Item 1.01.
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Entry into a Material Definitive Agreement.
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On September 13, 2017, AAC Healthcare
Network, Inc., a Delaware corporation (Buyer) and wholly owned subsidiary of AAC Holdings, Inc., a Nevada corporation (Holdings), entered into a Securities Purchase Agreement (the Purchase Agreement), by and among
Buyer, Holdings, AdCare, Inc., a Massachusetts corporation (the Company), and AdCare Holding Trust, a Massachusetts business trust (Seller). The Company and its subsidiaries offer treatment of drug and alcohol addiction and
own, among other things, a
114-bed
hospital and five outpatient centers in Massachusetts and a
52-bed
(46 currently licensed) residential treatment center and two
outpatient centers in Rhode Island.
Pursuant to the Purchase Agreement, Buyer has agreed to acquire from Seller all of the issued and
outstanding shares of common stock, no par value per share, of the Company in exchange for the following: (i) the payment by Buyer of $70,000,000 in cash, (ii) the delivery by Buyer of the number of unregistered shares of the common stock,
par value $0.001, of Holdings (Common Shares), equal to $5,000,000 divided by the average closing price per Common Share on the New York Stock Exchange during the ten (10) trading day period ending three (3) business days prior
to the closing date (the Closing Stock Consideration); and (iii) the delivery by Buyer of a promissory note issued by Holdings to Seller in the principal amount of $10,000,000 (the Promissory Note), for aggregate
consideration of $85,000,000, subject to adjustments as set forth in the Purchase Agreement.
The cash portion of the acquisition is
anticipated to be financed through a combination of proceeds from the issuance of an incremental term loan under Holdings senior secured loan facility and cash on hand. The Promissory Note will mature no more than 91 days after the maturity
date of Holdings then existing term loans, which are currently scheduled to mature on June 30, 2023, under Holdings senior secured loan facility and will bear interest on the unpaid principal amount thereof at a fixed rate per annum
equal to 5%, compounded annually. At closing, the Closing Stock Consideration will be deposited in escrow as security for potential post-closing indemnity claims (the Escrow Fund) and $500,000 in cash will be deposited in escrow for
shortfalls in the Companys net working capital. In addition, post-closing indemnity claims for certain matters will be effected first by a set off against the Promissory Note and, to the extent such claim for indemnification exceeds the then
outstanding principal and interest due under the Promissory Note, any remaining claims will be paid from the Escrow Fund.
The Purchase
Agreement contains customary representations and warranties by the parties to such agreement as well as customary indemnification provisions and termination rights for the parties. Further, pursuant to the Purchase Agreement, Buyer, Holdings, Seller
and Company have also agreed to customary covenants, including, among others, covenants relating to (1) the conduct of the Companys business during the interim period between the execution of the Purchase Agreement and the completion of
the acquisition; and (2) obligations to obtain any consents, approvals, permits, or authorizations which are required to be obtained in order to complete the acquisition under any applicable federal or state laws or regulations.
A copy of the Purchase Agreement is attached hereto as Exhibit 2.1 and is incorporated herein by reference. The foregoing description of the
Purchase Agreement does not purport to be complete and is qualified in its entirety by reference to the full text of the Purchase Agreement. The Purchase Agreement has been attached to provide investors with information regarding its terms. It is
not intended to provide any other factual information about Buyer, Holdings, the Company or Seller. In particular, the assertions embodied in the representations and warranties in the Purchase Agreement were made as of a specified date, are modified
or qualified by information in confidential disclosure letters provided by each party to the other in connection with the signing of the Purchase Agreement, may be subject to a contractual standard of materiality different from what might be viewed
as material to shareholders, or may have been used for the purpose of allocating risk between the parties. Accordingly, the representations and warranties in the Purchase Agreement are not necessarily characterizations of the actual state of facts
about Buyer, Holdings, the Company or Seller at the time they were made or otherwise and should only be read in conjunction with the other information that Holdings makes publicly available in reports, statements and other documents filed with the
Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC).