NYSE:DGX Quest Diagnostics Q3 2021 Earnings Report $194.79 -0.21 (-0.11%) Closing price 06/18/2026 03:59 PM EasternExtended Trading$195.02 +0.23 (+0.12%) As of 06/18/2026 07:45 PM Eastern Extended trading is trading that happens on electronic markets outside of regular trading hours. This is a fair market value extended hours price provided by Massive. Learn more. ProfileEarnings HistoryForecast Quest Diagnostics EPS ResultsActual EPS$3.96Consensus EPS $2.88Beat/MissBeat by +$1.08One Year Ago EPS$4.31Quest Diagnostics Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$2.77 billionExpected Revenue$2.52 billionBeat/MissBeat by +$256.30 millionYoY Revenue Growth-0.60%Quest Diagnostics Announcement DetailsQuarterQ3 2021Date10/20/2021TimeBefore Market OpensConference Call DateWednesday, October 20, 2021Conference Call Time8:00PM ETUpcoming EarningsQuest Diagnostics' Q2 2026 earnings is estimated for Thursday, July 23, 2026, based on past reporting schedules, with a conference call scheduled at 8:30 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 Quest Diagnostics Q3 2021 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrOctober 20, 2021 ShareLink copied to clipboard.Key Takeaways Quest delivered Q3 revenue of $2.77 billion (–0.4% vs prior year) and adjusted EPS of $3.96 (–8%), while YTD cash from operations rose ~20% to $1.75 billion, leading management to raise 2021 revenue guidance to $10.45–10.60 billion. COVID-19 molecular testing averaged 83,000 tests/day in Q3 with one-day turnaround, peaked mid-September, and will shift toward non-clinical “return-to-life” programs in schools, workplaces and travel with Q4 volumes modeled at ~50,000 tests/day. The base business recovered sequentially in Q3, with Diagnostic Information Services base revenue up ~6% vs 2019 (2% ex-acquisitions) and volumes above pre-pandemic levels, and is expected to grow low-single digits vs Q4 2019. Quest remains on track to deliver 3% annual efficiencies, opening a 250k sq ft Next Gen Lab in NJ, expanding lab automation, maintaining a robust M&A pipeline, and achieving ~90% commercial insured lives access, while setting new records in consumer-initiated testing and launching a health panel on QuestDirect. The company’s $100 million+ Quest for Health Equity initiative has launched 18 programs—ranging from COVID testing/vaccination events to nutrition education and a long-haul COVID clinic—and recently partnered with the American Heart Association to advance Black and Hispanic hypertension research and mentorship. AI Generated. May Contain Errors.Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallQuest Diagnostics Q3 202100:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2xTranscript SectionsPresentationParticipantsPresentationSkip to Participants Operator00:00:00Welcome to the Quest Diagnostics third quarter 2021 conference call. At the request of the company, this call is being recorded. The entire contents of the call, including the presentation and question-and-answer session that will follow, are the copyrighted property of Quest Diagnostics with all rights reserved. Any registration, retransmission or rebroadcast of this call in any form without the written consent of Quest Diagnostics is strictly prohibited. Now I would like to introduce Shawn Bevec, Vice President of Investor Relations for Quest Diagnostics. Go ahead, please. Shawn BevecVP of Investor Relations at Quest Diagnostics00:00:41Thank you and good morning. I'm joined by Steve Rusckowski, our Chairman, CEO, and President, and Mark Guinan, our Chief Financial Officer. During this call, we may make forward-looking statements, and we'll discuss non-GAAP measures. We provide a reconciliation of non-GAAP measures to comparable GAAP measures in the tables to our earnings press release. Actual results may differ materially from those projected. Risks and uncertainties, including the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic, that may affect Quest Diagnostics' future results include, but are not limited to, those described in our most recent annual report on Form 10-K and subsequently filed quarterly reports on Form 10-Q, and current reports on Form 8-K. Shawn BevecVP of Investor Relations at Quest Diagnostics00:01:25The company continues to believe that the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on future operating results, cash flows, and/or its financial condition will be primarily driven by the pandemic's severity and duration, healthcare insurer, government, and client payer reimbursement rates for COVID-19 molecular tests, the pandemic's impact on the U.S. healthcare system and the U.S. economy, and the timing, scope, and effectiveness of federal, state, and local governmental responses to the pandemic, including the impact of vaccination efforts, which are drivers beyond the company's knowledge and control. For this call, references to reported EPS refer to reported diluted EPS, and references to adjusted EPS refer to adjusted diluted EPS. Any references to base business testing, revenues, or volumes refer to the performance of our business excluding COVID-19 testing. Shawn BevecVP of Investor Relations at Quest Diagnostics00:02:16Growth rates associated with our long-term outlook projections, including total revenue growth, revenue growth from acquisitions, organic revenue growth, and adjusted earnings growth, are compound annual growth rates. Finally, revenue growth rates from acquisitions will be measured against our base business. Now, here is Steve Rusckowski. Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics00:02:37Thanks, Shawn, and thanks everyone for joining us today. Well, we had a strong third quarter as COVID-19 molecular volumes increased throughout the summer, while our base business continued to deliver solid volume growth versus the prior year and 2019. In late summer, we experienced some softness in the base business across the country, but saw a rebound in September. Importantly, our base business continued to improve sequentially in the third quarter, which speaks to the ongoing recovery. We have raised our outlook for the remainder of the year based on higher-than-anticipated COVID-19 volumes, as well as continued progress we expect to see in our base business, despite rising labor costs and inflationary pressures. The momentum of our base business positions us to deliver the 2022 outlook we shared at our March investor day. Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics00:03:42This morning, I'll discuss our performance for the third quarter of 2021 and update you on our base business. Mark will provide more detail on our financial results and talk about our updated outlook and underlying assumptions. Before turning to our results into the third quarter, I'd like to update you on the progress we've made in our Quest for Health Equity initiative, a more than $100 million initiative aimed at reducing healthcare disparities in underserved neighborhoods. Since we established it just over a year ago, we have launched 18 programs across the U.S. and Puerto Rico, ranging from supporting COVID-19 testing and vaccination events, to educating young students on healthy nutritional choices, to providing funding support for a long-haul COVID-19 clinic in Puerto Rico. Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics00:04:41Recently, we announced a collaboration with the American Heart Association that will expand research and mentorship opportunities for Black and Hispanic scholars to drive hypertension management and COVID-19 relief. We're off to a good start, and I look forward to updating you on our continued progress as Quest for Health Equity enters its second year. Turning to our results for the third quarter. Total revenue of $2.77 billion, down 40 basis points versus the prior year. Earnings per share were $4.02 on a reported basis, down approximately 3% versus the prior year, and $3.96 on an adjusted basis, down 8% versus the prior year. The revenue and earnings declines in the third quarter reflect lower COVID-19 testing in 2021 versus the prior year, partially offset by continued recovery in our base business. Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics00:05:52Cash provided by operations increased by nearly 20% year to date through September to approximately $1.75 billion. Now, starting with COVID-19 testing, our COVID-19 molecular volumes increased in the third quarter versus the second quarter due to the spread of the Delta variant over the course of the summer. Testing began to increase meaningfully in mid-July and peaked in early mid-September. Our observed positivity rate peaked in mid-August and has steadily been declining across much of the country in recent weeks. We performed an average of 83,000 COVID-19 molecular tests a day in the third quarter and maintained strong average turnaround times of approximately one day for most specimens throughout the surge. As clinical COVID-19 volumes decline, we are expanding our non-clinical COVID-19 testing to support the return to school, office, travel, and entertainment. We're making testing easy, fast, and affordable for school systems and other group settings across the country. Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics00:07:14We are currently performing K-12 school testing in approximately 20 states with five additional states ready to come online. Quest exclusively provided testing at the Boston Marathon earlier this month. In the base business, we continue to make progress on our two-point strategy to accelerate growth and drive operational excellence. Here are some highlights from the third quarter. Our M&A pipeline remains strong. In the third quarter, we completed a small tuck-in acquisition of an independent lab in Florida. We continue to build on our exceptional health plan access of approximately 90% of all commercially insured lives in the U.S. At our investor day, we discussed how we have fundamentally changed our relationship with health plans. We continue to see the promise of value-based relationships come to life. Here's a couple examples. Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics00:08:21We are working with national health plans to help their self-insured employer customers improve quality outcomes and lower the cost of care for both the employers and their employees. Effective October 1st, we gained access to 1 million managed Medicaid members in Florida as their coverage transitions to Centene's Sunshine Health Plan. We're getting good feedback from the provider community and are growing testing volumes through this expanded access opportunity. Our hospital health system revenue continues to track well above 2019 levels, driven largely by the strength of our professional laboratory services contracts. As we highlighted previously, 2021 performance is benefiting from two of our largest PLS contracts to date, Hackensack Meridian Health and Memorial Hermann. Altogether, our PLS business is expected to exceed $500 million in annual revenue this year. Trends in our hospital reference business also remain steady, with third quarter base testing volumes above 2019 levels. Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics00:09:48We also generated record consumer-initiated testing revenue through QuestDirect in Q3. While COVID testing has been strong contributor growth, we expect our base direct-to-consumer testing revenue to more than double this year. Recently, we soft launched a comprehensive health profile on QuestDirect, similar to our Blueprint for Wellness offering for employers. This expanded health panel offers a deep dive into consumers' health profile with a battery of tests and biometric measurements to provide a personalized health quotient score that can be used to track health progress over time. Finally, our MyQuest app and patient portal now has almost 20 million users. In advanced diagnostics, we continue to ramp investments and see strong momentum in key growth drivers. We're seeing strong growth in non-invasive prenatal testing, significantly above 2019 levels, and saw solid contribution in our specialty genetics portfolio from Blueprint Genetics. Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics00:11:05We continue to work closely with the CDC to sequence positive COVID specimens in an ongoing effort to track emerging variants, expanding of the work that we performed in the quarter. Finally, we plan to introduce a test service based on a new FDA-approved companion diagnostic from Agilent for a therapy from Eli Lilly for a certain type of high-risk early breast cancer. Quest will be the first laboratory to offer it to physicians nationally at the end of the month. Turning to our second strategy, driving operational excellence. We made progress and remain on track to deliver our targeted 3% annual efficiencies across the business. Last week, we announced that we completed the integration and consolidation of our Northeast regional operations into our new 250,000 sq ft next generation lab in Clifton, New Jersey. This state-of-the-art, highly automated facility services more than 40 million people across 7 states. Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics00:12:16In patient services, we are seeing all-time high numbers of patients making appointments to visit our Patient Service Centers. Now, more than 50% of Patient Service Center visits are now by appointment versus walk-ins. This enables patients to be very satisfied and also improves our ability to drive productivity for our phlebotomists. Similar to our immunoassay platform consolidation, we recently procured a highly automated urinalysis platform that is expected to generate millions in annual savings once these new systems are standardized across our laboratory network. Finally, I'd like to recognize and thank all of our nearly 50,000 employees who have worked tirelessly to provide critical COVID-19 testing to our country throughout the pandemic and continue to serve the healthcare needs of patients who depend on Quest every day. Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics00:13:21As a demonstration of our gratitude, we're assisting our employees with a one-time payment of up to $500, designed to reimburse costs that they incurred during the pandemic. Additionally, another year of pandemic pressures and travel restrictions have made it very difficult for many employees to take their hard-earned time off. Therefore, we are providing a payout of most unused paid time off for our hourly employees to ensure they don't forfeit their earned, unused time at year-end. Now, I'd like to turn it over to Mark to provide more details on the third quarter financial performance and updated outlook for the remainder of 2021. Mark? Mark GuinanCFO at Quest Diagnostics00:14:12Thanks, Steve. In the third quarter, consolidated revenues were $2.77 billion, down 0.4% versus the prior year. Revenues for diagnostic information services were essentially flat compared to the prior year, which is reflected by lower revenue from COVID-19 testing services versus the third quarter of last year, largely offset by the strong ongoing recovery in our base testing revenues. Compared to 2019, our base DIS revenue grew approximately 6% in the third quarter, and it was up nearly 2% excluding acquisitions. Volume, measured by the number of requisitions, increased 5.3% versus the prior year, with acquisitions contributing approximately 2%. Compared to our third quarter 2019 baseline, total base testing volumes increased 9%. Excluding acquisitions, total base testing volumes grew approximately 4% and benefited from new PLS contracts that have ramped over the last year. Mark GuinanCFO at Quest Diagnostics00:15:23We saw a rebound in our base business volumes in September following a modest softening in August that we believe was at least partially caused by the rise of the Delta variant and the timing of summer vacations. Importantly, our base business revenue and volume grew sequentially in the third quarter. This helps illustrate the ongoing recovery as historically, total revenue and volume typically step down in Q3 versus Q2 due to summer seasonality. As most of you know, COVID-19 testing volumes grew in the third quarter versus Q2, which was in line with broader COVID-19 testing trends across the country. We resulted approximately 7.6 million molecular tests and nearly 700,000 serology tests in the third quarter. Far in October, average COVID-19 molecular volumes have declined approximately 10% from where we exited Q3 but are still above the levels we expected prior to the surge of the Delta variant. Mark GuinanCFO at Quest Diagnostics00:16:27While the base business continues to improve since September. Revenue per requisition declined 5.4% versus the prior year, driven primarily by lower COVID-19 molecular volumes and, to a lesser extent, recent PLS wins. Unit price headwinds remained modest and in line with our expectations. Reported operating income in the third quarter was $652 million or 23.5% of revenues, compared to $718 million or 25.8% of revenues last year. On an adjusted basis, operating income in Q3 was $694 million or 25% of revenues, compared to $831 million or 29.8% of revenues last year. The year-over-year decline in operating margin was driven by lower COVID-19 testing revenue, partially offset by the recovery in our base business. Reported EPS was $4.02 in the quarter, compared to $4.14 a year ago. Adjusted EPS was $3.96, compared to $4.31 last year. Mark GuinanCFO at Quest Diagnostics00:17:41Cash provided by operations was $1.75 billion through September year to date, versus $1.46 billion in the same period last year. Turning to guidance, we have raised our full year 2021 outlook as follows. Revenue is expected to be between $10.45 billion and $10.6 billion, an increase of approximately 11%-12% versus the prior year. Reported EPS expected to be in a range of $4.69 and $15.09. Adjusted EPS to be in a range of $13.50 and $13.90. Cash provided by operations is expected to be approximately $2.2 billion, and capital expenditures are expected to be approximately $400 million. Before concluding, I'll touch on some assumptions embedded in our updated outlook. We expect COVID-19 molecular volumes to continue to decline from Q3 levels throughout the remainder of the year. Mark GuinanCFO at Quest Diagnostics00:18:43At the low end of our outlook, we assume approximately 50,000 molecular tests per day in Q4, and serology volumes to hold relatively steady at approximately 5,000 tests per day. As you may know, late last week, the public health emergency was again extended another 90 days through late January. We expect reimbursement for clinical COVID-19 molecular testing to hold relatively steady through the remainder of the year. However, we continue to assume average reimbursements to trend lower in Q4 as our mix of COVID-19 molecular volumes potentially shift from clinical diagnostic testing to more return to life surveillance testing. Finally, we continue to assume low single-digit revenue growth in our base business in Q4 versus 2019. Getting to the midpoint or higher end of our outlook ranges assumes stronger COVID-19 molecular testing volumes and/or stronger growth in our base business. I will now turn it back to Steve. Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics00:19:50Thanks, Mark. Well, to summarize, we had a strong third quarter. We have raised our outlook for the remainder of the year based on higher-than-anticipated COVID-19 volumes, as well as our continued progress we expect to see in our base business. Finally, the momentum of our base business positions us to deliver the 2022 outlook we shared at our March investor day. Now we'd be happy to take any of your questions. Operator? Operator00:20:24Thank you. We will now open it up to questions. At the request of the company, we ask that you please limit yourself to one question. If you have additional questions, we ask that you please fall back in the queue. To be placed in the queue, please press star one from your phone. To withdraw, please press star two. Again, to ask a question, please press star one. Our first question comes from Kevin Caliendo, UBS. Your line is now open. Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics00:21:05Good morning, Kevin. Kevin CaliendoAnalyst at UBS00:21:06Thank you. Thanks. Good morning, everybody. Thanks for all the details and the guidance for 2021. I really want to talk about into 2022, sort of you reiterated your guidance from March, which I believe was at the higher end of the $7.40-$8.00 range. I'm just wondering at this point, what are the assumptions baked in for COVID testing into next year? Do you anticipate that it's going to continue? Do you anticipate there's going to be a meaningful decline? Any color around how you think COVID testing will proceed into next year? Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics00:21:46Mark, why don't you start, and then I'll follow. Mark GuinanCFO at Quest Diagnostics00:21:49Sure. Kevin, just to be clear up front, we haven't provided guidance yet for 2022. We provided an outlook. We did confirm that today. Things have largely played out where we saw them for 2022 back in March. The base volumes have recovered. We thought we were ahead in June when it was close to being flat to 2019 and potentially saw some upside. Obviously, with Delta, it took a little bit of a step back. We still expect to enter 2022 with a base volume utilization level similar to pre-pandemic. That's good. The second thing is we did assume that COVID will continue at a much lower level than we saw in 2020 and 2021, but still to be significant and certainly much larger than our current flu testing. Mark GuinanCFO at Quest Diagnostics00:22:43We've referenced in the past that at some point, COVID testing will still be here, but maybe more on the level of flu testing. At this point, we feel comfortable with what we had assumed back in March around continued need for COVID testing, for PCR. We envision a stronger role for serology going into 2022 and think that's a potential. We feel good about that. We did reference inflationary pressures. We certainly have longer-term contracts on a lot of our purchases, but things like fuel, certainly were subject to inflation in the near term and going into 2022. Most notably, as many people have talked, there's certainly inflation in wages and benefits, and especially in wages. Mark GuinanCFO at Quest Diagnostics00:23:35As we look at that, we gave a range, and we still feel very comfortable that when you put all those pieces together, that the $8.5 billion baseline for revenue and the $7.4-$8 is certainly still deliverable, maybe in a slightly different way. Still very comfortable that that's likely where we're going to land when we do finally provide guidance for 2022. Kevin CaliendoAnalyst at UBS00:24:00Just as a quick follow-up, can you in any way quantify the higher inflationary pressures, supply chain, any of that? Is there any way to put numbers around that? Mark GuinanCFO at Quest Diagnostics00:24:14Yeah. I'm sure you're most interested in 2022. We'll see what we can provide when we come out with guidance in early next year to provide clarity. Certainly, at this point, while we're experiencing some of that, given the performance of the business, it hasn't prevented us from significantly over-delivering our previous guidance. We'll take it under consideration, Kevin. We appreciate the question. We'll see what we can do when we talk more about next year. Kevin CaliendoAnalyst at UBS00:24:45Thank you. Shawn BevecVP of Investor Relations at Quest Diagnostics00:24:49Operator, next question. Operator00:24:51Yes. Our next question comes from Brian Tanquilut, Jefferies. Your line is now open. Brian TanquilutAnalyst at Jefferies00:24:59Hey, good morning, guys. Congrats on the quarter. Just to follow up, just as I think about costs and all the moving pieces, obviously, the Clifton Lab just opened. How are you thinking about the flow-through of the benefits from that and how it would potentially offset some of the inflationary pressures that you're seeing on the cost side? Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics00:25:20Yeah. Thanks, Brian, for the question. As you know, and what I reiterated in our prepared remarks, we've been marching with our two-point strategy for some time, and the second strategy is to drive operational excellence. We have maintained and just reiterated that we do believe we can continue to deliver 3% efficiency or productivity gains going forward. That 3% comes from a variety of programs across Quest Diagnostics, and one of which is what we did in Clifton. I actually also reiterated a couple other programs. The prepared remarks are working with our suppliers with new integrated platforms, what we've done around immunoassay, what we're doing around our immuno urinalysis are two good examples of more work we can get the benefits from, and there's others. There's a lot more efficiencies in productivity we can continue to get. Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics00:26:28As I said before, this isn't cost-cutting, this is improvement. Every time we make an improvement in our operation, we expect our quality improves and our service performance improves, and it has. We continue to make progress. You see it in our numbers this year, and you'll continue to see it in our 2022 numbers as well. That's always been used to offset headwinds, and we do have headwinds. We've had headwinds from wage bill increases in the past, albeit maybe it could be a little bit higher going forward given what we see in the labor market. Second is we have seen headwinds from price consequences as well, which we've been able to offset, and we'll have some of those in 2022, as we've outlined before. Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics00:27:20Also any additional inflationary pressures, we will be able to offset most of that, if not all of that, to be able to hit the outlook. We just reiterated our confidence, our ability to do that. Hopefully, that's helpful. Mark GuinanCFO at Quest Diagnostics00:27:38Yeah, I just wanted to add. Brian TanquilutAnalyst at Jefferies00:27:40Thank you. Mark GuinanCFO at Quest Diagnostics00:27:41Reference that the Clifton Lab and its increased productivity efficiency is really part of our Invigorate work that we talk about, the 3% productivity every year. It's not over and above or separate. I will comment is that what we've done there, like we did up in Massachusetts, we have added more automation. Obviously, as you add automation, you insulate yourself a little bit from labor inflation. Certainly, we have that going as we operate that lab. It is built in and part of what my assumptions I had putting together that outlook for 2022, that we would achieve that ongoing 3% efficiency, not something separate. Brian TanquilutAnalyst at Jefferies00:28:31Awesome. Thank you. Operator00:28:38Our next question comes from Ricky Goldwasser, Morgan Stanley. Your line is now open. Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics00:28:45Good morning, Ricky. Ricky GoldwasserAnalyst at Morgan Stanley00:28:47Hi. Good morning. One follow-up question on the cost. I mean, clearly, we're all interested in the magnitude of the potential impact of labor and inflation. Maybe you can help us by reminding us what percent of your cost structure today is labor, and how should we think about its breakdown between cost of goods and SG&A? Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics00:29:11Mark? Mark GuinanCFO at Quest Diagnostics00:29:14Ricky, we've shared in the past, pre-pandemic, that about $3 billion of our cost was related to salary and benefits. Obviously, with COVID moving around, it's hard to cite the precise number with including the COVID testing. I think that should give you a pretty good idea of what proportion of our cost, our $6+ billion cost base we had prior to the pandemic is made up of labor. It's somewhere in the 50% range. As we said, as we continue to automate, that certainly offsets some of that. Also, we are seeing an increased amount of demand for phlebotomy. That is going the other direction. We obviously consider it a net benefit because giving access helps us grow our business. It certainly makes us more attractive, especially in a world of consumerism. Mark GuinanCFO at Quest Diagnostics00:30:08It's a good thing, but it certainly will drive costs and labor costs as a percentage of overall cost in the other direction. Ricky GoldwasserAnalyst at Morgan Stanley00:30:18Just to follow up on the direct-to-consumer point. Steve, you mentioned the soft launch of the comprehensive health panel that's direct-to-consumer. Can you just share with us what has been the response to date and maybe some data points about pricing? Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics00:30:36Sure. As I said in my introductory remarks, we have a product that we sold for years to employers called Blueprint for Wellness. We offer it to our Quest employees as well. It's a fabulous dipstick reading on an annual basis for people to get an indication of what's going on with their health. If you do it year upon year, you've got a good, nice trending capability that I found beneficial since I've been here at Quest, and I know many of our employees have as well, and many of our customers have. We're now using that as the product, to introduce that through our direct-to-consumer channel, through QuestDirect. We're very optimistic about the possibility that this has. Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics00:31:27We believe that it has a unique capability that few others provide, and we also believe it's hitting the market at the right time, where many people have not gone to their primary healthcare providers. We believe that there's a lot of opportunities now for people to directly engage with us as a consumer to buy this directly from us. As far as pricing, Mark, can you share what we're thinking about in terms of pricing, even though this is a soft launch? Mark GuinanCFO at Quest Diagnostics00:32:01Yeah. It's going to be a couple hundred dollars. When you look at the individual elements that are contained in here, it's a reasonable price for everything that you get. I can also tell you that we've gotten a lot of feedback that this score that we give people, which really simplifies how to interpret the results, is a huge consumer positive. A lot of reasons to believe that this could get some additional momentum for our consumer business. We think the pricing is reasonable, and we feel that the product we're delivering is something that consumers really find interesting and valuable. Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics00:32:41Just to follow up on the price, we actually did some market research to understand that the value that this provides to consumers justifies the price that we're pricing it for initially. We feel good about value delivered and price charged. Shawn BevecVP of Investor Relations at Quest Diagnostics00:33:01Operator, next question. Operator00:33:05Our next question comes from Jack Meehan, Nephron Research. Your line is now open. Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics00:33:11Hey, good morning, Jack. Jack MeehanAnalyst at Nephron Research00:33:13Good morning, Steve. Good morning, Mark and Shawn. I wanted to continue on the inflation topic, but looked at a different way. If operating costs were to remain elevated, do you think there's an appreciation by payers that the cost of doing business is moving higher? How do you feel about your ability to get price increases? Maybe just talk about recent negotiations. Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics00:33:37Let me start, and Mark, please add. We've been on this march, as I said in my remarks, to continue to demonstrate to our health plan partners that we continue to deliver value, and I believe we're making tremendous progress. One is that we're picking up access in the number of lives. I mentioned 90% of insured lives we're in network with within the U.S., and we're happy about the progress of picking some more up this coming year. That's moving along. Second, as far as pricing is concerned, we continue to march through our contracts as they are up for renewal. We have said in earlier calls that we're now very fairly priced. A matter of fact, we believe we offer a very affordable price offering to the health plans and their memberships with great quality, great service, and very competitive pricing. Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics00:34:41Much so that we're part of these preferred lab networks. We're justified. We are getting some modest price increases, and we do believe, going forward, that we can continue to pound that drum. We are using what other people are using across the U.S. that, in fact, now that we're entering a new inflationary period, our costs are going up just like yours, and therefore, we need to start talking about modest price increases going forward. Mark, you'd like to add anything to that? Mark GuinanCFO at Quest Diagnostics00:35:18Yeah. Jack, I think you appreciate, I'm sure a lot of people do as well, that our health plan contracts typically are three to five years. It's not as if every health plan contract is up for renegotiation in any window of time. We've been socializing PAMA and how that is changing the dynamic and how they can look at the NLA rates and be confident that they have competitive rate because they know that's the market for the independent labs, which we've said is lower than the market, but the market for the independent labs. This whole notion of a price below Medicare, which was the historical practice, is going away with PAMA. Now you add inflation, as you suggest, and it's absolutely part of the conversation we've been having over the last number of months. Mark GuinanCFO at Quest Diagnostics00:36:13I can tell you that although it's not final, there is one national payer that we've been negotiating, and it's not final, but it looks like the first price increase we will have gotten from them in certainly my tenure, and I'm sure more than a decade. We've been stabilizing as we shared our commercial negotiations to go from a world of price declines every contract extension to getting it more flat, and we actually have shared there's a handful of regional plans where we got increases over the last couple years, and now we have a national contract that I'm very optimistic we're going to get an increase. How much of it's inflation? How much of it's PAMA? Mark GuinanCFO at Quest Diagnostics00:36:56How much of it is our value proposition and seeing that working with us is a benefit for everyone versus treating us as a commoditized provider of a laboratory result? Can't tell you, but we're in a much better place. Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics00:37:11Just to remind everyone, our health plan channel business is a significant portion of our revenue every year. What we've also highlighted, the reason why we do have unit price decreases in our typical assumptions annually is because we have other pressures in our business. We do have direct business to physicians, which we call clients. Our client business is under price pressure over the past several years, and that has contributed to the price pressure we see. Secondly, is we sell to the hospitals, and we're doing quite well in the hospital segment, but it is price competitive. Then we have other product lines where we sell our services directly to employers or to insurance companies, and there's price pressure there as well. When we talk about our unit price changes, it's not all in the commercial health plan area. Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics00:38:09There's other areas that we have price pressure as well. Operator00:38:15Our next question comes from A.J. Rice, Credit Suisse. Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics00:38:20Hey, A.J. A.J. RiceAnalyst at Credit Suisse00:38:21Hey, thanks. Hi, everybody. Just trying to maybe ask you a high-level question about how the pandemic is maybe impacting your business for the long term. It seems like in the pandemic, we've seen people move away from just traditional physician office visits at some level, virtual care, other alternative sites to get their primary care. Are you seeing, and does that help you or hurt you if people go to these other avenues, which may generate testing volume? Do you think you capture a disproportionate share of that? The other thing I was going to ask about the pandemic was related to you've said that as you have outperformance because of COVID testing, you accelerated some of your programs for cost savings and other efficiencies. A.J. RiceAnalyst at Credit Suisse00:39:12Should we think of that as just enhancing the visibility on the 3% cost reduction annual goal, or are there things you're doing that might even present some upside for 2022 and beyond? Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics00:39:24Yeah. Thanks, AJ, for your question. Let me take the first one, and I'll ask Mark to comment on the second part of your question. First of all, telehealth, as we all know, has really increased considerably during the pandemic and has really hit an inflection point, and patients and consumers are now very comfortable with getting a portion of their healthcare delivered through telehealth networks, whatever that might be. As we have watched it, initially, a lot of the telehealth visits started with mental health and behavior health and have now transitioned to more general health, and primary care and even specialized care. With all those visits happening in telehealth, you have to engage with the patient, and you have to be able to enter orders. Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics00:40:17Fortunately for us, despite the pandemic and before the pandemic, we have strong relationships with all the telehealth companies, and as you would expect, they're only going to work with a small group of laboratories, and Quest would be one of those laboratories. We're very well-positioned with the telehealth providers. You also know that even though there are telehealth companies, telehealth is provided through integrated delivery systems, hospital systems in different ways, and they might use one of the telehealth provider platforms, but they're still providing that through their physicians and using their EMR. When they enter the order, it's going to be entered the order the same way as in the past. We're watching it carefully. Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics00:41:01We do believe it's a positive trend for us given what I just described, but it's complicated because it all depends how telehealth platforms are deployed, and particularly with so many owned physicians by integrated delivery systems, and they're still conducting the business as they do. It all depends how they actually implement their telehealth services throughout their network and how that will affect our business. Again, for us, we believe it is a positive. Mark, you want to take the second part? Mark GuinanCFO at Quest Diagnostics00:41:32Yeah. Actually, AJ, could you repeat the second part? Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics00:41:39It had to do with accelerating our drive program because of our enhanced performance, and I think he's speaking to some of the acceleration and capital purchases that we've made and spending some additional money to get more improvements than what we would've realized if we didn't have the pandemic. A.J. Rice, is that correct? A.J. RiceAnalyst at Credit Suisse00:42:06Percent savings and all. Mark GuinanCFO at Quest Diagnostics00:42:10Yeah. We have had an opportunity to invest more than we probably would've otherwise given this stronger growth than we would've anticipated in 2021. We've talked about that. A lot of that investment has actually been more towards top-line acceleration. We've talked about what we're doing in advanced diagnostics. We've talked about what we're doing, what requires to build a consumer business. I'd say a disproportionate amount of the opportunity as we try to balance near-term results with longer-term value creation has really been in top line. Yes, as we looked at some of the things we did during the pandemic, we had an opportunity to update our molecular equipment and into more efficient, more state-of-the-art, probably faster than we normally would have cycled. That'll give us some efficiency that maybe wouldn't have otherwise. Mark GuinanCFO at Quest Diagnostics00:43:07I wouldn't, at this point suggest that we're ready to commit to more than the 3% productivity, because obviously that's a large number in and of itself, and small basis points changes are really significant. Directionally, I would say yes, A.J., that this pandemic goal is of value creation and additional cash has enabled us to accelerate some investments, most of it on the top line growth, but certainly some on the productivity side as well. Operator00:43:44Next up is Ann Hynes, Mizuho Securities. Your line is now open. Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics00:43:49Good morning, Ann. Ann HynesAnalyst at Mizuho Securities00:43:51Hi. Good morning. I just want to talk about the base volume trends. I know revenue was up versus 2019, but can you give us some color on how much your base volume trends are still down versus pre-pandemic, maybe X some of the PLS deals that you've signed during the pandemic, and if it's still down, maybe just give a geographic breakdown. I guess my second question would be, obviously, testing was very strong for molecular PCR test for COVID-19. Can you give us a breakdown how much of that was contributed to this Back to Life initiative, whether it's schools, cities, states, more like maintenance testing? I know you said in your prepared remarks that you assume revenue per test goes down in Q4. Can you give us what it was in Q3, and maybe just directionally what we should model for Q4? Ann HynesAnalyst at Mizuho Securities00:44:44That would be very helpful. Thanks. Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics00:44:46Okay. Thanks, Ann. Mark, why don't you start with giving the numbers on base business performance as the part? Mark GuinanCFO at Quest Diagnostics00:44:53Yeah. Hopefully, I can clarify. Base volume in total is obviously anything non-COVID related as we've been through the pandemic. We've been recording strong growth in base volume, which includes our M&A and our PLS, as you would expect. We've also been trying to provide some color on utilization. In the absence of an independent way to measure that, we look at our base volume ex the acquired volume and ex the new PLS deals. We've talked about that continuing to improve in addition to the growth we're getting from M&A and from PLS. In June, the organic base volumes of the new PLS deals was getting close to back to the 2019 levels, and then it kind of stabilized in July. It took a little bit of a step back in August. Mark GuinanCFO at Quest Diagnostics00:45:54As we see where we are through September and into October, it's getting back again very close to being fully recovered to 2019. That's why I said earlier that we would expect certainly by the end of this year and going into 2022, that we'd be fully recovered. It is regionally variable, as we've talked in the past, and that really has not changed. There's certain regions that are actually above where they were in 2019. Most notably, our Southwest region, as we're looking at Florida and the South, the volume trends are above. A couple other areas that are kind of in that middle point. The one area of note that's really been lagging is the East. It continues to lag. Mark GuinanCFO at Quest Diagnostics00:46:40While it certainly has improved from where it was several months ago, it's still down and kind of an outlier, especially in the 5 boroughs of New York City. Quickly, I'll answer the question on the revenue expectations from elective testing, and I'll let Steve talk about the Back to Life. We're still around $90 in the quarter. We're not expecting a meaningful decline in the fourth quarter. Certainly, if Back to Life really took off, which is not what we're expecting in the middle of our guidance here, it could have a little bit of a but again, it's still net positive. It's just math. You can expect for your modeling purposes that just a very slight decline in Q4, nothing of significance. Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics00:47:32Yeah. The last question, Ann, you had asked for the breakdown of what we describe as, first of all, the clinical portion of our PCR volumes versus the Return to Life portion of our clinical volumes. As you can expect, it's tough for us to know exactly, particularly which bucket we can put those in. I can tell you that the trend line is trending towards more of the Return to Life. We see the infection rates coming down, and we see programs that we've worked on going up. Examples are the Return to School programs, mentioned 20 states and five more coming. We're also doing some testing for employers, if they have mandates in place where they're requiring vaccination or testing. Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics00:48:23We see some increase in testing's related to, again, employers bringing people back to the workplace and requiring testing or vaccination for that. I would say trending-wise, it is a larger percentage than before, but it's very difficult for us to give you exact numbers on that because we just don't get it through the orders that we received. We think what we provided for guidance is clearly what's going to happen in 2022. Operator00:48:52Next up is Ralph Giacobbe with Citi. Your line is now open. Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics00:48:56Hey, Ralph. Ralph GiacobbeAnalyst at Citi00:48:58Hey, good morning. Thanks. First, just a quick follow-up on a comment you made. Can you give us a sense of how much flu testing you do a year, if that's what you're anchoring for based on COVID testing going forward? Separately, was just hoping you could talk about COVID reimbursement and the outlook of that for next year. Obviously, you mentioned PHE got extended at least for the early part of next year. If that continues to extend, would you expect reimbursement to be better than what you assumed in that $8 EPS for next year? Also, what about commercial pricing specifically for COVID? Is that tied to PHE? Help us understand how that's negotiated, and if there's a step down there for next year. Thanks. Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics00:49:41Mark, you want to start with the flu? Mark GuinanCFO at Quest Diagnostics00:49:44Yeah. There's quite a bit there, Ralph. We'll see if we can touch on all of them. We don't generally share the precise revenue for any given test offering, but it's significantly lower than our current levels of COVID and what we would anticipate. The flu is not the baseline for 2022. We still expect COVID testing to be multiples of our flu revenues in 2022. The reason flu testing is smaller than would be otherwise is there's not a ton of molecular testing done. Physicians have become very comfortable with doing point of care. Even though the molecular is more precise, they feel like it's good enough in the office, and they have an opportunity to make money on it. Mark GuinanCFO at Quest Diagnostics00:50:31It would probably be several years, although I don't have the ability to call it precisely before we would expect COVID to be at our flu level. In terms of the pricing, we have either specific agreements or general agreements in the commercial rates that as long as the public health emergency continues, that the pricing will reflect what we're being paid by the federal government. It's not mechanistically tied to every contract, but we know that the expectation would be when that goes away, and again, there's still always a possibility they can decouple that $100 reimbursement rate from the public health emergency, so there's some other risks as well. As long as that continues, we would expect most of our commercial pricing to be at the same rate. Mark GuinanCFO at Quest Diagnostics00:51:24Obviously when that goes away, that we would expect negotiations to take it down to more the NLA level. When I talked about 2022 at the Investor Day, I talked about a reimbursement rate around $50, which is what the NLA is. Again, when you put all these pieces together, I want to be clear, we still fully expect to be in the upper end of that $7.48. I just wanted to caution against upside to that, given everything that's going on with inflation and so on, because we do have some positive things that have developed over the last six months or so. Some of that is probably going to be partially offset, if not largely offset by labor inflation. We're still pretty much where we were back in March. Mark GuinanCFO at Quest Diagnostics00:52:14In the higher end of the $7.48, and then certainly at least $8.5 billion of revenue, which importantly ties back to the 2018 CAGR that we shared with you at Investor Day. Just getting there at a little different way but still getting to where we said we would be. Operator00:52:35Next question comes from Matt Larew, William Blair. Your line is now open. Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics00:52:40Morning, Matt. Matt LarewAnalyst at William Blair00:52:42Yeah. Hi, good morning. A number of questions around labor issues. I actually wanted to ask about supply chain. I'm just curious if you're starting to see any challenges in sourcing anything, either for your PSCs or the labs, either longer lead times, and then if you're having any issues with sample transport logistics. Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics00:53:01So far, Matt, we're keeping up. We always have battles here and there, even despite the pandemic with suppliers. We've got a complicated business, and a lot of pieces have to come together to do what we do. Not a meaningful disruption so far, but we're watching it carefully because we're not through this yet. The last part of this is around logistics, and again, logistics have become a little more complicated given we do use commercial carriers for some portion of our logistics, but we've been managing our way through that. Fortunately, we have our own network of couriers. We have about 3,500 couriers in automobiles that are Quest employees. We have a fleet of small airplanes that do some of the connections between our collection locations and our laboratories, and they're employed by us. Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics00:53:54We're happy we have those in these uncertain times, and we continue to have strong relationships with the national carriers as well. So far, so good. Operator00:54:06Next up is Pito Chickering, Deutsche Bank. Your line is now open. Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics00:54:10Hey, Pito. Pito ChickeringAnalyst at Deutsche Bank00:54:11Hey, good morning, guys. A follow-up on Ann's question around the base testing business. Once you exclude M&A and PLS, can you give us color on where the tests are coming in from, specifically looking at primary care visits versus specialty visits versus hospital visits? Just curious if hospitals slow down in fourth quarter with the COVID-19 surge, does it impact anything on your fourth quarter growth? Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics00:54:35Mark? Mark GuinanCFO at Quest Diagnostics00:54:38First off, Pito, to be clear, the utilization trend that I talked about being nearly fully recovered doesn't exclude all PLS. It's just since we're comparing to 2019, it's excluding some of the really large deals that we've done recently, so that we don't cloud what we think utilization is. We had a PLS business of size back in 2019. I'm not taking that out, because obviously, that's part of the trend as well. When you look at the sources, we've shared that the recovery has been pretty broad-based. There's not a lot of differences, especially now. Early in the pandemic, there were some. We talked about prescription drug monitoring certainly being one that was lagging. A lot of that was policy driven. Mark GuinanCFO at Quest Diagnostics00:55:27Some of that, not all of it, but a lot of it's been addressed. Certainly, we've seen the toxicology or prescription drug monitoring business coming back in the same ballpark as some of our other clinical areas. We did see hospitals recovering faster early in the pandemic as they return to treating patients for elective surgeries and so on. Physician office was a little more lagging. At this point, as we talked about in the prepared remarks, the physician business is quite strong and we're seeing the volumes, especially in some of the regions above where they were in 2019. We don't feel, other than the East, that there's been any sort of a fundamental change in either patient engagement with physician offices and/or the prescribing practices for our diagnostics business specifically. Operator00:56:24Next up is Tycho Peterson, JPMorgan. Your line is now open. Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics00:56:29Hey, Tycho. Casey WoodringAnalyst at JPMorgan00:56:30Hi, this is Casey on for Tycho. Two quick ones for you guys. The first one, do you think that the increased cash spend per requisition or test density trends that you've called out in 2021 will continue into 2022, and is that baked into that $7.40 to $8 EPS outlook? My second one is just on capital deployment. You guys have completed the ASR, right? Should we expect any more buybacks in 4Q, and what share count should we use for our model for 4Q? Thank you. Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics00:56:59Yeah. I'll take the first one. Mark, can you take the second? This is on req density, that is the number of tests per requisition. We assume there's a lot of different moving parts, as you know, for our business. One of which is the mix of tests. The second is number of tests per requisition. We have channel mix changes. All of that is complicated in our outlook that we've provided. We assume that's in there. Mark, you want to talk about capital deployment question? Mark GuinanCFO at Quest Diagnostics00:57:31Sure. The ASR should be wrapped up sometime in the next 30 days. Therefore, at this point, even if we did additional purchases once the window opens, and not committing to anything at this point, because we always say there's a balance between potential M&A and share repurchases. It wouldn't have a significant impact on our WASO this year. Any sort of additional purchases of our shares repurchases would be more of an impact for 2022. Obviously, we'll talk about that in detail when we come up to the guidance for 2022, early next year. Operator00:58:12Next up is Derik de Bruin, Bank of America. Your line is now open. Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics00:58:17Good morning, Jim. Analyst at Bank of America00:58:18Hi, this is John on for Derik. I wanted to dig into the base business growth, specifically within your advanced diagnostics business. Was there any notable trend for cancer and genetic testing? If you could comment on the growth trajectory, that'd be great. Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics00:58:36John, in our remarks, we're pleased with the recovery we've seen in advanced diagnostics and remind everyone that our definition of advanced diagnostics are entirely molecular and genetics. When I say recovery, and I did say molecular, it does not include our COVID testing. It's our base, if you will, molecular and genetic testing. We saw very good growth and beyond recovery for our prenatal testing. Feel good about that. We are seeing nice growth for our genetics business. As you recall, we did an acquisition with Blueprint Genetics last year, and that's progressing nicely and give us some nice growth and strength in that business. We feel good about the recovery and growth we're seeing in those areas that we're really focused on. Genetics in general is one of those areas. Operator00:59:35Next up is Mike Newshel, Evercore ISI. Your line is now open. Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics00:59:40Hey, Mike. Mike NewshelAnalyst at Evercore ISI00:59:42Hey, thanks. Do the labor and inflation cost issues you have talked about that you can absorb in your 2022 outlook, does that have any change in the long-term sort of growth targets that you laid out for post-2022 in terms of earnings growth? Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics01:00:01Mark? Mark GuinanCFO at Quest Diagnostics01:00:02At this point, obviously, we have a broad range. I would say that just like we've done in other periods of time, we'll look for and identify offsets to that. It's not significant enough that we should deviate on a multi-year outlook in terms of our earnings growth being in the high single digits. Although we haven't identified everything over the next several years, I'm sure as we move through time, we'll look for other productivity opportunities to offset some of that. Operator01:00:41There are no more questions. Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics01:00:44Okay. Very good. Thanks, everyone for joining our call today. We appreciate your continued support, and everyone have a great day. Operator01:00:56Thank you for participating in the Quest Diagnostics third quarter 2021 conference call. A transcript of prepared remarks on this call will be posted later today on Quest Diagnostics website at www.questdiagnostics.com. A replay of the call may be accessed online at www.questdiagnostics.com/investor or by phone at 866-360-7722 for domestic callers or 203-369-0174 for international callers. Telephone replays will be available from approximately 10:30 A.M. Eastern Time on October 21st, 2021 until midnight Eastern Time, November 4th, 2021.Read moreParticipantsExecutivesMark GuinanCFOShawn BevecVP of Investor RelationsSteve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and PresidentAnalystsA.J. RiceAnalyst at Credit SuisseAnn HynesAnalyst at Mizuho SecuritiesBrian TanquilutAnalyst at JefferiesCasey WoodringAnalyst at JPMorganJack MeehanAnalyst at Nephron ResearchKevin CaliendoAnalyst at UBSMatt LarewAnalyst at William BlairMike NewshelAnalyst at Evercore ISIPito ChickeringAnalyst at Deutsche BankRalph GiacobbeAnalyst at CitiRicky GoldwasserAnalyst at Morgan StanleyAnalyst at Bank of AmericaPowered by Earnings DocumentsPress Release(8-K)Quarterly report(10-Q) Quest Diagnostics Earnings HeadlinesIs Quest Diagnostics Stock Underperforming the S&P 500?2 hours ago | finance.yahoo.comQuest Diagnostics (NYSE:DGX) Upgraded at Wall Street Zen4 hours ago | americanbankingnews.comI’m giving you a stock today. Free.There's a company almost no one knows is in a joint venture with Elon Musk - running the emergency power plant keeping his supercomputer operational right now. Every hour those turbines spin, this company collects a toll off Musk's energy crisis. That temporary power is on a federal clock, and the scramble for a permanent solution is just getting started. | Behind the Markets (Ad)Quest Diagnostics Inc. stock underperforms Thursday when compared to competitorsJune 19 at 3:01 PM | marketwatch.comIs Quest Diagnostics Stock Underperforming the S&P 500?June 18 at 11:31 PM | barchart.comUTI-causing Bacteria Resistant to Current Drugs, Finds National Study by Hackensack Meridian CDI and Quest DiagnosticsJune 18 at 8:57 AM | prnewswire.comSee More Quest Diagnostics Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like Quest Diagnostics? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on Quest Diagnostics and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About Quest DiagnosticsQuest Diagnostics (NYSE:DGX) (NYSE: DGX) is a leading provider of diagnostic information services that supports clinical decision-making for patients, physicians and healthcare organizations. The company operates a network of clinical laboratories and patient service centers that perform a broad range of laboratory tests and diagnostic assays used in routine care, disease diagnosis, monitoring and screening. Its services span core clinical laboratory testing, anatomic pathology, molecular and genomic diagnostics, infectious disease testing and toxicology. Quest also offers specialized esoteric testing, employer and occupational health testing, clinical trial laboratory services and health information solutions designed to integrate lab data into provider and population health workflows. These capabilities are delivered through laboratory infrastructure, patient collection sites and digital tools that enable ordering, reporting and analytics. Quest primarily serves the United States healthcare market—providing testing and related services to physician practices, hospitals, payers, employers and governmental agencies—while maintaining capabilities that support international clinical trials and diagnostics initiatives. The company has operated for multiple decades and is structured with centralized laboratory operations, regional service locations and an executive leadership team responsible for strategic, clinical and operational oversight.View Quest Diagnostics ProfileRead more More Earnings Resources from MarketBeat Earnings Tools Today's Earnings Tomorrow's Earnings Next Week's Earnings Upcoming Earnings Calls Earnings Newsletter Earnings Call Transcripts Earnings Beats & Misses Corporate Guidance Earnings Screener Latest Articles Satellogic Is Tiny But Its Revenue Growth Is Hard to IgnoreAehr Spikes on New Order, But Has Stock Gotten Ahead of Itself?Why Kroger’s Pullback Could Be a Gift for Patient InvestorsCredo Technologies Accelerates AI—Its Stock Price Will FollowWhy Palantir’s Google Cloud Deal Could Change the DebateAmerican Eagle’s Q1 Beat Leaves Investors With a Bigger QuestionCarMax In Reverse? 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PresentationSkip to Participants Operator00:00:00Welcome to the Quest Diagnostics third quarter 2021 conference call. At the request of the company, this call is being recorded. The entire contents of the call, including the presentation and question-and-answer session that will follow, are the copyrighted property of Quest Diagnostics with all rights reserved. Any registration, retransmission or rebroadcast of this call in any form without the written consent of Quest Diagnostics is strictly prohibited. Now I would like to introduce Shawn Bevec, Vice President of Investor Relations for Quest Diagnostics. Go ahead, please. Shawn BevecVP of Investor Relations at Quest Diagnostics00:00:41Thank you and good morning. I'm joined by Steve Rusckowski, our Chairman, CEO, and President, and Mark Guinan, our Chief Financial Officer. During this call, we may make forward-looking statements, and we'll discuss non-GAAP measures. We provide a reconciliation of non-GAAP measures to comparable GAAP measures in the tables to our earnings press release. Actual results may differ materially from those projected. Risks and uncertainties, including the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic, that may affect Quest Diagnostics' future results include, but are not limited to, those described in our most recent annual report on Form 10-K and subsequently filed quarterly reports on Form 10-Q, and current reports on Form 8-K. Shawn BevecVP of Investor Relations at Quest Diagnostics00:01:25The company continues to believe that the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on future operating results, cash flows, and/or its financial condition will be primarily driven by the pandemic's severity and duration, healthcare insurer, government, and client payer reimbursement rates for COVID-19 molecular tests, the pandemic's impact on the U.S. healthcare system and the U.S. economy, and the timing, scope, and effectiveness of federal, state, and local governmental responses to the pandemic, including the impact of vaccination efforts, which are drivers beyond the company's knowledge and control. For this call, references to reported EPS refer to reported diluted EPS, and references to adjusted EPS refer to adjusted diluted EPS. Any references to base business testing, revenues, or volumes refer to the performance of our business excluding COVID-19 testing. Shawn BevecVP of Investor Relations at Quest Diagnostics00:02:16Growth rates associated with our long-term outlook projections, including total revenue growth, revenue growth from acquisitions, organic revenue growth, and adjusted earnings growth, are compound annual growth rates. Finally, revenue growth rates from acquisitions will be measured against our base business. Now, here is Steve Rusckowski. Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics00:02:37Thanks, Shawn, and thanks everyone for joining us today. Well, we had a strong third quarter as COVID-19 molecular volumes increased throughout the summer, while our base business continued to deliver solid volume growth versus the prior year and 2019. In late summer, we experienced some softness in the base business across the country, but saw a rebound in September. Importantly, our base business continued to improve sequentially in the third quarter, which speaks to the ongoing recovery. We have raised our outlook for the remainder of the year based on higher-than-anticipated COVID-19 volumes, as well as continued progress we expect to see in our base business, despite rising labor costs and inflationary pressures. The momentum of our base business positions us to deliver the 2022 outlook we shared at our March investor day. Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics00:03:42This morning, I'll discuss our performance for the third quarter of 2021 and update you on our base business. Mark will provide more detail on our financial results and talk about our updated outlook and underlying assumptions. Before turning to our results into the third quarter, I'd like to update you on the progress we've made in our Quest for Health Equity initiative, a more than $100 million initiative aimed at reducing healthcare disparities in underserved neighborhoods. Since we established it just over a year ago, we have launched 18 programs across the U.S. and Puerto Rico, ranging from supporting COVID-19 testing and vaccination events, to educating young students on healthy nutritional choices, to providing funding support for a long-haul COVID-19 clinic in Puerto Rico. Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics00:04:41Recently, we announced a collaboration with the American Heart Association that will expand research and mentorship opportunities for Black and Hispanic scholars to drive hypertension management and COVID-19 relief. We're off to a good start, and I look forward to updating you on our continued progress as Quest for Health Equity enters its second year. Turning to our results for the third quarter. Total revenue of $2.77 billion, down 40 basis points versus the prior year. Earnings per share were $4.02 on a reported basis, down approximately 3% versus the prior year, and $3.96 on an adjusted basis, down 8% versus the prior year. The revenue and earnings declines in the third quarter reflect lower COVID-19 testing in 2021 versus the prior year, partially offset by continued recovery in our base business. Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics00:05:52Cash provided by operations increased by nearly 20% year to date through September to approximately $1.75 billion. Now, starting with COVID-19 testing, our COVID-19 molecular volumes increased in the third quarter versus the second quarter due to the spread of the Delta variant over the course of the summer. Testing began to increase meaningfully in mid-July and peaked in early mid-September. Our observed positivity rate peaked in mid-August and has steadily been declining across much of the country in recent weeks. We performed an average of 83,000 COVID-19 molecular tests a day in the third quarter and maintained strong average turnaround times of approximately one day for most specimens throughout the surge. As clinical COVID-19 volumes decline, we are expanding our non-clinical COVID-19 testing to support the return to school, office, travel, and entertainment. We're making testing easy, fast, and affordable for school systems and other group settings across the country. Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics00:07:14We are currently performing K-12 school testing in approximately 20 states with five additional states ready to come online. Quest exclusively provided testing at the Boston Marathon earlier this month. In the base business, we continue to make progress on our two-point strategy to accelerate growth and drive operational excellence. Here are some highlights from the third quarter. Our M&A pipeline remains strong. In the third quarter, we completed a small tuck-in acquisition of an independent lab in Florida. We continue to build on our exceptional health plan access of approximately 90% of all commercially insured lives in the U.S. At our investor day, we discussed how we have fundamentally changed our relationship with health plans. We continue to see the promise of value-based relationships come to life. Here's a couple examples. Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics00:08:21We are working with national health plans to help their self-insured employer customers improve quality outcomes and lower the cost of care for both the employers and their employees. Effective October 1st, we gained access to 1 million managed Medicaid members in Florida as their coverage transitions to Centene's Sunshine Health Plan. We're getting good feedback from the provider community and are growing testing volumes through this expanded access opportunity. Our hospital health system revenue continues to track well above 2019 levels, driven largely by the strength of our professional laboratory services contracts. As we highlighted previously, 2021 performance is benefiting from two of our largest PLS contracts to date, Hackensack Meridian Health and Memorial Hermann. Altogether, our PLS business is expected to exceed $500 million in annual revenue this year. Trends in our hospital reference business also remain steady, with third quarter base testing volumes above 2019 levels. Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics00:09:48We also generated record consumer-initiated testing revenue through QuestDirect in Q3. While COVID testing has been strong contributor growth, we expect our base direct-to-consumer testing revenue to more than double this year. Recently, we soft launched a comprehensive health profile on QuestDirect, similar to our Blueprint for Wellness offering for employers. This expanded health panel offers a deep dive into consumers' health profile with a battery of tests and biometric measurements to provide a personalized health quotient score that can be used to track health progress over time. Finally, our MyQuest app and patient portal now has almost 20 million users. In advanced diagnostics, we continue to ramp investments and see strong momentum in key growth drivers. We're seeing strong growth in non-invasive prenatal testing, significantly above 2019 levels, and saw solid contribution in our specialty genetics portfolio from Blueprint Genetics. Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics00:11:05We continue to work closely with the CDC to sequence positive COVID specimens in an ongoing effort to track emerging variants, expanding of the work that we performed in the quarter. Finally, we plan to introduce a test service based on a new FDA-approved companion diagnostic from Agilent for a therapy from Eli Lilly for a certain type of high-risk early breast cancer. Quest will be the first laboratory to offer it to physicians nationally at the end of the month. Turning to our second strategy, driving operational excellence. We made progress and remain on track to deliver our targeted 3% annual efficiencies across the business. Last week, we announced that we completed the integration and consolidation of our Northeast regional operations into our new 250,000 sq ft next generation lab in Clifton, New Jersey. This state-of-the-art, highly automated facility services more than 40 million people across 7 states. Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics00:12:16In patient services, we are seeing all-time high numbers of patients making appointments to visit our Patient Service Centers. Now, more than 50% of Patient Service Center visits are now by appointment versus walk-ins. This enables patients to be very satisfied and also improves our ability to drive productivity for our phlebotomists. Similar to our immunoassay platform consolidation, we recently procured a highly automated urinalysis platform that is expected to generate millions in annual savings once these new systems are standardized across our laboratory network. Finally, I'd like to recognize and thank all of our nearly 50,000 employees who have worked tirelessly to provide critical COVID-19 testing to our country throughout the pandemic and continue to serve the healthcare needs of patients who depend on Quest every day. Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics00:13:21As a demonstration of our gratitude, we're assisting our employees with a one-time payment of up to $500, designed to reimburse costs that they incurred during the pandemic. Additionally, another year of pandemic pressures and travel restrictions have made it very difficult for many employees to take their hard-earned time off. Therefore, we are providing a payout of most unused paid time off for our hourly employees to ensure they don't forfeit their earned, unused time at year-end. Now, I'd like to turn it over to Mark to provide more details on the third quarter financial performance and updated outlook for the remainder of 2021. Mark? Mark GuinanCFO at Quest Diagnostics00:14:12Thanks, Steve. In the third quarter, consolidated revenues were $2.77 billion, down 0.4% versus the prior year. Revenues for diagnostic information services were essentially flat compared to the prior year, which is reflected by lower revenue from COVID-19 testing services versus the third quarter of last year, largely offset by the strong ongoing recovery in our base testing revenues. Compared to 2019, our base DIS revenue grew approximately 6% in the third quarter, and it was up nearly 2% excluding acquisitions. Volume, measured by the number of requisitions, increased 5.3% versus the prior year, with acquisitions contributing approximately 2%. Compared to our third quarter 2019 baseline, total base testing volumes increased 9%. Excluding acquisitions, total base testing volumes grew approximately 4% and benefited from new PLS contracts that have ramped over the last year. Mark GuinanCFO at Quest Diagnostics00:15:23We saw a rebound in our base business volumes in September following a modest softening in August that we believe was at least partially caused by the rise of the Delta variant and the timing of summer vacations. Importantly, our base business revenue and volume grew sequentially in the third quarter. This helps illustrate the ongoing recovery as historically, total revenue and volume typically step down in Q3 versus Q2 due to summer seasonality. As most of you know, COVID-19 testing volumes grew in the third quarter versus Q2, which was in line with broader COVID-19 testing trends across the country. We resulted approximately 7.6 million molecular tests and nearly 700,000 serology tests in the third quarter. Far in October, average COVID-19 molecular volumes have declined approximately 10% from where we exited Q3 but are still above the levels we expected prior to the surge of the Delta variant. Mark GuinanCFO at Quest Diagnostics00:16:27While the base business continues to improve since September. Revenue per requisition declined 5.4% versus the prior year, driven primarily by lower COVID-19 molecular volumes and, to a lesser extent, recent PLS wins. Unit price headwinds remained modest and in line with our expectations. Reported operating income in the third quarter was $652 million or 23.5% of revenues, compared to $718 million or 25.8% of revenues last year. On an adjusted basis, operating income in Q3 was $694 million or 25% of revenues, compared to $831 million or 29.8% of revenues last year. The year-over-year decline in operating margin was driven by lower COVID-19 testing revenue, partially offset by the recovery in our base business. Reported EPS was $4.02 in the quarter, compared to $4.14 a year ago. Adjusted EPS was $3.96, compared to $4.31 last year. Mark GuinanCFO at Quest Diagnostics00:17:41Cash provided by operations was $1.75 billion through September year to date, versus $1.46 billion in the same period last year. Turning to guidance, we have raised our full year 2021 outlook as follows. Revenue is expected to be between $10.45 billion and $10.6 billion, an increase of approximately 11%-12% versus the prior year. Reported EPS expected to be in a range of $4.69 and $15.09. Adjusted EPS to be in a range of $13.50 and $13.90. Cash provided by operations is expected to be approximately $2.2 billion, and capital expenditures are expected to be approximately $400 million. Before concluding, I'll touch on some assumptions embedded in our updated outlook. We expect COVID-19 molecular volumes to continue to decline from Q3 levels throughout the remainder of the year. Mark GuinanCFO at Quest Diagnostics00:18:43At the low end of our outlook, we assume approximately 50,000 molecular tests per day in Q4, and serology volumes to hold relatively steady at approximately 5,000 tests per day. As you may know, late last week, the public health emergency was again extended another 90 days through late January. We expect reimbursement for clinical COVID-19 molecular testing to hold relatively steady through the remainder of the year. However, we continue to assume average reimbursements to trend lower in Q4 as our mix of COVID-19 molecular volumes potentially shift from clinical diagnostic testing to more return to life surveillance testing. Finally, we continue to assume low single-digit revenue growth in our base business in Q4 versus 2019. Getting to the midpoint or higher end of our outlook ranges assumes stronger COVID-19 molecular testing volumes and/or stronger growth in our base business. I will now turn it back to Steve. Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics00:19:50Thanks, Mark. Well, to summarize, we had a strong third quarter. We have raised our outlook for the remainder of the year based on higher-than-anticipated COVID-19 volumes, as well as our continued progress we expect to see in our base business. Finally, the momentum of our base business positions us to deliver the 2022 outlook we shared at our March investor day. Now we'd be happy to take any of your questions. Operator? Operator00:20:24Thank you. We will now open it up to questions. At the request of the company, we ask that you please limit yourself to one question. If you have additional questions, we ask that you please fall back in the queue. To be placed in the queue, please press star one from your phone. To withdraw, please press star two. Again, to ask a question, please press star one. Our first question comes from Kevin Caliendo, UBS. Your line is now open. Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics00:21:05Good morning, Kevin. Kevin CaliendoAnalyst at UBS00:21:06Thank you. Thanks. Good morning, everybody. Thanks for all the details and the guidance for 2021. I really want to talk about into 2022, sort of you reiterated your guidance from March, which I believe was at the higher end of the $7.40-$8.00 range. I'm just wondering at this point, what are the assumptions baked in for COVID testing into next year? Do you anticipate that it's going to continue? Do you anticipate there's going to be a meaningful decline? Any color around how you think COVID testing will proceed into next year? Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics00:21:46Mark, why don't you start, and then I'll follow. Mark GuinanCFO at Quest Diagnostics00:21:49Sure. Kevin, just to be clear up front, we haven't provided guidance yet for 2022. We provided an outlook. We did confirm that today. Things have largely played out where we saw them for 2022 back in March. The base volumes have recovered. We thought we were ahead in June when it was close to being flat to 2019 and potentially saw some upside. Obviously, with Delta, it took a little bit of a step back. We still expect to enter 2022 with a base volume utilization level similar to pre-pandemic. That's good. The second thing is we did assume that COVID will continue at a much lower level than we saw in 2020 and 2021, but still to be significant and certainly much larger than our current flu testing. Mark GuinanCFO at Quest Diagnostics00:22:43We've referenced in the past that at some point, COVID testing will still be here, but maybe more on the level of flu testing. At this point, we feel comfortable with what we had assumed back in March around continued need for COVID testing, for PCR. We envision a stronger role for serology going into 2022 and think that's a potential. We feel good about that. We did reference inflationary pressures. We certainly have longer-term contracts on a lot of our purchases, but things like fuel, certainly were subject to inflation in the near term and going into 2022. Most notably, as many people have talked, there's certainly inflation in wages and benefits, and especially in wages. Mark GuinanCFO at Quest Diagnostics00:23:35As we look at that, we gave a range, and we still feel very comfortable that when you put all those pieces together, that the $8.5 billion baseline for revenue and the $7.4-$8 is certainly still deliverable, maybe in a slightly different way. Still very comfortable that that's likely where we're going to land when we do finally provide guidance for 2022. Kevin CaliendoAnalyst at UBS00:24:00Just as a quick follow-up, can you in any way quantify the higher inflationary pressures, supply chain, any of that? Is there any way to put numbers around that? Mark GuinanCFO at Quest Diagnostics00:24:14Yeah. I'm sure you're most interested in 2022. We'll see what we can provide when we come out with guidance in early next year to provide clarity. Certainly, at this point, while we're experiencing some of that, given the performance of the business, it hasn't prevented us from significantly over-delivering our previous guidance. We'll take it under consideration, Kevin. We appreciate the question. We'll see what we can do when we talk more about next year. Kevin CaliendoAnalyst at UBS00:24:45Thank you. Shawn BevecVP of Investor Relations at Quest Diagnostics00:24:49Operator, next question. Operator00:24:51Yes. Our next question comes from Brian Tanquilut, Jefferies. Your line is now open. Brian TanquilutAnalyst at Jefferies00:24:59Hey, good morning, guys. Congrats on the quarter. Just to follow up, just as I think about costs and all the moving pieces, obviously, the Clifton Lab just opened. How are you thinking about the flow-through of the benefits from that and how it would potentially offset some of the inflationary pressures that you're seeing on the cost side? Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics00:25:20Yeah. Thanks, Brian, for the question. As you know, and what I reiterated in our prepared remarks, we've been marching with our two-point strategy for some time, and the second strategy is to drive operational excellence. We have maintained and just reiterated that we do believe we can continue to deliver 3% efficiency or productivity gains going forward. That 3% comes from a variety of programs across Quest Diagnostics, and one of which is what we did in Clifton. I actually also reiterated a couple other programs. The prepared remarks are working with our suppliers with new integrated platforms, what we've done around immunoassay, what we're doing around our immuno urinalysis are two good examples of more work we can get the benefits from, and there's others. There's a lot more efficiencies in productivity we can continue to get. Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics00:26:28As I said before, this isn't cost-cutting, this is improvement. Every time we make an improvement in our operation, we expect our quality improves and our service performance improves, and it has. We continue to make progress. You see it in our numbers this year, and you'll continue to see it in our 2022 numbers as well. That's always been used to offset headwinds, and we do have headwinds. We've had headwinds from wage bill increases in the past, albeit maybe it could be a little bit higher going forward given what we see in the labor market. Second is we have seen headwinds from price consequences as well, which we've been able to offset, and we'll have some of those in 2022, as we've outlined before. Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics00:27:20Also any additional inflationary pressures, we will be able to offset most of that, if not all of that, to be able to hit the outlook. We just reiterated our confidence, our ability to do that. Hopefully, that's helpful. Mark GuinanCFO at Quest Diagnostics00:27:38Yeah, I just wanted to add. Brian TanquilutAnalyst at Jefferies00:27:40Thank you. Mark GuinanCFO at Quest Diagnostics00:27:41Reference that the Clifton Lab and its increased productivity efficiency is really part of our Invigorate work that we talk about, the 3% productivity every year. It's not over and above or separate. I will comment is that what we've done there, like we did up in Massachusetts, we have added more automation. Obviously, as you add automation, you insulate yourself a little bit from labor inflation. Certainly, we have that going as we operate that lab. It is built in and part of what my assumptions I had putting together that outlook for 2022, that we would achieve that ongoing 3% efficiency, not something separate. Brian TanquilutAnalyst at Jefferies00:28:31Awesome. Thank you. Operator00:28:38Our next question comes from Ricky Goldwasser, Morgan Stanley. Your line is now open. Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics00:28:45Good morning, Ricky. Ricky GoldwasserAnalyst at Morgan Stanley00:28:47Hi. Good morning. One follow-up question on the cost. I mean, clearly, we're all interested in the magnitude of the potential impact of labor and inflation. Maybe you can help us by reminding us what percent of your cost structure today is labor, and how should we think about its breakdown between cost of goods and SG&A? Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics00:29:11Mark? Mark GuinanCFO at Quest Diagnostics00:29:14Ricky, we've shared in the past, pre-pandemic, that about $3 billion of our cost was related to salary and benefits. Obviously, with COVID moving around, it's hard to cite the precise number with including the COVID testing. I think that should give you a pretty good idea of what proportion of our cost, our $6+ billion cost base we had prior to the pandemic is made up of labor. It's somewhere in the 50% range. As we said, as we continue to automate, that certainly offsets some of that. Also, we are seeing an increased amount of demand for phlebotomy. That is going the other direction. We obviously consider it a net benefit because giving access helps us grow our business. It certainly makes us more attractive, especially in a world of consumerism. Mark GuinanCFO at Quest Diagnostics00:30:08It's a good thing, but it certainly will drive costs and labor costs as a percentage of overall cost in the other direction. Ricky GoldwasserAnalyst at Morgan Stanley00:30:18Just to follow up on the direct-to-consumer point. Steve, you mentioned the soft launch of the comprehensive health panel that's direct-to-consumer. Can you just share with us what has been the response to date and maybe some data points about pricing? Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics00:30:36Sure. As I said in my introductory remarks, we have a product that we sold for years to employers called Blueprint for Wellness. We offer it to our Quest employees as well. It's a fabulous dipstick reading on an annual basis for people to get an indication of what's going on with their health. If you do it year upon year, you've got a good, nice trending capability that I found beneficial since I've been here at Quest, and I know many of our employees have as well, and many of our customers have. We're now using that as the product, to introduce that through our direct-to-consumer channel, through QuestDirect. We're very optimistic about the possibility that this has. Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics00:31:27We believe that it has a unique capability that few others provide, and we also believe it's hitting the market at the right time, where many people have not gone to their primary healthcare providers. We believe that there's a lot of opportunities now for people to directly engage with us as a consumer to buy this directly from us. As far as pricing, Mark, can you share what we're thinking about in terms of pricing, even though this is a soft launch? Mark GuinanCFO at Quest Diagnostics00:32:01Yeah. It's going to be a couple hundred dollars. When you look at the individual elements that are contained in here, it's a reasonable price for everything that you get. I can also tell you that we've gotten a lot of feedback that this score that we give people, which really simplifies how to interpret the results, is a huge consumer positive. A lot of reasons to believe that this could get some additional momentum for our consumer business. We think the pricing is reasonable, and we feel that the product we're delivering is something that consumers really find interesting and valuable. Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics00:32:41Just to follow up on the price, we actually did some market research to understand that the value that this provides to consumers justifies the price that we're pricing it for initially. We feel good about value delivered and price charged. Shawn BevecVP of Investor Relations at Quest Diagnostics00:33:01Operator, next question. Operator00:33:05Our next question comes from Jack Meehan, Nephron Research. Your line is now open. Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics00:33:11Hey, good morning, Jack. Jack MeehanAnalyst at Nephron Research00:33:13Good morning, Steve. Good morning, Mark and Shawn. I wanted to continue on the inflation topic, but looked at a different way. If operating costs were to remain elevated, do you think there's an appreciation by payers that the cost of doing business is moving higher? How do you feel about your ability to get price increases? Maybe just talk about recent negotiations. Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics00:33:37Let me start, and Mark, please add. We've been on this march, as I said in my remarks, to continue to demonstrate to our health plan partners that we continue to deliver value, and I believe we're making tremendous progress. One is that we're picking up access in the number of lives. I mentioned 90% of insured lives we're in network with within the U.S., and we're happy about the progress of picking some more up this coming year. That's moving along. Second, as far as pricing is concerned, we continue to march through our contracts as they are up for renewal. We have said in earlier calls that we're now very fairly priced. A matter of fact, we believe we offer a very affordable price offering to the health plans and their memberships with great quality, great service, and very competitive pricing. Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics00:34:41Much so that we're part of these preferred lab networks. We're justified. We are getting some modest price increases, and we do believe, going forward, that we can continue to pound that drum. We are using what other people are using across the U.S. that, in fact, now that we're entering a new inflationary period, our costs are going up just like yours, and therefore, we need to start talking about modest price increases going forward. Mark, you'd like to add anything to that? Mark GuinanCFO at Quest Diagnostics00:35:18Yeah. Jack, I think you appreciate, I'm sure a lot of people do as well, that our health plan contracts typically are three to five years. It's not as if every health plan contract is up for renegotiation in any window of time. We've been socializing PAMA and how that is changing the dynamic and how they can look at the NLA rates and be confident that they have competitive rate because they know that's the market for the independent labs, which we've said is lower than the market, but the market for the independent labs. This whole notion of a price below Medicare, which was the historical practice, is going away with PAMA. Now you add inflation, as you suggest, and it's absolutely part of the conversation we've been having over the last number of months. Mark GuinanCFO at Quest Diagnostics00:36:13I can tell you that although it's not final, there is one national payer that we've been negotiating, and it's not final, but it looks like the first price increase we will have gotten from them in certainly my tenure, and I'm sure more than a decade. We've been stabilizing as we shared our commercial negotiations to go from a world of price declines every contract extension to getting it more flat, and we actually have shared there's a handful of regional plans where we got increases over the last couple years, and now we have a national contract that I'm very optimistic we're going to get an increase. How much of it's inflation? How much of it's PAMA? Mark GuinanCFO at Quest Diagnostics00:36:56How much of it is our value proposition and seeing that working with us is a benefit for everyone versus treating us as a commoditized provider of a laboratory result? Can't tell you, but we're in a much better place. Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics00:37:11Just to remind everyone, our health plan channel business is a significant portion of our revenue every year. What we've also highlighted, the reason why we do have unit price decreases in our typical assumptions annually is because we have other pressures in our business. We do have direct business to physicians, which we call clients. Our client business is under price pressure over the past several years, and that has contributed to the price pressure we see. Secondly, is we sell to the hospitals, and we're doing quite well in the hospital segment, but it is price competitive. Then we have other product lines where we sell our services directly to employers or to insurance companies, and there's price pressure there as well. When we talk about our unit price changes, it's not all in the commercial health plan area. Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics00:38:09There's other areas that we have price pressure as well. Operator00:38:15Our next question comes from A.J. Rice, Credit Suisse. Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics00:38:20Hey, A.J. A.J. RiceAnalyst at Credit Suisse00:38:21Hey, thanks. Hi, everybody. Just trying to maybe ask you a high-level question about how the pandemic is maybe impacting your business for the long term. It seems like in the pandemic, we've seen people move away from just traditional physician office visits at some level, virtual care, other alternative sites to get their primary care. Are you seeing, and does that help you or hurt you if people go to these other avenues, which may generate testing volume? Do you think you capture a disproportionate share of that? The other thing I was going to ask about the pandemic was related to you've said that as you have outperformance because of COVID testing, you accelerated some of your programs for cost savings and other efficiencies. A.J. RiceAnalyst at Credit Suisse00:39:12Should we think of that as just enhancing the visibility on the 3% cost reduction annual goal, or are there things you're doing that might even present some upside for 2022 and beyond? Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics00:39:24Yeah. Thanks, AJ, for your question. Let me take the first one, and I'll ask Mark to comment on the second part of your question. First of all, telehealth, as we all know, has really increased considerably during the pandemic and has really hit an inflection point, and patients and consumers are now very comfortable with getting a portion of their healthcare delivered through telehealth networks, whatever that might be. As we have watched it, initially, a lot of the telehealth visits started with mental health and behavior health and have now transitioned to more general health, and primary care and even specialized care. With all those visits happening in telehealth, you have to engage with the patient, and you have to be able to enter orders. Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics00:40:17Fortunately for us, despite the pandemic and before the pandemic, we have strong relationships with all the telehealth companies, and as you would expect, they're only going to work with a small group of laboratories, and Quest would be one of those laboratories. We're very well-positioned with the telehealth providers. You also know that even though there are telehealth companies, telehealth is provided through integrated delivery systems, hospital systems in different ways, and they might use one of the telehealth provider platforms, but they're still providing that through their physicians and using their EMR. When they enter the order, it's going to be entered the order the same way as in the past. We're watching it carefully. Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics00:41:01We do believe it's a positive trend for us given what I just described, but it's complicated because it all depends how telehealth platforms are deployed, and particularly with so many owned physicians by integrated delivery systems, and they're still conducting the business as they do. It all depends how they actually implement their telehealth services throughout their network and how that will affect our business. Again, for us, we believe it is a positive. Mark, you want to take the second part? Mark GuinanCFO at Quest Diagnostics00:41:32Yeah. Actually, AJ, could you repeat the second part? Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics00:41:39It had to do with accelerating our drive program because of our enhanced performance, and I think he's speaking to some of the acceleration and capital purchases that we've made and spending some additional money to get more improvements than what we would've realized if we didn't have the pandemic. A.J. Rice, is that correct? A.J. RiceAnalyst at Credit Suisse00:42:06Percent savings and all. Mark GuinanCFO at Quest Diagnostics00:42:10Yeah. We have had an opportunity to invest more than we probably would've otherwise given this stronger growth than we would've anticipated in 2021. We've talked about that. A lot of that investment has actually been more towards top-line acceleration. We've talked about what we're doing in advanced diagnostics. We've talked about what we're doing, what requires to build a consumer business. I'd say a disproportionate amount of the opportunity as we try to balance near-term results with longer-term value creation has really been in top line. Yes, as we looked at some of the things we did during the pandemic, we had an opportunity to update our molecular equipment and into more efficient, more state-of-the-art, probably faster than we normally would have cycled. That'll give us some efficiency that maybe wouldn't have otherwise. Mark GuinanCFO at Quest Diagnostics00:43:07I wouldn't, at this point suggest that we're ready to commit to more than the 3% productivity, because obviously that's a large number in and of itself, and small basis points changes are really significant. Directionally, I would say yes, A.J., that this pandemic goal is of value creation and additional cash has enabled us to accelerate some investments, most of it on the top line growth, but certainly some on the productivity side as well. Operator00:43:44Next up is Ann Hynes, Mizuho Securities. Your line is now open. Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics00:43:49Good morning, Ann. Ann HynesAnalyst at Mizuho Securities00:43:51Hi. Good morning. I just want to talk about the base volume trends. I know revenue was up versus 2019, but can you give us some color on how much your base volume trends are still down versus pre-pandemic, maybe X some of the PLS deals that you've signed during the pandemic, and if it's still down, maybe just give a geographic breakdown. I guess my second question would be, obviously, testing was very strong for molecular PCR test for COVID-19. Can you give us a breakdown how much of that was contributed to this Back to Life initiative, whether it's schools, cities, states, more like maintenance testing? I know you said in your prepared remarks that you assume revenue per test goes down in Q4. Can you give us what it was in Q3, and maybe just directionally what we should model for Q4? Ann HynesAnalyst at Mizuho Securities00:44:44That would be very helpful. Thanks. Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics00:44:46Okay. Thanks, Ann. Mark, why don't you start with giving the numbers on base business performance as the part? Mark GuinanCFO at Quest Diagnostics00:44:53Yeah. Hopefully, I can clarify. Base volume in total is obviously anything non-COVID related as we've been through the pandemic. We've been recording strong growth in base volume, which includes our M&A and our PLS, as you would expect. We've also been trying to provide some color on utilization. In the absence of an independent way to measure that, we look at our base volume ex the acquired volume and ex the new PLS deals. We've talked about that continuing to improve in addition to the growth we're getting from M&A and from PLS. In June, the organic base volumes of the new PLS deals was getting close to back to the 2019 levels, and then it kind of stabilized in July. It took a little bit of a step back in August. Mark GuinanCFO at Quest Diagnostics00:45:54As we see where we are through September and into October, it's getting back again very close to being fully recovered to 2019. That's why I said earlier that we would expect certainly by the end of this year and going into 2022, that we'd be fully recovered. It is regionally variable, as we've talked in the past, and that really has not changed. There's certain regions that are actually above where they were in 2019. Most notably, our Southwest region, as we're looking at Florida and the South, the volume trends are above. A couple other areas that are kind of in that middle point. The one area of note that's really been lagging is the East. It continues to lag. Mark GuinanCFO at Quest Diagnostics00:46:40While it certainly has improved from where it was several months ago, it's still down and kind of an outlier, especially in the 5 boroughs of New York City. Quickly, I'll answer the question on the revenue expectations from elective testing, and I'll let Steve talk about the Back to Life. We're still around $90 in the quarter. We're not expecting a meaningful decline in the fourth quarter. Certainly, if Back to Life really took off, which is not what we're expecting in the middle of our guidance here, it could have a little bit of a but again, it's still net positive. It's just math. You can expect for your modeling purposes that just a very slight decline in Q4, nothing of significance. Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics00:47:32Yeah. The last question, Ann, you had asked for the breakdown of what we describe as, first of all, the clinical portion of our PCR volumes versus the Return to Life portion of our clinical volumes. As you can expect, it's tough for us to know exactly, particularly which bucket we can put those in. I can tell you that the trend line is trending towards more of the Return to Life. We see the infection rates coming down, and we see programs that we've worked on going up. Examples are the Return to School programs, mentioned 20 states and five more coming. We're also doing some testing for employers, if they have mandates in place where they're requiring vaccination or testing. Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics00:48:23We see some increase in testing's related to, again, employers bringing people back to the workplace and requiring testing or vaccination for that. I would say trending-wise, it is a larger percentage than before, but it's very difficult for us to give you exact numbers on that because we just don't get it through the orders that we received. We think what we provided for guidance is clearly what's going to happen in 2022. Operator00:48:52Next up is Ralph Giacobbe with Citi. Your line is now open. Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics00:48:56Hey, Ralph. Ralph GiacobbeAnalyst at Citi00:48:58Hey, good morning. Thanks. First, just a quick follow-up on a comment you made. Can you give us a sense of how much flu testing you do a year, if that's what you're anchoring for based on COVID testing going forward? Separately, was just hoping you could talk about COVID reimbursement and the outlook of that for next year. Obviously, you mentioned PHE got extended at least for the early part of next year. If that continues to extend, would you expect reimbursement to be better than what you assumed in that $8 EPS for next year? Also, what about commercial pricing specifically for COVID? Is that tied to PHE? Help us understand how that's negotiated, and if there's a step down there for next year. Thanks. Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics00:49:41Mark, you want to start with the flu? Mark GuinanCFO at Quest Diagnostics00:49:44Yeah. There's quite a bit there, Ralph. We'll see if we can touch on all of them. We don't generally share the precise revenue for any given test offering, but it's significantly lower than our current levels of COVID and what we would anticipate. The flu is not the baseline for 2022. We still expect COVID testing to be multiples of our flu revenues in 2022. The reason flu testing is smaller than would be otherwise is there's not a ton of molecular testing done. Physicians have become very comfortable with doing point of care. Even though the molecular is more precise, they feel like it's good enough in the office, and they have an opportunity to make money on it. Mark GuinanCFO at Quest Diagnostics00:50:31It would probably be several years, although I don't have the ability to call it precisely before we would expect COVID to be at our flu level. In terms of the pricing, we have either specific agreements or general agreements in the commercial rates that as long as the public health emergency continues, that the pricing will reflect what we're being paid by the federal government. It's not mechanistically tied to every contract, but we know that the expectation would be when that goes away, and again, there's still always a possibility they can decouple that $100 reimbursement rate from the public health emergency, so there's some other risks as well. As long as that continues, we would expect most of our commercial pricing to be at the same rate. Mark GuinanCFO at Quest Diagnostics00:51:24Obviously when that goes away, that we would expect negotiations to take it down to more the NLA level. When I talked about 2022 at the Investor Day, I talked about a reimbursement rate around $50, which is what the NLA is. Again, when you put all these pieces together, I want to be clear, we still fully expect to be in the upper end of that $7.48. I just wanted to caution against upside to that, given everything that's going on with inflation and so on, because we do have some positive things that have developed over the last six months or so. Some of that is probably going to be partially offset, if not largely offset by labor inflation. We're still pretty much where we were back in March. Mark GuinanCFO at Quest Diagnostics00:52:14In the higher end of the $7.48, and then certainly at least $8.5 billion of revenue, which importantly ties back to the 2018 CAGR that we shared with you at Investor Day. Just getting there at a little different way but still getting to where we said we would be. Operator00:52:35Next question comes from Matt Larew, William Blair. Your line is now open. Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics00:52:40Morning, Matt. Matt LarewAnalyst at William Blair00:52:42Yeah. Hi, good morning. A number of questions around labor issues. I actually wanted to ask about supply chain. I'm just curious if you're starting to see any challenges in sourcing anything, either for your PSCs or the labs, either longer lead times, and then if you're having any issues with sample transport logistics. Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics00:53:01So far, Matt, we're keeping up. We always have battles here and there, even despite the pandemic with suppliers. We've got a complicated business, and a lot of pieces have to come together to do what we do. Not a meaningful disruption so far, but we're watching it carefully because we're not through this yet. The last part of this is around logistics, and again, logistics have become a little more complicated given we do use commercial carriers for some portion of our logistics, but we've been managing our way through that. Fortunately, we have our own network of couriers. We have about 3,500 couriers in automobiles that are Quest employees. We have a fleet of small airplanes that do some of the connections between our collection locations and our laboratories, and they're employed by us. Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics00:53:54We're happy we have those in these uncertain times, and we continue to have strong relationships with the national carriers as well. So far, so good. Operator00:54:06Next up is Pito Chickering, Deutsche Bank. Your line is now open. Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics00:54:10Hey, Pito. Pito ChickeringAnalyst at Deutsche Bank00:54:11Hey, good morning, guys. A follow-up on Ann's question around the base testing business. Once you exclude M&A and PLS, can you give us color on where the tests are coming in from, specifically looking at primary care visits versus specialty visits versus hospital visits? Just curious if hospitals slow down in fourth quarter with the COVID-19 surge, does it impact anything on your fourth quarter growth? Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics00:54:35Mark? Mark GuinanCFO at Quest Diagnostics00:54:38First off, Pito, to be clear, the utilization trend that I talked about being nearly fully recovered doesn't exclude all PLS. It's just since we're comparing to 2019, it's excluding some of the really large deals that we've done recently, so that we don't cloud what we think utilization is. We had a PLS business of size back in 2019. I'm not taking that out, because obviously, that's part of the trend as well. When you look at the sources, we've shared that the recovery has been pretty broad-based. There's not a lot of differences, especially now. Early in the pandemic, there were some. We talked about prescription drug monitoring certainly being one that was lagging. A lot of that was policy driven. Mark GuinanCFO at Quest Diagnostics00:55:27Some of that, not all of it, but a lot of it's been addressed. Certainly, we've seen the toxicology or prescription drug monitoring business coming back in the same ballpark as some of our other clinical areas. We did see hospitals recovering faster early in the pandemic as they return to treating patients for elective surgeries and so on. Physician office was a little more lagging. At this point, as we talked about in the prepared remarks, the physician business is quite strong and we're seeing the volumes, especially in some of the regions above where they were in 2019. We don't feel, other than the East, that there's been any sort of a fundamental change in either patient engagement with physician offices and/or the prescribing practices for our diagnostics business specifically. Operator00:56:24Next up is Tycho Peterson, JPMorgan. Your line is now open. Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics00:56:29Hey, Tycho. Casey WoodringAnalyst at JPMorgan00:56:30Hi, this is Casey on for Tycho. Two quick ones for you guys. The first one, do you think that the increased cash spend per requisition or test density trends that you've called out in 2021 will continue into 2022, and is that baked into that $7.40 to $8 EPS outlook? My second one is just on capital deployment. You guys have completed the ASR, right? Should we expect any more buybacks in 4Q, and what share count should we use for our model for 4Q? Thank you. Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics00:56:59Yeah. I'll take the first one. Mark, can you take the second? This is on req density, that is the number of tests per requisition. We assume there's a lot of different moving parts, as you know, for our business. One of which is the mix of tests. The second is number of tests per requisition. We have channel mix changes. All of that is complicated in our outlook that we've provided. We assume that's in there. Mark, you want to talk about capital deployment question? Mark GuinanCFO at Quest Diagnostics00:57:31Sure. The ASR should be wrapped up sometime in the next 30 days. Therefore, at this point, even if we did additional purchases once the window opens, and not committing to anything at this point, because we always say there's a balance between potential M&A and share repurchases. It wouldn't have a significant impact on our WASO this year. Any sort of additional purchases of our shares repurchases would be more of an impact for 2022. Obviously, we'll talk about that in detail when we come up to the guidance for 2022, early next year. Operator00:58:12Next up is Derik de Bruin, Bank of America. Your line is now open. Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics00:58:17Good morning, Jim. Analyst at Bank of America00:58:18Hi, this is John on for Derik. I wanted to dig into the base business growth, specifically within your advanced diagnostics business. Was there any notable trend for cancer and genetic testing? If you could comment on the growth trajectory, that'd be great. Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics00:58:36John, in our remarks, we're pleased with the recovery we've seen in advanced diagnostics and remind everyone that our definition of advanced diagnostics are entirely molecular and genetics. When I say recovery, and I did say molecular, it does not include our COVID testing. It's our base, if you will, molecular and genetic testing. We saw very good growth and beyond recovery for our prenatal testing. Feel good about that. We are seeing nice growth for our genetics business. As you recall, we did an acquisition with Blueprint Genetics last year, and that's progressing nicely and give us some nice growth and strength in that business. We feel good about the recovery and growth we're seeing in those areas that we're really focused on. Genetics in general is one of those areas. Operator00:59:35Next up is Mike Newshel, Evercore ISI. Your line is now open. Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics00:59:40Hey, Mike. Mike NewshelAnalyst at Evercore ISI00:59:42Hey, thanks. Do the labor and inflation cost issues you have talked about that you can absorb in your 2022 outlook, does that have any change in the long-term sort of growth targets that you laid out for post-2022 in terms of earnings growth? Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics01:00:01Mark? Mark GuinanCFO at Quest Diagnostics01:00:02At this point, obviously, we have a broad range. I would say that just like we've done in other periods of time, we'll look for and identify offsets to that. It's not significant enough that we should deviate on a multi-year outlook in terms of our earnings growth being in the high single digits. Although we haven't identified everything over the next several years, I'm sure as we move through time, we'll look for other productivity opportunities to offset some of that. Operator01:00:41There are no more questions. Steve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and President at Quest Diagnostics01:00:44Okay. Very good. Thanks, everyone for joining our call today. We appreciate your continued support, and everyone have a great day. Operator01:00:56Thank you for participating in the Quest Diagnostics third quarter 2021 conference call. A transcript of prepared remarks on this call will be posted later today on Quest Diagnostics website at www.questdiagnostics.com. A replay of the call may be accessed online at www.questdiagnostics.com/investor or by phone at 866-360-7722 for domestic callers or 203-369-0174 for international callers. Telephone replays will be available from approximately 10:30 A.M. Eastern Time on October 21st, 2021 until midnight Eastern Time, November 4th, 2021.Read moreParticipantsExecutivesMark GuinanCFOShawn BevecVP of Investor RelationsSteve RusckowskiChairman, CEO, and PresidentAnalystsA.J. RiceAnalyst at Credit SuisseAnn HynesAnalyst at Mizuho SecuritiesBrian TanquilutAnalyst at JefferiesCasey WoodringAnalyst at JPMorganJack MeehanAnalyst at Nephron ResearchKevin CaliendoAnalyst at UBSMatt LarewAnalyst at William BlairMike NewshelAnalyst at Evercore ISIPito ChickeringAnalyst at Deutsche BankRalph GiacobbeAnalyst at CitiRicky GoldwasserAnalyst at Morgan StanleyAnalyst at Bank of AmericaPowered by