Healthcare M&A drops in volume, value for Q3, PwC says

https://www.healthcaredive.com/news/healthcare-ma-drops-in-volume-value-for-q3-pwc-says/540679/

Dive Brief:

  • Healthcare deal activity in the third quarter of this year continued the streak of at least 200 deals each quarter since the end of 2015 and at least 250 quarterly deals since Q3 of last year, PwC said in a new report.
  • However, the quarter saw the fewest number of deals in a quarter since Q1 2017. There were also declines in value compared to both the previous year and quarter.
  • Long-term care remained the most active sub-sector with 102 deals. Payers have increasingly seen potential in long-term care companies.

Dive Insight:

Healthcare M&A activity saw a dip in Q3, but that doesn’t mean it’s the start of a downward trend.

Thad Kresho, U.S. health services deals leader at PwC, told Healthcare Dive on Thursday that interest remains high among “historical acquirers.” Those purchasers are looking to “further their connection points with their constituents,” Kresho said.

“Further buoyancy is fueled by increasing private equity interest (with their available capital) as well as non-traditional entrants, such as retail and tech-enabled companies. Interest of these participants range across many sub-sectors,” he added.

There were 261 healthcare deals in Q3 of 2018, slightly lower than the average of the past seven quarters (264). Deal volume increased 0.4% compared to a year ago, but dropped almost 11% compared to Q2 2018.

The total deal value plummeted to $15.9 billion, which is a drop of nearly 36% compared to the previous quarter and 10.1% year over year. It’s also a far cry from Q4 2017 ($100 billion) and Q1 2018 ($72.6 billion). Of course, one or two megadeals, such as the proposed CVS-Aetna and Cigna-Express Scripts deals, can be the difference between an OK quarter and a blockbuster, so quarterly value isn’t always the best gauge.

Kresho said volumes remain strong across multiple sub-sectors. PwC expects that to continue through the rest of this year and into the next.

“The industry’s major ongoing themes of regulatory uncertainty, income pressure, technological innovation and consumer-centricity continue to drive interest in deals,” PwC said.

The largest deal of the quarter was the RCCH HealthCare Partners purchase of LifePoint Health. The $5.6 billion transaction continued the hospital sub-sector’s average of one megadeal per quarter, which stretches back to 2015.

Another billion-dollar transaction in the hospital sector was HCA Healthcare’s purchase of Mission Health for $1.5 billion. Hospital deal volume overall dipped about 12%, but its value increased by 4,711% thanks in large part to the billion-dollar deals.

A different recent quarterly report by Kaufman Hall also found that M&A activity is down for hospitals and noted 18 deals in the quarter. The total was a 38% decrease from a year ago. Transactions for the first nine months of the year were also down, though value was up, according to that analysis.

Meanwhile, in the PwC report, another notable transaction over $1 billion was UnitedHealth Group’s purchase of 80% of Genoa Healthcare. The deal will help OptumRx’s behavioral offerings.

The sub-sector that saw the most deals was long-term care with a volume increase of about 33%, but value fell by 35%.

On the other end, PwC saw the largest value declines in physical medical groups and managed care. Physician medical groups volume dropped 30% and value fell by 97%. The sub-sector saw its fewest deals since Q4 2016. PwC doesn’t think the slow quarter is the start of a downward trend in that sub-sector, though. It’s likely an outlier.

Managed care volume, meanwhile, dropped 25% and value plummeted 95%. The slowdown in managed care purchases come as health insurers explore vertical integration rather than merging with other payers. Regulators have been leery of horizontal mergers over the past couple of years, but there are fewer roadblocks for vertical deals.

The managed care M&A activity will likely be in growth areas, such as Medicaid and Medicare Advantage. Otherwise, expect insurers to continue to look beyond their sub-sector and seek out opportunities in areas like pharmacy benefit management and long-term care companies.

 

 

Catholic Health Initiatives CFO Dean Swindle’s advice to other systems: ‘Don’t get too comfortable with your past success’

https://www.beckershospitalreview.com/finance/catholic-health-initiatives-cfo-dean-swindle-s-advice-to-other-systems-don-t-get-too-comfortable-with-your-past-success.html

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Englewood, Colo.-based Catholic Health Initiatives embarked on a turnaround plan several years ago with the goal of improving its financial picture while providing high-quality care at its hospitals and other facilities across the nation. The system has made great strides toward its goal, yet there is still a lot of work to be done.

CHI has been laser-focused on performance improvement over the past three years, but rolling out a comprehensive turnaround plan across an organization with 100 hospitals is challenging, and progress is slow. The health system’s efforts just began to take hold in the second half of fiscal year 2017. Although CHI has encountered obstacles on its path to financial stability, the system is pleased with the headway it has made and expects more improvement in the coming months.

