NYSE:THC Tenet Healthcare Q3 2024 Earnings Report $194.29 +7.38 (+3.95%) Closing price 03:59 PM EasternExtended Trading$194.50 +0.21 (+0.11%) As of 06:47 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 Tenet Healthcare EPS ResultsActual EPS$2.93Consensus EPS $2.33Beat/MissBeat by +$0.60One Year Ago EPS$1.44Tenet Healthcare Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$5.12 billionExpected Revenue$5.05 billionBeat/MissBeat by +$73.38 millionYoY Revenue Growth+1.10%Tenet Healthcare Announcement DetailsQuarterQ3 2024Date10/29/2024TimeBefore Market OpensConference Call DateTuesday, October 29, 2024Conference Call Time10:00AM ETConference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptSlide DeckPress Release (8-K)Quarterly Report (10-Q)Earnings HistoryCompany ProfileSlide DeckFull Screen Slide DeckPowered by Tenet Healthcare Q3 2024 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrOctober 29, 2024 ShareLink copied to clipboard.Key Takeaways In Q3, Tenet reported net operating revenues of $5.1 billion and consolidated adjusted EBITDA of $978 million, a 15% increase year-over-year, driving a 19.1% margin that surpassed expectations. USPI delivered an adjusted EBITDA of $439 million, up 19% year-over-year with same-facility revenue growth of 8.7% and six new de novo centers opened, including the largest dedicated musculoskeletal ASC in San Diego. The Hospital segment generated $539 million of adjusted EBITDA, an 11% increase driven by a 5.2% rise in same-store admissions and a 3.3% increase in revenue per adjusted admission, while opening a new hospital in Westover Hills and advancing construction in Port St. Lucie. Management raised full-year 2024 adjusted EBITDA guidance by $50 million to a range of $3.9 billion to $4.0 billion, marking a nearly $600 million increase from initial expectations. Following the sale of its Alabama hospitals at attractive multiples, Tenet reduced its leverage to around 2.8x EBITDA (less NCI) and generated $829 million of free cash flow in Q3, enabling continued investments and share repurchases. AI Generated. May Contain Errors.Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallTenet Healthcare Q3 202400:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2xTranscript SectionsPresentationParticipantsPresentationSkip to Participants Operator00:00:01Good morning and welcome to Tenet Healthcare's Third Quarter 2024 Earnings Conference Call. After the speaker remarks, there will be a question-and-answer session for industry analysts. At that time, if you'd like to ask a question, please press star one on your telephone keypad. Tenet respectfully asks that analysts limit themselves to one question each. I'll now turn the call over to your host, Mr. Will McDowell, Vice President of Investor Relations. Mr. McDowell, you may now begin. William McDowellVP of Investor Relations at Tenet Healthcare00:00:32Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining today's call. I am Will McDowell, Vice President of Investor Relations. We're pleased to have you join us for a discussion of Tenet's Third Quarter 2024 results, as well as a discussion of our financial outlook. Tenet Senior Management participating in today's call will be Dr. Saum Sutaria, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, and Sun Park, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer. Our webcast this morning includes a slide presentation, which has been posted to the Investor Relations section of our website, tenethealth.com. Listeners to this call are advised that certain statements made during our discussion today are forward-looking and represent management's expectations based on currently available information. Actual results and plans could differ materially. Tenet is under no obligation to update any forward-looking statements based on subsequent information. William McDowellVP of Investor Relations at Tenet Healthcare00:01:23Investors should take note of the cautionary statement slide included in today's presentation, as well as the risk factors discussed in our most recent Form 10-K and other filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission, and with that, I'll turn the call over to Saum. Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:01:38Thanks, Will, and good morning, everybody. Before we discuss our third quarter results, I'd like to take a moment to acknowledge and pay respect to those impacted by the hurricanes in our company, in our peers in those markets, and in our partners and suppliers who operate in those regions. The devastation is significant, but the energy to recover and rebuild shows the best of the American spirit rallying together in a crisis. Moving on to our results. Once again, our performance in the third quarter exceeded our expectations and represents a continuation of consistently strong operating results driven by volume growth and disciplined operations. In the third quarter, we reported net operating revenues of $5.1 billion. Consolidated adjusted EBITDA was $978 million, representing growth of 15% over third quarter 2023 and an adjusted EBITDA margin of 19.1%. Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:02:35USPI's results were once again strong, with $439 million in Adjusted EBITDA, which represents 19% growth over third quarter 2023. Same facility revenues grew 8.7%, and Adjusted EBITDA margins remain robust. Orthopedic volumes are strong, and total joint replacements in the ASCs were up 19% over prior year, coupled with the ongoing growth in urology and GI procedures. We did open six new de novos in the quarter, including a new partnership with Synergy Orthopedics, establishing the largest dedicated musculoskeletal outpatient surgery center in San Diego, California. De novo development activity remains an important part of USPI's growth story, and we have nearly 20 centers currently in syndication stages or under construction. Turning to our hospital segment, Adjusted EBITDA was $539 million in the third quarter, representing 11% growth over the third quarter 2023, and importantly, strong sequential growth. Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:03:38The strong utilization environment remains, with same-store hospital admissions up 5.2% as we continue to open up capacity in a cost-efficient way. Third quarter 2024 revenue per adjusted admission was up 3.3% over prior year, reflecting continued strength in acuity and mix. We have proven our ability to succeed in tough operating environments, leading the way in 2022 and 2023 in cost management in the aftermath of COVID, and now in 2024 with robust demand, where our efficient operating chassis has allowed us to deliver stronger results than expected throughout the year. As such, we are continuing to make significant investments in expanding our network to support growth in our markets over the coming years. In July, we opened our newest hospital in Westover Hills, a rapidly growing area near San Antonio. Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:04:32The hospital is focused on procedural services, with state-of-the-art operating rooms and cath labs, a large emergency department, and an entire floor devoted to women's services. Additionally, construction of our next hospital in Port St. Lucie, Florida, continues, with an opening planned for 2025. Turning to our full year 2024 guidance, we are once again raising our full year 2024 guidance to a range of $3.9-$4 billion, based on the fundamental organic outperformance in both of our business units. This represents an increase of $50 million at the midpoint of the range over our prior guidance, increased and announced at the second quarter call. We have now raised our Adjusted EBITDA guidance by nearly $600 million from our initial expectations this year. Clearly, we are pleased with our strong performance throughout the year. Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:05:25Before I turn the call over to Sun, I'd like to spend a little bit of time discussing our portfolio transformation. We completed the sale of our Alabama hospitals on September 30th. All of the sales that we have executed on have been at high multiples to reflect the operational improvements that we have made to each of these facilities over the last several years. More importantly, as a result of these sales, our current hospital portfolio has an enhanced return profile. More attractive geographies for us and our business model, higher expected returns on invested capital that should result. Conifer has retained and, in many cases, expanded its relationship with the acquirers of the hospitals, demonstrating the value we deliver to providers in revenue cycle management. Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:06:11While our hospitals are well positioned to benefit from a favorable operating environment, we've built a leadership team and a culture of operating discipline to be able to execute and deliver results during more challenging times as well. The actions we have taken have enabled us to significantly improve our leverage ratio, and we are committed to a deleveraged balance sheet going forward. After accounting for the tax payments that are still due on asset sales, our leverage ratio on an EBITDA minus NCI basis is around three. We are very pleased with the deleveraging accomplished to date. Looking forward, we are well positioned to create value for shareholders through stronger free cash flow generation. Our transform portfolio provides us with a high degree of capital and financial flexibility. Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:06:58We will continue to deploy capital to enhance growth in our industry-leading ambulatory surgical business through M&A and de novo development, increase capital spending to fuel organic growth, and return excess capital to shareholders via share repurchase, given we believe our equity continues to trade at attractive multiples relative to the market. The combination of an established management team, a focused strategy, and consistent operations and disciplined capital deployment positions us to drive significant value for physicians, patients, and in turn, our shareholders. And with that, Sun will now provide a more detailed view of our financial results. Sun. Sun ParkEVP and CFO at Tenet Healthcare00:07:43Thank you, Saum, and good morning, everyone. Our financial results in the third quarter continue to be strong, with Adjusted EBITDA coming in well above our guidance range. In the third quarter, we generated total net operating revenues of $5.1 billion and consolidated Adjusted EBITDA of $978 million, a 15% increase over third quarter 2023. Our third quarter Adjusted EBITDA margin of 19.1% is up 220 basis points from third quarter of 2023. These results were driven by strong same-store revenue growth, favorable payer mix, and effective cost controls. I would now like to highlight some key items for each of our segments in the third quarter, beginning with USPI, which again delivered strong operating results. USPI's Adjusted EBITDA grew 19% over last year, with Adjusted EBITDA margin at 38.5%. Sun ParkEVP and CFO at Tenet Healthcare00:08:37USPI delivered an 8.7% increase in same-facility system-wide revenues over last year, with same-facility system-wide net revenue per case up 7.6%, driven by high levels of acuity and favorable payer mix. Same-facility system-wide cases grew 1%. Turning to our hospital segment, adjusted EBITDA grew 11%, with margins up 180 basis points over last year at 13.5%. Excluding the divested hospitals, adjusted EBITDA in our hospital segment grew 24% over third quarter of 2023. Same-hospital inpatient admissions increased 5.2%, and revenue per adjusted admission grew 3.3%, again demonstrating favorable payer mix and continued high acuity levels. Our consolidated salary, wages, and benefits were 43.3% of net revenues in the quarter, and our consolidated contract labor expense was 2.2% of SW&B, both substantially lower than the 45.2% and the 3.1%, respectively, that we reported in third quarter of 2023. Next, we will discuss our cash flow, balance sheet, and capital structure. Sun ParkEVP and CFO at Tenet Healthcare00:09:51We generated $829 million of free cash flow in the third quarter, and as of September 30, we had $4.1 billion of cash on hand, with no borrowings outstanding under our $1.5 billion line of credit facility. We repurchased 795,000 shares of our stock for $124 million during the quarter, and year to date, we have repurchased 5.6 million shares for $672 million. As Saum mentioned, our leverage ratio as of September 30 was 2.2 times EBITDA, or 2.8 times EBITDA less NCI, a substantial improvement from year-end, reflecting the proceeds that we received from our hospital divestitures, as well as our outstanding operational performance. Let me now turn to our outlook for 2024. For '24, we now expect consolidated net operating revenues in the range of $20.6-$20.8 billion, $100 million lower at the midpoint versus our prior expectations, due primarily to the sale of the Alabama hospitals. Sun ParkEVP and CFO at Tenet Healthcare00:10:56We are raising our 2024 adjusted EBITDA outlook range by $50 million to $3.9-$4.0 billion, reflecting the strong fundamental performance of our businesses, partially offset by the impact of the sale of our Alabama hospitals. At the midpoint of our range, we now expect our full year 2024 adjusted EBITDA to grow 12% over 2023, or 20% when taking into account the impact of reduced EBITDA from divested facilities. At USPI, we have narrowed the range of our expected 2024 adjusted EBITDA to $1.76-$1.80 billion. In the hospital segment, we are raising our 2024 adjusted EBITDA outlook range by $50 million at the midpoint to $2.14-$2.20 billion. Turning to cash flows, we now expect free cash flows in the range of $975 million to $1.225 billion. Sun ParkEVP and CFO at Tenet Healthcare00:11:55This range includes the payment of about $875 million in net taxes related to our completed divestitures, including the recent Alabama transaction. Excluding these tax payments, this represents $1.975 billion of free cash flow at the midpoint of our 2024 outlook, or $1.225 billion of free cash flow less NCI, an increase of $50 million over prior expectations. As we've said before, the continued improvement in our cash flow performance has helped us deleverage our balance sheet while making disciplined investments in our business and delivering value for our