NYSE:USPH U.S. Physical Therapy Q1 2024 Earnings Report $68.14 -1.47 (-2.11%) As of 02:09 PM Eastern Earnings HistoryForecast U.S. Physical Therapy EPS ResultsActual EPS$0.51Consensus EPS $0.58Beat/MissMissed by -$0.07One Year Ago EPS$0.59U.S. Physical Therapy Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$155.70 millionExpected Revenue$153.30 millionBeat/MissBeat by +$2.40 millionYoY Revenue Growth+4.80%U.S. Physical Therapy Announcement DetailsQuarterQ1 2024Date5/7/2024TimeAfter Market ClosesConference Call DateWednesday, May 8, 2024Conference Call Time10:30AM ETUpcoming EarningsU.S. Physical Therapy's Q1 2025 earnings is scheduled for Tuesday, May 6, 2025, with a conference call scheduled on Wednesday, May 7, 2025 at 10:30 AM ET. Check back for transcripts, audio, and key financial metrics as they become available.Conference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptPress Release (8-K)Quarterly Report (10-Q)Earnings HistoryCompany ProfilePowered by U.S. Physical Therapy Q1 2024 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrMay 8, 2024 ShareLink copied to clipboard.There are 9 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Good day and thank you for standing by. Welcome to the U. S. Physical Therapy First Quarter 2024 Earnings Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen only mode. Operator00:00:12After the speakers' presentation, there will be a question and answer I'd now like to turn the call over to Chris Redding, President and CEO. Please go ahead, Speaker 100:00:37sir. Okay. Thanks, David. Good morning, and welcome, everyone, to our U. S. Speaker 100:00:41Physical Therapy First Quarter 2024 earnings call. With me on the line this morning include Carrie Hendrickson, our CFO Eric Williams, who is our COO, East And Eric will be assuming a larger role in our company as he takes over as President in just a few weeks after our annual meeting later this month. So we congratulate him on that. Graham Reeve, our COO at West and Jake Martinez, our Senior Vice President, Finance and Accounting. Before we begin our prepared remarks, I'll ask Jake to cover a brief disclosure statement. Speaker 200:01:17Thank you, Chris. This presentation contains forward looking statements, which involves certain risks and uncertainties. These forward looking statements are based on the company's current views and assumptions. The company's actual results may vary materially from those anticipated. Please see the company's filings the Securities and Exchange Commission for more information. Speaker 200:01:38Thanks, Jake. Okay, I'm going to Speaker 100:01:40keep my remarks reasonably brief, but I do want to give you kind of an overview of what I think are some important takeaways for the start of the year. So let me begin by saying that while these past few years have not been easy for anybody in our industry, I think our team has done some remarkable things in that period. We feel like we're off to a good start for this year as well. For some of you, I know that it may feel like this Q1 is a little bit of a disappointment, having enjoyed an all time record Q1 in 2023. This quarter was actually ahead of where we expected to be and that expectation was baked into our original guidance, which you will see we are updating today. Speaker 100:02:24While we experienced tough start to the year, not based upon demand, which has been very strong, but a rough weather start for sure compared to year. However, we bounced back very quickly and visits have again been at or above previous record levels for visits per clinic per day. Visits per clinic were all time highs for both February March of this year, and I'm happy to report that April is another all time high for that month as we have built slowly but steadily in our volume progression so far this year. So what does that mean? Well, for one, it means that our facilities are being recognized and sought out for the great care we are providing the patients and their families and by the physicians who refer to us. Speaker 100:03:08And so demand has been very high. I will also tell you that staffing, while improved, is really still the gating factor to being able to capture even more volume. We're working hard on that. We have a new leader over that recruiting department and I expect we will continue to make adjustments that will further assist us in meeting the demand that we're seeing for services. Our partners are working with our ops team to network differently than maybe we have done in the past to increase the number and the quality of seeds planted, so to speak, with respect to talented clinicians in their markets. Speaker 100:03:46It's an all hands on deck exercise, but I'm buoyed by the fact that demand is really strong and that underpins all of this. Coupled with strong demand and record monthly volumes once we get outside of January is the progress the team has made with respect to net rate. In spite of the impact of a rather large approximately 3.5% Medicare reduction to start the year, We were able to produce some uplift in our rate and some improvement in our work comp mix that created some overall incremental improvement that we hope to build upon as the year progresses. For this Q1, we saw non Medicare rate improve another 2.8% overall from Q1 2023 and up 5% since the same quarter in 2022. And we're not done yet. Speaker 100:04:39We continue to work to lift reimbursement for the life improving work that we are delivering across the more than 5,000,000 patient interagency. While demand is also improving where demand is also improving is in our injury prevention business. First, you saw a recent acquisition announcement with respect to a really terrific company led by Fine Team, who recently joined our Briotix partnership. That opportunity will further will help us to further broaden our exposure to several additional industry, we call them verticals, essentially industry types, where over time we expect to gain additional sales traction as well as cross selling opportunities given that we have a much broader subset of services available now to sell. For the quarter, revenue grew 9.8%, which in turn produced a gross profit increase of over 15%. Speaker 100:05:41I'm very proud of our teams and our partnerships in this area. They continue to attract opportunities for further expansion, while they make a large difference for these companies in terms of the injuries they prevent and the cost that they save as a result of the fine work of our embedded clinical and technical resources. We have other highlights to cover. So let me turn the call over to Karru to discuss our results in more detail before we open things Speaker 300:06:09up for questions. Thank you, Chris, and good morning, everyone. Our first quarter results, as Chris noted, were better than we anticipated coming into the quarter, driven by strong volumes in February, March at a growing net rate. As we noted in our release and also in our year end earnings release, we had the significant adverse weather events in January 2024 that Chris noted that we knew we're going to make comparisons to the Q1 of 2023 challenging since there weren't any significant weather events in the Q1 of last year. Volumes in January of 2024 were light as expected, but volumes quickly picked up back up in February March and we experienced record volumes in each of those 2 months. Speaker 300:06:50Our hard work on rate negotiations and our focus on increasing workers' comp as a percentage of overall business continued to take root in the Q1 of 2024 and resulted in a net rate increasing year over year despite that Medicare rate reduction that was in effect for most the Q1 that Chris noted. From an EBITDA standpoint, we reported adjusted EBITDA for the Q1 of 20 20 '24 EBITDA down by about $1,700,000 and then the adverse weather in January was a negative impact of about $1,300,000 Our operating results were $7,700,000 in both the Q1 of 'twenty four and the Q1 of 'twenty 3. On a share basis, on a per share basis, operating results were $0.51 in the Q1 of this year versus $0.59 in the Q1 of last year. That's because of the decrease related to the increase in shares that we had associated with the secondary offering that we completed in May of 'twenty three. Our average visits per clinic per day in the Q1 was 29.5, which is the 2nd highest volume in the company's history for a Q1, second only to the 29.8% that we had in the Q1 of 2023. Speaker 300:08:11January was at 27.4% and that compares to 28.9 in the previous year. So we're down from 28.9 to 27.4, but then February was at 30.4 percent and March was at 30.8 percent. And both of those months, as Chris noted, were higher than the same months in the previous year. Volumes continued strong in April with our average visits per day just north of 31 and that's a record high average visits per day number for the company ever and the first time we've ever had average visits per day at or above 31 per month. Our net rate was $103.37 in the first quarter of 'twenty four, which was an increase of $0.25 again despite that Medicare rate reduction that was in fact for most of the Q1 of 3.5%. Speaker 300:09:00The increase was largely related to our strategic priority of increasing reimbursement rates through contract negotiations with commercial and other payers