CHI’s cost-cutting initiative

To improve its finances, CHI set out to cut costs across the system. It put a great deal of energy into lowering labor and supply costs, which combined can make up two-thirds or more of the system’s operating expenses. CHI developed plans and playbooks focused on reducing these costs several years ago, knowing it would not immediately see results.

In the labor area, CHI President of Enterprise Business Lines and CFO Dean Swindle says the system had to incur costs to cut costs. “In the second half of the year [fiscal 2017] we began to see the benefits of our labor activities in the markets, but we also had cost,” he says. For example, CHI incurred the one-time expense of hiring advisers to help the system develop new labor management techniques. The system also cut jobs, which resulted in severance costs.

“When we got to the second half of 2017, we were very confident and felt very pleased that we were seeing benefit … but it was difficult for others to see it because it was for half of the year, and we had the one-time costs that were burdening that,” Mr. Swindle says.

After factoring in expenses and one-time charges, CHI ended fiscal year 2017 with an operating loss of $585.2 million, compared to an operating loss of $371.4 million in fiscal year 2016.

However, CHI saw its financial situation improve in the first quarter of fiscal year 2018. The system’s operating loss narrowed to $77.9 million from $180.7 million in the same period of the year prior. “What you were able to see in the first quarter [of fiscal 2018] … was the one-time costs had gone away for the most part; those weren’t burdening our results,” says Mr. Swindle.

He says although the system employed more physicians, its absolute labor costs were lower year over year. CHI’s supply costs, including drug costs, were also lower in the first quarter of fiscal year 2018 than in the first quarter of last year.

Mr. Swindle says CHI saw its finances improve in a difficult operating environment. Patient volume was lower in the first quarter of fiscal year 2018 than a year prior, and the system also experienced a nearly $26 million loss from business operations as a result of Hurricane Harvey.

“[This has] given us a level of confidence that we can move forward and address the difficulty that our industry is going to be facing over the next several years,” he says.

In early January, Fitch Ratings affirmed CHI’s “BBB+” rating and upgraded its credit outlook to stable from negative. The credit rating agency cited the health system’s strong start to the 2018 fiscal year and financial improvements in several markets as key reasons for the upgrade.

Preparing for new challenges

Although healthcare organizations are currently facing many challenges, including regulatory uncertainty and dwindling reimbursement rates, Mr. Swindle anticipates hospitals and health systems will face new obstacles over the next few years.

For example, hospitals will be challenged by changes to the 340B Drug Pricing Program. CMS’ 2018 Medicare Outpatient Prospective Payment System rule finalized a proposal to pay hospitals 22.5 percent less than the average sales price for drugs purchased through the 340B program. Medicare previously paid the average sales price plus 6 percent.

“I don’t think 340B was by chance and in isolation,” says Mr. Swindle. “I think we’re entering one of those cycles that the whole economic environment of our industry is going to be working against us.”

The pressures in the industry are driving hospitals and health systems to join forces. After more than a year of talks, CHI and San Francisco-based Dignity Health signed a definitive merger agreement in December 2017. The proposed transaction will create a massive nonprofit Catholic health system, comprising 139 hospitals across 28 states.

In the short term, the combination of the two systems is expected to drive synergies in the $500 million range, according to Mr. Swindle. In the coming months, the two systems will dive deeper into the synergies they expect to achieve over a multiyear period. “We do believe beyond the synergies there are some strategic initiatives we can put into place as a combined organization that we couldn’t do individually,” Mr. Swindle says. “You won’t see the benefit of those as much in the short term.”

“Take a deep breath”

Mr. Swindle knows firsthand that developing and executing an operational turnaround plan is no easy task. However, today’s healthcare landscape requires health systems to re-engineer their business models.

“Regardless of how good your results … have been over the last five to 10 years, we’re all going to have to transform ourselves in our own way to meet the characteristics of our organizations,” says Mr. Swindle.

When embarking on a performance improvement plan, the first thing health system CFOs should do is “take a deep breath,” he says. Then, they should focus on the things they have more control over. Mr. Swindle says it is critical for health systems to continue to drive improvement in patient experience and quality. They also need to be strategic cost managers.

“It’s not going to be as easy as just saying we’re going to take these [full-time employees] out or reduce this service. You’re really going to have to be very smart and very thoughtful about how you become a good cost manager that adds value to your communities,” says Mr. Swindle. “Don’t get too comfortable with your past success and your past models.”