Privia Health Group, Inc.

Q3 2023 Earnings Conference Call

11/3/2023

spk07: Good day and thank you for standing by. Welcome to the Privia Health third quarter conference call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. After the speaker's presentation, there will be a question and answer session. To ask a question during the session, you will need to press star 11 on your telephone. You will then hear an automated message advising your hand is raised. To withdraw your question, please press star 11 again. Please be advised that today's conference is being recorded. I would now like to hand the conference over to your speaker today, Robert Borchert, SVP, Investor, and Corporate Communications. Please go ahead.
spk02: Thank you, Gigi, and good morning, everyone. Joining me today are Parth Marotra, our Chief Executive Officer, and David Mountcastle, our Chief Financial Officer. This call is being webcast and can be accessed from the Investor Relations section of PriviaHelp.com. Today's financial press release and slide presentation are posted on the Investor Relations pages of PriviaHealth.com. Following our prepared remarks, we will open the line for questions. We ask that you please limit yourself to one question only and return to the queue if you have a follow-up so we can get to as many questions as possible. The financial results reported today and in the press release are preliminary and are not final until our Form 10-Q for the third quarter of nine months ended September 30th, 2023 is filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Some of the statements we will make today are forward-looking in nature, based on our current expectations and view of our business as of August 3, 2023. Such statements, including those related to our future financial and operating performance and future business plans and objectives, are subject to risks and uncertainties that may cause actual results to differ materially. As a result, these statements should be considered, along with the cautionary statements in today's press release and the risk factors described in our company's most recent SEC filings. Finally, we may refer to certain non-GAAP financial measures on the call. Reconciliation of these measures to comparable GAAP measures are included in our press release and the accompanying slide presentation posted on our website. Now, I'll turn the call over to Parth.
spk13: Thank you, Robert, and good morning, everyone. Privia Health delivered another solid performance in the third quarter as we continue to execute on multiple fronts to extend our market reach and drive future growth. This morning, I'll provide an overview of key business highlights Then David will discuss our MSSP and recent financial performance and our 2023 guidance outlook before we take your questions. As we build one of the largest ambulatory provider network in the nation and positively impact care delivery, the Privia Health operating model continues to gain market share with providers. We experienced solid new care center and same store provider additions as we increased our provider density in existing states. We added 235 implemented providers in the quarter and a record 499 implemented providers through the first nine months of 2023, which highlights our momentum. In addition, our year-to-date gross provider attrition in 2023 remains near the lowest in our company's history. These factors help drive practice collections growth of more than 18%. Adjusted EBITDA was up 20% in Q3 versus the same quarter a year ago. as we continue to scale our operating model in existing states while increasing our number of providers and investing in new states. Today, we announce our entry into the state of South Carolina. We are partnering with Greenville ENT and Allergy Associates as our anchor partner in launching Privia Medical Group South Carolina. We expect this specialty group practice with approximately 20 providers to be implemented on the Privia platform in the first half of 2024. South Carolina is the sixth new state we've entered over the past 12 months, and we are excited about our significant progress in expanding our national presence. In addition, as you can see from our financial performance, we are absorbing all new market entry costs while delivering year-over-year EBITDA and free cash flow growth at the mid to high end of our original guidance. We continue to expand Previa's national footprint, which now includes more than 4,100 implemented providers in our medical groups caring for over 4.7 million patients. Our more than 1,000 care center locations span across 14 states and the District of Columbia. We remain focused on building one of the largest multi-specialty medical groups and ambulatory care delivery network in the country. And our scale and diverse provider and payer partnerships are true differentiators. Privia serves approximately 1.1 million attributed lives across more than 100 at-risk payer contracts in commercial and government programs. Total attributed lives increased more than 29% from a year ago. This positions our business as one of the broadest, most balanced, and diversified value-based care platforms in the industry. The diversity of our value-based book of business is core to the strength of our operating model. Our commercial attributed lives increased 35% from a year ago to 675,000. Across our commercial, Medicare Advantage, and Medicaid value-based contracts, we earn care management fees as well as incremental shared savings in addition to fee-for-service reimbursement. We offer a highly differentiated value proposition to payers to drive better patient outcomes and lower costs. This generates financial benefits for providers, payers, and Privia across a broad population. As we noted last quarter, there remains a significant embedded opportunity for us to move our Medicare Advantage lives into upside and downside risk arrangements over the next few years. We remain focused on thoughtfully moving to increased risk arrangements while continuing to provide significant opportunities for EBITDA and free cash flow growth. Our strong overall performance could not be accomplished without the strength of our 4,000 plus physician and provider partners as well as the hard work and dedication of all Previa employees. Now I'll ask David to review our 2022 MSSB performance, recent financial results, and 2023 outlook.