and then our focus on growing our workers' comp business. Excluding Medicare, our net rate was up 2.8% versus the Q1 of last year with increases in each of the major categories other than Medicare. Workers' comp, which is one of our highest rate categories, increased from 9.3% of our revenue mix in the Q1 of 'twenty 3 to 10% in the Q1 of 'twenty 4. And both of those initiatives, increasing net rate, the rate negotiations and the workers' comp business will remain high priorities throughout the year. Our physical therapy revenues were $134,400,000 in the Q1 of 2024, which was an increase of $5,300,000 or 4.1 percent from last year despite the setbacks that we had from weather and the Medicare rate reduction. Speaker 300:09:57The increase was driven by having 28 more clinics on average in the Q1 of this year than we had in the Q1 of last year, coupled with the increase in our net rate. Our physical therapy operating costs were $110,400,000 which was an increase of 8.1% over the Q1 of the prior year, due in part to having 28 more clinics on average than in the Q1 of last year. On a per visit basis, our total operating costs were 85.50 dollars Speaker 400:10:25in the Speaker 300:10:25Q1, which was up from just under $82 in the Q1 of 2023. Our average cost per visit was high in January because we had less operating leverage due to the lower number of visits and then it returned to more normal levels in February March, which averaged $82.90 per visit. Our salaries and related cost was really the same story. They were $61.42 in the Q1 of 2024. That was up from $59.14 in the Q1 of 'twenty 3. Speaker 300:10:56But again, those salaries related costs were high in January, but then they were turned to more normal levels in February March, which averaged $59.42 per visit, which is comparable to that $59.14 that we saw in the Q1 of 'twenty three. Our physical therapy margin was 17.9% in the Q1 of 'twenty four. That margin was also impacted by January due to having less operating leverage, but then it increased to 20.6% in fit for February March on a combined basis, which is back to very close to the Q1 of 'twenty two and 'three margin, which was 21 percent. Chris talked about IIP and what a great job they did. In the Q1, revenues were up almost 10%, IP income was up 15.1% and then our margin increased 19.5 increased from 19.5% in the Q1 of 'twenty 3 to 20.4% in the Q1 of 2024. Speaker 300:11:55Our balance sheet continues to be in an excellent position. We had $143,000,000 debt on our term loan with a swap agreement in place that places the rate on that debt at 4.7%, which as you know is a very favorable rate in today's market and it's well below the current Fed funds rate. In the Q1 of 2024 alone, the swap agreement saved us $900,000 in interest expense with cumulative savings of $4,200,000 since we put that in place in the Q3 of 2022. In addition to the term loan, we also have a $175,000,000 revolving credit facility that had nothing drawn on it during the Q1 and we have approximately $105,000,000 of excess cash over and above what we need for working capital ready for deployment into growth initiatives. Including the April 30 acquisitions that we announced last week, we've deployed just over $40,000,000 of cash into acquisitions so far this year. Speaker 300:12:53As we noted in our release, we're raising our EBITDA guidance range for the full year 2024 to $82,500,000 to $87,500,000 That's an increase of $2,500,000 on both ends of the range. Our guidance previously considered that a 3.5% Medicare rate reduction versus last year's rates would be in a place for all of 2024. However, as we noted in an 8 ks that we put out in March, Congress addressed the Medicare reduction in the Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2024 and adjusted that reduction from 3.5% to 1.8%, that's effective March 9 through the end of 2024. It was not retro to the beginning of the year, but it will be from that March 9 forward at 1.8% reduction rather than 3.5%. The outperformance of our internal expectations in the Q1 of 2024 due to our strong volumes in February March and our continued progress in that rate gives us confidence to raise the range by more than just the $2,000,000 effective that's related to the Medicare rate change even though it's early in the year. Speaker 300:14:04As a reminder, the expected EBITDA contribution from acquisitions we've closed so far this year and another one that we expect to close by the end of July are included in their guidance just as they were in our previous guidance. In closing, our Q1 was ahead of our internal expectations. February March were strong months from a volume, revenue, EBITDA and margin perspective. Our net rate grew in the Q1 over the prior year even with 3.5% Medicare reduction in place for most of that Q1 and we have very good momentum as we start the Q2 as evidenced by our average visits per day in April. And we increased our full year guidance by $2,500,000 to reflect all of those things. Speaker 300:14:44So with that, Chris, I'll turn the call back to you. Speaker 100:14:48Yes. Really appreciate it, Carey. Great job. Thank you. So operator, let's go ahead and open up for questions or comments. Operator00:15:15And we'll take our first question from Brian Tanquilut from Jefferies. Please go ahead. Your line is open. Speaker 500:15:22Good morning, Brian. Good morning, guys. Good morning and Eric, congrats. Chris, maybe my first question, as we think about your commentary that Q2 or Q1 was essentially in line with internal expectations, the salaries cost stands out to us up 3.5% sequentially. So just curious, what are you seeing there and what needs to happen for that to maybe normalize? Speaker 500:15:48Or are these the normalized levels that we should be thinking about from a salaries and related costs as a percentage of revenue perspective going forward? Speaker 100:15:58Yes. Well, I think I may pull Carey back in for part of this. Certainly, I think the impact in January on light revenue, light volume impacted us there on a percent of revenue basis. When we look at the rest of the quarter, the February March numbers, which I'll get Cary to revisit here momentarily, those return to a more normal level. And I think that's a better indication of where we think this will be going forward. Speaker 100:16:31So Kerry, you want to hit those again quickly? Speaker 300:16:34Yes, you bet. So salaries and related costs in February March, they were $59.42 per visit. And that is up only slightly from $59.14 in the Q1 of 2020 3, which is a good comparison because January the Januarys were so different. And each year, January of last year didn't have any weather. And of course, we know we had the weather event and weather events in January of this year. Speaker 300:17:03So I think that's a better comparison and something you should look at for going forward is something around that $59.42 kind of per visit from a salary standpoint. And that will actually probably go down a little it varies because there's a certain amount of your salaries related costs that are relatively fixed. So a lot of it varies with the cost per visit, but you do have just some base level of employees that are on a that make that fixed. So it will vary and probably come down a little bit in the second quarter from the first is what I would anticipate given that we'll have that's one of our it's actually usually our highest volume quarter. So that may be a little less than the second quarter, but then vary a little bit from that as we go into the 3rd and the 4th. Speaker 300:17:50So I feel like in a decent place from salaries and related costs. It's just that that January impacted that number quite a bit, because we didn't have the operating leverage that we did in the February March months. Speaker 100:18:04Okay. Yes, Speaker 500:18:06that makes a lot of sense. Speaker 100:18:07Yes, okay. Speaker 500:18:09And then maybe my follow-up question, Kerry, as I think about I appreciate your comment that Q1 was within your internal range and you're obviously raising guidance for the year. Any color you can share with us to help us think about how your or what your internal expectations are for Q2 understanding that you're off to a really strong start in April? Speaker 300:18:34Yes. I mean, gosh, we don't usually give guidance by quarter, but I would just say, we expect it to be at a level that is up from last year's Q1 Q2, excuse me, and certainly up from where we were in the Q1 of this year. A lot of it honestly, a lot of it's going to depend on what net rate obviously and then just how strong those volumes are in April, May June, but that's certainly my expectation. I mean, we have we've added acquisitions since the Q2 of last year. We've improved our net rate since the Q2 of last year. Speaker 300:19:10It certainly should be up. Speaker 100:19:12Yes, Brian. I mean, we're not going to get to the point and I know you're not asking us to do this where we're going to guide by quarter. I know ATI just did that. I don't think that's the right move for us. But we're comfortable in the guidance that we updated for the year and you guys have the hard job of trying to parse that out between quarters. Speaker 500:19:36No, totally understand, Chris. And thank you for the comments. Speaker 100:19:41Thank you. Operator00:19:44We'll