🏥 Teladoc's $6.7 billion loss
Good morning! Just wanted to pop in and say I've received lots of thoughtful responses from readers on both replies to e-mails and on Twitter related to the Hospitalogy launch. Keep 'em coming! This week in healthcare:
Let's get after it. Was this email forwarded to you? VIRTUAL CARE Teladoc Plummets after Livongo ImpairmentLast week, Teladoc posted the worst quarter that might ever happen for a digital health company. But let’s back up for a second. In its 10-K filing for 2021 back in February, Teladoc warned that if its stock continued to slide, it would be forced by auditors to recognize a goodwill impairment charge (AKA, an accounting term to basically say they overpaid on an acquisition) related to its $18.5 billion acquisition of Livongo. In that filing, Teladoc represented that the firm expected to recognize between about $800 million and $4 billion for that impairment charge.
Based on the reported loss, Teladoc plummeted to $33 / share, sitting just $5 above its 2015 IPO price of $28, rebounding slightly Monday to $36. For those keeping score, Teladoc hit an all-time high in February 2021 at $294.54 and has since dropped almost 90% in a year. Here’s what else interested me from the earnings report. The Good: Teladoc’s core business, ironically enough, is plodding along just fine. The telehealth platform experienced 35% growth in visits and 25% topline growth. In Q1, Teladoc actually met guidance on EBITDA and revenue. The Bad: Teladoc experienced softness in its chronic care division based on longer sales cycles with clients and pipeline developments taking much longer to unwind.
The Worst: Besides the Livongo write-off, I found CEOs Jason Gorevic’s comments about the direct-to-consumer mental health market VERY interesting. With the emergence of well-capitalized startups like Cerebral, Lyra, Talkspace, Ginger, and probably hundreds of smaller firms, competition is rampant in the space. As a result, Teladoc’s cost to acquire customers - especially in paid search and online ads - skyrocketed 20%. Here’s what Gorevic had to say:
Gorevic went on to say that Teladoc expects the trend to continue at least throughout the rest of the year. Madden’s MusingThe direct-to-consumer virtual mental health market is a zero-sum game, and I’m of the opinion that only a few larger players will be able to withstand the current gauntlet facing the segment. The more I read about DTC mental health, the more I either hear about (1) Cerebral’s irresponsible hyper growth and ‘pill-mill’ policies, or (2) Talkspace’s current failures in the DTC market and their frantic attempts to pivot to B2B. FYI, Talkspace, a pure-play virtual mental health provider, is down 85% all time. Here’s the thing with DTC mental health. I love the level of access any consumer has to jump on to any platform and see licensed personnel for mental health purposes. There’s a clear need for this. But the economics of the business model are unfavorable given the level of competition. It’s why you’re seeing multiple large players - like Teladoc and Talkspace - struggle. There’s just a funny feeling for me that things won’t end well for everyone here. You have a number of well-capitalized players competing with you to acquire customers that likely won’t even stick with you for that long. I have to imagine that a multitude of these companies will artificially inflate numbers through paid acquisition, cash will run out, and they’ll crash and burn. Do I want that to happen? No. I just think it will. I never want to see companies fail, if their mission is aimed at improving healthcare. I can’t imagine that lawmakers will just sit back, read about Cerebral’s prescribing practices, and let that continue unregulated beyond the public health emergency. Maybe I’m wrong, because lawmakers can be idiots when it comes to public health policy.
If Cerebral can make it through the unending string of bad press, I could see the firm becoming a dominant player in the landscape. For now, you all should be keeping track of what’s going on. Final point. If Cerebral DOES crash and burn, there needs to be a reckoning for investors and executives pushing hyper scale and sacrificing plenty of morals for the sole sake of growth. Can you imagine being pregnant and hearing your company announce they’re removing your benefits? I’d love to hear any and all thoughts from my readers on the DTC mental health market, as I’ve already engaged in thoughtful discussion with a few folks. Have you used these services? Which ones? Have they pushed pills on you? What was your overall experience? Wild times. Teladoc and Accolade (more on that below) sell-offs beg the question as two of the more successful companies in digital health - is a reckoning coming for private valuations?