spk17: Thank you, Parth. We continue to see solid performance across our value-based care book, including our success in the Medicare Shared Savings Program in the 2022 performance year. The results publicly released in late August show that across our seven ACOs, We lowered utilization and cost significantly below that of our peer ACOs. This performance was even better when compared to fee-for-service Medicare. We generated total shared savings of almost $132 million, up 32% from a year earlier. We operate one of the country's largest ACOs in the Mid-Atlantic region, caring for about 61,000 patients in the MSSP enhanced track. We delivered savings of 10% which for the second year in a row was the highest savings rate of all ACOs with greater than 40,000 attributed lives. With 77% of total MSSP lives in downside risk in 2022, Privia Health is well positioned to expand further into and succeed in value-based care arrangements across the risk spectrum. For the 2022 performance year, we have 10 ACOs in MSSP with seven in the enhanced track. During the 2022 performance year for MSSP, Privia Health's ACOs managed over $1.8 billion in medical spend. However, we only recognized our share of the gross shared savings in practice collections and gap revenue, which was approximately $91 million. This performance clearly demonstrates our success in transitioning to value-based and downside risk contracts over time as we generate increased profitability. Privia Health's operational execution continued to deliver strong financial results in the third quarter of 2023. Our implemented provider count was 4,105, up 14.2% year-over-year. New implemented providers and strong ambulatory utilization trends led to practice collections increasing 18.2% from Q3 a year ago to reach 723.5 million. Adjusted EBITDA was up 20% over Q3 last year to 18.8 million. highlighting our ability to continue to generate operating leverage as we expand and grow in existing and new markets. For the first nine months of 2023, practice collections increased 16.4% from a year ago to almost $2.1 billion. Care margin was up 18.7%, and adjusted EBITDA grew 18% to reach $55 million. Our business profile continues to show very strong cash generation coupled with no debt and pro forma cash balance of approximately $371 million. As noted in the table on this slide, we received $91.2 million in cash from CMS in October as payment for Privia Health's portion of shared savings generated in the 2022 performance year of MSSP. As you may recall, we received the CMS payment in fourth quarter last year as well. We then share approximately 60% with our providers for their participation and success in MSSP leaving net cash of approximately $40.7 million to Privia. Our year-to-date free cash flow was $57.3 million pro forma for the net cash received from CMS. Our updated 2023 guidance highlights the strength and resiliency of our operating model and diversified book of business. We are raising our guidance for implemented providers and platform contribution to above the high end of our initial ranges, and maintaining our previous updated guidance for the other metrics as communicated in our Q2 report. Our year-to-date performance gives us a very high level of confidence to achieve our updated guidance and close the year strong. Our robust financial and operating model is enabling us to deliver EBITDA and free cash flow growth while absorbing approximately $10 million in new market entry and expansion costs in 2023. We expect our new markets to scale significantly in the coming years as we grow our provider base and attributed lives in these new states, while delivering proven unit economics similar to our more mature markets. We continue to expect 80 to 90% of our adjusted EBITDA to convert to free cash flow this year, given our capital efficient partnership model and annual capital expenditures of less than one million. We remain focused on building Privia Health into one of the largest ambulatory care delivery networks in the nation, and we look forward to continuing to serve our physicians, providers, and health system partners and their patients. Operator, we are now ready to take your questions.
spk07: Thank you. As a reminder, to ask a question, please press star 1-1 on your telephone and wait for your name to be announced. To withdraw your question, please press star 1-1 again. Our first question comes from the line of Joshua Raskin from Nefron Research.
