Trump Budget, Revised AHCA, Credit Negatives for NFP Hospitals

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The one-two punch of massive cuts to Medicaid that are proposed in both the new budget and the House Republicans’ revised American Healthcare Act would result in cuts of close to $1 trillion over 10 years, analysis shows.

Cutting Medicaid by more than $860 million over the next decade would be a credit negative for states and not-for-profit hospitals, both of which would be left scrambling for alternative funding to cover the loss, according to a new report from Moody’s Investors Service.

Last week the Trump administration unveiled a budget proposal that includes $610 billion in cuts to core Medicaid services, and an additional $250 million in reductions to Medicaid expansion programs created under the Affordable Care Act.

The following day, the Congressional Budget Office released its scoring of the revised American Health Care Act – the Republican plan to repeal and replace the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act and estimated that it would reduce Medicaid spending by $834 million through 2026.

“The proposals significantly change the longstanding Medicaid financing system and are credit negative for states and not-for-profit hospitals,” Moody’s said in an issues brief.

For states that don’t have the luxury of ignoring budget imbalances, the changes would increase pressure to either kick people off Medicaid, increase the state share of Medicaid funding, or cut payments to hospitals and other providers, Moody’s says.

Hospitals, particularly those serving a high mix of Medicaid patients, could expect to see reimbursement cuts and more cases of uncompensated care as Medicaid patients lose the coverage they’d gained under the ACA’s expansion.

Medicaid is already a significant budget burden for states, consuming between 7% to 34% of state revenue and averaging 16%.

Under the ACA, bad debt expense at not-for-profit hospitals in states that expanded Medicaid eligibility declined on average by 15% to 20% since 2014, enhancing these hospitals’ cash flow. Similarly, the gains in insurance coverage lowered the nationwide uninsured rate to approximately 11%, with uninsured rates even lower in states that expanded their Medicaid rolls, Moody’s says.

“Although the budget would give states limited new flexibility to adjust their Medicaid programs, the measure overall reflects a significant cost shift away from federal funding to states,” Moody’s says. “This cost shift is significant and would force states to make difficult decisions about safety-net spending for hospitals that serve large numbers of indigent patients.”

NYC Health + Hospitals cuts 476 positions amid financial pressure

http://www.healthcaredive.com/news/nyc-health-hospitals-cuts-476-positions-amid-financial-pressure/444136/

Dive Brief:

  • NYC Health + Hospitals on Friday cut 476 management positions, which will reduce the current six layers of managers to four and is expected to save the health system $60 million, several news outlets reported.
  • The largest U.S. public health system cut 396 managers and eliminated 80 unfilled positions.
  • The system expects the job cuts to lead to $60 million in savings in fiscal year 2018.

Dive Insight:

The announcement of the health system’s massive restructuring day came after a $673 million loss was posted for Q3 2017. H+H interim President and CEO Stanley Brezenoff said in a statement the restructuring will reduce “unnecessary layers of management.” The health system will now be able to “better direct resources where we need them most —  at the front line of patient care.” It also cut 70 employees in February.

Revenue increased by 1.8% to $6.7 billion during the third quarter. Yet system officials said net patient service revenues dropped by 9%. The reasons behind the drop were “lower payments from the disproportionate share hospital (DSH) and upper payment limit programs,” according to the healthcare system of 11 hospitals.

At that time, H+H predicted that it would cut its $779 million budget gap this year and end with $185 million cash in hand. In April, the health system announced a redesign of its management structure after losing $776 million for the first half of FY 17, but said at that time that they did not expect layoffs.

Hospitals are facing financial issues across the country. Safety net hospitals like H+H may soon face even more difficulties. H+H has a large Medicaid population and potential cuts in President Donald Trump’s budget and the American Health Care Act – the GOP’s proposed bill to replace the Affordable Care Act – could send millions off of Medicaid. This would mean a system like H+H may soon face more uncompensated care.

H+H is looking for ways to improve its finances. One way is through a new Epic revenue cycle system that officials in May said will “improve efficiency and ensure that the health system is collecting the maximum amount of revenue for the services it delivers.” They expect it will improve clinical documentation, reduce claims denials and accelerate reimbursements.

8 hospitals with strong finances

http://www.beckershospitalreview.com/finance/8-hospitals-with-strong-finances-051817.html

Here are eight hospitals and health systems with strong operational metrics and solid financial positions according to recent reports from Fitch Ratings, Moody’s Investors Service and S&P Global Ratings.

1. Ann & Robert H. Lurie Children’s Hospital of Chicago has an “AA-” rating and stable outlook with S&P. The credit rating agency believes the hospital will maintain its business position, improved balance sheet and solid cash flow margins.

2. Coral Gables-based Baptist Health South Florida has an “AA-” rating and stable outlook with S&P. The system maintained key balance sheet metrics and generated better-than-projected financial results in fiscal year 2016, according to S&P.

3. Dallas-based Baylor Scott & White Health has an “Aa3” rating and stable outlook with Moody’s. The health system has strong cash flow margins and a favorable business position as the largest nonprofit health system in Texas, according to Moody’s.

4. Christiana Care Health Services has an “Aa2” rating and stable outlook with Moody’s. The Wilmington, Del.-based system has solid liquidity and a history of above average financial performance, according to Moody’s.

5. Kaiser Permanente has an “AA-” rating and stable outlook with S&P. The Oakland, Calif.-based system has a strong enterprise profile with a favorable integrated business model, according to S&P.

6. Albuquerque, N.M.-based Presbyterian Health Services has an “AA” rating and stable outlook with S&P. The system has a solid financial profile and a modest debt load, according to S&P.

7. Madison-based University of Wisconsin Hospital and Clinics has an “Aa3” rating and stable outlook with Moody’s. The system has strong balance sheet resources and established clinical and academic market positions, according to Moody’s.

8. WellSpan Health has an “Aa3” rating and stable outlook with Moody’s. The York, Pa.-based system has a strong and broadening market position and a track record of healthy financial performance, according to Moody’s.

Dignity Health reports $85M operating loss in Q3

http://www.beckershospitalreview.com/finance/dignity-health-reports-85m-operating-loss-in-q3.html

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San Francisco-based Dignity Health saw a decrease in revenue in the third quarter of fiscal year 2017, according to an unaudited quarterly report.

The nonprofit health system reported revenues of $3.14 billion for the three-month period ended March 31, down about 2 percent from $3.2 billion in the same period the year prior. Dignity partially attributed lower revenues to a $111.3 million decrease in net patient and premium revenue over the same period in the previous fiscal year.

The system’s operating loss more than doubled in the third quarter when compared with the same period last year. For the three-month period, the health system recorded operating losses of $85.4 million, up from $41.7 million in the same period the year prior.

Dignity attributed the loss to several factors, including unrecognized provider fee income during the period, which is pending CMS approval. The system recorded provider fee income of $108.9 million in the third quarter of the previous fiscal year.

For the nine months ended March 31, Dignity reported an operating gain of $79.5 million, up from an operating loss of $87.1 million for the same period in the prior year.

Moody’s: US nonprofit hospitals see decrease in median operating margin

http://www.beckershospitalreview.com/finance/moody-s-us-nonprofit-hospitals-see-decline-in-median-operating-margin.html

OR Efficiencies

U.S. nonprofit hospitals’ median operating margin fell in fiscal year 2016 as expenses grew, according to preliminary financial data compiled by Moody’s Investors Service.

The data is from the agency’s annual report, “Not-for-profit Healthcare and Public Hospitals — US: Preliminary 2016 Medians Skew Lower As Revenue and Expense Pressures Hinder Profitability.” For the report, Moody’s examined audited fiscal year 2016 financial statements for 150 hospitals and health systems.

Here are seven things to know from the analysis.

 

Kaiser hits $1 billion operating gain in Q1

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Kaiser Permanente Monday posted a record $1 billion operating gain in its first quarter, just days after holding its largest-ever bond offering.

The Oakland, Calif.-based health plan and hospital giant eclipsed the $1 billion barrier on revenue of $18.1 billion. That compared with an operating gain of $701 million on revenue of $16.3 billion in the year-earlier quarter.

The 5.5% operating margin in the first quarter beat the strong 4.3% operating margin from the year-earlier period.

Not-for-profit Kaiser is the nation’s largest integrated health system with 11.7 million health plan members and 39 hospitals.

Its record first quarter was disclosed in a financial filing Monday.

Efforts to reach Kaiser for a comment late Monday were unsuccessful.

Kaiser’s performance was only nominally aided by contributions from its $1.8 billion acquisition of Seattle-based Group Health Cooperative on Feb. 1.

Group Health contributed $18 million of operating income on revenue of $709 million over the last two months of the quarter, the financial filing shows.

