Flat Footed LLC Sends Letter to Diversified Healthcare Trust’s Board of Trustees Regarding Its Opposition to the Merger with Office Properties Income Trust
Announces Intent to Vote AGAINST the Proposed Merger, Given This Value-Destructive Transaction Would Benefit OPI and the REITs’ Conflicted External Manager, RMR Group, at the Direct Expense of DHC’s Shareholders and Other Stakeholders
Highlights Many Superior Alternatives Exist, Including Targeted Asset Sales to Pay Down Near-Term Debt and Provide a Runway for Long-Term Value Creation
Sees DHC’s Highly Valuable Senior Housing Property Assets as a Catalyst for Growth and Believes the Company Should be Trading Between
***
May 23, 2023
Board of Trustees
Diversified Healthcare Trust
c/o Jennifer B. Clark, Secretary
Two Newton Place
255 Washington Street, Suite 300
Re: Flat Footed LLC’s Opposition to DHC’s Proposed Merger with OPI
Dear Board of Trustees:
Flat Footed LLC (collectively with its affiliates, “FFL” or “we”) is an investment management firm led by individuals with decades of experience investing in companies with complex capital structures across the private and public markets, including the real estate investment trust and senior housing industries. We are also a significant stakeholder in Diversified Healthcare Trust (“DHC” or the “Company”), with an approximately
FFL opposes and intends to vote AGAINST the Company’s proposed merger with Office Properties Income Trust (“OPI”). We believe the Board of Trustees (the “Board”) has failed DHC’s stakeholders by pursuing the proposed merger, which would unnecessarily burden the Company with OPI’s rapidly declining commercial office properties. We also believe the deal disproportionally benefits OPI and the conflicted external manager for both DHC and OPI, The RMR Group LLC (“RMR”), at the expense of DHC stakeholders.
Before investing in DHC, FFL conducted a rigorous analysis of the Company, including its balance sheet, capital structure, management agreements, portfolio, and market opportunities. We believe DHC has highly valuable assets with long-term growth potential. This is particularly true of DHC’s Senior Housing Operating Portfolio (“SHOP”) and its ability to capitalize on a rapidly rebounding senior housing market.
We believe our investments across DHC’s capital structure demonstrate strong alignment with fellow stakeholders and confirm our conviction in the Company’s long-term potential, which is why we strongly oppose – and intend to vote AGAINST – DHC’s proposed merger with OPI, for the following reasons:
-
The proposed merger dramatically undervalues DHC.
-
Saddling DHC with OPI’s failing office portfolio and rapidly deteriorating balance sheet makes no sense.
-
The proposed merger only benefits OPI and RMR – at DHC’s direct expense.
- There are vastly superior alternatives to the merger.
Given our sizable investment in DHC, we believe our views merit substantial weight. It appears the Board has failed shareholders by prioritizing the external manager’s interests above all else. There are many superior alternatives available to address DHC’s upcoming debt maturities, such as curtailing RMR’s fee-driven spending to preserve cash or a targeted sale of a small percentage of its assets, that we urge the Company to consider.
Based on unsolicited feedback received from other stakeholders and the market’s reaction to the proposed merger (DHC’s common shares have traded down more than
The proposed merger dramatically undervalues DHC
Under the terms of the proposed merger, DHC shareholders are set to receive consideration worth only
If the proposed merger is approved, DHC shareholders will receive 0.147 OPI shares per DHC share, which the Company touts, incredibly, as a
-
OPI’s delayed announcement of its dividend cut from
to$2.20 per share until after the proposed merger terms were set.$1.00
-
OPI’s rapidly deteriorating operating metrics – reported during OPI’s first quarter earnings call after the proposed merger announcement.
-
OPI’s share price collapsing
43% as a result.5
In contrast, DHC’s value continues to improve. The Company confirmed during its recent first quarter earnings call that DHC’s financial condition continues to rebound, largely driven by the recovery in senior housing – furthering the disparity between OPI’s declining operating performance and DHC’s increasing earnings power.