spk11: Thanks. Good morning. I guess starting with just where's the upside of the implemented providers coming from? I'm just curious if that's more in some of these new markets that you've been building out or in some of the older networks and the density I think that Par spoke to. And then conversely, I guess the other question would be, are you seeing more competition for providers? I'm thinking specifically for sort of big health system opportunities.
spk13: Thanks for the question, Josh. So it's a combination. As we noted in our prepared remarks, we've had a record implemented providers in the first nine months, and that's reflected of very strong sales. That happens with a five-month lag. We're seeing very good increase in density in the existing states, and then we've obviously added six new states, as we noted. So it's really very broad-based, which is really good to see. I think our model is gaining a lot of traction. It's a very proven model with unit economics proven, and everybody we speak to understands what they're partnering with Privia for, so I don't think we've seen an increase or decrease in competition that we did last year or the year before. A lot of the participants have been around for a while, so I just think we're gaining a lot of traction and momentum, and a lot of new sales are coming from referrals from our existing physicians, which just speaks to the strength of the model, if that's what you'd like to see.
spk07: Thank you. One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from the line of Elizabeth Anderson from Evercore ISI.
spk08: Hi, guys. Thanks so much for the question. Can you talk about a little bit more detail on the MSSP accrual? I think there's some confusion out there in the market that perhaps sort of missed expectations. So just kind of explain to us, like, I know you provided the math, which was helpful. How do you kind of think about that? You know, how you think about the accruals there versus performance and anything else you can say on that would be helpful.
spk13: Yeah, I appreciate the question, Elizabeth. Our methodology is fairly consistent, as we've noted in prior quarters on the earnings call. We get data from CMS on a quarterly basis. We are updating both the prior year accruals as well as the current year based on that data. So at this point of the year, with 2022 results finally trued up and the payment received, there's obviously nothing in the accruals from a 22 perspective that's not reflected. And then our 23 accruals reflect all the data we received so far. So we update that every quarter. Our guidance reflects those updated estimates. So I'm not sure what we are referring to from a market expectations perspective, but our methodology has been fairly consistent and that's reflected in our guidance.
spk07: Thank you. One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from the line of AJ Rice from UBS.
spk05: Hi, everybody. Thanks. Maybe I know it's early, but when you look out, because obviously we have to pull these thoughts together and think about 24 at this early date, any thoughts on puts and takes or things we should keep in mind, even if you're not ready to give specific guidance, but generally as we think about the year ahead?
spk13: Hi, AJ. Appreciate the question. Look, it's fairly consistent from past years. We'll guide 24 when we issue our Q4 results early next year. The puts and takes are pretty much similar to what you'd expect. You're seeing very strong provider additions this year. That's the number one factor. You're seeing attributed lives grow, so that impacts our value-based book. Obviously, we'll update our estimates on shared savings across our Very diversified value-based book of business across commercial, MAM, SSP as we get new data. So that'll be number three. And then obviously we've entered six new states as we mentioned. So, you know, momentum in those states, investments in those states. I think we'll be number four as we've communicated this year. We've absorbed about $10 million of that cost. You'll expect that to continue. And then obviously we are scaling our operating model. As you can see, the outperformance on platform contribution. The unit economics are really proven in the most mature markets. We're able to deliver that down the P&L and into free cash flow. So I think you'll hope to see that continue into next year. So those, I think, are the key puts and takes, and we'll tally it all up, try to close the year strong, and then issue guidance early next year.
spk07: Thank you. One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from the line of Jay Lendressing from Truist Securities.
spk12: Good morning, and thanks for taking my questions. I actually wanted to follow up on Elizabeth's question, and let me ask that question slightly differently. So shared savings figure was down 19 million sequentially. I understand it includes MSSP results. Did you have any true-up related to that program in the quarter? And more important, there's a lot of focus on your non-MSSP savings in that item as well. Maybe spend some time, like what key business are there and how have been trends in those businesses?
spk17: Yeah, Jalinder, thanks a lot. This is David. Yeah, you know, in any typical year, you know, we definitely have a lot of our true-ups, I'll say, in Q2 and Q3 of every year from the prior year. And so I think what you're seeing there is just some, I would say, normal, you know, variability that we see from on a quarter-over-quarter basis. You know, we really take an annual and would probably, you know, say you really want to look at sort of a 12-month view of this on a 12-month rolling basis. And, you know, on a 12-month rolling basis, you know, you'll see that we're, you know, we're up, you know, pretty significantly from last year. And again, you know, on a go-forward basis, that's what we're, that's really what we're using to look at it. So, you know, we're not expecting any, you know.
