John A. Martins
Thanks, Josh, and thank you to everyone for joining us this afternoon. The end of the second quarter was my first full quarter as CEO and I continue to be amazed by the capability of this organization to execute across so many fronts, with an unwavering commitment to deliver best-in-class service to the thousands of clients we support and the tens of thousands of clinicians and professionals we place. The culture at Cross Country has never been stronger, as evidenced by the recent certification we received for Great Place to Work. For those that may not know, this award is based entirely on what our current employees have to say, standing workplace culture, employee experience and leadership. I believe that our commitment to core values and thirst for innovation has become a beacon to thousands of employees who have joined Cross Country in delivering on its mission. We're a company committed to clinical excellence, ethical practices and help equity which has positioned us as the partner of choice for thousands of client. Beyond the continued strong performance for both revenue and adjusted EBITDA, we have once again exceeded the high-end of our guidance ranges. The second quarter also marks a new chapter for Cross Country as we continue to evolve our tech-enabled workforce solutions with the launch of our newest product Intellify. Intellify is our very first proprietary cloud-based multi-tenant vendor management system that will not only be used across our managed service programs, will also serve as the backbone for a vendor neutral solution that will further diversify our business. I'll get into more detail on our technology investments in a few minutes. So let me first share some comments on our results. Consolidated revenue of $754 million exceeded our expectations and was up more than double over the prior year. Fueling this impressive performance was the achievement of yet another historic milestone with the highest number of professionals on assignments across our business. Growth was once again broad based with all lines reporting at least double-digit year-over-year increase. As expected, bill rates within our travel nurse business declined by 7% from the first quarter, which is partly offset by a 3% increase in billable hours. It's interesting to note that the sequential increase in billable hours was primarily driven by an increase in the number of professionals on a site, which was muted somewhat by a reduction in the average hours per assignments as hospitals increasingly return to the normal 36 hour contracts for healthcare profession. Based on discussions with our clients as well as what has been reported, COVID cases are rising once again, but hospitals are not seeing the same increase in COVID-related hospitalizations and the number of positive cases is slightly far higher than what is reported due to the number of positive home test that are not included in those figures. The takeaway is that, the rise in demand we are experiencing is only partly being fueled by COVID needs today versus what we have seen during prior surges. According to a recent study by Yale, COVID seems poised to transition into an endemic. One contributing factor is that 78% of the US population have received at least one dose of the vaccine and 67% are fully vaccinated. As COVID transitions into more of an endemic, we would expect to see more of a seasonal trend in needs, so much the flu with spikes in demand for respiratory therapists, ICU nurses and emergency room nurses. Though COVID demand will ebb and flow, the effects of pandemic on the healthcare workforce will likely persist. The continued cost pressure faced by healthcare providers is a function of extremely tight labor market and the ongoing struggle that system stays as they try to in core staff levels of missed earn out, fatigue and retirements. The labor shortages in core staff do not appear to ease. Despite reports of decreasing patient census in acute settings, we also think the growing supply-demand imbalance at the core level is being exasperated as healthcare professionals of all ages continue to embrace the gig economy and the lifestyle that comes with it. This is evident in our travel nurse population where 65% are millennials or younger. As discussed on our last earnings call, we are in an environment where bill rates remain elevated relative to pre-pandemic levels as a result of a higher compensation costs across most specialties. With health system citing increased labor costs and a desire to see contingent usage normalize, we continue to work collaboratively and proactively with our clients on adjusting rates to lower their cost, while ensuring that they have the clinicians at their bedside to deliver the highest standard of care. However, as I mentioned a moment ago, the persistent labor shortage continues to fuel higher labor costs and as a result there'll likely be some resistance to the speed at which rates come down or how low they can go. Based on the bill rates for open orders in our mix of business, we expect travel bill rates to see a mid-teen sequential decline for both the third and fourth quarters. This trajectory would place rates roughly 30% to 40% higher than pre-pandemic levels as we move into 2023. Overall demand remains well ahead pre-COVID levels. So, as expected, down from the peak seen in prior quarters. Throughout the second quarter and continuing into the third quarter, we have seen a rising trend for travel orders, most of which predated the recent spike in COVID cases. Travel orders rose by more than 50% from the start of the quarter to the end and are up another 10% as of today. The increase was seen across most specialties with the greatest rise in need for med-surge, emergency room and operating room nurses. Also noteworthy is that demand remains robust across our diversified lines of business, including local staffing, Locums, education, home health, RPO and surge. From accounting perspective, we continue to see strong interest with thousands of new leads generated each week. With the deployment of our candidate facing portal earlier this year, we have seen thousands of candidates searching jobs and a rising number of candidates who are self-selecting opportunities of interest. From a compensation perspective, I am encouraged to see that the compensation costs have come down slightly faster in the second quarter in travel bill rates, driving a modest increase in our gross margin. And as we look to return to normal gross margins one area that could be a short-term headwind for us is that bill rates could decline