HealthSouth
Earns Fall on Medicare Change
By
William Borden
Washington Post, November 5,
2002
NEW YORK (Reuters) - HealthSouth Corp. , which is under investigation
by the Securities and Exchange Commission, said on Tuesday its net income
fell 32 percent, hit by Medicare changes for reimbursement for group
physical therapy.
Net income at the provider of physical therapy, outpatient surgery and
diagnostic imaging centers, dropped to $53.6 million, or 13 cents per
share, from $79.1 million, or 20 cents per share in last year's third
quarter.
Frank Morgan, analyst at Jefferies & Co., "I would say that
the results in the quarter were not that big of a surprise, given the
operational challenges they are facing in retooling outpatient
rehab."
The Birmingham, Alabama, company warned in August that changes in
Medicare reimbursement for physical therapy would hurt earnings before
interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization by $175 million annually.
Also the company faces investigations into possible insider trading,
and is facing challenges to the company's corporate governance policies.
The SEC is investigating the timing of the announcement and stock sales
by HealthSouth Chairman Richard Scrushy. The company's outside counsel
said it found no evidence of insider trading by Scrushy, who exercised
options for 5.3 million shares in May and returned 2.5 million shares to
the company in July to repay a loan.
Excluding a one-time gain from the early repayment of debt, earnings
were $38.3 million, or 10 cents per share at HealthSouth.
On that basis, 13 analysts who follow HealthSouth expected the company
to earn between 13 cents and 23 cents per share with a mean estimate of 21
cents, according to research firm Thomson First Call.
Revenue rose 2 percent to $1.09 billion from $1.08 billion a year ago.
Medicare's change in group therapy billing and closing or consolidating
facilities in some markets to improve efficiency, led to a 17 percent drop
in outpatient rehabilitation business revenue, the company said.
"The demands on management resources in the quarter, combined with
confusion among our therapists on scheduling and staffing requirements
under the new Medicare policy, negatively affected our ability to restore
lost (patient) volumes during the quarter," President and Chief
Executive William Owens said in a statement.
HealthSouth's inpatient rehabilitation revenue increased 12 percent in
the third quarter from a year ago.
Over the past three months, HealthSouth said it added two new
independent members to its board of directors, and formed a special
corporate governance committee to review its governance policies and
recommend changes.
The company has become the target of criticism for its governance
policy, with some investors suggesting that its board is not independent.
Scrushy, who founded the company in 1984, said he might be willing to
change some board members, some of whom have been with the company prior
to 1985.
Since Aug. 26, the day before HealthSouth warned of the Medicare
change, the company's stock fell 59.23 percent. HealthSouth shares closed
at $4.88, but the stock traded as low as $2.80 shortly after the company
disclosed the SEC investigation on Sept 19.
"It's clear the company has distractions on multiple fronts,"
Morgan said.
"All these external issues between investigations and the SEC will
have to run their natural course and the timing of that is difficult to
say. The further they get into that process of getting it resolved the
better," said Morgan, who has a "hold" on the stock and a
$9 sum-of-the-parts valuation.