take our next question from Joanna Gajuk with Bank of America. Please go ahead. Your line is open. Speaker 400:19:51Good morning. Thank you. Thanks for taking questions here. So I guess coming back to volumes and the comments around February, March were pretty good months. And then I guess April in particular looks like it's pretty good. Speaker 400:20:06So the question is what is driving this better volume here? And also what do you assume, I guess, for the rest of the year? Speaker 100:20:16So, I got to tip my hat to our clinicians and our partners, 95% of whom are clinicians. They're doing a great job with patients. We're doing, I think, a better than ever job in outreach, not just to physician referral sources, but to communities, social media, other things driving patients. Frankly, our demand is high enough that if we could just magically import staffing on an incremental basis where and when we need it, we could drive volumes even higher. And so gating factor for us right now, staffing, teams worked very hard. Speaker 100:21:03Turnover for this quarter is at the lowest level that I can remember since I've looked at turnover going back many, many years. So our partners who largely influence that are doing a very good job. We're continuing to work to try to get it down even further. But staffing is really the gating factor. Demand is high. Speaker 400:21:28That's great to hear. So essentially, I meant demand there. So for the turnover, are you willing to share the actual percent of turnover you're seeing among your clinicians? Speaker 100:21:41It's nicely below 20%. I don't want to get into a pattern where we've got to put it out every single quarter because it's going to move around a little bit, but it's lower than it was last year and it's well below 20 at this point. Speaker 400:21:58That's great. Thanks. That's helpful. You have to have a magnitude of things, always good. And I guess your other segment, the injury Industrial Injury Prevention revenues up nicely and profits up 15%. Speaker 400:22:14So I just want to clarify, this is all organic. There's no really the deal that you announced that didn't even close that in the quarter. And the second Speaker 600:22:22half of the Speaker 400:22:22year, what's yes, thank you. And then what is really driving that? I mean, are you like growing with your existing partners? You're adding new clients? Like, I guess, what's driving that 10% revenue growth? Speaker 400:22:35And obviously, as you translate it into profit, but I guess it starts with top line. Speaker 100:22:41Yes. Thank you. So Eric, if you can, you guys are both Eric and Graham doing a great job at working with these 2 partnerships. Our partnerships in fact doing a very good job and Briotix has come out really strong. So Eric, do you want to speak to that? Speaker 600:23:04Yes. And actually, it's both of those. I mean, we are adding new clients. We're adding new verticals. We're heavy in distribution retail, heavy in automotive, adding additional manufacturing and distribution clients as well. Speaker 600:23:19And then we're expanding product lines within existing clients. So it's a combination of both. The business development pipeline for both of our injury prevention businesses, Progressive and Briotix are very, very deep right now. So terrific same store growth, terrific new client growth. We're really bullish in terms of the direction we're headed and really excited about the acquisition that we just announced here on April 1. Speaker 600:23:46So continues to go really, really well and we expect good things out of our injury prevention business as we move forward through the year. Speaker 400:23:54It sounds like in that business, staffing maybe is not a gating factor or would you say is it that much better? Or maybe not that much better, but it sounds like maybe better? Speaker 600:24:08It's different. So when you take a look at the big gating factor that we deal with in the physical therapy side here, we are predominantly hiring PTs and big shortage of those and you really got to be good at recruiting and retention in order to make an impact on your business. As Chris mentioned, we're doing well on both fronts there with the best retention rates we've had in a long, long time. When you look at the injury prevention side, we have the luxury and flexibility of going in a different direction from a staffing perspective. So you're looking at athletic trainers in those businesses. Speaker 600:24:42So it's a slightly different hiring requirement. The challenge on the injury prevention side really and we have them, it's not they're not all full time positions. So a lot of the various accounts and clients that we staff for aren't looking for 40 hours a week. They could be looking for 6 hours a week, 8 hours a week. So it's a challenge for those injury prevention businesses to be able to bundle those positions to have an easier time finding someone because it's always easier to find somebody full time than part time. Speaker 600:25:12So slightly different type of clinical need, which makes it a tad bit easier on the injury prevention businesses as opposed to PT. Speaker 100:25:20I would say this and Eric, I think Eric did a great job outlining that. Our turnover rate in injury prevention is really low. It's lower even than at our facilities. And they've been very creative. And so I think that combination, again, we have more demand at any given point in time and this will always be the case than we can staff to. Speaker 100:25:56There's always a bit of a lag, but they're doing a really good job right now, and I'm proud of that group. Speaker 400:26:06Great. And talking about deals, just also clarification, confirmation when it comes to what's included in your guidance. So there was no change in there, right? You had kind of the $2,000,000 is the Medicare rate and $500,000 I guess it's Q1. I just want to make sure there's nothing around moving around the deals. Speaker 400:26:23Like I guess the deals are tracking in line with your initial expectations in terms of the contribution in the guidance. Speaker 100:26:32Yes. I would say this. One of the deals that we had factored into our original guidance, it didn't happen and isn't going to happen. But we've got other activity and all of that has been included in our guidance for the remaining part of the year. And so we had a little in and net net we're comfortable where we are for the year at this point. Speaker 400:27:07Great. Thank you so much. Speaker 100:27:09Thanks Joanna. Speaker 400:27:10Thank you Joanna. Operator00:27:13We'll take our next question from Larry Solow with CJS Securities. Please go ahead. Your line is open. Speaker 700:27:25Great. Hey, Larry. Good morning, guys. Thanks for hey, good morning. Question, I guess, just on the good price momentum, it sounds like outside of Medicare, I know the core contract negotiations, it sounds like they're going really even a little better than expected. Speaker 700:27:40And also good to see workers' comp picking up a little bit. That's kind of lag, I guess, even since COVID. So maybe a little more color on the workers' comp side and then just overall the progression of your contract negotiations. Speaker 100:27:55Eric, why don't you go ahead and then Kerry, if you have anything to add, you can jump in and answer. Speaker 600:28:00Sure. You bet. Yes, sure. On the work comp side, so look, we've talked about this on a number of quarterly calls here over the course of the past year and a half. There's been a tremendous amount of effort to really drive both volume and rate. Speaker 600:28:16And it's not an overnight turn unfortunately. And we're really starting to see the fruits of the efforts that we put in here over the course of that timeframe. One of the really key drivers for us here is the fact that since Q2 of last year, we've signed 10 new work comp payer contracts, 4 of which came online mid Q1. So and we have a number of additional contracts in process just as Carey has a number of contracts that he's looking to renegotiate rates on. So a lot of effort to beef up in this area and we expect this trend to continue as we move forward through the year. Speaker 300:28:52Yes. And Larry, I'd say this mix of growing from 9.3% to 10%, it's both, it's both volume and rate. So volume picked up, so it's the volume outpaced the growth of the other categories, so that it would increase as a percent of the mix and then also net rate increased as well. So, good on both fronts and that resulted in that overall mix of revenue increasing. Speaker 700:29:20Great. And what about just I know no one knows concern, but just Medicare outlook, obviously, they reduced their rates, the cut a little bit, gave you a little bit of relief on the original cut from this year. I think physician fee schedule and all that balancing should be done by next year. Is that kind of the what industry pundits kind of believe? Or again, not holding you to this, but what is sort of the current belief going forward on that side of it? Speaker 100:29:50Yes. If I was in the predict what Medicare CMS is going to do business, I'd probably need a couple more jobs. So I'm not sure exactly. I think we get out of the system that we're in completely in 2020 6. We were actually just a big group of us in DC. Speaker 100:30:15Now