CHICAGO--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Jan. 11, 2012--
Ventas, Inc. (NYSE: VTR) (“Ventas” or the “Company”) said today that
management will participate in a panel discussion at the 2012 Stifel
Nicolaus Senior Housing & Healthcare Real Estate Conference in Dana
Point, California on Tuesday, January 17, 2012, at 3:00 p.m. Pacific
Time (6:00 p.m. Eastern Time).
Any written materials accompanying the Company’s participation in the
conference will be available on the Company’s website on January 17 and
for a limited period following the event.
Ventas, Inc., an S&P 500 company, is a leading healthcare real estate
investment trust. Its diverse portfolio of more than 1,300 assets in 47
states (including the District of Columbia) and two Canadian provinces
consists of seniors housing communities, skilled nursing facilities,
hospitals, medical office buildings and other properties. Through its
Lillibridge subsidiary, Ventas provides management, leasing, marketing,
facility development and advisory services to highly rated hospitals and
health systems throughout the United States. More information about
Ventas and Lillibridge can be found at http://www.ventasreit.com
and http://www.lillibridge.com.
This press release includes forward-looking statements within the
meaning of Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and
Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended. All
statements regarding the Company’s or its tenants’, operators’,
managers’ or borrowers’ expected future financial position, results of
operations, cash flows, funds from operations, dividends and dividend
plans, financing plans, business strategy, budgets, projected costs,
operating metrics, capital expenditures, competitive positions,
acquisitions, investment opportunities, dispositions, merger
integration, growth opportunities, expected lease income, continued
qualification as a real estate investment trust (“REIT”), plans and
objectives of management for future operations and statements that
include words such as “anticipate,” “if,” “believe,” “plan,” “estimate,”
“expect,” “intend,” “may,” “could,” “should,” “will” and other similar
expressions are forward-looking statements. Such forward-looking
statements are inherently uncertain, and security holders must recognize
that actual results may differ from the Company’s expectations. The
Company does not undertake a duty to update such forward-looking
statements, which speak only as of the date on which they are made.
The Company’s actual future results and trends may differ materially
depending on a variety of factors discussed in the Company’s filings
with the Securities and Exchange Commission. These factors include
without limitation: (a) the ability and willingness of the Company’s
tenants, operators, borrowers, managers and other third parties to meet
and/or perform their obligations under their respective contractual
arrangements with the Company, including, in some cases, their
obligations to indemnify, defend and hold harmless the Company from and
against various claims, litigation and liabilities; (b) the ability of
the Company’s tenants, operators, borrowers and managers to maintain the
financial strength and liquidity necessary to satisfy their respective
obligations and liabilities to third parties, including without
limitation obligations under their existing credit facilities and other
indebtedness; (c) the Company’s success in implementing its business
strategy and the Company’s ability to identify, underwrite, finance,
consummate and integrate diversifying acquisitions or investments,
including the Nationwide Health Properties transaction and those in
different asset types and outside the United States; (d) macroeconomic
conditions such as a disruption of or lack of access to the capital
markets, changes in the debt rating on U.S. government securities,
default and/or delay in payment by the United States of its obligations,
and changes in the federal budget resulting in the reduction or
nonpayment of Medicare or Medicaid reimbursement rates; (e) the nature
and extent of future competition; (f) the extent of future or pending
healthcare reform and regulation, including cost containment measures
and changes in reimbursement policies, procedures and rates; (g)
increases in the Company’s cost of borrowing as a result of changes in
interest rates and other factors; (h) the ability of the Company’s
operators and managers, as applicable, to deliver high quality services,
to attract and retain qualified personnel and to attract residents and
patients; (i) changes in general economic conditions and/or economic
conditions in the markets in which the Company may, from time to time,
compete, and the effect of those changes on the Company’s revenues and
its ability to access the capital markets or other sources of funds; (j)
the Company’s ability to pay down, refinance, restructure and/or extend
its indebtedness as it becomes due; (k) the Company’s ability and
willingness to maintain its qualification as a REIT due to economic,
market, legal, tax or other considerations; (l) final determination of
the Company’s taxable net income for the year ended December 31, 2011;
(m) the ability and willingness of the Company’s tenants to renew their
leases with the Company upon expiration of the leases and the Company’s
ability to reposition its properties on the same or better terms in the
event such leases expire and are not renewed by the Company’s tenants or
in the event the Company exercises its right to replace an existing
tenant upon default; (n) risks associated with the Company’s senior
living operating portfolio, such as factors causing volatility in the
Company’s operating income and earnings generated by its properties,
including without limitation national and regional economic conditions,
costs of materials, energy, labor and services, employee benefit costs,
insurance costs and professional and general liability claims, and the
timely delivery of accurate property-level financial results for those
properties; (o) the movement of U.S. and Canadian exchange rates; (p)
year-over-year changes in the Consumer Price Index and the effect of
those changes on the rent escalators, including the rent escalator for
Master Lease 2 with Kindred Healthcare, Inc., and the Company’s
earnings; (q) the Company’s ability and the ability of its tenants,
operators, borrowers and managers to obtain and maintain adequate
liability and other insurance from reputable and financially stable
providers; (r) the impact of increased operating costs and uninsured
professional liability claims on the liquidity, financial condition and
results of operations of the Company’s tenants, operators, borrowers and
managers, and the ability of the Company’s tenants, operators, borrowers
and managers to accurately estimate the magnitude of those claims; (s)
risks associated with the Company’s MOB portfolio and operations,
including its ability to successfully design, develop and manage MOBs,
to accurately estimate its costs in fixed fee-for-service projects and
to retain key personnel; (t) the ability of the hospitals on or near
whose campuses the Company’s MOBs are located and their affiliated
health systems to remain competitive and financially viable and to
attract physicians and physician groups; (u) the Company’s ability to
maintain or expand its relationships with its existing and future
hospital and health system clients; (v) risks associated with the
Company’s investments in joint ventures and unconsolidated entities,
including its lack of sole decision-making authority and its reliance on
its joint venture partners’ financial condition; (w) the impact of
market or issuer events on the liquidity or value of the Company’s
investments in marketable securities; and (x) the impact of any
financial, accounting, legal or regulatory issues or litigation that may
affect the Company or its major tenants, operators or managers. Many of
these factors are beyond the control of the Company and its management.

Source: Ventas, Inc.
Ventas, Inc.
David J. Smith, (877) 4-VENTAS