image
Healthcare - Medical - Care Facilities - NYSE - US
$ 14.15
-4.13 %
$ 1.22 B
Market Cap
-6.05
P/E
EARNINGS CALL TRANSCRIPT
EARNINGS CALL TRANSCRIPT 2022 - Q1
image
Operator

Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for standing by, and welcome to the MEDNAX First Quarter 2022 Earnings Conference Call. [Operator Instructions] And as a reminder, today's conference call is being recorded. I would now like to turn the conference over to Mr. Charles Lynch. Please go ahead..

Charles Lynch Senior Vice President of Finance, Strategy & Investor Relations

Thank you, Cynthia. Good morning, everyone, and welcome to our call. I will quickly read our forward-looking statements and turn the call over to Mark. Certain statements and information during this conference call may be deemed to be forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Federal Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995.

These forward-looking statements are based on assumptions and assessments made by MEDNAX' management in light of their experience and assessment of historical trends, current conditions, expected future developments and other factors they believe to be appropriate.

Any forward-looking statements made during this call are made as of today, and MEDNAX undertakes no duty to update or revise any such statements, whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise.

Important factors that could cause actual results, developments and business decisions to differ materially from forward-looking statements are described in the company's most recent annual report on Form 10-K, its quarterly reports on Form 10-Q and its current reports on Form 8-K, including the sections entitled Risk Factors.

In today's remarks by management, we will be discussing non-GAAP financial metrics. A reconciliation of these non-GAAP financial measures to the most comparable GAAP measures can be found in this morning's earnings press release, our quarterly reports on Form 10-Q and our annual report on Form 10-K and on our website at www.mednax.com.

With that, I'll turn the call over to our CEO, Mark Ordan..

Mark Ordan

Thanks, Charlie, and good morning, everybody. Also joining me on today's call are Marc Richards, our CFO; and Dr. Jim Swift, our Chief Development Officer. We are pleased with the results for the quarter.

Our bottom line results were in line with our expectations and demonstrate resilience in a challenging health care environment and operating challenges we anticipated and addressed. Volumes continue to rise.

Total births at the hospitals where we provide NICU services were up just under 4% on a same-unit basis, and our aggregate patient volumes were up just over 3%, with office-based growth a bit higher than hospital-based growth.

We also recorded $10 million in revenue related to related funds from the CARES Act during the first quarter that favorably impacted adjusted EBITDA by about $6 million, which relates to applications we submitted to the periods in 2020 when our operations were disrupted during the COVID pandemic.

As we've done in the past, we've provided details of their contribution to revenue and adjusted EBITDA in order for you to make a proper comparison to your models. Within our financial results for the quarter, I'll point out that revenue was modestly below our internal expectations.

This was primarily -- excuse me, this was primarily related to our transition of our revenue cycle functions, although it appears in pricing, as we detailed in our release. Marc will discuss this in more detail, but this was largely anticipated and we believe relates primarily to timing.

Offsetting this modest variance in revenue, we had good cost performance during the quarter, yielding adjusted EBITDA in line with our expectations before contemplating the addition of CARES funds.

I'm also pleased that despite headwinds across the health care industry, particularly labor cost pressures and for physician groups like ours, the uncertainties surrounding surprise billing rulings, we remain comfortable with our outlook of at least $270 million of adjusted EBITDA for 2022.

On the labor front, I'll share shortly how we'll be focused on ensuring that pediatrics continues to be the organization that people really want to be part of. We all know the challenging labor environment, and this has only deepened our commitment to our amazing clinical team and to our equally amazing support team.

On payer relationships, we continue to have constructive discussions around the country, including in many states where we've successfully renewed contracts in a fair manner and on schedule. Let me update you on our organizational priorities. I'll start with our people.

As an ardent physician leader, I'm constantly in awe of the dedication of all of our clinicians have to this company's mission, and I'm likewise confident that our dedication to physician leadership will always keep our organization focused on our highest priority, which is providing great patient care.

To that end, we are establishing a physician executive council represented by many of our specialties to enable our affiliated physicians to advance their skill and knowledge for the sake of patients. This group will meet directly with me to ensure my first-hand understanding of issues and opportunities on the minds of our affiliated clinicians.