spk07: Thank you. One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from the line of Richard Close from Canaccord Genuity.
spk06: Great. Thanks for the question. Congratulations. Just looking at the care margin, I think it was 13.1% of collections in the second quarter ratcheted down to 12.7% if I'm not mistaken here in 3Q. Just anything to call out on that would be helpful.
spk13: Thanks, Richard, as far. I think that's just pretty minor quarter-over-quarter movement. It's impacted by care management fees, shared savings on the value-based book, some fee-for-service trends in existing and new states. So, you know, again, nothing significant variability from our expectations. You can see from our guidance, you know, it's pretty much in line with what we've outlined at the beginning of the year. So I would just say that that's quarter-over-quarter variance.
spk07: Thank you. One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from the line of Brian Tankulut from Jefferies.
spk15: Hey, good morning, guys, and nice work on the quarter. It's Jack Slovin on for Brian. Wanted to ask a couple on care management fees, why it looked really strong in the quarter. One, are there any one-timers to call out, or how should we be thinking about the progression of that going forward? And then two, we've been getting a lot of questions on commercial risk for you all. Can you just confirm where any commercial risk contracts would land? I would think it's in shared savings, but just want to make sure that's not part of the contribution on that care management fee strength. Thanks.
spk13: Yeah, I appreciate the question. So we think this is one of the most underappreciated parts of our business. As we highlighted, we grew our commercial value-based lives very significantly. It's about 675,000. We're one of the only platforms that actually does commercial value-based at this level of scale. we are partnering with a number of payers across our different states. So you see both care management fees and shared savings reflect that. We are typically, as we noted in our prepared remarks, we're getting $2 or $3 or $5 p.m. p.m. depending on the contract on these lives, which is a pretty significant step up over the fee-for-service reimbursement for us to you know, do all the work. And then obviously we're getting shared savings on top of that based on certain quality and cost metrics. We think our ability to bend the curve for the payers, both self-insured employers, commercial payers, is a very significant value proposition. It's 50% of the U.S. population. It's not going away anywhere soon. It's not MA. And, you know, it's not a population where you can take full risk, but it's a population where you can make a pretty significant impact on the cost trends in healthcare. And I think we're a great platform to demonstrate that. So you're seeing some of the strength in the commercial book, and it's a very stable income stream as is reflected in the results. So we really like how that balances out some of the variability on the MA book.
spk07: Thank you. One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from the line of Adam Ron from Bank of America.
spk14: Hey, thanks for the question. I wanted to follow up on AJ's question. When you mentioned the puts and takes for 2024, you really only mentioned tailwinds, whereas last year you kind of emphasized that there was a tough calm from growing really quickly and from new markets starting out with not a lot of providers. It seems like the geographic entry costs are running at a really high exit rate given the six state entries that you mentioned. Should we still be thinking about 30% long-term EBITDA growth guidance as like the run rate or how we should think about core growth from here? Or are there actual headwinds that we should be concerned about? Thanks.
spk13: Thanks for the question, Adam. I mean, we highlighted both tailwinds and headwinds. I mean, you know, the new market entry costs will continue into next year as demonstrated by these six new markets. I think we've been fairly consistent with that. over the last few quarters. You know, obviously shared savings is the other one where we'll just look at all the puts and takes on the MA book. You're hearing commentary about increased utilization, benefit design changes by payers, impact from V28 coming. And so, you know, we'll just tally all that up and there'll be puts and takes on both sides. So I think when we issue our guidance, We'll reflect all of that in our book. So it'll be a combination of both, as it always is.
spk07: Thank you. One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from the line of Jack Sempt from William Blair.
spk16: Hey, guys. This is Jack Sempt. I'm from Ryan Daniels. In terms of the 2023 adjusted EBITDA guidance, I know you noted the $10 million in startup costs for the new geographies and ACOs. Is this mainly a function of just entering the six states over the past year, which is faster than the one state, your target that you initially guided to? Or is there something additional in there? And then just a quick follow up to do you have any earlier, maybe an updated view for the new geography costs next year? I know you aren't guiding for 2024 yet, but I know it's been a topic of discussion in the past. So just trying to see what you're expecting there for next year. Thanks.