In fact, senior housing properties, such as DHC’s, are widely expected to continue their post-pandemic rebound, driven by a once-in-a-lifetime favorable supply and demand dynamic. Aging baby boomers will fuel senior housing demand, as the growth rate of 80+ year old Americans inflects to a
-
Adam Portnoy’s recent
acquisition of AlerisLife, the manager of 119 DHC SHOP properties, which represents$44 million 86% of all properties managed by AlerisLife.8
-
OPI’s plans to raise over
in new, post-merger Government Sponsored Enterprise debt, which could only be utilized by using profitable DHC SHOP assets as collateral.9$1 billion
Besides undervaluing DHC, there are also no strategic, cost-saving merits or synergies to the proposed merger. Estimated fees resulting from the transaction are
Under current leadership, DHC investors have lost
Saddling DHC with OPI’s failing office portfolio and rapidly deteriorating balance sheet makes no sense
Equally troubling is the proposed merger’s attempt to saddle Company stakeholders with OPI’s rapidly declining commercial office portfolio and problematic balance sheet. DHC shareholders are being asked to believe that DHC, a company with
In stark contrast to the senior housing market, the prospects for commercial office properties are bleak and will continue to darken as the market shifts towards work-from-home employment. Relative to other office REITs, OPI is even more negatively exposed, given its focus on single-tenant buildings, which leads to an inability to counter tenant downsizing and to tremendous tenant leverage in negotiating lease terms, tenant improvements and owner-funded capital expenditures. In its first quarter 2023 earnings release and call, OPI management acknowledged two troubling items. First, OPI failed to renew at least half of its leases due for renewal during the year to date and expects this trend to continue beyond 2023. Second, the rates for the mere
As companies continue to downsize their office space en masse, OPI renewal rates are expected to worsen while it faces lease expirations equaling at least
It therefore came as no surprise that OPI was forced to cut its annual dividend from
The proposed merger only benefits OPI and RMR – at DHC’s direct expense
The sole beneficiaries of this misguided merger are OPI and the external manager, RMR. OPI gains access to DHC’s valuable, unencumbered assets from which it will seek to raise
RMR’s compensation is primarily driven by the enterprise value of OPI and DHC, as opposed to the equity performance of either company, in addition to fees derived from rent collected and construction costs incurred. In 2022, RMR collected approximately
Since a substantial part of these fees are calculated on enterprise value and construction costs – not profitability or equity value – RMR is perversely incentivized to maximize debt and spending: the primary reasons why DHC faces near-term challenges today. RMR’s own investor presentation highlights the importance of debt and construction fees collected from managing capital programs at its various REIT clients.14
There are vastly superior alternatives to the merger
Management claims that the merger is necessary to address the Company’s near-term debt obligations15 and has touted OPI as a financial savior. Nothing could be further from the truth. As outlined, despite short-term challenges, DHC is well-positioned for growth in the coming years, while OPI is a distressed REIT composed of rapidly declining single-tenant commercial office properties.
It is worth noting that DHC’s recent “going concern” assertions are suspect and appear to be an improper attempt to goad shareholders into approving the value-destructive merger. On May 8, 2023, the Company suddenly announced for the first time that “there is substantial doubt about [DHC’s] ability to continue as a going concern” due to its “reduced cash balances” and
Additionally, RMR’s own investor presentations similarly undermine DHC’s recent going concern statement. As recently as March 2023, only a few weeks before the proposed merger announcement, RMR assured its investors about the stability of RMR’s management fees, claiming “limited fee downside to RMR” at “current REIT share price levels.”18 In doing so, RMR highlighted that a substantial part of its compensation derives from DHC’s debt.19 If DHC’s ability to satisfy its debt were truly a concern, the dependability of RMR’s management fees would be as well – in this case, the two opposing outcomes are mutually exclusive. Any warning to this effect is glaringly absent from RMR’s investor presentation, an inconsistency which undermines the reliability of DHC’s going concern statement – implying that the going concern crisis and alleged need to merge with OPI has been fabricated by RMR to further its own interests.
Any purported going concern issues faced by the Company can be readily addressed. Simply curtailing RMR’s self-interested, fee-driven spending would go a long way toward preserving the Company’s cash and addressing its near-term liquidity challenges. The current pace of DHC’s capital spending is wholly inconsistent with a company facing going concern problems and one that needs to preserve cash and liquidity.
And because DHC’s
That liquidity should be readily obtainable from a variety of sources or transactions. Given DHC’s expected performance and based on DHC’s/RMR’s own internal projections that SHOP will reach EBITDA of
-
10 Wellness Centers, six of which are Life Time Fitness facilities with annual Net Operating Income (“NOI”) of
. We estimate a value of approximately$12 million for the six Life Time facilities alone. The other four centers are leased to regional operators and have an estimated NOI of$160 million . Based on discussions with other public REITs, we believe a deep and ready market exists for these assets at a$5.8 million 7.5% cap rate.
-
27 Triple Net Lease senior housing facilities with NOI of
annually (estimated value of approximately$23 million ).$267 million
-
The Company’s remaining equity stakes in two joint ventures, Seaport Innovation LLC and The LSMD Fund REIT LLC, which the Company carries on its balance sheet at a
value as of March 31, 2023.$153.4 million
***
In sum, DHC is uniquely positioned to capitalize on the rapidly growing senior housing market, which has yet to be reflected in its share price. And there is no basis to dampen DHC’s prospects by burdening it with OPI’s dying commercial office portfolio and looming debt refinancings. By simply selling a small portion of its assets, DHC should be well-positioned to pay down its near-term notes, extend its revolving credit facility, and maximize value for all DHC stakeholders. FFL, accordingly, intends to vote its DHC shares AGAINST the proposed merger with OPI to protect the long-term value and interests of the Company’s stakeholders.
