Press Release

Glass Lewis Recommends Stockholders Vote for Change at Brookdale Senior Living Inc.

Third Independent Proxy Advisor Confirms the Persuasive Case to Bolster Key Competencies on the Brookdale Board and Recommends Stockholders Vote FOR Ortelius Nominees to Advance a Necessary Turnaround

Glass Lewis Identifies Governance Challenges at Brookdale Including the Persistent Lack of Accountability for Legacy Directors who have Overseen Poor Performance Furthering the Need for Board Renewal

Ortelius Urges Brookdale Stockholders to Vote FOR all Six of Orteliusโ€™ Nominees on the WHITE Proxy Card

NEW YORK–(BUSINESS WIRE)–Ortelius Advisors, L.P. (โ€œOrteliusโ€) today announced that a third leading independent proxy advisory firm, Glass, Lewis & Co. (โ€œGlass Lewisโ€), has recommended that stockholders vote FOR the election of Ortelius nominees to the Brookdale Senior Living Inc. (NYSE: BKD) (โ€œBrookdaleโ€ or โ€œCompanyโ€) Board of Directors, on the WHITE Ortelius proxy card, at the upcoming 2025 Annual Meeting of Stockholders. The recommendation from Glass Lewis builds on supportive commentary already published by Institutional Shareholder Services Inc. (โ€œISSโ€) and the Egan-Jones Ratings Company (โ€œEgan-Jonesโ€) related to Orteliusโ€™ campaign for change at Brookdale.

Peter DeSorcy, Managing Member of Ortelius, said:

โ€œWe appreciate that Glass Lewis has further confirmed the need for change at Brookdale. With three independent proxy advisors now having validated Orteliusโ€™ position, we reiterate our call to stockholders that now is the time to put more qualified and independent voices in the boardroom at Brookdale.

As confirmed by Glass Lewis, ISS, and Egan-Jones, Orteliusโ€™ nominees are necessary to effect the critical changes required at Brookdale. If elected, the Ortelius nominees will leverage their well-documented expertise to restore confidence in the critical process to select the Companyโ€™s next CEO and accelerate the necessary steps to unlock the significant value within Brookdale.

A new and qualified Board is a necessary first step to realizing the potential within Brookdale and we urge our fellow Brookdale stockholders to vote FOR all six of the Ortelius nominees on the WHITE proxy card.โ€

In its report finding that Ortelius has presented a compelling case for change at Brookdale, Glass Lewis*:

Recognized the validity of Orteliusโ€™ campaign to end a history of underperformance at Brookdale:

โ€œThe current bout, spearheaded here by Ortelius, largely orbits alternatives relating to Brookdaleโ€™s portfolio of senior living communities and associated efforts to reverse long-term trendlines which have left the Company trailing comps and fighting to remedy a moribund returns profile.โ€

Credited Orteliusโ€™ public campaign for driving change, with the Board only acting under pressure from Ortelius:

โ€œโ€ฆnotwithstanding the boardโ€™s contention to the contrary, we believe Brookdaleโ€™s contest tack โ€“ which includes the outwardly sudden and immediately effective termination of longtime CEO Cindy Baier with no heir apparent and the appointment of multiple new board members โ€“ very strongly correlates with Orteliusโ€™ involvementโ€ฆ.and the Dissidentโ€™s application of significant public pressure. Further, we note certain culpable members continue to serve on the board despite Brookdaleโ€™s flat-footed refreshment process and decidedly less than laudatory long-term performance.โ€

โ€œWe further note Brookdaleโ€™s shares experienced a one-day gain of 7.1% following announcement of Orteliusโ€™ current campaign (Ventas, Welltower and the S&P 400 gained 1.0%, 0.6% and 3.1%, respectively), suggesting that the Dissidentโ€™s public involvement was viewed as a prospective catalyst for further value creation.โ€

โ€œJust as notably, Brookdaleโ€™s shares surged 8.5% on the announcement that former CEO Cindy Baier would be transitioned with immediate effectiveness (Ventas, Welltower and the S&P 400 gained 2.0%, 2.1% and 1.2%, respectively), clearly reinforcing the notion that her prior executive service was viewed as a valuation millstone for Brookdale. Neither of these developments seem to reflect a ringing endorsement for Brookdaleโ€™s pre-Ortelius oversight architecture.โ€