spk13: Yeah, I appreciate the question. So it's very similar to what we've said previously. We're spending anywhere from one to three million in any new market. It's mainly comprised of sales and marketing, leadership, implementation costs, all those come in before we sell a single provider to join the platform. The size of spend correlates to the size of the market, and it's fairly consistent from that perspective. We've entered some of these new markets in the middle of this year, so obviously the full run rate of cost, you'll see that next year. And that's no different from what we've seen previously. So I think it's a normal part of doing the business. I think what's exciting for us is you can see the leverage on the P&L where despite entering more new geographies, we are performing on platform contribution. That would have likely flowed into our performance on EBITDA as well. had it not been for some of the newer geographies in an accelerated manner. So our hope is that we can continue to scale the P&L and absorb these costs. We don't have them back, as you know, so I think we'll continue to do that. And on top of that, like we said, the existing markets are really scaling, and our most mature markets are exhibiting unit economics, which are very consistent with our long-term margin profile. And so we're really excited to see that, and now it's all about just execution in all these new states and get them up the curve.
spk07: thank you one moment for our next question our next question comes from the line of wit mayo from leering partners hey thanks it was just um wondering what changes you guys are are beginning to plan for in mssp for for 2020 for any
spk09: plans to move any of your legacy ACOs into the enhanced track, take advantage of some of the other changes, and are you planning for any new ACOs? And then I had just one clarification, David. Did you say in your prepared comments that you guys are paying or providing your physicians with 65% of the savings? I thought in my notes I had that it was 60, but maybe I just misheard you. Thanks.
spk13: Yeah, so I'll take the first part. David will answer the second part. So we're going through our entire book. As you saw last year, we added three new ACOs. We have seven out of ten in Enhanced Track. So we make all those determinations in some of these new markets. You may add some of the lives in an existing ACO, just given the timing. So we'll announce any new ones like we did last year in January. in January, February timeframe. So I think we'll just go through that. But it's been fairly consistent. We do this every year as we enter new states and look at the entire book and what makes sense for us. Sometimes it makes sense to move to the enhanced track. Sometimes it doesn't. So again, I think we'll evaluate. I think all the existing enhanced tracks, you should expect that we'll continue to maintain an enhanced track. So I don't think we go backwards. And we'll hopefully continue our good performance.
spk17: And our value-based care book is still 60-40, so I apologize if there's any mishearing there or whatever, but it's still 60-40.
spk07: Thank you. One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from the line of Jeff Garro from Stevens, Inc.
spk04: Yeah, good morning. Thanks for taking the question, and congrats on the quarter. I have a couple that I'll lump together on the capitated MA book. I was hoping that you could discuss the profitability for that book year to date. It looks like a pretty favorable inflection quarter over quarter. And it looks like you benefited from a small prior period development in the quarter. So good to see that reverse, but would love to get more detail there. And lastly, how should we think about year to date performance influencing Privia and and providers' interest in growing that portion of the business in 2024 as you collectively make decisions about contracts for next year?
spk17: Yeah, so you are correct. We are seeing some positive momentum in our full risk cap business. Again, you know, our process for estimating that amount is the same it's been this year as it is in years past. The more data that we receive from the payers as we get farther into the year, obviously the better estimates that we have. And again, we're seeing some favorable trends in that business. Primarily, I would say, sort of a mix of higher premium yields and lower medical costs.
spk13: And on the second half of the question, I think we are going to be very consistent with our process in assuming more risk. As we've stated previously, We take a much more thoughtful, very deliberate approach. We're not backstopping risk. We do it together with our providers, together with our medical groups. We look at each state, each risk pool, and make that determination with the payer partner. We ideally like to have some payers have skin in the game versus jumping into 100% risk. That's just our preferred methodology. If you see the broader MA environment, again, with benefit design changes, some of the utilization commentary that you're seeing from a pretty broad number of managed care companies, some of the V28 changes coming down the pike, new drugs being approved. So that impacts Part D from a risk equation perspective. I just think our thoughtful approach is more prudent in this kind of an environment. We don't think it's an environment where you blindly take risk. So we are looking, as we have said previously, to maximize shared savings, maximize earnings power, for the payers, for us, for our providers. And so we'll just tally all that up and see if it makes sense to dial up the risk. You have to recognize our providers are not going anywhere. The patients that they see don't go anywhere. So then it's just a financial contract and a determination every year. And if it makes sense in this environment to dial up risk, we will. And if it doesn't, we won't. So I think we're just going to continue to take a very thoughtful approach.