This is also an opportunity for them to have a far better understanding of our decision processes. Dr. Curt Pickert, our Executive Vice President of Clinical Services is Chair of this council, and Dr. Mack Hinson will serve as an adviser to the group.

On that note, Mack will be transitioning away from his role as President of our Women's and Children's organization on June 1, and I want to personally thank him on behalf of the entire organization for all that he has done for the company. Mack has been an invaluable physician leader since he joined pediatrics in 2003.

And given his experience and judgment, I'm pleased that in addition to advising our physician executive council, he will continue to remain as a senior adviser to me and the rest of the team here.

Across our entire organization, ensuring that pediatrics is the place of choice for people to practice and to work is absolutely a priority for us in today's market. That's true within our affiliated practices, and it's equally true across all of our nonclinical support teams.

A key reason our affiliated practices can be fully devoted to our patients is a work of an amazing group of support professionals in all areas of our operations. On our February earnings call, I talked about a number of steps we've taken, including our commitment to our ESG goals and ensuring that we are truly in an equitable organization.

Here again, I believe that my deep personal involvement and commitment will ensure that our efforts do not let up on behalf of our teams and the diversity and inclusion are truly in our core and just not a couple of 2 buzzwords. I also talked about the importance of a strong brand.

And in March, we formally introduced our new pediatric's logo, which you'll now find throughout our website and which is being rolled out across our affiliated practices.

Further to that, you'll recall that in 2020, we asked our shareholders for approval to rename the company as Pediatrics Medical Group, signifying the return to our core focus and in caring for women's and babies and children.

This year, thanks to the great strides of our amazing marketing team, we are now in position to formally return to the pediatrics name for our corporate entity as well.

I'm excited to complete this full return of pediatrics, which is a well-known and highly respected name nationwide, and we'll signify our commitment to be the employer of choice, a trusted partner in the hospitals and clinicians across the country and a public company that can meet the high standards of view of our shareholders.

The pediatrics name and brand is also integral to our growth. Following our acquisition earlier this year of a second urgent care clinical platform, NightLight of Orlando, bringing us to 21 urgent care centers.

We've begun the process of de novo development of pediatrics to brand their primary and urgent care clinics in several of our key markets with the goal of opening new clinics before the end of this year.

As I've said in the past, we'll also contemplate additional opportunistic acquisitions, but I believe that these de novo development opportunities give us the chance to tailor the location, size and layout of clinics exactly to our existing market footprint.

Since this is still a new business area for pediatrics and has real estate as a key component to it. We've also added to our senior team a head of real estate, who will play a key leadership role in our clinic development and report directly to Dr. Jim Swift, whose role within the company is also expanding.

Building a presence of primary and urgent care clinics in our key markets also gives us opportunities to reinforce our brand since these locations will carry the pediatric's name. Before I turn the call to Marc, I want to thank our people.

The clinicians caring for their patients, the operators and the myriad support teams that make pediatrics the special organization that we are. We continue to operate in a changing and challenging environment. But despite that, the dedication I see every day to our highest priority, our patience has never wavered.

It's that dedication that motivates me and that gives me confidence that we can continue to succeed, grow and serve all of our stakeholders as well. Now I'll turn the call to Marc for additional financial details..

Marc Richards

Thanks, Mark, and good morning, everyone. I'll provide some details on our quarterly results as they relate to our revenue cycle management transition process and then add to Mark's comments on our outlook to financial position.

Related to revenue cycle, there were 2 factors within that transition process that modestly impacted our first quarter revenue and financial results, which I would classify as primarily timing related.

As you will see in our balance sheet, our accounts receivable increased sequentially by roughly $16 million, which brought our DSOs to 59 days at March 31 versus 55 at December 31. This reflects an increase in unbilled AR related to the transition to R1.

We were not surprised directionally by this extension since there was an expectation that there would be some delay as R1 automated various functions that had previously been manual in nature, but it was modestly beyond our expectations as of quarter end.

Based on our normal reserving practices for the aging of receivables, our Q1 revenue was slightly affected by this. However, we view this AR aging predominantly as a timing matter. We expect our DSOs to return to historically normal levels over the course of this year.

And correspondingly, we also expect a historically normal collection of these amounts. Separately, but also related to our RCM transition activity, we also saw a slight uptick in our self-pay receivables, which are not managed by R1 but by other third-party vendors.