it's been 3 weeks ago, we had a meeting at the White House, meeting at HHS. We met with the head of AARP, the regulatory head. We met with a couple of consumer facing groups. We have a bill right now on fall prevention. That could be some additional directed volume for us. Speaker 100:30:41And we met with MedPAC. And I would say the MedPAC meeting was the meeting where we've got more opportunity to help educate them their original calculations with respect to the physician fee schedule as it impacted us was based on a misunderstanding of the code set under which we bill. In short, they were trying to cut the reimbursement to what they thought were the highest income level physicians across their fee schedule physician fee schedule, so included physiatrists, pain management doctors and in some cases orthopedic surgeons portions of our code set, but we make up physical therapy makes up 85% of that code set. And again, physical therapists making somewhere in $70,000 to $90,000 a year range And they had no idea of that. And yet their recommendation to CMS was to cut because they thought they were knocking these highly compensated physicians back. Speaker 100:31:58And we ended up being what they called collateral damage, demonstrating that mistakes don't get fixed quickly in Washington. But we've got good line of communication. We've got better data over a period of years with studies and other things that we've done on how much physical therapy saves the system when entered and accessed on a primary care basis, really physical therapy first for musculoskeletal problems. And so while this isn't an easy fight, I think it's a fight where facts matter and facts and reasonableness are on our side. We've just got to continue to drive home the message and be more effective and more diligent with our dealing in Washington. Speaker 100:32:50It's a little frustrating, but we're committed to the whole industry with APTQI kind of in a leadership role now alongside the APTA, we're very focused on making progress. Speaker 700:33:07Got it. No, I appreciate that color. I guess just last question or disappointment. I just I noticed that you had a net 6 closers 6 closed facilities. Is that just is that did you happen to accelerate on some underperforming facility closures? Speaker 700:33:25Or what's sort of the outlook for net openings in 2024? Thanks. Speaker 100:33:30I think you'll see us with strong openings similar to what we've done in the last couple of years. We're having a good organic de novo opening schedule for the remaining part of the year. We're in good shape through the end of April. And then we're finding tuck ins at very, very reasonable prices where we can fold those into strong existing partnerships. So we expect that to go well. Speaker 100:34:02The closures really are a result of just what we believe is a healthy pairing of facilities that have been around some of those for multiple decades. And it's at the end of their useful life and the leases just happened to be up. And so they don't carry with them a lot of closure costs. It allows us to focus efforts on where we can get the greatest return. It's kind of like trimming a fruit tree. Speaker 100:34:33You got to prune some branches to have more fruit at the end of the day. So that's what we do. Timing is kind of no message there. Speaker 700:34:44Got you. No, I appreciate that analogy. Speaker 400:34:46Thanks a Speaker 700:34:47lot, Chris. Operator00:34:51Thanks, We'll take our next question from Mike Petusky with Barrington Research. Speaker 800:35:11So on injury prevention, Chris, I think maybe a year and a half, 2 years ago or so, you sort of expressed some caution, hey, some companies are pulling back on these types of services, concerned about recession and all the rest. I mean, do you feel like in light of the comment you made about demand improving, I mean, do you feel like most of these executives have sort of somehow made peace with the economic backdrop? Or can you just speak to your sense of that? Thanks. Speaker 100:35:45Sure. Sure. Thanks, Mike. Mike, you know us. You've known us for 20 the entirety of the time I've been here, 21 years now. Speaker 100:35:52And we tell everybody what we think and what we're seeing and feeling and hearing. And going into last year, we felt like we were seeing from the CEOs and CFOs who make these decisions in some sectors that they were anxious and they were pulling back not just with us, but with a lot of vendors in a lot of areas. We're not feeling that right now. And while there may be individual sectors or companies that are still a little tepid relative to the interest rate environment. Look, I think people demand consumer demand continues to be high. Speaker 100:36:44It's what's in part driving some of the inflation that we're seeing. Employment is still pretty good. And I think there's a sense that the Fed isn't going to run to the rescue anytime soon. And this is going to be the state of the state for a while. And we're just feeling really good about what we're onboarding. Speaker 100:37:06We're seeing good opportunities. We're winning some good fights. And I think you're hearing what we think the year is going to look like, just like you heard last year that we thought things were going to be a little slower. So that's just kind of where we are. Speaker 800:37:25And then maybe for Carey or anybody who should take this. In terms of the place you are and the multi year effort to sort of get better, more appropriate reimbursement from commercial payers, I mean, how much work there do you feel like is I understand it will be ongoing for a while. But in terms of the heavy lift, what you really want to accomplish, how far into this do you feel like you are at this point? Speaker 300:37:57Yes. I'd say we're through about 2 thirds of the initial heavy lift, if you will. But it's as Jim noted, it's an ongoing effort. So when we get done with this, we just start right back over again and go through it. There's always opportunities and we're so it's a never ending process. Speaker 300:38:16But we're I'd say from the initial lift, we're probably 2 thirds of the way through. Speaker 800:38:20And then just I guess last question on just M and A. And Chris, I heard you say, hey, we're seeing some really reasonable prices for some tuck ins. And I'm just curious, in terms of the conversations you're having, are there bigger sort of needle deals out there where you would say, hey, there's active discussions. The timing on it could come in 6 months, it could come in 2 years, but are there larger deals out there or larger partnerships out there that are looking for exit strategies and where you guys could be a reasonable option? Speaker 100:39:01Yes, for sure. And Mike, it's interesting time right now. I know that from time to time over a period of many years, we've sometimes gotten criticized a little bit for having a conservative balance sheet. Interesting, many, many of our competitors are really balance sheet constrained. And so we're able to continue to grow and have discussions and really to create meaningful points of differentiation, not just culturally and in normal life after, but really predictable stability because we're so well capitalized. Speaker 100:39:48And so you're going to continue to see us grow. We're talking to some large and large companies. I'm not going to promise timing around that, which I know you're not asking for. But we're not afraid to grow. We want to do it the right way. Speaker 100:40:10And at the same time, we need to meet people where they are and that involves their own personal timing and circumstance. And so I think we're seeing in a really good light, the deals that we've won recently. We haven't been the highest bidder on and yet not that we've gotten them cheaply, the larger ones that we've announced, but I think in part it's because people see us being able to execute on our strategy over a long period of time where others are beginning to feel capital market, which is not in their favor right now. Speaker 800:40:52Okay. Nice start to the year. Thank you. Speaker 100:40:54Thanks, Mike. Operator00:41:15And there are no further questions on the line at this time. I'll turn the program back to our speakers for any closing comments. Sure. Speaker 100:41:23All right, David. Thank you. Thanks, everybody. We appreciate your time today. Carrie and I are available later. Speaker 100:41:30And again, as always, when you have questions you want to things you want to bounce around, we're happy to speak to those. Thank you for your time today and have a great rest of your week. Bye now. Operator00:41:47This does conclude today's program.Read moreRemove AdsPowered by Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallU.S. Physical Therapy Q1 202400:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2xRemove Ads Earnings DocumentsPress Release(8-K)Quarterly report(10-Q) U.S. Physical Therapy Earnings HeadlinesU.S. Physical Therapy (NYSE:USPH) Upgraded at StockNews.comApril 11, 2025 | americanbankingnews.comUS Physical Therapy Approves New Executive Incentive PlansMarch 28, 2025 | tipranks.comThe Crypto Market is About to Change LivesI've discovered something so significant about the 2025 crypto market that I had to put everything else aside and write a book about it. This isn't just another Bitcoin prediction – it's a complete roadmap for what I believe will be the biggest wealth-building opportunity of this decade. The evidence is so compelling, I'm doing something that probably seems insane: I'm giving away my entire book for free. April 16, 2025 | Crypto 101 Media (Ad)Their physical therapy coverage ran out before they could walk againMarch 27, 2025 | msn.comU.S. Physical Therapy price target lowered to $110 from $120 at JPMorganMarch 20, 2025 | markets.businessinsider.comEx-Dividend Reminder: U.S. Physical Therapy, American Homes 4 Rent and Banc Of CaliforniaMarch 14, 2025 | nasdaq.comSee More U.S. Physical Therapy Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like U.S. Physical Therapy? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on U.S. Physical Therapy and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About U.S. Physical TherapyU.S. Physical Therapy (NYSE:USPH) operates outpatient physical therapy clinics. The company operates through Physical Therapy Operations and Industrial Injury Prevention Services segments. The company provides pre-and post-operative care and treatment for orthopedic-related disorders, sports-related injuries, preventative care, rehabilitation of injured workers, and neurological-related injuries. It offers industrial injury prevention services, including onsite injury prevention and rehabilitation, performance optimization, post-offer employment testing, functional capacity evaluations, and ergonomic assessments through physical therapists and specialized certified athletic trainers for Fortune 500 companies, and other clients comprising insurers and their contractors. 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There are 9 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Good day and thank you for standing by. Welcome to the U. S. Physical Therapy First Quarter 2024 Earnings Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen only mode. Operator00:00:12After the speakers' presentation, there will be a question and answer I'd now like to turn the call over to Chris Redding, President and CEO. Please go ahead, Speaker 100:00:37sir. Okay. Thanks, David. Good morning, and welcome, everyone, to our U. S. Speaker 100:00:41Physical Therapy First Quarter 2024 earnings call. With me on the line this morning include Carrie Hendrickson, our CFO Eric Williams, who is our COO, East And Eric will be assuming a larger role in our company as he takes over as President in just a few weeks after our annual meeting later this month. So we congratulate him on that. Graham Reeve, our COO at West and Jake Martinez, our Senior Vice President, Finance and Accounting. Before we begin our prepared remarks, I'll ask Jake to cover a brief disclosure statement. Speaker 200:01:17Thank you, Chris. This presentation contains forward looking statements, which involves certain risks and uncertainties. These forward looking statements are based on the company's current views and assumptions. The company's actual results may vary materially from those anticipated. Please see the company's filings the Securities and Exchange Commission for more information. Speaker 200:01:38Thanks, Jake. Okay, I'm going to Speaker 100:01:40keep my remarks reasonably brief, but I do want to give you kind of an overview of what I think are some important takeaways for the start of the year. So let me begin by saying that while these past few years have not been easy for anybody in our industry, I think our team has done some remarkable things in that period. We feel like we're off to a good start for this year as well. For some of you, I know that it may feel like this Q1 is a little bit of a disappointment, having enjoyed an all time record Q1 in 2023. This quarter was actually ahead of where we expected to be and that expectation was baked into our original guidance, which you will see we are updating today. Speaker 100:02:24While we experienced tough start to the year, not based upon demand, which has been very strong, but a rough weather start for sure compared to year. However, we bounced back very quickly and visits have again been at or above previous record levels for visits per clinic per day. Visits per clinic were all time highs for both February March of this year, and I'm happy to report that April is another all time high for that month as we have built slowly but steadily in our volume progression so far this year. So what does that mean? Well, for one, it means that our facilities are being recognized and sought out for the great care we are providing the patients and their families and by the physicians who refer to us. Speaker 100:03:08And so demand has been very high. I will also tell you that staffing, while improved, is really still the gating factor to being able to capture even more volume. We're working hard on that. We have a new leader over that recruiting department and I expect we will continue to make adjustments that will further assist us in meeting the demand that we're seeing for services. Our partners are working with our ops team to network differently than maybe we have done in the past to increase the number and the quality of seeds planted, so to speak, with respect to talented clinicians in their markets. Speaker 100:03:46It's an all hands on deck exercise, but I'm buoyed by the fact that demand is really strong and that underpins all of this. Coupled with strong demand and record monthly volumes once we get outside of January is the progress the team has made with respect to net rate. In spite of the impact of a rather large approximately 3.5% Medicare reduction to start the year, We were able to produce some uplift in our rate and some improvement in our work comp mix that created some overall incremental improvement that we hope to build upon as the year progresses. For this Q1, we saw non Medicare rate improve another 2.8% overall from Q1 2023 and up 5% since the same quarter in 2022. And we're not done yet. Speaker 100:04:39We continue to work to lift reimbursement for the life improving work that we are delivering across the more than 5,000,000 patient interagency. While demand is also improving where demand is also improving is in our injury prevention business. First, you saw a recent acquisition announcement with respect to a really terrific company led by Fine Team, who recently joined our Briotix partnership. That opportunity will further will help us to further broaden our exposure to several additional industry, we call them verticals, essentially industry types, where over time we expect to gain additional sales traction as well as cross selling opportunities given that we have a much broader subset of services available now to sell. For the quarter, revenue grew 9.8%, which in turn produced a gross profit increase of over 15%. Speaker 100:05:41I'm very proud of our teams and our partnerships in this area. They continue to attract opportunities for further expansion, while they make a large difference for these companies in terms of the injuries they prevent and the cost that they save as a result of the fine work of our embedded clinical and technical resources. We have other highlights to cover. So let me turn the call over to Karru to discuss our results in more detail before we open things Speaker 300:06:09up for questions. Thank you, Chris, and good morning, everyone. Our first quarter results, as Chris noted, were better than we anticipated coming into the quarter, driven by strong volumes in February, March at a growing net rate. As we noted in our release and also in our year end earnings release, we had the significant adverse weather events in January 2024 that Chris noted that we knew we're going to make comparisons to the Q1 of 2023 challenging since there weren't any significant weather events in the Q1 of last year. Volumes in January of 2024 were light as expected, but volumes quickly picked up back up in February March and we experienced record volumes in each of those 2 months. Speaker 300:06:50Our hard work on rate negotiations and our focus on increasing workers' comp as a percentage of overall business continued to take root in the Q1 of 2024 and resulted in a net rate increasing year over year despite that Medicare rate reduction that was in effect for most the Q1 that Chris noted. From an EBITDA standpoint, we reported adjusted EBITDA for the Q1 of 20 20 '24 EBITDA down by about $1,700,000 and then the adverse weather in January was a negative impact of about $1,300,000 Our operating results were $7,700,000 in both the Q1 of 'twenty four and the Q1 of 'twenty 3. On a share basis, on a per share basis, operating results were $0.51 in the Q1 of this year versus $0.59 in the Q1 of last year. That's because of the decrease related to the increase in shares that we had associated with the secondary offering that we completed in May of 'twenty three. Our average visits per clinic per day in the Q1 was 29.5, which is the 2nd highest volume in the company's history for a Q1, second only to the 29.8% that we had in the Q1 of 2023. Speaker 300:08:11January was at 27.4% and that compares to 28.9 in the previous year. So we're down from 28.9 to 27.4, but then February was at 30.4 percent and March was at 30.8 percent. And both of those months, as Chris noted, were higher than the same months