Kaiser earlier this month raised a record $4.4 billion through a series of three bond offerings to build out access points in its current markets and look for growth opportunities in communities neighboring its facilities. Those include hundreds of physician offices and outpatient centers across the country.

Kaiser reported operating income of $1.9 billion on revenue of $64.6 billion in full-year 2016 compared with operating income of $1.8 billion on revenue of $60.7 billion in the prior year.

In the first quarter of 2017, Kaiser also posted an investment gain of $582 million compared with an investment loss of $157 million in the year-ago period.

The operating gain coupled with the investment gain and other non-operating income pushed Kaiser to a net gain in the quarter of $1.56 billion.

Kaiser only books actual investment gains, not paper or unrealized gains in its investment portfolio.

Molina Healthcare fires its CEO and CFO

http://www.fiercehealthcare.com/payer/molina-healthcare-fires-its-ceo-and-cfo

Boardroom

Citing “the company’s disappointing financial performance,” Molina Healthcare has cut ties with its CEO, J. Mario Molina, and his brother, CFO John Molina.

The Medicaid managed care company announced Tuesday that Joseph W. White, who was its chief accounting officer, will take over the role of CFO and act as the interim president and CEO while Molina seeks a replacement for that role.

Molina’s board of directors took the step of firing the sons of the company’s founder, C. David Molina, “in order to drive profitability through operational improvements,” Chairman Dale B. Wolf said in the announcement.

“With the industry in dynamic transition, the Board believes that now is the right time to bring in new leadership to capitalize on Molina’s strong franchise and the opportunities we see for sustained growth,” he added.

The leadership change comes in the wake of Molina’s revelation in February that it lost $110 million on its Affordable Care Act exchange business last year. On the company’s fourth-quarter earnings call, J. Mario Molina primarily blamed the ACA’s risk adjustment program, which he said uses a methodology that “penalizes low-cost and low-premium health insurers like Molina.”

That was a sharp turnaround from back in September, when the insurer’s CEO said that it had exceeded its own growth targets for its ACA exchange business.

J. Mario Molina has also been an outspoken critic of Republicans’ bill that aims to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act—a rarity among his peers. In particular, he was critical of the steep funding cuts for Medicaid proposed by the GOP.

Molina’s now-ex-CEO earned $10 million in total compensation in 2016, a slight decrease from the $10.3 million he made the year prior and only one of two executives at the eight largest publicly traded health insurers to take a pay cut.

CHS records $199M net loss, says divestiture spree is over

http://www.beckershospitalreview.com/finance/chs-records-199m-net-loss-keeps-focus-on-performance-improvement.html

OR Efficiencies

Franklin, Tenn.-based Community Health Systems posted a net loss of $199 million in the first quarter after recording net income of $11 million in the same period of the year prior.

CHS said revenues dipped to $4.49 billion in the first quarter of this year, down from $4.99 billion in the same period of 2016. The decrease in revenue was attributable, in part, to lower patient volume. On a same-facility basis, admissions were down 1.5 percent in the first quarter of this year. When adjusted for outpatient activity, admissions decreased 1.4 percent year over year.

Although CHS kept operating expenses in check in the first quarter, one-time charges took a toll on the company’s bottom line. CHS said its first-quarter financial results included $250 million in impairment charges and losses related to the sale of some of its hospitals.

Commenting on the company’s financial results, CHS Chairman and CEO Wayne T. Smith said, “We are focused on performance improvements that we believe will yield additional efficiencies as we move through 2017. At the same time, we are making progress with our portfolio rationalization strategy as we work to create a stronger, more sustainable company for the future and further reduce our debt.”

To improve its finances and reduce its nearly $15 billion debt load, CHS put a turnaround plan into place last year. As part of the plan, the company is selling off 30 hospitals, which includes 11 hospitals it divested this week. Twelve other transactions are under definitive agreement and seven are under letter of intent, Mr. Smith said on a first quarter earnings call Tuesday.

“We’re about finished with our divestiture process, this 30 just about lines it up,” said Mr. Smith. “There may be one or two more, but we are not specifically thinking about doing anything significant for the rest of the year.”

 

UnitedHealth Group’s operating earnings rise 15% in Q1: 6 things to know

http://www.beckershospitalreview.com/payer-issues/unitedhealth-group-s-operating-earnings-rise-15-in-q1-6-things-to-know.html

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Minnetonka, Minn.-based UnitedHealth Group saw revenue and earnings from operations increase in the first quarter of fiscal year 2017 despite its widespread withdrawal from the ACA individual marketplace this year.