For context, I'll point out that self-pay, which for us is true self-pay, typically represents only 1% to 2% of our total revenue. So it's a fairly nominal amount. That said, we saw a modest increase in these true self-pay balances, which, as you might imagine, carry a lower collection rate.

This also had a modest impact on our revenue for the first quarter. MEDNAX utilizes several third-party vendors to manage these accounts separate from R1, and we are working closely with these vendors to first determine whether this is a temporary or ongoing shift, and second, to ensure that we optimize the collectibility of these accounts.

Net-net, the combination of these 2 items are the primary pieces within the modest decline in our same-unit pricing in Q1, which, again, we believe is primarily related to the timing of our RCM transition to R1.

Offsetting these revenue items, our cost trends in G&A were favorable in Q1, primarily reflecting lower professional fees and the net savings in RCM expenses following our transition to R1. At the practice level, underlying salaries remain at historically normal levels at our existing practices.

All told, these modest variances from our internal expectations yielded adjusted EBITDA largely in line with our expectations prior to the contribution from the CARES funds we received.

As our first quarter results relate to our outlook of adjusted EBITDA for the year, as Mark noted, we're maintaining our underlying expectations for 2022 of revenue in the range of $2 billion and adjusted EBITDA of at least $270 million.

Within that outlook, we expect our adjusted EBITDA for the second quarter to be roughly comparable to or slightly higher than the prior year's $66 million, with growth in adjusted EBITDA reaccelerating in the second half of the year. I'll close with a quick overview of our financial position.

On March 31, balance sheet reflects the refinancing of our CapEx structure that we completed during the quarter, with total borrowings of $799 million and only a modest amount of cash for both gross and net leverage of approximately 3x on trailing adjusted EBITDA.

Our debt structure is fairly evenly split between fixed and floating rate debt and all of our borrowings under our revolving credit facility and term loan are prepayable. This refinancing significantly reduced our ongoing debt service costs.

Based on our March 31 borrowings, we expect our quarterly interest expense to be approximately $8 million compared to $12 million in the first quarter of this year and $17 million in the fourth quarter of 2021.

We also believe our current debt structure provides us with an efficient capital structure that offers optimal flexibility and liquidity for the foreseeable future. I'll turn the call back over to Mark..

Mark Ordan

Thanks, Marc. We're ready for any questions..

Charles Lynch Senior Vice President of Finance, Strategy & Investor Relations

Cynthia, if you can open up the line for questions, we'd appreciate it..

Operator

[Operator Instructions]. And we will go to the line of Tao Qiu with Stifel..

Tao Qiu

You have taken the opportunity to refinance the debt before rates moved much higher.

I'm wondering if you have seen any changes in the acquisition market or your pipeline now that the cost of capital has increased? And also maybe you could give us an update on kind of how your year-to-date acquisition of de novo is active relative to your expectations?.

Mark Ordan

Well, we've seen some change in pricing in the acquisition pipeline. Given the uncertainties that are still out there on pricing and relative to the surprise billing legislation, we've been a little bit more cautious to take a stab because we want to see how things level out a little bit.

We do think that this -- that all of this dislocation that will provide opportunities for us and our team is working on those now.

I don't know, Jim, if there's anything you want to add to that?.

James Swift Chief Executive Officer & Director

I just think there continues to be interest among the different subspecialties and primary care specialties in the acquisition market..

Tao Qiu

What about transaction volume? Has that been affected by the cost of capital?.

Mark Ordan

Only slightly. As we said on our last call, our focus has been on primary urgent care side. So that's where we've seen growth. And it's been helpful, and we want to digest that properly. But we foresee a continuing flow of transactions.

And I'd also point to the areas which are also of key interest to us, which is working with our major hospital system to look at areas where we can fill in and be better and even fuller partners to them, and that's, I would say, a very big trust of what we're doing right now..

Tao Qiu

Got you. And on the labor front, I know that you mentioned that labor costs remain at kind of historical levels, but that kind of stands in contrast with what we've seen on the hospital side, where they're seeing accelerating labor cost increases. I'm wondering what's your outlook on the physician salary and benefits growth for the rest of the year.

Do you expect that to accelerate some here? Would you see that to be relatively stable?.