Agreed with Ortelius on the need for Board renewal to bring greater expertise and fresh independent perspectives as well as to hold long-term directors accountable for poor performance:

โ€œโ€ฆwe do believe there exists persuasive cause to advance incremental change to bolster key competencies, hold certain long-term directors accountable and provide fresh insight into a critical and, to date, murky succession initiative.โ€

โ€œ…we similarly donโ€™t believe investors should forego the opportunity to promote incremental change and firm accountability as the Company moves through the early innings of a pivotal strategic and financial transition.โ€

Validated Orteliusโ€™ criticisms about Brookdaleโ€™s operating performance:

โ€œโ€ฆfor all the boardโ€™s public posturing, basic facts should prevail here: slightly more than a third of the Companyโ€™s properties presently sit at lower than 75% occupancy, with a substantial subset of that group sitting at less than 70%.โ€

Echoed Orteliusโ€™ well-founded concerns about Brookdaleโ€™s occupancy rates:

โ€œOrtelius does, however, reasonably note that Brookdaleโ€™s occupancy fell further than Ventas and Welltower amid COVID headwinds and that Brookdale currently remains below senior housing occupancy rates posted by those comps, suggesting the Companyโ€™s emergent rebound still leaves Brookdale off peer levels.โ€

Confirmed Orteliusโ€™ commentary on Brookdaleโ€™s poor financial performance including lagging net operating income (NOI) margins and excessive leverage:

โ€œWe do believe Ortelius offers persuasive commentary regarding depressed NOI margins.โ€

โ€œโ€ฆNOI margins do indeed appear to remain below both pre-COVID figures and margins posted by Ventas and Welltower, again suggesting that Brookdaleโ€™s recovery from long-term performance trends remains very much a work in progress.โ€

โ€œโ€ฆthere appears to be little meaningful debate that Brookdale presently remains heavily levered.โ€

Confirmed that Orteliusโ€™ plan to sell underperforming properties is well conceived and viable:

โ€œโ€ฆwe note central elements of Orteliusโ€™ plan critically rely on exiting Brookdaleโ€™s existing portfolio of leased properties while concurrently monetizing the Companyโ€™s underperforming owned assets, leaving Brookdale with an optimized pool of high-quality communities which would be expected to unlock significant value for investors.โ€

Questioned Brookdaleโ€™s governance practices and the Boardโ€™s capacity to lead a credible CEO search process given concerns around the Boardโ€™s recent director appointments:

โ€œTwo of the four directors recently appointed to the Brookdale board (Mr. Fioravanti and Ms. Mace) were identified by Ms. Baier, while one other (Mr. Hausman) was identified by current chair and interim CEO Denise Warren. That these appointments do not appear to reflect legacy relationships is arguably much less important than the impression that the nominating and corporate governance committee โ€“ currently helmed by Victoria Freed โ€“ expressly skirted retaining an independent search firm in favor of recommendations submitted by Brookdaleโ€™s senior executives, one of which, Ms. Baier, appears to have been well out of favor with investors. This framework does not go particularly far in establishing that a broad, independent, externally validated candidate identification process was prioritized, and does little to deflect the implication that key members of leadership have increasingly self-selected the members of the board to which they report.โ€

โ€œBrookdale indicates it retained Spencer Stuart to aid in CEO succession matters as early as November 2024. However, currently available materials do not give a particularly firm impression that any significant progress was made on those matters during the roughly five-month period between retention and Ms. Baierโ€™s departure. For the sake of clarity, our engagement with the board indicated five of seven investors with which Brookdale engaged after Orteliusโ€™ emergence expressed a desire for immediate management change. That the board thereafter swiftly accelerated Ms. Baierโ€™s exit in lieu of purportedly ongoing succession processes suggests to us that its members realized relatively late that they were materially out of phase with investor sentiment and thus sought to blunt possible solicitation vulnerabilities narratives by securing Ms. Baierโ€™s immediate resignation despite the apparent absence of any qualified long-term replacement.โ€

โ€œMs. Warren is slated to serve as interim CEO until a permanent successor to Ms. Baier is named. Notably, Brookdaleโ€™s own skills matrix indicates senior housing is not among Ms. Warrenโ€™s core competencies (an assessment which curiously clashes with recent materials published by Brookdale stating Ms. Warren has โ€œdirectly relevant senior living experienceโ€).โ€