in the previous year. Volumes continued strong in April with our average visits per day just north of 31 and that's a record high average visits per day number for the company ever and the first time we've ever had average visits per day at or above 31 per month. Our net rate was $103.37 in the first quarter of 'twenty four, which was an increase of $0.25 again despite that Medicare rate reduction that was in fact for most of the Q1 of 3.5%. Speaker 300:09:00The increase was largely related to our strategic priority of increasing reimbursement rates through contract negotiations with commercial and other payers and then our focus on growing our workers' comp business. Excluding Medicare, our net rate was up 2.8% versus the Q1 of last year with increases in each of the major categories other than Medicare. Workers' comp, which is one of our highest rate categories, increased from 9.3% of our revenue mix in the Q1 of 'twenty 3 to 10% in the Q1 of 'twenty 4. And both of those initiatives, increasing net rate, the rate negotiations and the workers' comp business will remain high priorities throughout the year. Our physical therapy revenues were $134,400,000 in the Q1 of 2024, which was an increase of $5,300,000 or 4.1 percent from last year despite the setbacks that we had from weather and the Medicare rate reduction. Speaker 300:09:57The increase was driven by having 28 more clinics on average in the Q1 of this year than we had in the Q1 of last year, coupled with the increase in our net rate. Our physical therapy operating costs were $110,400,000 which was an increase of 8.1% over the Q1 of the prior year, due in part to having 28 more clinics on average than in the Q1 of last year. On a per visit basis, our total operating costs were 85.50 dollars Speaker 400:10:25in the Speaker 300:10:25Q1, which was up from just under $82 in the Q1 of 2023. Our average cost per visit was high in January because we had less operating leverage due to the lower number of visits and then it returned to more normal levels in February March, which averaged $82.90 per visit. Our salaries and related cost was really the same story. They were $61.42 in the Q1 of 2024. That was up from $59.14 in the Q1 of 'twenty 3. Speaker 300:10:56But again, those salaries related costs were high in January, but then they were turned to more normal levels in February March, which averaged $59.42 per visit, which is comparable to that $59.14 that we saw in the Q1 of 'twenty three. Our physical therapy margin was 17.9% in the Q1 of 'twenty four. That margin was also impacted by January due to having less operating leverage, but then it increased to 20.6% in fit for February March on a combined basis, which is back to very close to the Q1 of 'twenty two and 'three margin, which was 21 percent. Chris talked about IIP and what a great job they did. In the Q1, revenues were up almost 10%, IP income was up 15.1% and then our margin increased 19.5 increased from 19.5% in the Q1 of 'twenty 3 to 20.4% in the Q1 of 2024. Speaker 300:11:55Our balance sheet continues to be in an excellent position. We had $143,000,000 debt on our term loan with a swap agreement in place that places the rate on that debt at 4.7%, which as you know is a very favorable rate in today's market and it's well below the current Fed funds rate. In the Q1 of 2024 alone, the swap agreement saved us $900,000 in interest expense with cumulative savings of $4,200,000 since we put that in place in the Q3 of 2022. In addition to the term loan, we also have a $175,000,000 revolving credit facility that had nothing drawn on it during the Q1 and we have approximately $105,000,000 of excess cash over and above what we need for working capital ready for deployment into growth initiatives. Including the April 30 acquisitions that we announced last week, we've deployed just over $40,000,000 of cash into acquisitions so far this year. Speaker 300:12:53As we noted in our release, we're raising our EBITDA guidance range for the full year 2024 to $82,500,000 to $87,500,000 That's an increase of $2,500,000 on both ends of the range. Our guidance previously considered that a 3.5% Medicare rate reduction versus last year's rates would be in a place for all of 2024. However, as we noted in an 8 ks that we put out in March, Congress addressed the Medicare reduction in the Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2024 and adjusted that reduction from 3.5% to 1.8%, that's effective March 9 through the end of 2024. It was not retro to the beginning of the year, but it will be from that March 9 forward at 1.8% reduction rather than 3.5%. The outperformance of our internal expectations in the Q1 of 2024 due to our strong volumes in February March and our continued progress in that rate gives us confidence to raise the range by more than just the $2,000,000 effective that's related to the Medicare rate change even though it's early in the year. Speaker 300:14:04As a reminder, the expected EBITDA contribution from acquisitions we've closed so far this year and another one that we expect to close by the end of July are included in their guidance just as they were in our previous guidance. In closing, our Q1 was ahead of our internal expectations. February March were strong months from a volume, revenue, EBITDA and margin perspective. Our net rate grew in the Q1 over the prior year even with 3.5% Medicare reduction in place for most of that Q1 and we have very good momentum as we start the Q2 as evidenced by our average visits per day in April. And we increased our full year guidance by $2,500,000 to reflect all of those things. Speaker 300:14:44So with that, Chris, I'll turn the call back to you. Speaker 100:14:48Yes. Really appreciate it, Carey. Great job. Thank you. So operator, let's go ahead and open up for questions or comments. Operator00:15:15And we'll take our first question from Brian Tanquilut from Jefferies. Please go ahead. Your line is open. Speaker 500:15:22Good morning, Brian. Good morning, guys. Good morning and Eric, congrats. Chris, maybe my first question, as we think about your commentary that Q2 or Q1 was essentially in line with internal expectations, the salaries cost stands out to us up 3.5% sequentially. So just curious, what are you seeing there and what needs to happen for that to maybe normalize? Speaker 500:15:48Or are these the normalized levels that we should be thinking about from a salaries and related costs as a percentage of revenue perspective going forward? Speaker 100:15:58Yes. Well, I think I may pull Carey back in for part of this. Certainly, I think the impact in January on light revenue, light volume impacted us there on a percent of revenue basis. When we look at the rest of the quarter, the February March numbers, which I'll get Cary to revisit here momentarily, those return to a more normal level. And I think that's a better indication of where we think this will be going forward. Speaker 100:16:31So Kerry, you want to hit those again quickly? Speaker 300:16:34Yes, you bet. So salaries and related costs in February March, they were $59.42 per visit. And that is up only slightly from $59.14 in the Q1 of 2020 3, which is a good comparison because January the Januarys were so different. And each year, January of last year didn't have any weather. And of course, we know we had the weather event and weather events in January of this year. Speaker 300:17:03So I think that's a better comparison and something you should look at for going forward is something around that $59.42 kind of per visit from a salary standpoint. And that will actually probably go down a little it varies because there's a certain amount of your salaries related costs that are relatively fixed. So a lot of it varies with the cost per visit, but you do have just some base level of employees that are on a that make that fixed. So it will vary and probably come down a little bit in the second quarter from the first is what I would anticipate given that we'll have that's one of our it's actually usually our highest volume quarter. So that may be a little less than the second quarter, but then vary a little bit from that as we go into the 3rd and the 4th. Speaker 300:17:50So I feel like in a decent place from salaries and related costs. It's just that that January impacted that number quite a bit, because we didn't have the operating leverage that we did in the February March months. Speaker 100:18:04Okay. Yes, Speaker 500:18:06that makes a lot of sense. Speaker 100:18:07Yes, okay. Speaker 500:18:09And then maybe my follow-up question, Kerry, as I think about I appreciate your comment that Q1 was within your internal range and you're obviously raising guidance for the year. Any color you can share with us to help us think about how your or what your internal expectations are for Q2 understanding that you're off to a really strong start in April? Speaker 300:18:34Yes. I mean, gosh, we don't usually give guidance by quarter, but I would just say, we expect it to be at a level that is up from last year's Q1 Q2, excuse me, and certainly up from where we were in the Q1 of this year. A lot of it honestly, a lot of it's going to depend on what net rate obviously and then just how strong those volumes are in April, May June, but that's certainly my expectation. I mean, we have we've added