Mark Ordan

We're not forecasting any material difference. I would say we're working harder than ever to recruit and retain people. And I think it wasn't -- I certainly didn't mean it as just fluff some of the comments that I made.

I think that this is the time when our recruiting team and our whole organization just has to double down, we as executives have to double down on our own efforts personally to attract people to the organization. I mentioned the physician executive counsel and the work that Dr.

Pickert does so that making sure that there's such a close alignment between the organization and our key clinicians so that people really feel this is the home for them, and they want others to join us here. I think that, that's something that we're really doing quite well. In our human resources department, we have a terrific recruiting team.

And as we saw the wind shifting, we added to that team since that's really part of the heart of what we do. So we don't -- we're not forecasting anything materially different, except that we're working materially harder to make sure that we keep things on track..

Operator

Next, we will go to the line of A.J. Rice with Credit Suisse..

A.J. Rice

Thanks, everyone. First, maybe just to ask about your discussions with managed care, any changes? Obviously, people are focused on whether there will be any impact from surprised billing.

Any updated thoughts on pricing terms of arrangements that you're seeing versus -- and also any move to going out of network on the part of payers?.

Mark Ordan

Well, one of the reasons that we feel good about our 270 number, A.J., is that we haven't seen a material shift. We have had, as I mentioned, very good dialogue with all of our major payers. We've had renewals on schedule and in line with our expectations.

So there's been a cross current of things but certainly not a wave in a negative direction that people had feared.

Now I can speculate that after the Texas Medical Association ruling and the reaction from the government to say that they'll get back and think about where they're going to be, we had hoped that there would be clarity by April of this year.

And I think that, that was what many people expected, and the latest they've said is, there'll be clarity by early summer. So I would say until there's clarity, everybody out there is in a little bit of limbo. Having said that, during this time, I would think -- I've read everything I can read.

Really, I think people realize that the government is being very thoughtful about what they've done and what would be the right way to do things. And I think we feel at least modestly more comfortable, but we'll have to wait and see. So until we learn further, things seem to be moving along okay..

A.J. Rice

Okay. And maybe a follow-up question. You mentioned that you're making a push toward health systems to try to see what you can do there. I know it's been a while since you announced the Memorial deal, that was a big deal.

Do you think the pandemic has sort of slowed hospitals being willing to discuss potential making changes of significance like NICU management or whatever.

And now that the pandemic seems to be subsiding a bit, are those discussions picking up? Is that part of what your push is about? Or is it pretty much status quo?.

James Swift Chief Executive Officer & Director

A.J., this is Jim. Actually, we're seeing more activity with the health systems and what they perceive as their needs, and I think that's what we're trying to fill. What we see is both on the inpatient side, it's not accelerating from a standpoint of them looking at different opportunities.

I think what they're really looking at is how do we support them on the ambulatory side with some of these subspecialties that really lead to being able to manage patients on the inpatient arena. So our engagement at a national level has been very good with the large health systems.

And on a local level, I would characterize it as a strong relationship that we're trying to build on to look at all the services, both inpatient and ambulatory..

Operator

Next, we will go to the line of Ryan Daniels with William Blair..

Nicholas Spiekhout

Sorry.

Can you hear me now?.

Operator

Yes, we can. Please go ahead..

Nicholas Spiekhout

Okay. Sorry about that. Nick Spiekhout on for Ryan.

I guess just to start on the inflationary front, just wondering if there's any other areas where that is kind of likely -- those pressures are likely to show up, I guess, outside of the typical kind of wage inflation?.

Charles Lynch Senior Vice President of Finance, Strategy & Investor Relations

Nick, it's Charlie. As I think about that throughout our P&L, I think you can imagine the answer is going to be that there's always the possibility that, that can show itself virtually anywhere, just based on what you and we all have seen on a labor front, supply chain front, whatever the case may be.

In real time, our experience, as you can see in the first quarter, has been pretty favorable. As Marc Richards has mentioned on the -- at the practice level, as we look at underlying salary trends, and I'll add to-date so far this year, looking at underlying turnover trends, we're seeing historically normal activity.

In our G&A, our corporate and nonclinical functions, we also have, at least in a timely fashion, the benefit of all the changes that we've made over the past year, which is a -- which have afforded us some good opportunity for savings regardless of that inflationary environment.