spk07: Thank you. One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from the line of Gary Taylor from Cowan, Inc.
spk03: Hi, good morning. Sorry to go back to the shared savings for a minute, but I was just hoping for a more direct answer that down $19 million. sequentially is far more than the typical quarterly variability we see. So did you have to lower your accruals for the 22 performance year? Are you lowering what you've accrued year-to-date for the 23 performance year? I mean, the primary reason I ask is we just want to think about the run rate going forward. That line had been up 60% in the first half of the year, now only up 11%. Is it weighed upon by an accrual adjustment here and ought to move back higher to what we've been seeing in the first half of the year? Is that the way to think about the go-forward modeling? Thanks.
spk17: Yes. So, again, as I talked about earlier, I mean, again, I would really look at a 12-month view of this. So, you know, the change in the quarter was a mix of 2022 and 2023 estimates. It's not one or the other. You know, we've got 100-plus contracts out there, and, you know, some of the timing of this depends upon when in the year we get the final results from 2022. And if you look sort of our years over years, certain years they come in at different times. It's really when we get the final information from the payer. So, again, from a future modeling perspective, I'd really, you know, stress looking at a 12-month view and not looking at it on a quarter-by-quarter basis.
spk13: And, Gary, the other color I would give is, you know, this is spread across commercial, MSSP, MA. So unlike a one line focused business, we can have variability that just, to David's point, some of the data and the results in commercial can be more lagged than you typically see in MSSP or MA. CMS is very consistent in how they give us the data. It's a very structured program. Everybody gets it at the same time. That's not how it is in commercial sometimes. So, again, our book of business is pretty diversified, and you can see some of that variability as a result. So the annual run rate is probably the best way to go about it. We understand that that causes some quarter-over-quarter jumps like it did this quarter, but we've kind of maintained our view of the year, and when we give guidance, that's what we're looking at.
spk07: Thank you. One moment for our next question. Our next question comes in the line of Jamie Purse from Goldman Sachs.
spk10: Hey, thank you. Good morning. Can you give us an update on how your implemented provider partners break down by primary care versus specialty? How growth is trending between the two, if there's been any kind of mixed shifts, and just how to think about unit economics between those two categories? Thank you.
spk13: Yeah, thanks for the question, Jamie. So the broad mix on our 4,000 plus providers remains pretty consistent. We have about 60 to 65 that what we call as gatekeeper providers. So that's primary care, family medicine, internal medicine. We also include OBGYNs and pediatricians. So whoever's the first point of contact in the family. And then the remaining 35 to 40%, given the states, can be specialists. And again, there we are more focused on the non-surgical specialties. endocrinology, pulmonology, and so forth. In some of the states where we have a health system partner that's on the platform, Florida is a good example with Health First, you can see the specialty mix skew the other side, as you would expect. But as we grow that business across the rest of the states and add more standalone independent providers, that mix kind of normalizes. So it just varies a little bit by state, but that's the overall mix. And so what we've implemented this year reflects that mix. To the second question, the unit economics are pretty similar on both primary care and specialty on the fee-for-service book. We price that, obviously, specialists earn more per provider in certain specialties, and so the pricing reflects a very consistent unit economics. On the value-based book, obviously, the primary care has, you know, once we start MSSP, MA, and start to get into some of the risk contracts, the unit economics significantly increase. We are also The take rate is 40% on those shared savings versus, you know, the management fee on the fee-for-service. So the unit economics over time really increases on the primary care, and that's what we like to see in the business.
spk07: Thank you. One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from the line of Jessica Tazon from Piper Sandler.