shareholders. Now, I'd like to spend a minute discussing 2025. We are still conducting our business planning processes and evaluating key assumptions, and therefore, it's premature at this point for us to provide specifics on 2025 guidance. However, we do want to give you some context for our current thinking about next year. Sun ParkEVP and CFO at Tenet Healthcare00:12:53First of all, there are two normalizing items that I would call out. We have reported $113 million of Adjusted EBITDA in 2024 from facilities that we have divested and that will not recur in 2025. In addition, we have reported $74 million of out-of-period favorable adjustments from supplemental Medicaid programs in Michigan and Texas in 2024. More than offsetting these two items at a consolidated level, we expect continued growth in same-store volumes and effective pricing, some potential additional revenue from Medicaid supplemental programs, and continued strong operational efficiencies and disciplined cost controls. We also anticipate further contributions from recent investments and partnerships in the hospital segment, as well as from M&A and de novo development within USPI. We look forward to completing the planning process and sharing guidance with you for 2025 in February of our earnings call. Sun ParkEVP and CFO at Tenet Healthcare00:13:53And finally, as a reminder, our capital deployment priorities have not changed. First, we will continue to prioritize capital investments to grow USPI through M&A. Second, we expect to invest in key hospital growth opportunities, including our focus on higher acuity service offerings. Third, we will evaluate opportunities to retire and/or refinance debt. And finally, we'll have a balanced approach to share repurchases, depending on market conditions and other investment opportunities. We consider our equity to be very attractive at the multiples at which it trades and see this as an opportunity to drive value for shareholders with our attractive free cash flow profile. In conclusion, we're extraordinarily pleased with our strong performance in 2024 and the significant progress we have made with our portfolio transformation. Sun ParkEVP and CFO at Tenet Healthcare00:14:41We are confident in our ability to deliver on our increased outlook for 2024 as we remain focused on providing patient-centered care in the communities we serve. And with that, we're ready to begin the Q&A. Operator. Operator00:14:55Thank you. At this time, we'll be conducting a question-and-answer session. If you'd like to ask a question, please press Star 1 on your telephone keypad. As a reminder, we ask that you please limit to one question. A confirmation tone will indicate your line is in the question queue. You may press Star 2 if you'd like to remove your question from the queue. For participants using speaker equipment, it may be necessary to pick up your handset before pressing the Star keys. One moment, please, while we poll for questions. Our first question comes from Josh Raskin, with Nephron Research. Please proceed with your question. Joshua RaskinAnalyst at Nephron Research00:15:36Hi, thanks. Just a couple of quick clarifications. I think the ASC segment guidance for USPI implies a drop sequentially in EBITDA. That would obviously be seasonally very unusual. So I'm just curious if there's anything to call out there. And I think cash flow, if you could just tell us what the total tax payments in Q4 are going to be. And then just my real question would be, could you just talk about changes or any changes that you're potentially seeing from managed care behavior? Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:16:07Okay. There's three questions there, so let's handle them. Why don't we start with the. I don't think that's accurate on the USPI point, so let's just try to clarify that first and the tax payments, and then I'll talk about managed care. Sun ParkEVP and CFO at Tenet Healthcare00:16:26Yeah, Josh, hey, this is Sun. For USPI EBITDA, we reported $439 million in Q3, and our guidance currently implies $500 million at the midpoint for USPI in Q4. So what we see each year, a Q4 upswing. In terms of tax payments. Joshua RaskinAnalyst at Nephron Research00:16:44I'm sorry. I was looking at growth rate, so I screwed up the question. Sorry about that. Sun ParkEVP and CFO at Tenet Healthcare00:16:48Oh, I see. Okay. Thank you. On tax, as we put in our investor presentation, we have $875 million of total deal payments for the year, of which we expect to pay about $700 million in Q4, in addition with our kind of standard other tax payments. Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:17:09Josh, on the managed care side, I'll probably keep the comments limited to what dialogue has been around two topics. One is just the impact of the Two Midnight Rule, and particularly in the Medicare Advantage space. And secondly, I think there's been discussions about the impact of managed care denials. Look, when it comes to Two Midnight, I think the process of fully adopting the guidance on the Two Midnight Rule in the Medicare Advantage market is what I would describe as still underway. I don't think it's been fully adopted. And at least for us, we have seen probably somewhere between 50 and 100 basis points contribution to our overall admissions growth, but certainly short of and with more work than there should be if the Two Midnight Rule was fully adopted. Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:18:10I guess at some level, that goes back to this issue of disputes and denials and other things. I mean, again, I can only speak about us. We're very disciplined and clean and compliant in the way that we document and code. And I do think that if you look at the last few years, the amount of activity that we've seen in the industry, increasing administrative costs on both sides for payers and providers related to disputes and denials has gone up in somewhat of an extraordinary way. And it's certainly frustrating if you're sitting on this side of that activity. And at the same time, we have made the right investments and have the right capabilities and processes inside of Conifer for us and our clients to have mitigated that impact relative to what's been happening in the industry. Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:19:08But at some point, there has to be a solution to this because it's really just wasted administrative time and cost. Sun ParkEVP and CFO at Tenet Healthcare00:19:19Josh, hey, this is Sun again. Sorry. I think you also asked about USPI revenues sequentially. Q3 was $1,139 million for USPI revenues, and our guidance implies about $1,125 million in Q4, so sequentially flat. I think two things. One is we didn't change our USPI guidance, so we opted to leave both the EBITDA and revenues as they were. Then second, we also see, as you know, a pretty strong EBITDA margin increase in Q4, again, historically, and we expect the same. Those are kind of the two pieces for the revenue and EBITDA guidance. Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:19:58Yeah. And look, I know we have been more fortunate in our ability to plan and recover given what happened from the hurricane standpoint. We had 148 facilities impacted and at some point shut down. Only one of them at this point is still shut down. And so what we have done, we're confident that we will work on bringing back that business in the fourth quarter. We're confident that the margins will improve, and we've committed to our guidance for the year that we raised last quarter for USPI, and we're going to keep it for the fourth quarter and therefore the full year from what we raised. Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:20:46Yeah, it might make the numbers look slightly a little wonky there, but realize that we did have impact. But at the same time, we've made a decision that we think our operations will recover to the point where we'll be able to meet that guidance. Joshua RaskinAnalyst at Nephron Research00:21:03Perfect. Thanks. Operator00:21:06Our next question comes from Ben Hendricks with RBC Capital Markets. Please proceed with your question. Ben HendrixAnalyst at RBC Capital Markets00:21:12Great. Thank you very much. I was wondering if you could provide a little bit more detail on your 2025 comments specifically around growth and SS volumes next year. Is the degree to which you see those continuing to kind of outpace historical trends? Is there any moderation assumed in there and just your general thoughts on that momentum? Thank you. Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:21:35Yeah. No, thank you. Good question for 2025. We continue to see a strong demand environment. As we've talked about before, we do believe that the demand recovery, especially in the hospital segment around the country, continues as kind of the replacement of the early mortality that occurred from COVID in that demand environment. And we don't know when that's going to slow down to a more normal range, but currently, we still see that robust demand environment. And at the same time, we've spent the year working on cost-efficiently expanding our capacity in order to accommodate that volume so that we're not doing it with expensive contract labor, which really is a testament to our work in nurse recruiting that we have done this year through many of the terrific relationships formed with schools around the country. Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:22:38And so I can't sit here today and say that we're forecasting some kind of a decline as we look forward. I mean, as we think about our operations moving from the fourth quarter to the first quarter, we're not thinking about them differently at this point. Operator00:23:02Thanks. Our next question comes from AJ Rice with UBS. Please proceed with your question. A.J. RiceAnalyst at UBS00:23:11Hi, everybody. Thanks. Maybe I'll use Josh's approach. One clarification and then one question. Clarification being around the 1% USPI same facility volume growth. That's a step up from the first half, but you sort of alluded to maybe there was a little bit of impact from hurricanes in there. Just wondered if it was. And I know long-term, you have a transition you're making toward higher acuity procedures that is helping on the revenue per case side, but hitting a little on the volume side. Are you still in the midst of that? And what's the path to get back to 2%-3%? And then I just wanted to ask on your capital deployment. Thanks for laying out the priorities there. But obviously, you're at a point where you got strong free cash flow now. Your debt's down to a pretty low level. A.J. RiceAnalyst at UBS00:24:00We're flipping around the discussion away from paying down more debt, but say, is there any opportunity to accelerate the pace of development in USPI to consider accelerating the buyback pace or even consider possibly a dividend or a larger deal out there? Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:24:20Yeah. Thanks, AJ. Just in terms of the clarification point, as we said at the beginning of the year, given the extraordinary comps from 2023, we thought we would move into positive volume territory later in the year. And that's kind of the pattern that you've seen, right, from Q1, Q2, Q3. We'll see what happens with Q4, given the point that I made in the prior question related to the hurricane impact. And yes, we continue to focus on growing higher acuity, which drives net revenue per case. It also drives extraordinary value in the system from an overall lowering the cost of care standpoint. And we continue to look for opportunities where those transitions can happen in an orderly fashion to migrate certain lower acuity, higher volume type of activities out of the ASCs. I think that'll continue for the next couple of years. Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:25:24As we had said from the beginning, it was a multi-year plan to kind of move some of those things out. Look, you're right about capital deployment. Obviously, we're very cognizant of the free cash flow generation looking forward. One clarification, obviously, given the cash we have in our balance sheet, we've delevered, but the debt paydown opportunities are still ahead of us, which Sun and team will structure in very much the right way. The second point I would make is, despite our guidance, if you look at our history for the last five or six years, even before being in this position, we've deployed more than our 200 to 250, quote-unquote, in capital into USPI, given the larger deals that we've done, including the deal that we did in the first quarter of this year for 45 ASCs, plus what we've done otherwise. Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:26:17And so we continue to believe accelerating spend at USPI is the single most accretive thing to creating value within the company. And of course, as I noted in my comments and Sun did in his, we have, in fact, accelerated relative to the trend over the last few years, given our deleveraging and cash positions, our ability to return value back to shareholders. So I think they're very consistent. Your points are very consistent with our comments, with the helpful added nuance that we have the flexibility to be more proactive and aggressive on each one of those dimensions at this point looking forward. A.J. RiceAnalyst at UBS00:27:06Okay. Thanks a lot. Operator00:27:10Our next question comes from Stephen Baxter with Wells Fargo. Please proceed with your question. Stephen BaxterAnalyst at Wells Fargo00:27:16Yeah. Hi. Thanks. I wanted to ask another one about the fourth quarter. I guess the hospital earnings cadence is a little different this year than we probably would have expected. Usually, hospital EBITDA is generally up in the fourth quarter versus the third quarter. It seems like you guys are guiding to a bit of a different cadence. So just wondering if you could help us bridge that. And then if there's anything unusual in the third quarter, either positive or negative in the hospital business that we should be keeping in mind. Thank you. Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:27:38I mean, Sun can go through the numbers. But look, first of all, I think it's a very small change. I mean, first, we have a divestiture in there. That's the biggest thing. And the second thing is just from a seasonality standpoint, that's less pronounced in the hospitals than you would see in the USPI ambulatory surgery business. But look, guys, there's a range there for a reason with upside to the range. And let's look at the trajectory of this year. It is obviously our goal on what may be a bit conservative there to continue to outperform. But I don't know if you want to address specific numbers. Sun ParkEVP and CFO at Tenet Healthcare00:28:18Yeah. I'll do a little bit. I think, Steve, last year, if you kind of look at our quarterly progression, our Q4 was up. But if you recall, we had about a $52 million out-of-period Medicaid from California in Q4 that we called out. Once you kind of normalize for that, it was fairly steady throughout the quarters. This year, if you look at our quarterly progressions, we again had, obviously, the HRA from Michigan out-of-period piece in Q1. We also called out an out-of-period $30 million from Texas in Q2. So there's a bit of bumpiness from that. But we think our Q4 guidance is pretty consistent with our overall commentary on good margins, very well-managed operating costs, and a good demand environment. And then the last part of your question, in Q3, we did not have any out-of-period or kind of one-time things that we are calling out. Sun ParkEVP and CFO at Tenet Healthcare00:29:12Thanks for your question. Operator00:29:18Our next question comes from Ann Hynes with Mizuho. Please proceed with your question. Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:29:23Good morning. Thank you. Can you let us know just a supplemental payment amount in Q3 this year versus last year? And heading into 2025, you called out 187 million of EBITDA you'd have to overcome. But I believe you said you can just confirm that you think you can offset that? And I think you said partly because of some of the Medicaid programs and strong volume growth, and maybe highlight what you think could be incremental Medicaid payments in 2025. Thanks. Sun ParkEVP and CFO at Tenet Healthcare00:29:57Hey, Ann. It's Sun. Year to date in 2024, we'll be at about almost $900 million of Medicaid supplemental fees year to date. The comparison to 2023 becomes a little bit trickier because of all the divestitures and same-store hospital metrics. So we can maybe work with you offline on that. And then, yes, in my commentary, we called out $113 million plus another $74 million from hospital divestitures and out-of-period Medicaid payments that we believe currently at this stage that we can more than offset at a consolidated level through all the various things that we discussed. On your question about supplemental payments for next year, I think it's too early to have specific comments. We're all aware of potential new programs in certain markets that we're all monitoring closely, and we're awaiting final decisions. So we'll obviously update as we find out more about that. Sun ParkEVP and CFO at Tenet Healthcare00:30:51Thanks for your question. Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:30:53Thanks. Operator00:30:56Our next question comes from Michael Ha with Baird. Please proceed with your question. Stephen BaxterAnalyst at Wells Fargo00:31:02Hi. Thank you. So I see your hospital average on this day. I think it's the first time you've improved below five days in over three years. I was wondering if you could talk about what it'll take to operationally get back to sort of pre-COVID mid-four levels, your expected timeline, how we should think about the earnings benefits, our hospital segment growth, and margin expansion. And then in terms of the inpatient admin strength, I was wondering if you could sort of parse out the sources of that strength and, excuse me, the durability of that going forward. Thank you. Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:31:38On the length of stay piece, I appreciate your calling out the improvements that we've made. This has been our initiatives in length of stay management, which started in a new fresh form in 2022 and 2023 in order to manage contract labor. Excess contract labor costs have continued in this environment because we think it's important, and we're pleased with the results we're getting there. But I would make a comment similar to kind of my comments in the past about we don't spend a lot of time trying to chase the exact mix and volume that we had pre-COVID. I mean, same thing's true in length of stay, right? As our acuity goes up, you would expect length of stay to increase a bit from pre-COVID acuity levels and therefore lengths of stay that were a bit lower. Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:32:30So our fundamental driver strategically in the business is to continue to build our high acuity business, which we think is uniquely suited and sustainable to get to your second point from a demand standpoint, durable in terms of inpatient admissions. And within the context of taking care of those patients appropriately, we look to optimize length of stay relative to metrics that are out there like geometric mean and other things. Look, on the broader comment, I will just echo what I said earlier in the call, which is we're pleased with the demand environment today. We feel positive about it looking forward and even into 2025. As I said, we're not planning differently for the first quarter next year versus the last quarter of this year in terms of a robust demand environment. Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:33:27We're not seeing signs or signals that we should stop looking to add capacity selectively in markets where that demand could be serviced in an appropriate cost structure, etc. So I feel pretty good about that. The inpatient and hospital-based demand strength is really both emergent, and we're seeing nice success in some of our critical service lines, cardiovascular and other, in particular, specialty surgical areas. So the drivers are both emergent and elective business. Payer mix, obviously, has been very helpful this year, driven very much so by commercial and even more significantly by exchange strength. And that goes to not only the market, but our contracting strategy, which has been very inclusive of being in a broad range of exchange networks. Operator00:34:35Our next question comes from Peter Chickering with Deutsche Bank. Please proceed with your question. Joshua RaskinAnalyst at Nephron Research00:34:41Hey, good morning. Michael, the admissions continue to outpace surgical admissions. So how durable do you think that is? Or does it get past a Medicaid determination? Do you think that surgical admissions normalize next year as comps get easier? And then a quick clarification on hurricanes. You talked about the facilities impacted. Did you quantify a revenue impact for hurricanes in the fourth quarter? Thank you. Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:35:06Yeah, Peter, we're going to have to ask you to repeat the first question in a second. But I would just, rather than us spending time focused on the details of the hurricane impact, look, we had 148 centers affected. We've got all but one running. We're expecting fourth quarter higher acuity, better mix, therefore better margins. And we're maintaining our commitment to our guidance that we raised at the end of the second quarter. The first question got either the connection or something. It was a little bit jumbled. Do you mind repeating that one more time for us? Joshua RaskinAnalyst at Nephron Research00:35:44Yeah. You bet. Apologies. I'm in a hotel room. Medical admissions continue to outpace surgical admissions this quarter. How durable is that? Or do you think as we get past Medicaid redetermination, do you think that surgical admissions accelerate next year as comps get easier after this year's Medicaid determination? Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:36:06Yeah. Got it. Okay. Well, yes, the medical admissions are reflective of two things. Obviously, one is just our continued commitment to emergency department excellence in terms of services, wait times, and receiving ability from that standpoint, including how we manage our house to avoid our facilities ever being on diversion as a commitment to the community. We also have improved our ability to receive transfers from other hospitals for sick patients, intensive care patients, which result in medical admissions oftentimes from outlying hospitals. And so we're not surprised by that. I mean, this is, again, fundamentally, these priorities are part of our strategy to continue to build and grow high acuity, elective, and emergent care, including in the medical cases. I would also point out that medical admissions, not just surgical admissions, have been pretty strong in the commercial environment, including for exchange participants. Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:37:19Of course, that raises the question of both the exchange growth impact, but also some utilization benefit that comes from new exchange participants picking up more attractive coverage. Joshua RaskinAnalyst at Nephron Research00:37:35Great. Thanks. Thanks so much, guys, on this quarter. Operator00:37:40Our next question comes from Justin Lake with Wolfe Research. Please proceed with your question. Ben HendrixAnalyst at RBC Capital Markets00:37:47Thanks. Good morning. First, a quick follow-up on 2025. Just want to make sure I heard correctly that with all the puts and takes and the headwinds in terms of the year-over-year comp, you still expect to grow EBITDA year-over-year. And then my real question's on leverage. Now that you've completed the deals, I was wondering if you could share a target leverage ratio you expect to get to once you deploy the capital. And if you aren't ready to share that now, any thoughts on when you might be able to communicate that number? Thanks. Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:38:18Yeah. Justin, just two real quick answers. The first is, yes, I think Sun's comments that we expect to more than offset normalized numbers. And we'll go through a full description of the puts and takes, obviously, when we provide guidance. But at this stage, our work indicates that we should more than offset that. We're not ready to, I mean, I think my comments in the leverage section around we are pleased with where we are from a leverage standpoint is probably the most that we're going to say at this stage rather than having a formal guidance number. But I think you can read into that that we're pleased with where we are from that standpoint. And again, my commentary on debt paydown still stands, which is working through the best ways to do that is something that we're actively in the midst of doing. Operator00:39:28Our next question comes from Joanna Gajuk with Bank of America. Please proceed with your question. A.J. RiceAnalyst at UBS00:39:34Hi. Good morning. Thanks so much for taking that question. So I guess the follow-up I would have on capital deployment comments around the ASC acquisitions. Any commentary there in terms of multiples, or is there more competition or less in terms of what you end up paying for these deals when it comes to multiples? And are there still larger assets to be acquired? I mean, it sounds like maybe there will be other. But the other actual question, I guess, on guidance for this year, the hospital revenue guidance was reduced by $100 million, called it the midpoint. So I assume this is the Alabama hospitals, but there's also higher, I guess, same-store inpatient admissions. And I don't want to bring up the hurricanes again, but just to make sure, was there any impact from hurricanes in Q4 that you had assumed here too? Thank you. Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:40:27All right. We'll split up the questions here. The ASC business capital deployment and really the question being about multiples, I would just step back and remind the audience we're focused on our post-synergy multiples, and because of our ability collectively in the organization to drive to better management, more efficiency, network inclusion, supply chain efficiencies, etc., we often are able to buy assets and reduce the effective multiple within the first couple of years from that standpoint, and again, we're focused on what the effective multiple is at the end of that period rather than what we're paying for it. Now, factually speaking, we have not seen changes in the purchasing multiples of any note recently. I know this question comes up from time to time. We have not seen any type of changes. Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:41:34And so we are consistently guiding to the same pre- and post-acquisition multiples that we have in the past. And that's a good thing in terms of the availability of attractive, high-quality assets that are choosing to become part of the USPI portfolio. Do you want to cover the hospital hurricane? Stephen BaxterAnalyst at Wells Fargo00:41:58Sure. Hey, Joanna. On our hospital revenues, we still believe good demand environment, good pricing environment, high acuity, all those things that we've talked about. Our Q4 revenue guidance, the reduction is all primarily driven by the divested hospitals, and we don't have any material impact and therefore any hurricanes. Operator00:42:28Our next question is from Whit Mayo with Leerink Partners. Please proceed with your question. Ann HynesAnalyst at Mizuho00:42:34Thanks. So I'm just curious with the size of the acute care portfolio, obviously much smaller than in the past. How are you thinking about the underlying infrastructure and cost that you need to support the business going forward? And I had just one other quick one. You didn't call out any of the ongoing accretion to Conifer from the hospital sales as an offset in 2025. So just was hoping you could address that. Thanks. Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:43:02Okay. One more time. The second part of that, the offset? Ann HynesAnalyst at Mizuho00:43:08The accretion that you're getting to Conifer from the hospital sales, considering you don't eliminate the earnings and the reporting going forward. Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:43:16got it. Ann HynesAnalyst at Mizuho00:43:16Just got to think of an ongoing offset as we think about 2025. Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:43:21Right. Yeah. Okay. Got it. So let's start with the size of the acute care portfolio. Obviously, it's been reduced, and we would typically, on an ongoing basis, make adjustments, obviously, to the corporation from that perspective. Remember, in the period after divestitures, we tend to have transition service agreements that support the divested hospitals for a significant period of time. And so the way we think about those things is that we ought to support those transitioned hospitals with our sale partners very thoroughly and no differently than as if we were owning them. And that's not the least of which because we also have some longer-term Conifer relationships with these folks. So out of respect to what we do there, we take that job very seriously. And again, I would just reiterate that we are cognizant of the opportunity there overall from that standpoint. Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:44:28Obviously, there are costs that are simply direct allocations to these markets that go away as part of what we sold. I mean, that's not surprising. The chassis, certain purchased services contracts, and other things would come down naturally, as you would expect, with asset sales. On the offset, Sun? Stephen BaxterAnalyst at Wells Fargo00:44:54Yeah. Hey, Whit. On Conifer, yeah, as you noted, and as Saum has discussed several times before, we have long-term revenue cycle relationships with a lot of our divested sites. Going to 2025, we do expect those to be a benefit to us. In terms of actual specifics, again, we'll have more information when we give our guidance in 2025, but that is part of our overall expectations. Ann HynesAnalyst at Mizuho00:45:21Okay. Thanks. Operator00:45:25Our next question is from Andrew Mok with Barclays. Please proceed with your question. Stephen BaxterAnalyst at Wells Fargo00:45:31Hi. Maybe if I could just follow up on that last question first. I understand that in cases where you expand the relationship of Conifer, there would be an incremental contribution to EBITDA. But if you do not expand the relationship, are you saying that there's still an incremental enterprise EBITDA contribution from those divestitures? Yeah. Hey, Andrew. No, you're right. It's the expanded opportunities that I'm mostly referencing in terms of 2025 factors. Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:46:02Yeah. And the other thing I don't mind calling out, we've talked about some of the expansion opportunities. One of them, in particular, will be larger than others, which will require us to take on a significant amount. So I would think about that almost as a new customer acquisition in terms of what the margin profile would look like for Conifer in the outside market. And again, as Sun said, we'll put more detail to that as we give 2025 guidance. But we will make investments in order to onboard that business in 2025 before getting to our overall typical performance with Conifer over time. I would say for the rest of the divestitures, the expansions that we've done are a little bit more straightforward to onboard from that perspective. But it's a great story for Conifer in terms of these expansions. Stephen BaxterAnalyst at Wells Fargo00:47:08Great. Thank you. Operator00:47:12Our next question comes from Brian Tanquilut with Jefferies. Please proceed with your question. Joshua RaskinAnalyst at Nephron Research00:47:18Hey, good morning, guys, and congrats on the quarter. Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:47:21Thank you. Joshua RaskinAnalyst at Nephron Research00:47:21Tom, when you presented to the market, you talked a little bit about efficiency opportunities that you still see in the business. So as we think about the hospital segment and where margins stand today and with the divestitures that you've done, how much runway do you think you have left for margins? Or is it right to say that 15% segment-level EBITDA is about the right spot? Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:47:43I think without getting into specific numbers, I mean, from an efficiency opportunity standpoint, one of the things that we are focused on, including being a little bit different than some others, is capacity utilization, especially in high-value real estate in the hospitals, right? , and our ability to continue to improve the capacity utilization of our facilities for us, just to give you one example, represents how we think about that ongoing efficiency opportunity, and so we're not, again, our mindset is not whatever the number is to be satisfied with what the margins look like today. Obviously, ongoing improvements in labor supplies and other expenses, third-party purchase services, etc., stabilization of the staffing environment, the physician staffing environment, etc., all present opportunities looking forward to continue to try to optimize the business. Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:48:52But I would say that, as an example, that area of capacity utilization is still an important one to us from the standpoint of finding more efficiency. Operator00:49:05Thank you. Our next question comes from Matthew Gillmor with KeyBanc Capital Markets. Please proceed with your question. Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:49:15Hey, thanks. I wanted to hit on the total joint replacement growth at USPI. I think you're up 19% this quarter. And if we look at your disclosures, there was sort of an acceleration into the sort of 20% range starting last year and sustaining. So just wanted to see if you had any perspective to share with respect to the sustainability of that level of growth and maybe how that ties into your development pipeline on the USPI side. Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:49:42I think that, I mean, it's no secret that sometime around 2020, or even before, we made a decision that we wanted to be the unquestionable leaders in outpatient bone and joint care, more broadly, bone, joint, spine, etc., with a full range of outpatient-based services. We believe, and I think what we're seeing is that we can provide those services in a high-quality manner at a lower cost than in other settings. I think that the industry has moved pretty heavily towards outpatient-based care. Some of that care is still in the hospital outpatient-based environment versus in the freestanding environment. We still think there's migration opportunity over the next few years into the freestanding environment. Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:50:29Obviously, with the burden of chronic illness that we see in the country today, there are people that will need hospital-based outpatient services simply because of chronic condition management and appropriately providing those services. But the reality is, with all of these things that move into a lower-cost, higher-service setting, it's not a direct cannibalization. The market expands, and the market has been expanding for these services when you can offer it in an ambulatory setting. And so we're focused on that more than anything else, is continuing to expand the marketplace, continuing to get younger and younger orthopedic surgeons who aren't exposed to ASCs in their training, exposed to ASCs earlier in their careers to show them that this is a very viable place to practice. Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:51:25Got it. Thank you. Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:51:27Thanks. Operator00:51:29Our next question comes from Sarah James with Cantor Fitzgerald. Please proceed with your question. Sun ParkEVP and CFO at Tenet Healthcare00:51:35Thank you. Ambulatory 2024 guide shifted about 100-150 basis points to be more revenue per case than volume compared to the 2Q 2024 guide. So is this how we should think about mix going forward, with revenue per case being the larger driver compared to volume, given your comments on the durability of trends around commercial mix and migration of low acuity out of ASC? And then just a quick clarification. On the year-to-date DPP, what's the mix between ambulatory and hospital? We're just trying to get to a clean revenue per case number. Thanks. Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:52:17Yeah. Thanks for the question. We'll split them up again, but I think on the first question, look, there's a couple of things here that are important to put into perspective. First of all, I think that guidance is relevant for the rest of 2024, right? We haven't said anything about 2025 and how we're thinking about that with respect to our business planning, and I understand there's a lot of puts and takes. I mean, one of the reasons we're really pleased with the net revenue per case growth and the acuity growth at USPI is because, remember, we added 45 centers and more than that this year, but that 45-center tranche that was heavily non-orthopedic at the beginning of the year and therefore had lower average net revenues per case than in a truly orthopedic dedicated center. Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:53:06And yet, we haven't gone into that detail because we're not breaking out different segments of USPI, but the concept is important that we're outperforming our expectations in that acuity growth, even as we continue to add centers, especially when they come in large chunks like that from a more modest acuity standpoint. So I would think about the guidance for the rest of 2024. We'll get to 2025. But again, I would echo the answer to the question about tailwinds in this part of the business around we see a healthy long-term growth rate in bone and joint care in the ASCs. Stephen BaxterAnalyst at Wells Fargo00:53:50Yeah, and Sarah, hey, this is Sun. Just on your second question, I would consider virtually all of the DPP amounts related to the hospital segment, just given the different patient mix and payment mix across the two segments. Sun ParkEVP and CFO at Tenet Healthcare00:54:06Thank you. Operator00:54:10Our next question is from John Ransom with Raymond James. Please proceed with your question. Joshua RaskinAnalyst at Nephron Research00:54:16Hey, I'm going to take a shot at two, and you guys just pick your journey since that seems to be what people are doing. So the first one is, when we look at the expansion in the health exchanges this year, can you quantify the effect of that on USPI, if any? And then secondly, I mean, Tom, you're probably tired of answering this, but are you saying that on a same-store basis in 2025, we should expect total state-directed payments to increase over 2024? Are you not quite prepared to say that? Thanks. Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:54:48Yeah. We haven't made any forecasts for 2025 on state-directed payments on a relative basis to 2024. Obviously, if you compare to 2023, we would expect that 2025 is going to end up being higher than what it was back then. But the year-over-year, we haven't gotten to, and the 2023 to 2025 step-up is obviously more structural from that standpoint. You want to cover the HHIX? Joshua RaskinAnalyst at Nephron Research00:55:20Yeah, sure. Hey, John, on HIX, the broader trends I think are certainly applicable across hospitals and our ambulatory space. We haven't really quantified the USPI component of it. I do think it is probably smaller, relatively speaking, impact on ambulatory versus what we see in hospitals. And while we're talking about it, I can just remind everyone on Q3 for hospitals, we continue to see about a 58% increase in exchange volume year-over-year for Q3, so still very significant for us. Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:55:56It's been a benefit to the business all year, especially because of our contracting strategy being inclusive in the networks. Joshua RaskinAnalyst at Nephron Research00:56:03Thank you. Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:56:05Thanks. Operator00:56:07Our next question is from Jamie Perse with Goldman Sachs. Please proceed with your question. Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:56:14Hey, thank you. Good morning. Can you talk a little bit about the unconsolidated ASC portfolio for a minute? Just looking for an update on where some of those facilities are at from a development and ramp perspective and how you're thinking about potential increases in ownership of those facilities going forward? Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:56:32Yeah. No, Jamie, we've cut out of the habit of reporting exact numbers and other things on this as we've kind of gotten into a more stable environment after the 2022 discussion there. But yeah, we continue to have buy-up opportunities. We continue to execute on buy-up opportunities within the portfolio. And it's a small, but at least on a consolidated basis, additive part of our ongoing work. Obviously, sometimes when we do that, we unlock the ability to add new business development resources for growth or other types of synergies from that perspective. But yeah, it's a small, but it's not as big an opportunity as it was in the past because a lot of that stuff has been executed on. Operator00:57:34We have reached the end of the question-and-answer session. I'd now like to turn the call back over to management for closing comments. Operator00:57:43That's all for today. Thank you all very much. If you have any follow-up questions, certainly feel free to reach out to me. And thank you very much for joining our call today. Operator00:57:52This concludes today's conference. You may disconnect your lines at this time, and we thank you for your participation.Read moreParticipantsExecutivesSun ParkEVP and CFOSaum SutariaCEOWilliam McDowellVP of Investor RelationsAnalystsBen HendrixAnalyst at RBC Capital MarketsStephen BaxterAnalyst at Wells FargoJoshua RaskinAnalyst at Nephron ResearchA.J. RiceAnalyst at UBSAnn HynesAnalyst at MizuhoPowered by Earnings DocumentsSlide DeckPress Release(8-K)Quarterly report(10-Q) Tenet Healthcare Earnings HeadlinesAnalysts Offer Insights on Healthcare Companies: Tenet Healthcare (THC) and Kymera Therapeutics (KYMR)May 6 at 12:30 PM | theglobeandmail.comRBC Capital Sticks to Their Buy Rating for Tenet Healthcare (THC)May 5 at 10:29 AM | theglobeandmail.comBlackRock, JPMorgan, and Goldman are all stock piling the same asset… are you?BlackRock, JPMorgan, Goldman Sachs, Fidelity, ARK Invest and Andreessen Horowitz are all buying the same asset. The reason is tied to a legal mandate - the Clarity Act now requires the entire $382 trillion financial system to move onto a new monetary infrastructure by April 2027. BlackRock CEO Larry Fink calls it 'the next major evolution in market infrastructure.' Every transaction on this new grid burns one specific scarce digital resource - and institutions are accumulating shares before prices move.May 6 at 1:00 AM | Awesomely, LLC (Ad)Is It Too Late To Consider Tenet Healthcare (THC) After Its Strong Multi‑Year Rally?May 5 at 10:29 AM | finance.yahoo.comTenet Healthcare (NYSE:THC) Price Target Cut to $260.00 by Analysts at StephensMay 5 at 4:08 AM | americanbankingnews.comGuggenheim Has Lowered Expectations for Tenet Healthcare (NYSE:THC) Stock PriceMay 3 at 4:49 AM | americanbankingnews.comSee More Tenet Healthcare Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like Tenet Healthcare? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on Tenet Healthcare and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About Tenet HealthcareTenet Healthcare (NYSE:THC) (NYSE: THC) is a diversified American healthcare services company that owns and operates acute care hospitals and a broad range of outpatient facilities. Its portfolio includes general acute-care hospitals, specialty hospitals, ambulatory surgery centers, urgent care and diagnostic imaging centers, and other ancillary service locations. Tenet’s operations are oriented around delivering inpatient and outpatient clinical care across multiple medical specialties, with an emphasis on surgical services, emergency care, and advanced diagnostics. In addition to facility-based care, Tenet provides integrated services designed to support clinical operations and improve patient access and care coordination. These services include physician practice partnerships and networks, outpatient surgery and imaging services, and programs aimed at enhancing clinical quality, patient experience and operational efficiency. The company works with payors, health systems and physicians to implement care models that address both fee-for-service and value-based reimbursement environments. Headquartered in Dallas, Texas, Tenet’s facilities and services are concentrated across the United States. The company has grown and evolved through a combination of facility development, acquisitions and strategic partnerships to expand its geographic footprint and service offerings. Tenet continues to invest in clinical programs, technology and care delivery models intended to advance outcomes and access for the communities it serves while navigating the regulatory and market dynamics of the U.S. healthcare system.View Tenet Healthcare 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 Boarding Passes Now Being Issued for the Ultimate eVTOL ArbitrageDigitalOcean’s AI Surge: How Far Can This Rally Go?Years in the Making, AMD’s Upside Movement Has Just BegunCapital One’s Big Bet Faces Rising Credit RiskWestern Digital: The Storage Behemoth Skyrocketing on AI DemandOld Money, New Tech: Western Union's Crypto RebootHow Williams Companies Is Cashing in on the AI Power Boom Upcoming Earnings Coinbase Global (5/7/2026)Airbnb (5/7/2026)Datadog (5/7/2026)Ferrovial (5/7/2026)Gilead Sciences (5/7/2026)Microchip Technology (5/7/2026)MercadoLibre (5/7/2026)Monster Beverage (5/7/2026)Canadian Natural Resources (5/7/2026)W.W. 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PresentationSkip to Participants Operator00:00:01Good morning and welcome to Tenet Healthcare's Third Quarter 2024 Earnings Conference Call. After the speaker remarks, there will be a question-and-answer session for industry analysts. At that time, if you'd like to ask a question, please press star one on your telephone keypad. Tenet respectfully asks that analysts limit themselves to one question each. I'll now turn the call over to your host, Mr. Will McDowell, Vice President of Investor Relations. Mr. McDowell, you may now begin. William McDowellVP of Investor Relations at Tenet Healthcare00:00:32Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining today's call. I am Will McDowell, Vice President of Investor Relations. We're pleased to have you join us for a discussion of Tenet's Third Quarter 2024 results, as well as a discussion of our financial outlook. Tenet Senior Management participating in today's call will be Dr. Saum Sutaria, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, and Sun Park, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer. Our webcast this morning includes a slide presentation, which has been posted to the Investor Relations section of our website, tenethealth.com. Listeners to this call are advised that certain statements made during our discussion today are forward-looking and represent management's expectations based on currently available information. Actual results and plans could differ materially. Tenet is under no obligation to update any forward-looking statements based on subsequent information. William McDowellVP of Investor Relations at Tenet Healthcare00:01:23Investors should take note of the cautionary statement slide included in today's presentation, as well as the risk factors discussed in our most recent Form 10-K and other filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission, and with that, I'll turn the call over to Saum. Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:01:38Thanks, Will, and good morning, everybody. Before we discuss our third quarter results, I'd like to take a moment to acknowledge and pay respect to those impacted by the hurricanes in our company, in our peers in those markets, and in our partners and suppliers who operate in those regions. The devastation is significant, but the energy to recover and rebuild shows the best of the American spirit rallying together in a crisis. Moving on to our results. Once again, our performance in the third quarter exceeded our expectations and represents a continuation of consistently strong operating results driven by volume growth and disciplined operations. In the third quarter, we reported net operating revenues of $5.1 billion. Consolidated adjusted EBITDA was $978 million, representing growth of 15% over third quarter 2023 and an adjusted EBITDA margin of 19.1%. Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:02:35USPI's results were once again strong, with $439 million in Adjusted EBITDA, which represents 19% growth over third quarter 2023. Same facility revenues grew 8.7%, and Adjusted EBITDA margins remain robust. Orthopedic volumes are strong, and total joint replacements in the ASCs were up 19% over prior year, coupled with the ongoing growth in urology and GI procedures. We did open six new de novos in the quarter, including a new partnership with Synergy Orthopedics, establishing the largest dedicated musculoskeletal outpatient surgery center in San Diego, California. De novo development activity remains an important part of USPI's growth story, and we have nearly 20 centers currently in syndication stages or under construction. Turning to our hospital segment, Adjusted EBITDA was $539 million in the third quarter, representing 11% growth over the third quarter 2023, and importantly, strong sequential growth. Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:03:38The strong utilization environment remains, with same-store hospital admissions up 5.2% as we continue to open up capacity in a cost-efficient way. Third quarter 2024 revenue per adjusted admission was up 3.3% over prior year, reflecting continued strength in acuity and mix. We have proven our ability to succeed in tough operating environments, leading the way in 2022 and 2023 in cost management in the aftermath of COVID, and now in 2024 with robust demand, where our efficient operating chassis has allowed us to deliver stronger results than expected throughout the year. As such, we are continuing to make significant investments in expanding our network to support growth in our markets over the coming years. In July, we opened our newest hospital in Westover Hills, a rapidly growing area near San Antonio. Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:04:32The hospital is focused on procedural services, with state-of-the-art operating rooms and cath labs, a large emergency department, and an entire floor devoted to women's services. Additionally, construction of our next hospital in Port St. Lucie, Florida, continues, with an opening planned for 2025. Turning to our full year 2024 guidance, we are once again raising our full year 2024 guidance to a range of $3.9-$4 billion, based on the fundamental organic outperformance in both of our business units. This represents an increase of $50 million at the midpoint of the range over our prior guidance, increased and announced at the second quarter call. We have now raised our Adjusted EBITDA guidance by nearly $600 million from our initial expectations this year. Clearly, we are pleased with our strong performance throughout the year. Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:05:25Before I turn the call over to Sun, I'd like to spend a little bit of time discussing our portfolio transformation. We completed the sale of our Alabama hospitals on September 30th. All of the sales that we have executed on have been at high multiples to reflect the operational improvements that we have made to each of these facilities over the last several years. More importantly, as a result of these sales, our current hospital portfolio has an enhanced return profile. More attractive geographies for us and our business model, higher expected returns on invested capital that should result. Conifer has retained and, in many cases, expanded its relationship with the acquirers of the hospitals, demonstrating the value we deliver to providers in revenue cycle management. Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:06:11While our hospitals are well positioned to benefit from a favorable operating environment, we've built a leadership team and a culture of operating discipline to be able to execute and deliver results during more challenging times as well. The actions we have taken have enabled us to significantly improve our leverage ratio, and we are committed to a deleveraged balance sheet going forward. After accounting for the tax payments that are still due on asset sales, our leverage ratio on an EBITDA minus NCI basis is around three. We are very pleased with the deleveraging accomplished to date. Looking forward, we are well positioned to create value for shareholders through stronger free cash flow generation. Our transform portfolio provides us with a high degree of capital and financial flexibility. Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:06:58We will continue to deploy capital to enhance growth in our industry-leading ambulatory surgical business through M&A and de novo development, increase capital spending to fuel organic growth, and return excess capital to shareholders via share repurchase, given we believe our equity continues to trade at attractive multiples relative to the market. The combination of an established management team, a focused strategy, and consistent operations and disciplined capital deployment positions us to drive significant value for physicians, patients, and in turn, our shareholders. And with that, Sun will now provide a more detailed view of our financial results. Sun. Sun ParkEVP and CFO at Tenet Healthcare00:07:43Thank you, Saum, and good morning, everyone. Our financial results in the third quarter continue to be strong, with Adjusted EBITDA coming in well above our guidance range. In the third quarter, we generated total net operating revenues of $5.1 billion and consolidated Adjusted EBITDA of $978 million, a 15% increase over third quarter 2023. Our third quarter Adjusted EBITDA margin of 19.1% is up 220 basis points from third quarter of 2023. These results were driven by strong same-store revenue growth, favorable payer mix, and effective cost controls. I would now like to highlight some key items for each of our segments in the third quarter, beginning with USPI, which again delivered strong operating results. USPI's Adjusted EBITDA grew 19% over last year, with Adjusted EBITDA margin at 38.5%. Sun ParkEVP and CFO at Tenet Healthcare00:08:37USPI delivered an 8.7% increase in same-facility system-wide revenues over last year, with same-facility system-wide net revenue per case up 7.6%, driven by high levels of acuity and favorable payer mix. Same-facility system-wide cases grew 1%. Turning to our hospital segment, adjusted EBITDA grew 11%, with margins up 180 basis points over last year at 13.5%. Excluding the divested hospitals, adjusted EBITDA in our hospital segment grew 24% over third quarter of 2023. Same-hospital inpatient admissions increased 5.2%, and revenue per adjusted admission grew 3.3%, again demonstrating favorable payer mix and continued high acuity levels. Our consolidated salary, wages, and benefits were 43.3% of net revenues in the quarter, and our consolidated contract labor expense was 2.2% of SW&B, both substantially lower than the 45.2% and the 3.1%, respectively, that we reported in third quarter of 2023. Next, we will discuss our cash flow, balance sheet, and capital structure. Sun ParkEVP and CFO at Tenet Healthcare00:09:51We generated $829 million of free cash flow in the third quarter, and as of September 30, we had $4.1 billion of cash on hand, with no borrowings outstanding under our $1.5 billion line of credit facility. We repurchased 795,000 shares of our stock for $124 million during the quarter, and year to date, we have repurchased 5.6 million shares for $672 million. As Saum mentioned, our leverage ratio as of September 30 was 2.2 times EBITDA, or 2.8 times EBITDA less NCI, a substantial improvement from year-end, reflecting the proceeds that we received from our hospital divestitures, as well as our outstanding operational performance. Let me now turn to our outlook for 2024. For '24, we now expect consolidated net operating revenues in the range of $20.6-$20.8 billion, $100 million lower at the midpoint versus our prior expectations, due primarily to the sale of the Alabama hospitals. Sun ParkEVP and CFO at Tenet Healthcare00:10:56We are raising our 2024 adjusted EBITDA outlook range by $50 million to $3.9-$4.0 billion, reflecting the strong fundamental performance of our businesses, partially offset by the impact of the sale of our Alabama hospitals. At the midpoint of our range, we now expect our full year 2024 adjusted EBITDA to grow 12% over 2023, or 20% when taking into account the impact of reduced EBITDA from divested facilities. At USPI, we have narrowed the range of our expected 2024 adjusted EBITDA to $1.76-$1.80 billion. In