faster than compensation on specific asylums. Let me elaborate on this for a moment. We operate in a competitive market for talent and we believe it is in the long-term interest of our clients and clinicians to ensure continuity of service and to insulate clinicians from unexpected changes in compensation at the site. Therefore, should we work with a client on a bid assignment rate change, we could see a temporary margin impact until those assignments wind down. I continue to be impressed by the traction we have with our managed service program or MSP clients. Through all phases of the pandemic, we have thoughtfully and proactively engage with these clients on their needs and challenges. As a result, spend under management in the second quarter was again over $2 billion on an annualized basis with attach rate of just under 70%. Our success with MSPs has been driven by our proven ability to execute and rapidly deliver clinicians to the bedside, as well as building imitating close relationships with our broad third-party network to assist in filling the excess demand. Despite the market volatility and rapid swings in demand, we continue to deliver the highest levels with a clinical on time start rate of nearly 95% and a clinical cancellation rate below a half of 1%. We credit this performance not only to the technology we have deployed and the talent we have hired, but the clinical focus we have always maintained. We have more than 50 clinicians on staff that regularly engage with clients and candidates to ensure we are delivering the best clinical care possible to our clients and the patients they treat. Health systems need an accountable partner, one that understands their challenges, one that can quarter to create unique solutions and deliver consistently at highest levels. And as a result we are well positioned to accelerate the pipeline of opportunities with new large scale MSP programs. Over the last 18 months, we have built one of the most tenured and talented sales organizations that have the credibility and the capability to bring a significant number of new programs into our portfolio. We recently just closed on three new MSPs that will add approximately $85 million incremental spend under management, two of which were takeaways from competitors and looking ahead our pipeline for new programs is robust. Next, let me spend a few minutes discussing our technology investments. I opened the call with the announcement of our new vendor management tool that we believe will ultimately be pronged capabilities of tools currently available in the market, offering clients insights and analytics that will help them make better decisions around managing their contingent spend. The development effort was led by design to ensure superior usability, making the product simple and intuitive. We had a team of more than 40 developers writing more than a 1 million lines of code and dozens of business participants working through QA and user acceptance testing. Feedback thus far has been extremely positive and client interest is growing rapidly. And so over the next 12 to 18 months we will continue to deploy our VMS to new and existing clients, reducing our cost of fulfillment relying on third-party technologies, all while we continue to add features and functionality. Intellify is just the latest technology we had in our comprehensive multi-year digital roadmap to transform the company and our industry, coupled with our other initiatives such as the applicant tracking system deployed in late 2020 to our travel business and the release of marketplace in 2021 for our local conditions to self-select and schedule shifts and our candidate portal released earlier this year to ensure a smooth candidate experience. We have a full complement of technologies that ensure speed to market as well as a best-in-class experience for candidates, clients and team members. Over the last three years, we have invested heavily in digitally transforming our company starting from the inside out. We called out previously a doubling of our investment in technology and we are on track to do that this year. Year-to-date we have spent more than $8 million, which is approximately double the prior year. It is evident to me that we are a more efficient, agile and tech-enabled business in just two or three years ago. Our tenured revenue producers have more than doubled their productivity and new hires were able to become productive much earlier in their career. When it comes to technology, weâre never really done and at this point, I expect a fairly balanced level of continued investment to both internally facing and client or candidate facing technologies as we strive to become the most efficient organization, delivering the highest level of clinical excellence and solidifying ourselves as the partner of choice by clients. As we look to the third quarter, we expect revenue to be between $605 million to $615 million trending with our expectations. The sequential decline is primarily driven by a mid-teen decline in travel delays and to a lesser extent seasonal punctuation in demand in states like Florida, as well as softness in education due to the summer vacations. Our adjusted EBITDA margin is expected to be between 9% and 10%, in line with expectations as rates normalize. Beyond the third quarter and as we begin to set our sights on 2023 we are expecting continued volume growth in most lines of business, fueled by our strong execution, organic investment in capacity, gains to be realized from the adoption of technology and the expansion of our client base. Our outlook is unchanged as we expect to exit the year on a run rate that exceeds $2 billion in annualized revenue. In closing, I'm very encouraged by our business and prospects heading into the back half of the year as strong demand is setting up an exciting runway for growth. I believe and the street seems to be taking more notice as well in recent weeks that we are not just a COVID driven story, we are fundamentally a different company emerges from the pandemic that services the entire continuum of care as a tech-enabled workforce solutions provider. I believe we are positioned for long-term sustained growth across all lines of business, which we believe will continue to drive shareholder value. I finally want to thank all of our dedicated professionals who make Cross Country Healthcare their employer of choice. I'd also like to thank our stockholders for believing in the company and of course, our talented team who supported and embrace the changes we have made. With that, let me turn the call over to Bill.