More Than One Way to Find Value 201
good reason. But Sunrise was a different company at the time, and
the overall market pessimism for the industry created an opportu-
nity to acquire it at an attractive price.
Investment Analysis
Sunrise essentially had two sources of revenue:
- The sale of mature properties, in which case Sunrise would
retain the right to manage the properties for a fee - Long - term management of Sunrise properties and others
using its expertise
At the time, the economics of the Sunrise “ develop, build, and
sale ” model went something like this: It cost Sunrise about $ 11 mil-
lion to build a facility plus start - up costs of $ 700,000, so the total
cost was $ 11.7 million. Sunrise would use a combination of debt
and equity to fund each property development. Each facility was
being funded with about $ 2.5 million in equity with the remaining
$ 9 million or so coming from debt.
Once developed, Sunrise would sell the properties for about
$ 16 million, yielding a pretax profi t of $ 4.3 million, or about 170
percent return on investment.
ROI = $ 4.7 / $ 2.5 = 1.7 or 170 %
As part of the sale, Sunrise typically would retain a 20 percent
residual interest so it was getting about $ 12.3 million after the sale.
With the pretax profi t of $ 4.3 million, Sunrise was able to inter-
nally fi nance the build - out of four properties for each two sold.
The economics of this model creates tremendous value. The com-
pany would invest $ 2.3 million, sell the property for $ 16 million,
and have enough left over to repeat this process twice. At the time,
Sunrise was still a company with tremendous growth potential, and
this model was able to use leverage to create tremendous value.
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