It plans to develop a further 262 new units or beds over the next two years, and currently has about 100 units under construction, with a further 645 in the planning stage.
It announced today that it has inked a conditional agreement to pay $11m for 8.2 hectares of bare land in Richmond, Nelson, which would cater for a $100m retirement village and integrated care development.
"We continue to see a range of acquisition prospects and will continue to actively consider opportunities that meet our criteria in terms of location, quality of assets and current management, potential for development and earnings accretion," Arvida chair Peter Wilson said.
To help fund its growth, Arvida sold $41.8m of new shares in October 2016.
This month, it agreed a new $150m facility with ANZ Bank to help fund development activity over coming years, which is expected to be executed next month. The company said it expects to spend $75m on developments over the next 12 months. The total value of its assets lifted to $794.9m, from $460.7m a year earlier as the value of its investment property jumped to $569.9m from $295.8m.
Occupancy rates at the company's villages was maintained at 95 per cent, and the company said it had experienced strong demand for its village and care facilities
In the past year, Arvida sold 32 new units, up from 20 the year earlier. The average value slipped to $438,700 from $465,000, although the margin increased to 17 per cent from 16 per cent. The company lifted the total number of resales to 166 from 149, with the average value increasing to $274,100 from $244,900 and the margin lifting to 19 per cent from 14 per cent.
Arvida will pay a fourth quarter dividend of 1.15 cents per share on June 16, taking the total annual dividend to 4.45 cents, 5 percent ahead of the previous year. The company said it expects the increased level of dividend to be maintained.
Its shares rose 1.5 per cent to $1.33, and have gained 24 per cent over the past year.