So I think that's helped us insulate us from a lot of those outside forces. But it doesn't mean that they're not there. We've just had some pretty good opportunities to work against them..

Nicholas Spiekhout

Got you. And then kind of on that savings, I think last quarter you mentioned that the last component of the R1 RCM transition was on the ambulatory front-end functions. I think you targeted mid- to late 2022 for to kind of see the benefits of that.

Is that still the target? And how are we on that front?.

Marc Richards

Nick, it's Marc Richards. I can speak to that for you. Yes. The ambulatory piece is still slated towards the tail end of this year, and that's still within our project plan..

Nicholas Spiekhout

Got you. And then I guess just one last quick one, the Brave integration, I think last quarter, you mentioned it should take a couple more months.

Is that pretty much fully completed by now?.

Marc Richards

Well, the Brave integration, that's a technology company that we have a relationship with through an investment we made, and we're working with them now on their EHR and technical platform for our digital front door. So we feel good about where we are and the status of that.

And obviously, we're working with them in concert with some of the ambulatory pediatric primary urgent care rollout that we're doing. So that relationship is working well..

Charles Lynch Senior Vice President of Finance, Strategy & Investor Relations

Yes. And just to clarify on that, Nick, the relationship with Brave is an investment that we have in that organization. So it was not an outright acquisition. So for us, the opportunities that brings us are just what Jim brought up.

It's the access and availability of the investments that they have made in a pretty advanced IT and operating platform to support primary urgent care clinics, and that's where our focus is..

Mark Ordan

I would also add, they have a terrific team and culture and there's a real partnership that I don't think you'd find in most investor/investment relationships, which has been very beneficial for us..

Nicholas Spiekhout

Right. Yes. So just kind of on the -- like the efficiencies that you're gaining from that kind of partnership.

Are you kind of mostly experiencing the majority of those efficiencies that you kind of expect with that?.

Mark Ordan

No, I think that's still increasing as we speak. As we both transition clinics to new locations and open new clinics, I think that's when we'll feel the full effect of it..

Operator

Our next question comes from the line of Whit Mayo with SVB Securities..

Whit Mayo

Can you hear me? I just heard something funny..

Mark Ordan

We do..

Whit Mayo

Okay. On the reserving methodology, I didn't really think you guys added higher reserves until they age out more than 90 days, maybe 180 days.

So I'm just trying to wonder what -- which receivable category this was? Was this related to receivables in this quarter? Or is this something that's more 90, 100, even further out? Just maybe help me understand the timing of the age out..

Marc Richards

It's Marc Richards. It's a little bit of both. And you see the age out in the DSO. Certainly, I don't want to get into the intricacies of our accounting policies, but every day matters from that perspective. And it is more or less a cumulative view as those receivables they age and go through the pipeline..

Whit Mayo

So just to be clear, so was the reserving policy like if we go from 30 to 90, 60 to 90, whatever it is, every time you go into that next bucket automatically 100% of the time, you apply a higher reserve against that receivable.

I would think that there would be some exceptions here given that it seems like there's timing and this manual automation -- so I guess I'm trying to make sure I understand the methodology. I know you said you didn't want to talk about it, but it might be helpful..

Marc Richards

Well, no. I mean, that's a fair point. And yes, we do our history and our reserving methodology is built off of that history. And absent absolutely compelling information to the contrary, we wouldn't change that methodology despite the fact that we are seeing kind of a onetime event here at MEDNAX transitioning our RCM function.

So I would say we need to prove out the efficacy of all this in the coming months..

Whit Mayo

Okay. I mean if I look at the balance sheet allowance, it was 20% -- I'm sorry, 79%, I think it used to be 78%. I mean, just simplistically, that 1% would imply a $15 million impact against the gross AR level.

Is that the right way to think of the revenue impact, Marc? And does this actually -- should we think it's been working itself?.

Marc Richards

That's directionally why -- I'd say that number is probably a little high, but directionally, that's certainly a good way to think about it..

Whit Mayo

So if there was like, let's say, a minus $10 million, just to make a number up for the sake of this argument, in the first quarter, if all things play out, do you get that $10 million back as a good guide in the next few quarters?.

Marc Richards

Yes. I mean that's the timing premise here. It's that despite the fact that receivables have aged beyond our normal kind of aging policy, those are fully reserved. And as those receivables are collected in the future, there's the efficacy of the process. So yes, that's the timing component..

