not every building got to where it needed to be pre-pandemic,” he said. That’s where debt funds have stepped in with capital.

Lenders generally require recourse loans or assurances that the borrower has access to fresh equity as a backstop. “The details are important,” said Javaid.

Experience Counts

Debt for new construction is available for borrowers with industry experience, a good track record and a reliable equity source. A big challenge, though, is the rising cost of construction. “Fewer projects are penciling out,” said Javaid.

Lenders prefer projects in barrier-to-entry markets with good demand. In most of those cases, the developer has already done the hard work of securing new project entitlements to keep the construction timeline on track.

HUD offers funding for new construction but with tighter underwriting standards. “These loans are for the experienced borrower,” said Delaveris.

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Bridge loans and mezzanine financing are available, but again for the right borrower. The route to permanent financing depends on performance, noted Delaveris. The prospect of rising interest rates should spur borrowers to seek permanent financing.

New capital flow into senior housing bode well for borrowers. Hedge funds, private equity and pension funds are offering debt, currently at rates of about 3.5-4.5%. That compares to pre-COVID rates of 5-6%, according to Kelly. “There’s been some real compression in the cost of debt for higher leveraged paper,” he said.

Moderator Becker asked how the lenders helped their borrowers during COVID.

“Nobody’s plans worked out,” said Javaid. “Who planned for this?” He explained that every loan needed covenant modifications or extensions beyond the original maturity date. Projections have been recast as needed, for example, when the Delta variant emerged and caused an occupancy slowdown. “We have an ongoing process with borrowers,” said Javaid. “We want them to succeed.” He added that it comes back to the quality of the borrower. Lenders want smart operators that are in the business for the long haul.”

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Looking ahead, Kelly expects more investors to jump into the senior housing debt market because it offers good yields compared to the other commercial property sectors. He did, however, warn about the emergence of COVID variants that could hurt the industry. Delevaris said that property performance is likely to dictate financing activity. “Permanent capital is available for deals that work,” he said. Javaid doesn’t expect absorption numbers to return to more normal levels until 2023. But, he added, “We will be doing better in 2022.”