spk00: Hi. Thanks for taking the question. So I think the strength in commercial value-based care has really stood out to us. At the time of the IPO, I think we were thinking about those lives as a low single-digit PMPM. So just interested to know if that's still a reasonable assumption on those lives. And then is there an opportunity to sustain these really robust 2023 growth rates in 2024 through either lives growth or pricing or kind of both? Thanks.
spk13: Yeah, thanks for the question, Jess. We would agree. I think that's a very underappreciated part of our business. You can almost think of our business model as on the fee-for-service side, it's a very ERP-like pricing model that has inherent inflators with the rates. So as we have inflators in the contracts, the management fee generally increases, and we're also looking at same-store provider on a per-provider growth with patient panel increases. So that really helps on the same-store basis. Then if you add the PMPMs, that I would say is a very, from an analogy perspective, a Netflix-like $2, $3, $4 PMPM. That's on top of the fee-for-service reimbursement we get. That's very good margin business, and that adds to a very good annuity stream on top of that. We are doing very good work with a very broad population, and like we said previously in one of the questions, this really bends the curve for the payers. You can bend their MLR. You can bend the MLR for self-insured employers. We are having very advanced discussions with some of the payers on how do we take this model forward on the commercial book. Very few medical groups take commercial risk, and our density and the strength of our network and the platform allows us to do it at a very large scale in some of the geographies. So I think we're pretty excited about this book of business. Again, from a next year perspective, we'll guide in February, but it'll be a combination of growth in providers, commercial attributed lives, contracts that we enter, As you can see, we serve 4.7 million patients, and the value-based book is about a quarter of that or less than a quarter of that with commercial at just $675,000. So, you know, our operating model is you get the providers, you get their lives, you optimize fee-for-service, and then we layer in these value-based contracts, commercial, MAM, SSP on top. And that can take two or three years in some of the new markets, but we think the earnings power is pretty strong and very stable when all that machinery works. You're seeing some of that play out in the numbers this year.
spk07: Thank you. One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from the line of David Larson from BTIG.
spk01: Hi. Can you talk a little bit about how volumes trended in the quarter relative to your own expectations? And can you comment on obesity, diabetes, GLP-1s? It looks like your cash collections growth was very good. Are more volumes positive for your fee-for-service book or a headwind because of the risk, or does it all sort of net to be neutral? Thank you.
spk13: Thanks for the question, David. So as we've said on previous calls, you almost have to distinguish between ambulatory gatekeeper doctor's volumes, which we have in a pretty predominant way in our book, versus inpatient and surgical utilization. So the former has been running pretty strong. We expect it to be fairly strong from all the data we see. You see that in the numbers. And that's good utilization in our minds as individuals are seeing their primary provider across the age cohorts. I think the latter, you've seen some of the commentary from managed care companies. That has been trending high, but that does not impact us directly on the FIFO service. On the value-based book, given the diversity of our book between commercial, MSSP, and MA, we're fairly hedged in spikes in FIFO. surgical or inpatient utilization, the commercial value book. We're not taking downside risk. It's very PMPM based with some upside risk shared savings. So you don't see too much impact. MSSP is a relative benchmark program. So again, there could be some impact, but it's not that acute. And then where we are exposed, obviously, is the MA book. And we're trying to manage that as much as we can. So from an overall perspective, I think we are seeing favorability across all lines of business. And to the second question, look, it's too early on GLP-1s. I know it's a pretty hot topic given all the media news. I think we're still about 12, 24 months away to see some real empirical data. Our hope is that as utilization of these drugs takes up, gatekeeper providers, non-surgical specialties, those that we have predominantly in our network, should see more patient interaction as patients try to see the impact of these drugs and try to have more of a conversation as to how it's impacting their existing chronic condition or whatever it might be. So again, we think the ambulatory utilization should go up as a result. And then on the value-based book, as is broadly expected, if this leads to lower chronicity, if it leads to lower surgical volumes as people are much more healthier, then that should impact positively on the value-based side. So we'll see how the empirical data plays out, but overall I think we should be positive.
spk07: Thank you. At this time, I would now like to turn the conference back over to Mr. Parth Mirotra for closing remarks.
spk13: Thank you for listening to our call today. We appreciate your continued interest and support of Privia and look forward to speaking with you again in the near future.
spk07: This concludes today's conference call. Thank you for participating. You may now disconnect.
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