Here are six highlights from the payer’s financials for the quarter ended March 31.

1. UnitedHealth reported first quarter revenues of $48.7 billion, reflecting a 9.4 percent year-over-year increase.

2. The payer’s consolidated first quarter revenues were reduced by $1.6 billion due to its large-scale exit from 34 of the ACA individual markets it participated in 2016 and the 2017 health insurance tax deferral.

3. UnitedHealth recorded a 15 percent year-over-year increase of earnings from operations, from $2.96 billion in the first quarter of  FY 2016 to $3.4 billion in the first quarter of FY 2017.

4. UnitedHealthcare, the health insurance arm of UnitedHealth, recorded $40.1 billion in revenues for the first quarter, up 11.8 percent from the first quarter of FY 2016. Its membership grew by 730,000 policyholders during the same period. The health insurer also saw its first quarter earnings from operations increase 15 percent year-over-year to $2.1 billion. UnitedHealthcare attributed the growth to increased operating margins.

5. UnitedHealth’s health services platform Optum saw earnings from operations increase 15.6 percent year-over-year to $1.3 billion on revenue of $21.2 billion. Of Optum’s three segments, its advisory consulting arm OptumInsight reported the largest revenue growth at 10.6 percent year-over-year due to increases in revenue management, business process and technology services.

6. UnitedHealth Group raised its full-year 2017 financial outlook and now expects about $200 billion in revenue and adjusted net earnings of $9.65 to $9.85 per share.

 

11 health systems with strong finances

http://www.beckershospitalreview.com/finance/11-health-systems-with-strong-finances-041117.html

Here are 11 health systems with strong operational metrics and solid financial positions according to recent reports from Fitch Ratings, Moody’s Investors Service and S&P Global Ratings.

Note: This is not an exhaustive list. Health system names were compiled from recent credit rating reports and are listed in alphabetical order.

1. Allina Health has an “AA-” rating and stable outlook with Fitch and S&P and an “Aa3” rating and stable outlook with Moody’s. The Minneapolis-based system has a leading market position in a competitive service area and favorable balance sheet metrics, according to Moody’s.

2. Coral Gables-based Baptist Health South Florida has an “AA-” rating and stable outlook with S&P. The system maintained key balance sheet metrics and generated better-than-projected financial results in fiscal year 2016, according to S&P.

3. Christiana Care Health Services has an “Aa2” rating and stable outlook with Moody’s. The Wilmington, Del.-based system has solid liquidity and a history of above average financial performance, according to Moody’s.

4. Froedtert Health has an “AA-” rating and positive outlook with S&P. The system has healthy financial metrics, and its market share in a competitive service area is improving, according to S&P. The debt rating agency expects Froedtert’s financial profile to remain consistent over the next one to two years.

5. St. Joseph, Mich.-based Lakeland Hospitals has an “AA-” rating and stable outlook with Fitch. The health system has a strong financial profile and leading market position, according to Fitch.

6. Mercy Health has an “Aa3” rating and stable outlook with Moody’s. The St. Louis-based system’s balance sheet measures and financial performance have improved in the last three years, according to Moody’s. The debt rating agency expects Mercy Health’s operating margins to continue to improve.

7. Dallas-based Methodist Health has an “Aa3” rating and stable outlook with Moody’s. The system has a low debt burden and strong balance sheet measures, according to Moody’s.

8. Seattle Children’s Healthcare System has an “Aa2” rating and stable outlook with Moody’s. The system has strong balance sheet measures and operating performance, according to Moody’s. The debt rating agency expects Seattle Children’s Healthcare System’s overall profitability to remain strong and its debt coverage measures to improve.

9. Madison-based University of Wisconsin Hospital and Clinics has an “Aa3” rating and stable outlook with Moody’s. The system has strong balance sheet resources and established clinical and academic market positions, according to Moody’s.

10. Richmond-based Virginia Commonwealth University Health System has an “Aa3” rating and stable outlook with Moody’s. The health system has solid operating performance and a strong credit profile, according to Moody’s. The debt rating agency expects the health system to sustain cash flow margins at close to current levels and maintain its liquidity.

11. WellSpan Health has an “Aa3” rating and stable outlook with Moody’s. The York, Pa.-based system has a strong and broadening market position and a track record of healthy financial performance, according to Moody’s