Shortage of retirement homes creates opportunities with growing population over 65
Projected imbalance of over 65s in the UK – number expected to rise by 12% between 2015 -2020
Governments are unable to meet the growing demand for care homes and retirement villages. Over the next 25 years the number of centenarians is predicted to increase six-fold and one in 12 people will be aged 80 or above. This is due to the “baby boomer” generation reaching old age and improvements in medical care that means people are now living longer. With an aging population comes an increased demand for medical and care home facilities. Whilst it is a good thing that most people living now can expect to live a long life, there is also an increased likelihood of dementia. Increases of more than 60 percent have been recorded over a seven-year period.
According to the respected Lancet Public Health medical journal, 2.8 million over 65s will require nursing and social care by 2025, an increase of 25% between 2015 and 2025. A number of countries are struggling to make their balance of payments and are running deficits. Cutbacks are being made on public spending, even in the UK where there is a free health service there is already a lack of available care beds to cater for the current elderly patients in the UK, what will happen when the demand increases?
Luxury retirement communities deserve a mention
It is not just nursing care homes that are in short supply, at the luxury end of the market there is also a profound shortage. The reason is because the warmest areas in the South West of England, are the most desirable but also have green belt protection from new development. The quaint villages in which retirees wish to relocate have restrictive planning permission that prohibits large scale developments, thereby ensuring that the prevailing undersupply is structurally impossible to resolve.
Some ingenious developers have set their hands to converting large period buildings into luxury retirement homes. For example, a fourteen-bedroom stately manor home – which may have been impractical to maintain – would be acquired and converted into twenty-one luxury apartments designed for over 65’s. These estates provide the perfect backdrop for a retirement community with rolling country hills and quiet sandy beaches.
Residents would enjoy culinary delights of an onsite chef, weekly events such as wine tasting and country walks. In addition to the social benefits, the residents would have access to care. The Luxury retirement properties are not nursing homes for the elderly and infirm, they are typically for the able-minded and active retirees seeking a sense of community.
According to the consumer research company, Which?, the shortfall in suitable accommodation in regions (counties) such as Devon and Cornwall will be 29% and 25% respectively. Perhaps unsurprisingly, these two counties are home to high numbers of over 65s. There are 160,400 over 65s in Devon, which makes up 21.3% of the total population – 31.5% above the national average. Cornwall has an even higher percentage of over 65s, making up 24% of the total population (against a national average of 18%). There certainly are regions which are experiencing a chronic shortage of and growing demand because of the ageing population.
How to be content in retirement – avoiding loneliness
Many choose to live in a studio apartment in a retirement community simply because of the social aspect. Elderly people whose children have flown the nest and who no longer have a partner around often miss simple day-to-day interactions. According to research in 2017 conducted by AgeUK 31.4% of those aged 65+ have said that their main company is the television, and 8.5% “often or always” feel lonely. Retirement homes offer the elderly a place to live and thrive, hosting regular social activities such as wine tasting and walks along the beach, stimulating residents’ interests as well as giving them the opportunity to mingle with one another.
Baby-boomers are some of the richest retirees ever
Luxury retirement homes usually attract self-paying residents, and these usually have the strongest fundamentals. Baby-boomers (the generation born between 1946 and 1964) have reaped the benefits of the post war economic boom and are the wealthiest age group ever to have retired. Benefiting from free healthcare (UK), defined benefit pension schemes and a long run of economic growth. This category of customer bracket is also known as the silver pound and described as sociable and affluent customers who know what they want and have the money to pay for it. These are the very same group that will be the potential occupants in caring communities.
Global real estate consultancy, CBRE, says that it is a good market to enter into the luxury retirement sector because; “Savvy alternative lenders who are comfortable with the sector risks could capitalize on mainstream lenders’ limitations. By lending at appropriate leverage and structuring a facility that is protected in downside scenarios, there is an opportunity to back a high range of quality sponsors and support growth in the sector”.
According to research conducted by Knight Frank, 9% are reporting profit margins of 40% or more, and over a third are reporting margins of 30% on operational income. Operator such as the Berkley Care Group have reported profits of 410,000 ZAR (GBP 30,000) per bed.
How can investors can access U.K retirement property boom?
“Our retirement home investments are generally located in areas where there is a high elderly population, such as the Isle of Wight, Cornwall and the picturesque landscape of the North East” says Arran Kerkvliet of One Touch Investment. “People want to be surrounded by countryside that they explore during the day and enjoy a slower pace of life. They don’t want to experience the hustle and bustle of city life”.
Luxury care home investment opportunities are usually renovations of Grade II listed buildings, or elegant Victorian buildings – typically associated with high class living. Fine dining is a daily occurrence, often prepared in-house by a top chef; as are wine tasting events and trips to explore the local area. Many of these luxury retirement homes have onsite salons, gyms, cinema rooms and swimming pools for residents to enjoy at their leisure.
Depending on location, investors can purchase a suite in the retirement home from ZAR 1.2 million (69,950 GBP) and receive a 10% return per annum over a ten-year commercial lease with monthly or quarterly income payments. The contract has a flexible exit clause in favor of the investor; whereby they can trigger the buy-back option in year 5 with 10% uplift or year 10 with 25% uplift. These investments are ideal for those who want to capitalize on the week British pound currency valuation and are too busy to manage the day-to-day activities that a buy-to-let property usually requires.
In short, luxury retirement home investments are a robust investment class, and the profitability should only be buoyed by the aging population and undersupplied retirement property, specifically in the warmest coastal regions of the UK.
One Touch Investment
Contact them now 010 300 1200 (JHB)
enquire@onetouchinvestment.co.uk
From retirement homes in Cornwall, to retirement accommodation in Devon, One Touch Property are an investment property broker with South African roots; their expert team will be providing insight to investors able to meet them in either Cape Town or Johannesburg between the 7th and 18th of February. Contact them today to find out how they can help you achieve your financial goals.