Sincerely,
Marc Andersen
Flat Footed LLC
Appendix
Business Unit | Value | 2024 EBITDA | Multiple | Notes | ||||
SHOP Portfolio | 2,940.0 |
210.0 |
14.0x |
EBITDA based on 2024 company guidance; | ||||
Multiple based on current 2024 Brookdale multiple(*) | ||||||||
Annualize 1Q23 NOI |
Est. Cap Rate |
|||||||
Life Science Buildings | 505.0 |
40.4 |
|
Gross BV was |
||||
Medical Office Buildings | 1,050.0 |
84.0 |
|
Gross BV is |
||||
Triple Net Senior Housing | 267.1 |
22.7 |
|
Gross BV was |
||||
Wellness (Life Time/Others) | 175.9 |
15.0 |
|
Gross BV was |
||||
JV- Seaport | 104.8 |
DHC carrying value at Mar 31, 2023 | ||||||
JV- LSMD Fund REIT | 48.7 |
DHC carrying value at Mar 31, 2023 | ||||||
Total Asset Value | 5,091.5 |
|||||||
TOTAL Debt | (2,830.0) |
Total debt at Mar 31, 2023 | ||||||
Cash | 150.0 |
Estimated excess cash at Mar 31, 2023 | ||||||
Net Debt | (2,680.0) |
|||||||
RMR Mgmt Fees | (222.0) |
Capitalized value RMR management fees | ||||||
Equity Value | 2,189.5 |
|||||||
Shares Outstanding | 239.7 |
Share balance at May 3, 2023 | ||||||
Value per share |
|
|||||||
(*) Company guided to |
||||||||
At |
||||||||
At the current equity price ( |
About Flat Footed
Flat Footed LLC is a special situation, value-oriented investment management firm focused on leveraged, asset-heavy companies with complex capital structures. The Flat Footed LLC team has cumulatively managed
1 Source: Bloomberg. DHC’s stock closed at
2 Using OPI’s May 19, 2023 closing price of
3 Based on our valuation analysis, which is detailed in the Appendix on page 9, after accounting for some degree of capitalized cost of RMR’s fees and the Company’s debt.
4 Preliminary Form S-4 for the proposed merger filed by OPI on May 19, 2023
5 Source: Bloomberg. OPI’s share price closed at
6 Olivia Lueckermeyer, “Senior Housing Industry Mounts A Comeback As Baby Boomers Age In And New Construction Stalls Out,” Bisnow (April 28, 2023), https://www.bisnow.com/dallas-ft-worth/news/senior-housing/senior-housing-industry-mounts-a-comeback-as-baby-boomers-age-and-new-construction-stalls-118736.
7 See Office Properties Income Trust to Merge with Diversified Healthcare Trust (April 11, 2023) (“April 11 Slides”) at page 10.
8 Adam Portnoy is the President and CEO of RMR, and is the chair of the board of directors, a managing director, and president and CEO of its parent, RMR, Inc.
9 See Office Properties Income Trust & Diversified Healthcare Trust Merger Joint Conference Call Script (April 11, 2023) (“April 11 Script”) at page 6.
10 See April 11 Script at page 7; Form 10-Q for the Quarterly Period Ending March 31, 2023, Office Properties Income Trust at page 17.
11 Mark Maurer, “Companies Plan Additional Cuts to Office Space Amid Looming Downturn,” The Wall Street Journal (July 7, 2022), https://www.wsj.com/articles/companies-plan-additional-cuts-to-office-space-amid-looming-downturn-11657186201; Form 10-Q for the Quarterly Period Ending March 31, 2023, Office Properties Income Trust at page 18.
12 See id. at page 27.
13 See April 11 Slides at page 4.
14 See The RMR Group Inc. Investor Presentation (March 2023) at page 21.
15 During the Company’s May 9, 2023, investor call, it identified three “short-term challenges” concerning the Company’s ability to: (i) refinance or extend
16 Form 10-Q for the quarterly period ended March 31, 2023, Diversified Healthcare Trust at pages 6-7.
17 See id. at page 45.
18 See The RMR Group Inc. Investor Presentation (March 2023) at page 19.
19 Id.
View source version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20230523005570/en/
For Investors:
Flat Footed LLC
ir@flatfootedllc.com
Okapi Partners LLC
Mark Harnett
(212) 297-0720
mharnett@okapipartners.com
For Media:
Longacre Square Partners
Greg Marose / Charlotte Kiaie, 646-386-0091
FFL@longacresquare.com
Source: Flat Footed LLC