Moody’s: Nonprofit hospital rating downgrades rose sharply in 2017

https://www.beckershospitalreview.com/finance/moody-s-nonprofit-hospital-rating-downgrades-rose-sharply-in-2017.html

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Despite a strong economy and low uninsured population, nonprofit hospital rating downgrades sharply outpaced upgrades throughout 2017 — creating a downgrade-to-upgrade ratio of 3.4 to 1.0, which is more than double the 2016 ratio of 1.5 to 1.0, according to a new report by Moody’s Investors Service.

In 2017, there were 41 credit downgrades and 12 credit upgrades for nonprofit hospitals, compared to 32 credit downgrades and 21 credit upgrades in 2016.

Moody’s attributed the credit stress in 2017 to rising labor and supply costs coupled with a low revenue growth environment.

“An acute nursing shortage in many markets, along with rising supply and pharmaceutical costs, resulted in expense growth outpacing revenue growth for many hospitals and health systems,” the Moody’s report reads.

While hospitals of all sizes were downgraded, 60 percent of the downgrades in 2017 affected smaller health systems with less than $1 billion in total operating revenue. In addition, 12 of the downgrades occurred in Pennsylvania and Ohio, reflecting the lagging economy, aging demographics, competitive service area and commercial payer challenges in the Rust Belt area.

Although downgrades outpaced upgrades in 2017, Moody’s affirmed the vast majority of ratings in 2017, which is in line with historical trends.

Outlook Darkens for Not-for-Profit Hospitals

http://www.healthleadersmedia.com/finance/outlook-darkens-not-profit-hospitals?spMailingID=12500545&spUserID=MTY3ODg4NTg1MzQ4S0&spJobID=1300449776&spReportId=MTMwMDQ0OTc3NgS2

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The revised outlook from Moody’s comes amid a larger-than-expected drop in cash flow this year and the ongoing uncertainty regarding federal healthcare policy for public and not-for-profit hospitals.

Moody’s Investors Service has downgraded from stable to negative its 2018 outlook for the not-for-profit hospital sector based on an expected drop in operating cash flow.

“Operating cash flow declined at a more rapid pace than expected in 2017, and we expect continued contraction of 2%-4% through 2018,” said Eva Bogaty, a Moody’s vice president.

“The cash flow spike from insurance expansion under the Affordable Care Act in 2014 and 2015 has largely worn off, but cash flow has not stabilized as expected because of a low revenue and high expense growth environment,” Bogaty said.

In a briefing released Monday, Moody’s said hospital revenue growth is slowing and is expected to remain slightly above medical inflation, which declined to a low of 1.6% in September. Hospitals can’t translate volume growth into stronger revenue growth because of the lower reimbursement rate increases across all insurance providers and higher expense growth.

In addition, rising exposure to governmental payers will dampen revenue growth for the foreseeable future due to a rapidly aging population and low reimbursement rates. Medicare and Medicaid, represent 60% of gross patient revenue in 2017, Moody’s said.

Key drivers of expense growth include rising labor costs, driven by an acute nursing shortage and ongoing physician and medical specialist hiring. Technology costs are also rising as systems are upgraded and IT staff is needed for training and maintenance. While the ACA’s arrival heralded a drop in bad debt from 2014-16, bad debt rebounded in 2017 and will continue to grow at a rate of 6%-7% in 2018, Bogaty said.

“Rising copays and use of high deductible plans will increase bad debt for both expansion and non-expansion states,” she said.

In the near-term, uncertainty regarding federal healthcare policy will have a marginal fiscal impact on NFP hospitals. Bogaty said ambiguity surrounding the ACA does affect the planning and modelling of long-term strategies, while recent federal tax proposals will add to rising costs for hospitals.

The outlook could be revised to stable if operating cash flow resumes growth of 0%-4%. A change to positive could result from expectations of accelerated operating cash flow growth of more than 4% after inflation, Moody’s said.