Resources
STAFFING AGENCIES Why I’m watching staffing agencies this weekOne man’s margin compression is another man’s margin opportunity. At least, that’s how the dynamic goes between health systems, healthcare operators, and staffing agencies. On Thursday, I’ll be breaking down hospital operators’ Q1 and current dynamics affecting organizations - be on the lookout for that edition! Of late, staffing agencies like AMN Healthcare and Cross Country Healthcare are selling off based on comments from hospital operators that they expect inflated travel nurse staffing agency rates to steadily come down, starting as soon as this month as these contracts get re-negotiated. After an incredibly impressive run and elevated revenue & profits growth for both of these players, lots of folks are expecting these names to fizzle out over the next couple of years. In fact, analysts are expecting a decline in sales in 2023 and 2024 after 1.5 years of elevated staffing rates. The thesis is simple: local nurses are taking local travel nursing contracts. Once these contracts get re-negotiated (they’re usually on a 12-13 week cycle, which means they’re re-negotiating now) and there are fewer contract opportunities, these local nurses will return to local positions - albeit at higher wage rates. Still a net positive for health systems but a BIG negative for staffing agencies. We’ll see how CCRN and AMN earnings go on 5/4 and 5/5! Here's my prediction: earnings & revenue beat, but soft guidance. M&A Clinigence and Nutex Health complete mergerWe finally have a new player to add to the Hospitalogy Health Tech & Services Index, albeit a small one. Clinigence Holdings - a primary care tech platform that enables population health, is merging with Nutex Health, an independent operator of...micro hospitals and hospital outpatient departments. The combined co, called Nutex, will trade under the ticker NUTX.
Madden’s MusingThere’s a lot of digital health noise out there right now, and it’s hard to know who the sophisticated operators are as opposed to the ones floundering around on the ocean floor. As a result, they’re unfortunately getting valued and lumped together. Over time, the best operators will differentiate themselves. Maybe Nutex is one of those! Resources
MARKET MOVERS Big Winners: Pear Therapeutics (+8%), Augmedix (+7%), ATI Physical Therapy (+5%) Big Losers: Accolade (-44%), Teladoc (-40%), Community Health Systems (-20%). Interesting little tidbit - as of this writing, Doximity is now valued higher than Teladoc. SSM Health partnered with St. Louis University to form a regional integrated healthcare delivery network. That network will carry some serious weight behind it - more than 1,200 physicians and clinicians across a number of hospitals, including expanded clinical trials research and other strategic initiatives including what I imagine will result in more robust population health management. HCA is purchasing another urgent care chain - this time, BetterMed in Richmond. BetterMed operates 12 urgent care centers throughout central Virginia and North Carolina. The announcement comes on the heels of HCA’s acquisition of Florida-based MD Now, a 59-center footprint. Between these splash plays into primary care and its acquisition of Brookdale’s home health segment, HCA continues to sprawl out its footprint. Carbon Health acquired MedPost Urgent Care’s southern California footprint. The acquisition brings Carbon’s total managed clinics to 120, making Carbon one of the largest urgent care providers in the country and a major primary care presence. Carbon has been pretty dang active lately between urgent care acquisitions, partnering with Froedert Health in the Milwaukee area, successfully raising capital, and an interesting little relational arrangement with Hims & Hers. One of my favorite tech-enabled names to watch. Women’s Health-focused startup Tia just notched another major health system partner under its belt. After raising about $132 million and announcing its first partnership with CommonSpirit Health, Tia announced a second partnership with UCSF Health in the Bay Area and will open at least 10 de-novo clinics in the area. Between Carbon and Tia, it goes to show that partnering with health systems is an extremely effective strategy - if you can get your foot in the door for those conversations.
Skylight Health announced a joint venture with Collaborative Health Systems, a subsidiary of Centene and a population health management service organization. Based on the press release, the two will co-develop a value-based care framework in large markets within Pennsylvania, Colorado, and Florida. Accolade tanked 50% after posting Q1 earnings in what looks to be a very unforgiving market. Accolade lost its top customer - Comcast - to a competitor. To me, it points to a larger trend in digital health. VC dollars and investments are pouring in, tightening up competition across the board. I don’t envy these companies one bit right now. Shout out to Brian Dolan for the snag. CommonSpirit’s new CEO is Wright Lassiter, former CEO of Henry Ford Health. Teladoc got a new Chief Medical Officer - Vidya Raman-Tangella. Her tenure starts immediately for the telehealth giant and I’m sure she’ll have big ideas on how to best continue to integrate Livongo and package TDOC’s offerings. She has her work cut out for her. ATI Physical Therapy finally found someone courageous enough to take the CEO position - Sharon Vitti. She’ll step in just 9 months after the company went public via SPAC. Over that timeframe, ATI has dropped 84%. Other Q1 Earnings Releases:
HOSPITALOGY TOP PICKS
MISCELLANEOUS MADDENING'S
JOBS Here are some jobs that I’m curating for the healthcare industry. Use this link to submit your role to be featured if you’re looking to hire (yes, it says Healthcare Huddle - but you're in the right place)! Clinical Documentation Analyst, DeepScribe
Tech Lead - Clinical Workflows, Memora Health
Early Clinical Development (ECD) Clinician, Pfizer
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