the hospital segment, we are raising our 2024 adjusted EBITDA outlook range by $50 million at the midpoint to $2.14-$2.20 billion. Turning to cash flows, we now expect free cash flows in the range of $975 million to $1.225 billion. Sun ParkEVP and CFO at Tenet Healthcare00:11:55This range includes the payment of about $875 million in net taxes related to our completed divestitures, including the recent Alabama transaction. Excluding these tax payments, this represents $1.975 billion of free cash flow at the midpoint of our 2024 outlook, or $1.225 billion of free cash flow less NCI, an increase of $50 million over prior expectations. As we've said before, the continued improvement in our cash flow performance has helped us deleverage our balance sheet while making disciplined investments in our business and delivering value for our shareholders. Now, I'd like to spend a minute discussing 2025. We are still conducting our business planning processes and evaluating key assumptions, and therefore, it's premature at this point for us to provide specifics on 2025 guidance. However, we do want to give you some context for our current thinking about next year. Sun ParkEVP and CFO at Tenet Healthcare00:12:53First of all, there are two normalizing items that I would call out. We have reported $113 million of Adjusted EBITDA in 2024 from facilities that we have divested and that will not recur in 2025. In addition, we have reported $74 million of out-of-period favorable adjustments from supplemental Medicaid programs in Michigan and Texas in 2024. More than offsetting these two items at a consolidated level, we expect continued growth in same-store volumes and effective pricing, some potential additional revenue from Medicaid supplemental programs, and continued strong operational efficiencies and disciplined cost controls. We also anticipate further contributions from recent investments and partnerships in the hospital segment, as well as from M&A and de novo development within USPI. We look forward to completing the planning process and sharing guidance with you for 2025 in February of our earnings call. Sun ParkEVP and CFO at Tenet Healthcare00:13:53And finally, as a reminder, our capital deployment priorities have not changed. First, we will continue to prioritize capital investments to grow USPI through M&A. Second, we expect to invest in key hospital growth opportunities, including our focus on higher acuity service offerings. Third, we will evaluate opportunities to retire and/or refinance debt. And finally, we'll have a balanced approach to share repurchases, depending on market conditions and other investment opportunities. We consider our equity to be very attractive at the multiples at which it trades and see this as an opportunity to drive value for shareholders with our attractive free cash flow profile. In conclusion, we're extraordinarily pleased with our strong performance in 2024 and the significant progress we have made with our portfolio transformation. Sun ParkEVP and CFO at Tenet Healthcare00:14:41We are confident in our ability to deliver on our increased outlook for 2024 as we remain focused on providing patient-centered care in the communities we serve. And with that, we're ready to begin the Q&A. Operator. Operator00:14:55Thank you. At this time, we'll be conducting a question-and-answer session. If you'd like to ask a question, please press Star 1 on your telephone keypad. As a reminder, we ask that you please limit to one question. A confirmation tone will indicate your line is in the question queue. You may press Star 2 if you'd like to remove your question from the queue. For participants using speaker equipment, it may be necessary to pick up your handset before pressing the Star keys. One moment, please, while we poll for questions. Our first question comes from Josh Raskin, with Nephron Research. Please proceed with your question. Joshua RaskinAnalyst at Nephron Research00:15:36Hi, thanks. Just a couple of quick clarifications. I think the ASC segment guidance for USPI implies a drop sequentially in EBITDA. That would obviously be seasonally very unusual. So I'm just curious if there's anything to call out there. And I think cash flow, if you could just tell us what the total tax payments in Q4 are going to be. And then just my real question would be, could you just talk about changes or any changes that you're potentially seeing from managed care behavior? Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:16:07Okay. There's three questions there, so let's handle them. Why don't we start with the. I don't think that's accurate on the USPI point, so let's just try to clarify that first and the tax payments, and then I'll talk about managed care. Sun ParkEVP and CFO at Tenet Healthcare00:16:26Yeah, Josh, hey, this is Sun. For USPI EBITDA, we reported $439 million in Q3, and our guidance currently implies $500 million at the midpoint for USPI in Q4. So what we see each year, a Q4 upswing. In terms of tax payments. Joshua RaskinAnalyst at Nephron Research00:16:44I'm sorry. I was looking at growth rate, so I screwed up the question. Sorry about that. Sun ParkEVP and CFO at Tenet Healthcare00:16:48Oh, I see. Okay. Thank you. On tax, as we put in our investor presentation, we have $875 million of total deal payments for the year, of which we expect to pay about $700 million in Q4, in addition with our kind of standard other tax payments. Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:17:09Josh, on the managed care side, I'll probably keep the comments limited to what dialogue has been around two topics. One is just the impact of the Two Midnight Rule, and particularly in the Medicare Advantage space. And secondly, I think there's been discussions about the impact of managed care denials. Look, when it comes to Two Midnight, I think the process of fully adopting the guidance on the Two Midnight Rule in the Medicare Advantage market is what I would describe as still underway. I don't think it's been fully adopted. And at least for us, we have seen probably somewhere between 50 and 100 basis points contribution to our overall admissions growth, but certainly short of and with more work than there should be if the Two Midnight Rule was fully adopted. Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:18:10I guess at some level, that goes back to this issue of disputes and denials and other things. I mean, again, I can only speak about us. We're very disciplined and clean and compliant in the way that we document and code. And I do think that if you look at the last few years, the amount of activity that we've seen in the industry, increasing administrative costs on both sides for payers and providers related to disputes and denials has gone up in somewhat of an extraordinary way. And it's certainly frustrating if you're sitting on this side of that activity. And at the same time, we have made the right investments and have the right capabilities and processes inside of Conifer for us and our clients to have mitigated that impact relative to what's been happening in the industry. Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:19:08But at some point, there has to be a solution to this because it's really just wasted administrative time and cost. Sun ParkEVP and CFO at Tenet Healthcare00:19:19Josh, hey, this is Sun again. Sorry. I think you also asked about USPI revenues sequentially. Q3 was $1,139 million for USPI revenues, and our guidance implies about $1,125 million in Q4, so sequentially flat. I think two things. One is we didn't change our USPI guidance, so we opted to leave both the EBITDA and revenues as they were. Then second, we also see, as you know, a pretty strong EBITDA margin increase in Q4, again, historically, and we expect the same. Those are kind of the two pieces for the revenue and EBITDA guidance. Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:19:58Yeah. And look, I know we have been more fortunate in our ability to plan and recover given what happened from the hurricane standpoint. We had 148 facilities impacted and at some point shut down. Only one of them at this point is still shut down. And so what we have done, we're confident that we will work on bringing back that business in the fourth quarter. We're confident that the margins will improve, and we've committed to our guidance for the year that we raised last quarter for USPI, and we're going to keep it for the fourth quarter and therefore the full year from what we raised. Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:20:46Yeah, it might make the numbers look slightly a little wonky there, but realize that we did have impact. But at the same time, we've made a decision that we think our operations will recover to the point where we'll be able to meet that guidance. Joshua RaskinAnalyst at Nephron Research00:21:03Perfect. Thanks. Operator00:21:06Our next question comes from Ben Hendricks with RBC Capital Markets. Please proceed with your question. Ben HendrixAnalyst at RBC Capital Markets00:21:12Great. Thank you very much. I was wondering if you could provide a little bit more detail on your 2025 comments specifically around growth and SS volumes next year. Is the degree to which you see those continuing to kind of outpace historical trends? Is there any moderation assumed in there and just your general thoughts on that momentum? Thank you. Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:21:35Yeah. No, thank you. Good question for 2025. We continue to see a strong demand environment. As we've talked about before, we do believe that the demand recovery, especially in the hospital segment around the country, continues as kind of the replacement of the early mortality that occurred from COVID in that demand environment. And we don't know when that's going to slow down to a more normal range, but currently, we still see that robust demand environment. And at the same time, we've spent the year working on cost-efficiently expanding our capacity in order to accommodate that volume so that we're not doing it with expensive contract labor, which really is a testament to our work in nurse recruiting that we have done this year through many of the terrific relationships formed with schools around the country. Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:22:38And so I can't sit here today and say that we're forecasting some kind of a decline as we look forward. I mean, as we think about our operations moving from the fourth quarter to the first quarter, we're not thinking about them differently at this point. Operator00:23:02Thanks. Our next question comes from AJ Rice with UBS. Please proceed with your question. A.J. RiceAnalyst at UBS00:23:11Hi, everybody. Thanks. Maybe I'll use Josh's approach. One clarification and then one question. Clarification being around the 1% USPI same facility volume growth. That's a step up from the first half, but you sort of alluded to maybe there was a little bit of impact from hurricanes in there. Just wondered if it was. And I know long-term, you have a transition you're making toward higher acuity procedures that is helping on the revenue per case side, but hitting a little on the volume side. Are you still in the midst of that? And what's the path to get back to 2%-3%? And then I just wanted to ask on your capital deployment. Thanks for laying out the priorities there. But obviously, you're at a point where you got strong free cash flow now. Your debt's down to a pretty low level. A.J. RiceAnalyst at UBS00:24:00We're flipping around the discussion away from paying down more debt, but say, is there any opportunity to accelerate the pace of development in USPI to consider accelerating the buyback pace or even consider possibly a dividend or a larger deal out there? Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:24:20Yeah. Thanks, AJ. Just in terms of the clarification point, as we said at the beginning of the year, given the extraordinary comps from 2023, we thought we would move into positive volume territory later in the year. And that's kind of the pattern that you've seen, right, from Q1, Q2, Q3. We'll see what happens with Q4, given the point that I made in the prior question related to the hurricane impact. And yes, we continue to focus on growing higher acuity, which drives net revenue per case. It also drives extraordinary value in the system from an overall lowering the cost of care standpoint. And we continue to look for opportunities where those transitions can happen in an orderly fashion to migrate certain lower acuity, higher volume type of activities out of the ASCs. I think that'll continue for the next couple of years. Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:25:24As we had said from the beginning, it was a multi-year plan to kind of move some of those things out. Look, you're right about capital deployment. Obviously, we're very cognizant of the free cash flow generation looking forward. One clarification, obviously, given the cash we have in our balance sheet, we've delevered, but the debt paydown opportunities are still ahead of us, which Sun and team will structure in very much the right way. The second point I would make is, despite our guidance, if you look at our history for the last five or six years, even before being in this position, we've deployed more than our 200 to 250, quote-unquote, in capital into USPI, given the larger deals that we've done, including the deal that we did in the first quarter of this year for 45 ASCs, plus what we've done otherwise. Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:26:17And so we continue to believe accelerating spend at USPI is the single most accretive thing to creating value within the company. And of course, as I noted in my comments and Sun did in his, we have, in fact, accelerated relative to the trend over the last few years, given our deleveraging and cash positions, our ability to return value back to shareholders. So I think they're very consistent. Your points are very consistent with our comments, with the helpful added nuance that we have the flexibility to be more proactive and aggressive on each one of those dimensions at this point looking forward. A.J. RiceAnalyst at UBS00:27:06Okay. Thanks a lot. Operator00:27:10Our next question comes from Stephen Baxter with Wells Fargo. Please proceed with your question. Stephen BaxterAnalyst at Wells Fargo00:27:16Yeah. Hi. Thanks. I wanted to ask another one about the fourth quarter. I guess the hospital earnings cadence is a little different this year than we probably would have expected. Usually, hospital EBITDA is generally up in the fourth quarter versus the third quarter. It seems like you guys are guiding to a bit of a different cadence. So just wondering if you could help us bridge that. And then if there's anything unusual in the third quarter, either positive or negative in the hospital business that we should be keeping in mind. Thank you. Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:27:38I mean, Sun can go through the numbers. But look, first of all, I think it's a very small change. I mean, first, we have a divestiture in there. That's the biggest thing. And the second thing is just from a seasonality standpoint, that's less pronounced in the hospitals than you would see in the USPI ambulatory surgery business. But look, guys, there's a range there for a reason with upside to the range. And let's look at the trajectory of this year. It is obviously our goal on what may be a bit conservative there to continue to outperform. But I don't know if you want to address specific numbers. Sun ParkEVP and CFO at Tenet Healthcare00:28:18Yeah. I'll do a little bit. I think, Steve, last year, if you kind of look at our quarterly progression, our Q4 was up. But if you recall, we had about a $52 million out-of-period Medicaid from California in Q4 that we called out. Once you kind of normalize for that, it was fairly steady throughout the quarters. This year, if you look at our quarterly progressions, we again had, obviously, the HRA from Michigan out-of-period piece in Q1. We also called out an out-of-period $30 million from Texas in Q2. So there's a bit of bumpiness from that. But we think our Q4 guidance is pretty consistent with our overall commentary on good margins, very well-managed operating costs, and a good demand environment. And then the last part of your question, in Q3, we did not have any out-of-period or kind of one-time things that we are calling out. Sun ParkEVP and CFO at Tenet Healthcare00:29:12Thanks for your question. Operator00:29:18Our next question comes from Ann Hynes with Mizuho. Please proceed with your question. Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:29:23Good morning. Thank you. Can you let us know just a supplemental payment amount in Q3 this year versus last year? And heading into 2025, you called out 187 million of EBITDA you'd have to overcome. But I believe you said you can just confirm that you think you can offset that? And I think you said partly because of some of the Medicaid programs and strong volume growth, and maybe highlight what you think could be incremental Medicaid payments in 2025. Thanks. Sun ParkEVP and CFO at Tenet Healthcare00:29:57Hey, Ann. It's Sun. Year to date in 2024, we'll be at about almost $900 million of Medicaid supplemental fees year to date. The comparison to 2023 becomes a little bit trickier because of all the divestitures and same-store hospital metrics. So we can maybe work with you offline on that. And then, yes, in my commentary, we called out $113 million plus another $74 million from hospital divestitures and out-of-period Medicaid payments that we believe currently at this stage that we can more than offset at a consolidated level through all the various things that we discussed. On your question about supplemental payments for next year, I think it's too early to have specific comments. We're all aware of potential new programs in certain markets that we're all monitoring closely, and we're awaiting final decisions. So we'll obviously update as we find out more about that. Sun ParkEVP and CFO at Tenet Healthcare00:30:51Thanks for your question. Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:30:53Thanks. Operator00:30:56Our next question comes from Michael Ha with Baird. Please proceed with your question. Stephen BaxterAnalyst at Wells Fargo00:31:02Hi. Thank you. So I see your hospital average on this day. I think it's the first time you've improved below five days in over three years. I was wondering if you could talk about what it'll take to operationally get back to sort of pre-COVID mid-four levels, your expected timeline, how we should think about the earnings benefits, our hospital segment growth, and margin expansion. And then in terms of the inpatient admin strength, I was wondering if you could sort of parse out the sources of that strength and, excuse me, the durability of that going forward. Thank you. Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:31:38On the length of stay piece, I appreciate your calling out the improvements that we've made. This has been our initiatives in length of stay management, which started in a new fresh form in 2022 and 2023 in order to manage contract labor. Excess contract labor costs have continued in this environment because we think it's important, and we're pleased with the results we're getting there. But I would make a comment similar to kind of my comments in the past about we don't spend a lot of time trying to chase the exact mix and volume that we had pre-COVID. I mean, same thing's true in length of stay, right? As our acuity goes up, you would expect length of stay to increase a bit from pre-COVID acuity levels and therefore lengths of stay that were a bit lower. Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:32:30So our fundamental driver strategically in the business is to continue to build our high acuity business, which we think is uniquely suited and sustainable to get to your second point from a demand standpoint, durable in terms of inpatient admissions. And within the context of taking care of those patients appropriately, we look to optimize length of stay relative to metrics that are out there like geometric mean and other things. Look, on the broader comment, I will just echo what I said earlier in the call, which is we're pleased with the demand environment today. We feel positive about it looking forward and even into 2025. As I said, we're not planning differently for the first quarter next year versus the last quarter of this year in terms of a robust demand environment. Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:33:27We're not seeing signs or signals that we should stop looking to add capacity selectively in markets where that demand could be serviced in an appropriate cost structure, etc. So I feel pretty good about that. The inpatient and hospital-based demand strength is really both emergent, and we're seeing nice success in some of our critical service lines, cardiovascular and other, in particular, specialty surgical areas. So the drivers are both emergent and elective business. Payer mix, obviously, has been very helpful this year, driven very much so by commercial and even more significantly by exchange strength. And that goes to not only the market, but our contracting strategy, which has been very inclusive of being in a broad range of exchange networks. Operator00:34:35Our next question comes from Peter Chickering with Deutsche Bank. Please proceed with your question. Joshua RaskinAnalyst at Nephron Research00:34:41Hey, good morning. Michael, the admissions continue to outpace surgical admissions. So how durable do you think that is? Or does it get past a Medicaid determination? Do you think that surgical admissions normalize next year as comps get easier? And then a quick clarification on hurricanes. You talked about the facilities impacted. Did you quantify a revenue impact for hurricanes in the fourth quarter? Thank you. Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:35:06Yeah, Peter, we're going to have to ask you to repeat the first question in a second. But I would just, rather than us spending time focused on the details of the hurricane impact, look, we had 148 centers affected. We've got all but one running. We're expecting fourth quarter higher acuity, better mix, therefore better margins. And we're maintaining our commitment to our guidance that we raised at the end of the second quarter. The first question got either the connection or something. It was a little bit jumbled. Do you mind repeating that one more time for us? Joshua RaskinAnalyst at Nephron Research00:35:44Yeah. You bet. Apologies. I'm in a hotel room. Medical admissions continue to outpace surgical admissions this quarter. How durable is that? Or do you think as we get past Medicaid redetermination, do you think that surgical admissions accelerate next year as comps get easier after this year's Medicaid determination? Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:36:06Yeah. Got it. Okay. Well, yes, the medical admissions are reflective of two things. Obviously, one is just our continued commitment to emergency department excellence in terms of services, wait times, and receiving ability from that standpoint, including how we manage our house to avoid our facilities ever being on diversion as a commitment to the community. We also have improved our ability to receive transfers from other hospitals for sick patients, intensive care patients, which result in medical admissions oftentimes from outlying hospitals. And so we're not surprised by that. I mean, this is, again, fundamentally, these priorities are part of our strategy to continue to build and grow high acuity, elective, and emergent care, including in the medical cases. I would also point out that medical admissions, not just surgical admissions, have been pretty strong in the commercial environment, including for exchange participants. Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:37:19Of course, that raises the question of both the exchange growth impact, but also some utilization benefit that comes from new exchange participants picking up more attractive coverage. Joshua RaskinAnalyst at Nephron Research00:37:35Great. Thanks. Thanks so much, guys, on this quarter. Operator00:37:40Our next question comes from Justin Lake with Wolfe Research. Please proceed with your question. Ben HendrixAnalyst at RBC Capital Markets00:37:47Thanks. Good morning. First, a quick follow-up on 2025. Just want to make sure I heard correctly that with all the puts and takes and the headwinds in terms of the year-over-year comp, you still expect to grow EBITDA year-over-year. And then my real question's on leverage. Now that you've completed the deals, I was wondering if you could share a target leverage ratio you expect to get to once you deploy the capital. And if you aren't ready to share that now, any thoughts on when you might be able to communicate that number? Thanks. Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:38:18Yeah. Justin, just two real quick answers. The first is, yes, I think Sun's comments that we expect to more than offset normalized numbers. And we'll go through a full description of the puts and takes, obviously, when we provide guidance. But at this stage, our work indicates that we should more than offset that. We're not ready to, I mean, I think my comments in the leverage section around we are pleased with where we are from a leverage standpoint is probably the most that we're going to say at this stage rather than having a formal guidance number. But I think you can read into that that we're pleased with where we are from that standpoint. And again, my commentary on debt paydown still stands, which is working through the best ways to do that is something that we're actively in the midst of doing. Operator00:39:28Our next question comes from Joanna Gajuk with Bank of America. Please proceed with your question. A.J. RiceAnalyst at UBS00:39:34Hi. Good morning. Thanks so much for taking that question. So I guess the follow-up I would have on capital deployment comments around the ASC acquisitions. Any commentary there in terms of multiples, or is there more competition or less in terms of what you end up paying for these deals when it comes to multiples? And are there still larger assets to be acquired? I mean, it sounds like maybe there will be other. But the other actual question, I guess, on guidance for this year, the hospital revenue guidance was reduced by $100 million, called it the midpoint. So I assume this is the Alabama hospitals, but there's also higher, I guess, same-store inpatient admissions. And I don't want to bring up the hurricanes again, but just to make sure, was there any impact from hurricanes in Q4 that you had assumed here too? Thank you. Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:40:27All right. We'll split up the questions here. The ASC business capital deployment and really the question being about multiples, I would just step back and remind the audience we're focused on our post-synergy multiples, and because of our ability collectively in the organization to drive to better management, more efficiency, network inclusion, supply chain efficiencies, etc., we often are able to buy assets and reduce the effective multiple within the first couple of years from that standpoint, and again, we're focused on what the effective multiple is at the end of that period rather than what we're paying for it. Now, factually speaking, we have not seen changes in the purchasing multiples of any note recently. I know this question comes up from time to time. We have not seen any type of changes. Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:41:34And so we are consistently guiding to the same pre- and post-acquisition multiples that we have in the past. And that's a good thing in terms of the availability of attractive, high-quality assets that are choosing to become part of the USPI portfolio. Do you want to cover the hospital hurricane? Stephen BaxterAnalyst at Wells Fargo00:41:58Sure. Hey, Joanna. On our hospital revenues, we still believe good demand environment, good pricing environment, high acuity, all those things that we've talked about. Our Q4 revenue guidance, the reduction is all primarily driven by the divested hospitals, and we don't have any material impact and therefore any hurricanes. Operator00:42:28Our next question is from Whit Mayo with Leerink Partners. Please proceed with your question. Ann HynesAnalyst at Mizuho00:42:34Thanks. So I'm just curious with the size of the acute care portfolio, obviously much smaller than in the past. How are you thinking about the underlying infrastructure and cost that you need to support the business going forward? And I had just one other quick one. You didn't call out any of the ongoing accretion to Conifer from the hospital sales as an offset in 2025. So just was hoping you could address that. Thanks. Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:43:02Okay. One more time. The second part of that, the offset? Ann HynesAnalyst at Mizuho00:43:08The accretion that you're getting to Conifer from the hospital sales, considering you don't eliminate the earnings and the reporting going forward. Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:43:16got it. Ann HynesAnalyst at Mizuho00:43:16Just got to think of an ongoing offset as we think about 2025. Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:43:21Right. Yeah. Okay. Got it. So let's start with the size of the acute care portfolio. Obviously, it's been reduced, and we would typically, on an ongoing basis, make adjustments, obviously, to the corporation from that perspective. Remember, in the period after divestitures, we tend to have transition service agreements that support the divested hospitals for a significant period of time. And so the way we think about those things is that we ought to support those transitioned hospitals with our sale partners very thoroughly and no differently than as if we were owning them. And that's not the least of which because we also have some longer-term Conifer relationships with these folks. So out of respect to what we do there, we take that job very seriously. And again, I would just reiterate that we are cognizant of the opportunity there overall from that standpoint. Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:44:28Obviously, there are costs that are simply direct allocations to these markets that go away as part of what we sold. I mean, that's not surprising. The chassis, certain purchased services contracts, and other things would come down naturally, as you would expect, with asset sales. On the offset, Sun? Stephen BaxterAnalyst at Wells Fargo00:44:54Yeah. Hey, Whit. On Conifer, yeah, as you noted, and as Saum has discussed several times before, we have long-term revenue cycle relationships with a lot of our divested sites. Going to 2025, we do expect those to be a benefit to us. In terms of actual specifics, again, we'll have more information when we give our guidance in 2025, but that is part of our overall expectations. Ann HynesAnalyst at Mizuho00:45:21Okay. Thanks. Operator00:45:25Our next question is from Andrew Mok with Barclays. Please proceed with your question. Stephen BaxterAnalyst at Wells Fargo00:45:31Hi. Maybe if I could just follow up on that last question first. I understand that in cases where you expand the relationship of Conifer, there would be an incremental contribution to EBITDA. But if you do not expand the relationship, are you saying that there's still an incremental enterprise EBITDA contribution from those divestitures? Yeah. Hey, Andrew. No, you're right. It's the expanded opportunities that I'm mostly referencing in terms of 2025 factors. Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:46:02Yeah. And the other thing I don't mind calling out, we've talked about some of the expansion opportunities. One of them, in particular, will be larger than others, which will require us to take on a significant amount. So I would think about that almost as a new customer acquisition in terms of what the margin profile would look like for Conifer in the outside market. And again, as Sun said, we'll put more detail to that as we give 2025 guidance. But we will make investments in order to onboard that business in 2025 before getting to our overall typical performance with Conifer over time. I would say for the rest of the divestitures, the expansions that we've done are a little bit more straightforward to onboard from that perspective. But it's a great story for Conifer in terms of these expansions. Stephen BaxterAnalyst at Wells Fargo00:47:08Great. Thank you. Operator00:47:12Our next question comes from Brian Tanquilut with Jefferies. Please proceed with your question. Joshua RaskinAnalyst at Nephron Research00:47:18Hey, good morning, guys, and congrats on the quarter. Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:47:21Thank you. Joshua RaskinAnalyst at Nephron Research00:47:21Tom, when you presented to the market, you talked a little bit about efficiency opportunities that you still see in the business. So as we think about the hospital segment and where margins stand today and with the divestitures that you've done, how much runway do you think you have left for margins? Or is it right to say that 15% segment-level EBITDA is about the right spot? Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:47:43I think without getting into specific numbers, I mean, from an efficiency opportunity standpoint, one of the things that we are focused on, including being a little bit different than some others, is capacity utilization, especially in high-value real estate in the hospitals, right? , and our ability to continue to improve the capacity utilization of our facilities for us, just to give you one example, represents how we think about that ongoing efficiency opportunity, and so we're not, again, our mindset is not whatever the number is to be satisfied with what the margins look like today. Obviously, ongoing improvements in labor supplies and other expenses, third-party purchase services, etc., stabilization of the staffing environment, the physician staffing environment, etc., all present opportunities looking forward to continue to try to optimize the business. Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:48:52But I would say that, as an example, that area of capacity utilization is still an important one to us from the standpoint of finding more efficiency. Operator00:49:05Thank you. Our next question comes from Matthew Gillmor with KeyBanc Capital Markets. Please proceed with your question. Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:49:15Hey, thanks. I wanted to hit on the total joint replacement growth at USPI. I think you're up 19% this quarter. And if we look at your disclosures, there was sort of an acceleration into the sort of 20% range starting last year and sustaining. So just wanted to see if you had any perspective to share with respect to the sustainability of that level of growth and maybe how that ties into your development pipeline on the USPI side. Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:49:42I think that, I mean, it's no secret that sometime around 2020, or even before, we made a decision that we wanted to be the unquestionable leaders in outpatient bone and joint care, more broadly, bone, joint, spine, etc., with a full range of outpatient-based services. We believe, and I think what we're seeing is that we can provide those services in a high-quality manner at a lower cost than in other settings. I think that the industry has moved pretty heavily towards outpatient-based care. Some of that care is still in the hospital outpatient-based environment versus in the freestanding environment. We still think there's migration opportunity over the next few years into the freestanding environment. Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:50:29Obviously, with the burden of chronic illness that we see in the country today, there are people that will need hospital-based outpatient services simply because of chronic condition management and appropriately providing those services. But the reality is, with all of these things that move into a lower-cost, higher-service setting, it's not a direct cannibalization. The market expands, and the market has been expanding for these services when you can offer it in an ambulatory setting. And so we're focused on that more than anything else, is continuing to expand the marketplace, continuing to get younger and younger orthopedic surgeons who aren't exposed to ASCs in their training, exposed to ASCs earlier in their careers to show them that this is a very viable place to practice. Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:51:25Got it. Thank you. Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:51:27Thanks. Operator00:51:29Our next question comes from Sarah James with Cantor Fitzgerald. Please proceed with your question. Sun ParkEVP and CFO at Tenet Healthcare00:51:35Thank you. Ambulatory 2024 guide shifted about 100-150 basis points to be more revenue per case than volume compared to the 2Q 2024 guide. So is this how we should think about mix going forward, with revenue per case being the larger driver compared to volume, given your comments on the durability of trends around commercial mix and migration of low acuity out of ASC? And then just a quick clarification. On the year-to-date DPP, what's the mix between ambulatory and hospital? We're just trying to get to a clean revenue per case number. Thanks. Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:52:17Yeah. Thanks for the question. We'll split them up again, but I think on the first question, look, there's a couple of things here that are important to put into perspective. First of all, I think that guidance is relevant for the rest of 2024, right? We haven't said anything about 2025 and how we're thinking about that with respect to our business planning, and I understand there's a lot of puts and takes. I mean, one of the reasons we're really pleased with the net revenue per case growth and the acuity growth at USPI is because, remember, we added 45 centers and more than that this year, but that 45-center tranche that was heavily non-orthopedic at the beginning of the year and therefore had lower average net revenues per case than in a truly orthopedic dedicated center. Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:53:06And yet, we haven't gone into that detail because we're not breaking out different segments of USPI, but the concept is important that we're outperforming our expectations in that acuity growth, even as we continue to add centers, especially when they come in large chunks like that from a more modest acuity standpoint. So I would think about the guidance for the rest of 2024. We'll get to 2025. But again, I would echo the answer to the question about tailwinds in this part of the business around we see a healthy long-term growth rate in bone and joint care in the ASCs. Stephen BaxterAnalyst at Wells Fargo00:53:50Yeah, and Sarah, hey, this is Sun. Just on your second question, I would consider virtually all of the DPP amounts related to the hospital segment, just given the different patient mix and payment mix across the two segments. Sun ParkEVP and CFO at Tenet Healthcare00:54:06Thank you. Operator00:54:10Our next question is from John Ransom with Raymond James. Please proceed with your question. Joshua RaskinAnalyst at Nephron Research00:54:16Hey, I'm going to take a shot at two, and you guys just pick your journey since that seems to be what people are doing. So the first one is, when we look at the expansion in the health exchanges this year, can you quantify the effect of that on USPI, if any? And then secondly, I mean, Tom, you're probably tired of answering this, but are you saying that on a same-store basis in 2025, we should expect total state-directed payments to increase over 2024? Are you not quite prepared to say that? Thanks. Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:54:48Yeah. We haven't made any forecasts for 2025 on state-directed payments on a relative basis to 2024. Obviously, if you compare to 2023, we would expect that 2025 is going to end up being higher than what it was back then. But the year-over-year, we haven't gotten to, and the 2023 to 2025 step-up is obviously more structural from that standpoint. You want to cover the HHIX? Joshua RaskinAnalyst at Nephron Research00:55:20Yeah, sure. Hey, John, on HIX, the broader trends I think are certainly applicable across hospitals and our ambulatory space. We haven't really quantified the USPI component of it. I do think it is probably smaller, relatively speaking, impact on ambulatory versus what we see in hospitals. And while we're talking about it, I can just remind everyone on Q3 for hospitals, we continue to see about a 58% increase in exchange volume year-over-year for Q3, so still very significant for us. Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:55:56It's been a benefit to the business all year, especially because of our contracting strategy being inclusive in the networks. Joshua RaskinAnalyst at Nephron Research00:56:03Thank you. Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:56:05Thanks. Operator00:56:07Our next question is from Jamie Perse with Goldman Sachs. Please proceed with your question. Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:56:14Hey, thank you. Good morning. Can you talk a little bit about the unconsolidated ASC portfolio for a minute? Just looking for an update on where some of those facilities are at from a development and ramp perspective and how you're thinking about potential increases in ownership of those facilities going forward? Saum SutariaCEO at Tenet Healthcare00:56:32Yeah. No, Jamie, we've cut out of the habit of reporting exact numbers and other things on this as we've kind of gotten into a more stable environment after the 2022 discussion there. But yeah, we continue to have buy-up opportunities. We continue to execute on buy-up opportunities within the portfolio. And it's a small, but at least on a consolidated basis, additive part of our ongoing work. Obviously, sometimes when we do that, we unlock the ability to add new business development resources for growth or other types of synergies from that perspective. But yeah, it's a small, but it's not as big an opportunity as it was in the past because a lot of that stuff has been executed on. Operator00:57:34We have reached the end of the question-and-answer session. I'd now like to turn the call back over to management for closing comments. Operator00:57:43That's all for today. Thank you all very much. If you have any follow-up questions, certainly feel free to reach out to me. And thank you very much for joining our call today. Operator00:57:52This concludes today's conference. You may disconnect your lines at this time, and we thank you for your participation.Read moreParticipantsExecutivesSun ParkEVP and CFOSaum SutariaCEOWilliam McDowellVP of Investor RelationsAnalystsBen HendrixAnalyst at RBC Capital MarketsStephen BaxterAnalyst at Wells FargoJoshua RaskinAnalyst at Nephron ResearchA.J. RiceAnalyst at UBSAnn HynesAnalyst at MizuhoPowered by