Whit Mayo

Okay. And maybe one last one here just on this topic. Can you just go into a little bit more detail about this manual versus automated issue? I'm just trying to visualize and understand exactly what it is? And also, if you may be -- are payers turning back in on any additional claim edits. I mean, we're hearing some things.

I'm just trying to understand exactly the root cause of this. I mean I think that the numbers are fairly small, I guess, in the grand scheme of things, but I appreciate it..

Marc Richards

Yes. I mean they are. They are. And of course, part of the reason we went with R1 was due to their technology and the investments they've made into automated business intelligence that, of course, we didn't have. It's kind of that simple..

Mark Ordan

This is not about a change in payer behavior..

Marc Richards

Right..

Operator

Next, we will go to the line of Kevin Fischbeck with Bank of America..

Kevin Fischbeck

Great. Maybe just to follow up on that.

Can you give your sense of what core pricing was ex the CARES money and ex the RCM issues?.

Charles Lynch Senior Vice President of Finance, Strategy & Investor Relations

Yes, Kevin, we didn't see any meaningful variances in there from what we've typically experienced over the past several years and to repeat some comments that I've made in the past around that. Our normal experience on just underlying pricing without the distortions of payer mix, items like this, has generally been in the kind of 1% to 2% range.

Driven by normal managed care rate change, meaning escalators and the like, typically offset somewhat by Medicaid pricing. So those are the core drivers in there.

And then as you know, another component within our calculation of same unit pricing is correct in admin fees, which, again, for this quarter were up somewhat, but not in a very meaning way on the same unit base. Some are the pieces I'd say that about this quarter, absent some of these distortions and variances was historically normal..

Kevin Fischbeck

Okay. And then when we think about the RCM issue, you mentioned the 2. How should we think about the magnitude of the 2? Is it -- sounds like R1 is a bigger of the 2.

Is it 2/3, 1/3? Or how should we think about that?.

Marc Richards

I'd probably think of it more of a half and half..

Kevin Fischbeck

Okay. And then it sounds like on the self-pay side, you believe that it's a temporary issue, but you also sounded like you're still kind of working with your vendors to understand what drove it.

But I guess, what at this point makes you think that it's temporary if you're still doing that work?.

Marc Richards

Well, it was really just a front on in the first quarter in a blip with our R1 transition that leads us to pause and dig deeper on that..

Kevin Fischbeck

Okay. And then I guess maybe last question then. As far as price, I think last quarter, you kind of said that your discussions with managed care were a little bit mix that you had some contracts going normally at higher rates. I'm waiting to see, I think, it sounds like this quarter, it sounds like you're saying things are happening on time.

So is that a change? Are companies looking to just kind of move forward? Or are they still kind of some still taking that wait-and-see approach and maybe more of the number renewing in the back half?.

Mark Ordan

Overwhelmingly, we are seeing companies wanting to renew and not putting things off. We have enjoyed being overwhelmingly networked and we continue to. And our providers clearly continue to want to be in the network. So we are wantable today than we fear we might be..

Operator

[Operator Instructions] And allowing a few moments, I'm showing no questions in queue. Please continue..

Charles Lynch Senior Vice President of Finance, Strategy & Investor Relations

If there are no other questions, I think we are set with this morning. Thank you all for your understanding and support and reach out to us if we can be of further assistance. And have a great and optimistic day..

Operator

Thank you very much. And ladies and gentlemen, that does conclude your conference call for today. Thank you for your participation and for using AT&T Executive Teleconference Service. You may now disconnect..

ALL TRANSCRIPTS
2024 Q-3 Q-2 Q-1
2023 Q-4 Q-3 Q-2 Q-1
2022 Q-4 Q-3 Q-2 Q-1
2021 Q-4 Q-3 Q-2 Q-1
2020 Q-4 Q-3 Q-2 Q-1
2019 Q-4 Q-3 Q-2 Q-1
2018 Q-4 Q-3 Q-2 Q-1
2017 Q-4 Q-3 Q-2 Q-1
2016 Q-4 Q-3 Q-2 Q-1
2015 Q-4 Q-3 Q-2 Q-1
2014 Q-4 Q-3 Q-2 Q-1