Land & Buildings Sends Letter to National Health Investors Stockholders and Files Definitive Proxy Materials Detailing Urgent Need for Boardroom Change

In This Article:

Land & Buildings Letter to NHI Stockholders
Land & Buildings Letter to NHI Stockholders
Image 1: Historically Wide Discount to Senior Housing REIT Peers
Image 1: Historically Wide Discount to Senior Housing REIT Peers

Outlines Current Board’s Serious Conflicts of Interest Regarding Ongoing Lease Renewal Negotiations With Major Tenant National Healthcare Corp (NHC)

Details How NHI’s Archaic Corporate Governance, Interlocked Board and Lack of True Independence Have Directly Led to Underperformance

Believes Land & Buildings’ Independent Candidates – Adam Troso and Jim Hoffmann – Possess the REIT Expertise and Qualifications to Maximize Stockholder Value and Help Realize NHI’s True Potential

Urges NHI Stockholders to Vote FOR Land & Buildings’ Two Highly Qualified Nominees on the GOLD Proxy Card

STAMFORD, Conn., April 09, 2025--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Today, Land & Buildings Investment Management, LLC (together with its affiliates, "Land & Buildings"), a significant stockholder of National Health Investors, Inc. (NYSE: NHI) ("NHI" or the "Company"), sent a letter to the Company’s stockholders outlining the case for change and how Land & Buildings’ independent and experienced nominees – Adam Troso and Jim Hoffmann – can instill true independence on the NHI Board of Directors (the "Board") and help maximize stockholder value. Land & Buildings also filed definitive proxy materials in connection with its nomination of Messrs. Troso and Hoffmann for election to the Board at NHI’s 2025 Annual Meeting of Stockholders (the "2025 Annual Meeting"), scheduled for May 21, 2025.

The full text of the letter follows:

Dear Fellow National Health Investors Stockholders,

Land & Buildings Investment Management, LLC (together with its affiliates, "Land & Buildings" or "L&B") has closely followed and analyzed National Health Investors, Inc. ("NHI" or the "Company") and the healthcare REIT sector for decades. We invested in NHI because we believe it is a fundamentally valuable company with strong assets, secular tailwinds in its business, and a capable management team.

Unfortunately, the Company’s stockholder returns have meaningfully underperformed, and the stock is substantially undervalued compared to its Senior Housing REIT Peers.1 This underperformance stems, in our view, from an archaic corporate governance structure, including a staggered board (which NHI only committed to declassify following our engagement) and a Board of Directors ("Board") rife with conflicts of interest – such as multiple Board members’ significant stock ownership in one of NHI’s largest tenants, National Healthcare Corp. ("NHC").

Further, despite our sincere efforts to engage constructively with the Company over the past year to enhance governance and avoid a costly proxy contest, the Company has chosen instead to make reactive and one-sided changes that we believe fall well short of what is needed to fix the broken governance at NHI. Notably, NHI unilaterally hand-picked new directors for the Board, rather than consider stockholders’ input by working collaboratively with us to reach alignment on the skillsets needed in the boardroom. As a result, this marks the second year in a row where we have had to take our concerns directly to stockholders.