Ed,
Our client is a hospital group who is actively acquiring smaller medical practices. The client is looking for Fair Market Rental Value of the office space for regulatory reporting purposes. Intended user is the client, and most are as of a current valuation date. Whats happening is the client is buying the practice, but don't want to pay overly inflated rents to the landlords, who are often the same as the owner of the practice the client just purchased.
In our area, which is central NJ and eastern PA, many of the physician practices are owner occupied, and the Dr has a lease with himself, so leases like that are clearly not arms length, which is why the client wants the FMRV. But many of the practices also have these session subleases, which are among friends, and upon interviewing the Dr they inform me that this was an agreement between two people who were acquaintances, and that no market research was done to arrive at the price per session. So its not really arms length, and neither party appears to be well informed.
The type of agreement seems to be somewhat typical for medical offices in that we are coming across it more and more frequently, but since most of the parties are small individuals there is no income/expense data for the sublease. The signed agreements we see are usually very vague, outdated/expired, or terms have changed and a new document has not been signed. Typically a Session is 4 hours, includes use of one or two furnished exam rooms, may or may not include staff support, and is a flat fee, so while the main tenant may have a NNN lease, the subleases on a per session basis are gross.
So maybe an example will help. Mike Maher Medical leases 5,000 square feet of office space from Office Space Corp at $25.00/PSF NNN. It's an arms length transaction, signed lease, everything typical of the market. We can easily look to the market for recently signed leases of medical office space, as well as listing of office space, and determine that that lease is at fair market rents. However, Mike Maher Medical also has a sublease signed with Dr. X. Mike Maher Medical informs us that Dr. X uses 2 exam rooms in Mike Maher Medical's office suite once a week, for a single 4 hour session. Dr. X pays Mike Maher Medical $200 per session.
Since 4 hour session leases are not advertised as a typical lease term we have no market data, and the majority of data we have been collecting is either one offs, not arm's length, or not done by well informed parties, we're looking for other opinions as to how we should handle trying to value these session leases.