acquisitions since the Q2 of last year. We've improved our net rate since the Q2 of last year. Speaker 300:19:10It certainly should be up. Speaker 100:19:12Yes, Brian. I mean, we're not going to get to the point and I know you're not asking us to do this where we're going to guide by quarter. I know ATI just did that. I don't think that's the right move for us. But we're comfortable in the guidance that we updated for the year and you guys have the hard job of trying to parse that out between quarters. Speaker 500:19:36No, totally understand, Chris. And thank you for the comments. Speaker 100:19:41Thank you. Operator00:19:44We'll take our next question from Joanna Gajuk with Bank of America. Please go ahead. Your line is open. Speaker 400:19:51Good morning. Thank you. Thanks for taking questions here. So I guess coming back to volumes and the comments around February, March were pretty good months. And then I guess April in particular looks like it's pretty good. Speaker 400:20:06So the question is what is driving this better volume here? And also what do you assume, I guess, for the rest of the year? Speaker 100:20:16So, I got to tip my hat to our clinicians and our partners, 95% of whom are clinicians. They're doing a great job with patients. We're doing, I think, a better than ever job in outreach, not just to physician referral sources, but to communities, social media, other things driving patients. Frankly, our demand is high enough that if we could just magically import staffing on an incremental basis where and when we need it, we could drive volumes even higher. And so gating factor for us right now, staffing, teams worked very hard. Speaker 100:21:03Turnover for this quarter is at the lowest level that I can remember since I've looked at turnover going back many, many years. So our partners who largely influence that are doing a very good job. We're continuing to work to try to get it down even further. But staffing is really the gating factor. Demand is high. Speaker 400:21:28That's great to hear. So essentially, I meant demand there. So for the turnover, are you willing to share the actual percent of turnover you're seeing among your clinicians? Speaker 100:21:41It's nicely below 20%. I don't want to get into a pattern where we've got to put it out every single quarter because it's going to move around a little bit, but it's lower than it was last year and it's well below 20 at this point. Speaker 400:21:58That's great. Thanks. That's helpful. You have to have a magnitude of things, always good. And I guess your other segment, the injury Industrial Injury Prevention revenues up nicely and profits up 15%. Speaker 400:22:14So I just want to clarify, this is all organic. There's no really the deal that you announced that didn't even close that in the quarter. And the second Speaker 600:22:22half of the Speaker 400:22:22year, what's yes, thank you. And then what is really driving that? I mean, are you like growing with your existing partners? You're adding new clients? Like, I guess, what's driving that 10% revenue growth? Speaker 400:22:35And obviously, as you translate it into profit, but I guess it starts with top line. Speaker 100:22:41Yes. Thank you. So Eric, if you can, you guys are both Eric and Graham doing a great job at working with these 2 partnerships. Our partnerships in fact doing a very good job and Briotix has come out really strong. So Eric, do you want to speak to that? Speaker 600:23:04Yes. And actually, it's both of those. I mean, we are adding new clients. We're adding new verticals. We're heavy in distribution retail, heavy in automotive, adding additional manufacturing and distribution clients as well. Speaker 600:23:19And then we're expanding product lines within existing clients. So it's a combination of both. The business development pipeline for both of our injury prevention businesses, Progressive and Briotix are very, very deep right now. So terrific same store growth, terrific new client growth. We're really bullish in terms of the direction we're headed and really excited about the acquisition that we just announced here on April 1. Speaker 600:23:46So continues to go really, really well and we expect good things out of our injury prevention business as we move forward through the year. Speaker 400:23:54It sounds like in that business, staffing maybe is not a gating factor or would you say is it that much better? Or maybe not that much better, but it sounds like maybe better? Speaker 600:24:08It's different. So when you take a look at the big gating factor that we deal with in the physical therapy side here, we are predominantly hiring PTs and big shortage of those and you really got to be good at recruiting and retention in order to make an impact on your business. As Chris mentioned, we're doing well on both fronts there with the best retention rates we've had in a long, long time. When you look at the injury prevention side, we have the luxury and flexibility of going in a different direction from a staffing perspective. So you're looking at athletic trainers in those businesses. Speaker 600:24:42So it's a slightly different hiring requirement. The challenge on the injury prevention side really and we have them, it's not they're not all full time positions. So a lot of the various accounts and clients that we staff for aren't looking for 40 hours a week. They could be looking for 6 hours a week, 8 hours a week. So it's a challenge for those injury prevention businesses to be able to bundle those positions to have an easier time finding someone because it's always easier to find somebody full time than part time. Speaker 600:25:12So slightly different type of clinical need, which makes it a tad bit easier on the injury prevention businesses as opposed to PT. Speaker 100:25:20I would say this and Eric, I think Eric did a great job outlining that. Our turnover rate in injury prevention is really low. It's lower even than at our facilities. And they've been very creative. And so I think that combination, again, we have more demand at any given point in time and this will always be the case than we can staff to. Speaker 100:25:56There's always a bit of a lag, but they're doing a really good job right now, and I'm proud of that group. Speaker 400:26:06Great. And talking about deals, just also clarification, confirmation when it comes to what's included in your guidance. So there was no change in there, right? You had kind of the $2,000,000 is the Medicare rate and $500,000 I guess it's Q1. I just want to make sure there's nothing around moving around the deals. Speaker 400:26:23Like I guess the deals are tracking in line with your initial expectations in terms of the contribution in the guidance. Speaker 100:26:32Yes. I would say this. One of the deals that we had factored into our original guidance, it didn't happen and isn't going to happen. But we've got other activity and all of that has been included in our guidance for the remaining part of the year. And so we had a little in and net net we're comfortable where we are for the year at this point. Speaker 400:27:07Great. Thank you so much. Speaker 100:27:09Thanks Joanna. Speaker 400:27:10Thank you Joanna. Operator00:27:13We'll take our next question from Larry Solow with CJS Securities. Please go ahead. Your line is open. Speaker 700:27:25Great. Hey, Larry. Good morning, guys. Thanks for hey, good morning. Question, I guess, just on the good price momentum, it sounds like outside of Medicare, I know the core contract negotiations, it sounds like they're going really even a little better than expected. Speaker 700:27:40And also good to see workers' comp picking up a little bit. That's kind of lag, I guess, even since COVID. So maybe a little more color on the workers' comp side and then just overall the progression of your contract negotiations. Speaker 100:27:55Eric, why don't you go ahead and then Kerry, if you have anything to add, you can jump in and answer. Speaker 600:28:00Sure. You bet. Yes, sure. On the work comp side, so look, we've talked about this on a number of quarterly calls here over the course of the past year and a half. There's been a tremendous amount of effort to really drive both volume and rate. Speaker 600:28:16And it's not an overnight turn unfortunately. And we're really starting to see the fruits of the efforts that we put in here over the course of that timeframe. One of the really key drivers for us here is the fact that since Q2 of last year, we've signed 10 new work comp payer contracts, 4 of which came online mid Q1. So and we have a number of additional contracts in process just as Carey has a number of contracts that he's looking to renegotiate rates on. So a lot of effort to beef up in this area and we expect this trend to continue as we move forward through the year. Speaker 300:28:52Yes. And Larry, I'd say this mix of growing from 9.3% to 10%, it's both, it's both volume and rate. So volume picked up, so it's the volume outpaced the growth of the other categories, so that it would increase as a percent of the mix and then also net rate increased as well. So, good on both fronts and that resulted in that overall mix of revenue increasing. Speaker 700:29:20Great. And what about just I know no one knows concern, but just Medicare outlook, obviously, they reduced their rates, the