โ€œ…the fact that Ms. Warren was selected as pro tem CEO over any existing employee seems to invite immediate scrutiny regarding the depth of Brookdaleโ€™s bench and the efficacy of the boardโ€™s succession architecture.โ€

โ€œ…closer scrutiny suggests key elements of the Companyโ€™s refresh โ€“ including what seems to be nominal involvement from the nominating and corporate governance committee and the continuation of an objectively atypical and functionally reactive CEO succession process โ€“ suggest fresh perspectives could be beneficial here.โ€

Endorsed Ortelius nominees Steven J. Insoft and Steven Vick for bringing important skills and perspectives to the Board:

โ€œWe believe both Ortelius candidates offer valuable senior housing and real estate expertise at a critical juncture, with particular attention to Brookdaleโ€™s ongoing portfolio optimization efforts. Their elections in place of Ms. Freed and Mr. Wielansky would further demonstrate board refreshment directly predicated on exercise of the shareholder franchise, rather than on deference to members of management.โ€

Recommended โ€œWithholdโ€ votes on long tenured Brookdale directors Lee Wielansky, Chair of the Investment Committee, and Victoria Freed, Chair of the Nominating and Governance Committee:

โ€œWithholding votes from incumbent nominees Freed and Wielansky โ€“ Ms. Freed and Mr. Wielansky are, ex Ms. Warren, the longest serving members of the Brookdale board and thus the most readily accountable for the Companyโ€™s comparatively poor long-term performanceโ€

โ€œMr. Wielanskyโ€™s purportedly valuable strategic insight and real estate expertise should, in the context of Brookdaleโ€™s long-term arc, warrant particular scrutiny by investors, while Ms. Freedโ€™s experience seems to have very little crossover with the Companyโ€™s core operations or ongoing strategic and financial initiatives.โ€

โ€œImportantly, both directors have overseen significantly subpar shareholder returns during their respective tenures. We are further concerned that Ms. Freed, as chair of the nominating and corporate governance committee, has heavily deferred to the recommendations of current and former senior executives during Brookdaleโ€™s recent board refresh, a tack which, taken together with the Companyโ€™s muddled succession effort, reflects unfavorably on the fundamental efficacy of Brookdaleโ€™s existing oversight architecture.โ€

Your vote is important, no matter how many or how few shares of common stock you own. Ortelius urges you to sign, date, and return the WHITE universal proxy card today to vote โ€œFORโ€ the election of all six Ortelius nominees and in accordance with Orteliusโ€™ recommendations on the other proposals on the agenda for the Annual Meeting.

Stockholders who have questions or require assistance in voting their WHITE Proxy Card, or those who require copies of Orteliusโ€™ proxy materials, should contact: Saratoga Proxy Consulting LLC at (888) 368-0379 or [email protected]

*Permission to use quotations from the report was neither sought nor obtained.

Additional Information

Ortelius Advisors, L.P., together with the other participants in its proxy solicitation (collectively, โ€œOrteliusโ€), has filed a definitive proxy statement and accompanying WHITE universal proxy card with the Securities and Exchange Commission (โ€œSECโ€) to be used to solicit votes for the election of Orteliusโ€™ slate of highly-qualified director nominees at the 2025 annual meeting of stockholders (the โ€œAnnual Meetingโ€) of Brookdale Senior Living Inc., a Delaware corporation (the โ€œCompanyโ€). Stockholders are advised to read the proxy statement and any other documents related to the solicitation of stockholders of the Company in connection with the Annual Meeting because they contain important information, including information relating to the participants in Orteliusโ€™ proxy solicitation. These materials and other materials filed by Ortelius with the SEC in connection with the solicitation of proxies are available at no charge on the SECโ€™s website at http://www.sec.gov. The definitive proxy statement and other relevant documents filed by Ortelius with the SEC are also available, without charge, by directing a request to Orteliusโ€™ proxy solicitor, Saratoga Proxy Consulting LLC, at its toll-free number (888) 368-0379 or via email at [email protected].

About Ortelius Advisors, L.P.

Ortelius is a research-intensive, fundamental-based, activist-oriented alternative investment management firm focused on event-driven opportunities.

Contacts

Stockholders:
Saratoga Proxy Consulting LLC

John Ferguson & Joseph Mills

(212) 257-1311/(888) 368-0379

[email protected]

Media:
Gagnier Communications

Dan Gagnier & Riyaz Lalani

(646) 569-5897

[email protected]

Author

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