cut a little bit, gave you a little bit of relief on the original cut from this year. I think physician fee schedule and all that balancing should be done by next year. Is that kind of the what industry pundits kind of believe? Or again, not holding you to this, but what is sort of the current belief going forward on that side of it? Speaker 100:29:50Yes. If I was in the predict what Medicare CMS is going to do business, I'd probably need a couple more jobs. So I'm not sure exactly. I think we get out of the system that we're in completely in 2020 6. We were actually just a big group of us in DC. Speaker 100:30:15Now it's been 3 weeks ago, we had a meeting at the White House, meeting at HHS. We met with the head of AARP, the regulatory head. We met with a couple of consumer facing groups. We have a bill right now on fall prevention. That could be some additional directed volume for us. Speaker 100:30:41And we met with MedPAC. And I would say the MedPAC meeting was the meeting where we've got more opportunity to help educate them their original calculations with respect to the physician fee schedule as it impacted us was based on a misunderstanding of the code set under which we bill. In short, they were trying to cut the reimbursement to what they thought were the highest income level physicians across their fee schedule physician fee schedule, so included physiatrists, pain management doctors and in some cases orthopedic surgeons portions of our code set, but we make up physical therapy makes up 85% of that code set. And again, physical therapists making somewhere in $70,000 to $90,000 a year range And they had no idea of that. And yet their recommendation to CMS was to cut because they thought they were knocking these highly compensated physicians back. Speaker 100:31:58And we ended up being what they called collateral damage, demonstrating that mistakes don't get fixed quickly in Washington. But we've got good line of communication. We've got better data over a period of years with studies and other things that we've done on how much physical therapy saves the system when entered and accessed on a primary care basis, really physical therapy first for musculoskeletal problems. And so while this isn't an easy fight, I think it's a fight where facts matter and facts and reasonableness are on our side. We've just got to continue to drive home the message and be more effective and more diligent with our dealing in Washington. Speaker 100:32:50It's a little frustrating, but we're committed to the whole industry with APTQI kind of in a leadership role now alongside the APTA, we're very focused on making progress. Speaker 700:33:07Got it. No, I appreciate that color. I guess just last question or disappointment. I just I noticed that you had a net 6 closers 6 closed facilities. Is that just is that did you happen to accelerate on some underperforming facility closures? Speaker 700:33:25Or what's sort of the outlook for net openings in 2024? Thanks. Speaker 100:33:30I think you'll see us with strong openings similar to what we've done in the last couple of years. We're having a good organic de novo opening schedule for the remaining part of the year. We're in good shape through the end of April. And then we're finding tuck ins at very, very reasonable prices where we can fold those into strong existing partnerships. So we expect that to go well. Speaker 100:34:02The closures really are a result of just what we believe is a healthy pairing of facilities that have been around some of those for multiple decades. And it's at the end of their useful life and the leases just happened to be up. And so they don't carry with them a lot of closure costs. It allows us to focus efforts on where we can get the greatest return. It's kind of like trimming a fruit tree. Speaker 100:34:33You got to prune some branches to have more fruit at the end of the day. So that's what we do. Timing is kind of no message there. Speaker 700:34:44Got you. No, I appreciate that analogy. Speaker 400:34:46Thanks a Speaker 700:34:47lot, Chris. Operator00:34:51Thanks, We'll take our next question from Mike Petusky with Barrington Research. Speaker 800:35:11So on injury prevention, Chris, I think maybe a year and a half, 2 years ago or so, you sort of expressed some caution, hey, some companies are pulling back on these types of services, concerned about recession and all the rest. I mean, do you feel like in light of the comment you made about demand improving, I mean, do you feel like most of these executives have sort of somehow made peace with the economic backdrop? Or can you just speak to your sense of that? Thanks. Speaker 100:35:45Sure. Sure. Thanks, Mike. Mike, you know us. You've known us for 20 the entirety of the time I've been here, 21 years now. Speaker 100:35:52And we tell everybody what we think and what we're seeing and feeling and hearing. And going into last year, we felt like we were seeing from the CEOs and CFOs who make these decisions in some sectors that they were anxious and they were pulling back not just with us, but with a lot of vendors in a lot of areas. We're not feeling that right now. And while there may be individual sectors or companies that are still a little tepid relative to the interest rate environment. Look, I think people demand consumer demand continues to be high. Speaker 100:36:44It's what's in part driving some of the inflation that we're seeing. Employment is still pretty good. And I think there's a sense that the Fed isn't going to run to the rescue anytime soon. And this is going to be the state of the state for a while. And we're just feeling really good about what we're onboarding. Speaker 100:37:06We're seeing good opportunities. We're winning some good fights. And I think you're hearing what we think the year is going to look like, just like you heard last year that we thought things were going to be a little slower. So that's just kind of where we are. Speaker 800:37:25And then maybe for Carey or anybody who should take this. In terms of the place you are and the multi year effort to sort of get better, more appropriate reimbursement from commercial payers, I mean, how much work there do you feel like is I understand it will be ongoing for a while. But in terms of the heavy lift, what you really want to accomplish, how far into this do you feel like you are at this point? Speaker 300:37:57Yes. I'd say we're through about 2 thirds of the initial heavy lift, if you will. But it's as Jim noted, it's an ongoing effort. So when we get done with this, we just start right back over again and go through it. There's always opportunities and we're so it's a never ending process. Speaker 300:38:16But we're I'd say from the initial lift, we're probably 2 thirds of the way through. Speaker 800:38:20And then just I guess last question on just M and A. And Chris, I heard you say, hey, we're seeing some really reasonable prices for some tuck ins. And I'm just curious, in terms of the conversations you're having, are there bigger sort of needle deals out there where you would say, hey, there's active discussions. The timing on it could come in 6 months, it could come in 2 years, but are there larger deals out there or larger partnerships out there that are looking for exit strategies and where you guys could be a reasonable option? Speaker 100:39:01Yes, for sure. And Mike, it's interesting time right now. I know that from time to time over a period of many years, we've sometimes gotten criticized a little bit for having a conservative balance sheet. Interesting, many, many of our competitors are really balance sheet constrained. And so we're able to continue to grow and have discussions and really to create meaningful points of differentiation, not just culturally and in normal life after, but really predictable stability because we're so well capitalized. Speaker 100:39:48And so you're going to continue to see us grow. We're talking to some large and large companies. I'm not going to promise timing around that, which I know you're not asking for. But we're not afraid to grow. We want to do it the right way. Speaker 100:40:10And at the same time, we need to meet people where they are and that involves their own personal timing and circumstance. And so I think we're seeing in a really good light, the deals that we've won recently. We haven't been the highest bidder on and yet not that we've gotten them cheaply, the larger ones that we've announced, but I think in part it's because people see us being able to execute on our strategy over a long period of time where others are beginning to feel capital market, which is not in their favor right now. Speaker 800:40:52Okay. Nice start to the year. Thank you. Speaker 100:40:54Thanks, Mike. Operator00:41:15And there are no further questions on the line at this time. I'll turn the program back to our speakers for any closing comments. Sure. Speaker 100:41:23All right, David. Thank you. Thanks, everybody. We appreciate your time today. Carrie and I are available later. Speaker 100:41:30And again, as always, when you have questions you want to things you want to bounce around, we're happy to speak to those. Thank you for your time today and have a great rest of your week. Bye now. Operator00:41:47This does conclude today's program.Read moreRemove AdsPowered by