CURRENT ISSUES IN THE VALUATION OF HEALTH CARE ENTITIES

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1999 ASA International Appraisal Conference CURRENT ISSUES IN THE VALUATION OF HEALTH CARE ENTITIES Presented by CHRISTOPHER J. EVANS, FACHE THE HEALTH SERVICE GROUP, INC. 109 Kilmayne Drive Suite D Cary, NC 27511 (919) 460-7155 fax (919) 481-4229 email: HSGChris@aol.com

Goals for Today To provide an overview on critical issues in current healthcare industry business practices Introduction of key regulatory issues Review of valuation assumptions in the face of industry transactions Recognize when to implement the attorneyappraiser team approach

Discussion Outline Factors driving business practices in the healthcare industry and provider responses Regulatory overview affecting valuation and transactions New business relationships and impact on valuation approaches and methods Increasingly typical healthcare valuation engagements Appendix materials

Health Care Industry $1 trillion a year industry 44% paid by federal government 3.5% fraud in private sector 11% fraud abuse in Medicare ($20.3 billion of improper billing out of $177.4 billion in fee-for-service)

Drivers of Change in Healthcare Business Arrangements Revenue flows Amount, method and timing of payments Managed care penetration Loss of patient base Loss of control Development of networks Expense control

Drivers of Change in Healthcare Business Arrangements Hospitals are seeking: Income stabilization/growth Reduction of costs - providing care in the most efficient setting Broad provider access Prevention of market erosion Mid- to long-term partners

Drivers of Change in Healthcare Business Arrangements Physicians are seeking: To maintain clinical autonomy and high quality of care Income stabilization/growth Relief from uncertainty and adverse business risk Investment opportunities

Drivers of Change in Healthcare Business Arrangements Public companies are seeking: Investor return through earnings and earnings growth Acquisition of market share Reduction of clinical variation WARNING: Short Term Perspective!

Provider Responses to Business Pressures Hospitals Examine independence or interdependence status Affiliate, merge, sell Focus on core competencies and market strengths React to immediate financial needs

Provider Responses to Business Pressures Physicians Birds of a feather / strength in numbers (IPA, PHO, PO, PPMC, etc.) Seek business partners Get focused & improve position Accept defeat / cut losses: earn less, move, sell out

Provider Responses to Business Pressures Other Players Pure Play Providers seek broader bases of operations, multi year contracts National / Regional Firms become very competitive Marginal Players seek to hang on, watch market development

Regulatory Overview Healthcare is a highly-regulated industry Fraud & abuse, private benefit/inurement, antireferral prohibitions, antitrust Sanctions for non-compliance with the law are great Loss of Medicare provider status, loss of taxexemption status, astronomical financial penalties, incarceration

Medicare/Medicaid Fraud Investigations Medicare based on trust Average 3% claims audited Fraud requires Knowing Reckless disregard Intentional ignorance

Medicare/Medicaid Fraud Investigations HIPAA - $548 million for enforcement 300 new OIG & FBI agents 160 new federal prosecutors Operation Restore Trust $188 million in civil penalties 73 criminal cases 218 exclusions from Medicare

Medicare/Medicaid Fraud Investigations PATH audits: Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center spent $1.7 million defending audit which uncovered $768 in improper billings OIG nevertheless plans to audit all 125 teaching hospitals in country

Principal Industry Legal Issues Affecting Business Valuation Ethics in Patient Referrals Act ( Stark ) State Stark laws Medicare Fraud and Abuse Antikickback Statute 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code for tax-exempt organizations Corporate Practice of Medicine Laws

Physician Makes referral Stark Laws Ethics in Patient Referral Act - Elements: For designated health services payable by Medicare To an entity (i.e., hospital) With which physician (or immediate family member) has a financial relationship No protection outside of enumerated exceptions

Stark Laws Financial relationship Ownership or investment interest Covers hospital-physician joint ventures Compensation arrangement Includes management services contracts and all other contracts with physicians Includes hospital payments to physicians Includes recruitment assistance

Stark Laws Designated Health Services Clinical lab Physical therapy Occupational therapy Radiology and diagnostic services Radiation therapy DME Home health Outpatient prescription drugs Inpatient and outpatient hospital services Parental and enteral nutrients, supplies, etc. Prosthetics

Stark Laws FAIR MARKET VALUE All transactions and considerations must be based on fair market value and the result of arms length dealing on commercially reasonable and available terms The value or volume of referrals cannot be considered The FMV consideration is one of the most difficult to address

Stark Laws 3 Questions Does the physician (or a family member) have a financial relationship to the entity? Will the physician make referrals to the entity for designated health services that are paid by Medicare or Medicaid? Does an Exception apply?

Medicare Anti-kickback Law Covers the giving or receiving of anything of value to induce Medicare/Medicaid referrals Violation if only one material purpose is to induce referrals Violation = felony, possible loss of provider status, false claim liability OIG looking for disguised payments for referrals Protection available outside safe harbors

IRS Section 501 (c)(3) Compliance Covers tax-exempt organizations Exempt organization must serve public rather than private interests Activities must further tax-exempt purposes Net earnings of tax-exempt organization shall not inure to private persons ( private inurement )

IRS Section 501 (c)(3) Compliance Consequences of private inurement: Loss of tax-exempt status (institutional) Intermediate sanctions (board and managers) Relationship between hospital and physicians must further tax-exempt purposes of hospital Private benefit to physicians must be incidental

IRS Section 501 (c)(3) Compliance Terms must be arms length and commercially reasonable Revenue sharing can amount to private inurement

IRS Section 501 (c)(3) Compliance In health care context, examine contracts for employment, services, and supplies, equipment and real estate leases, physician practice acquisitions, joint ventures, and compensation arrangements

Why is Compliance Important? Reduces risk of legal violations Reduces risk of whistle blower (qui tam) suits Reduces risk of financial liability Reduces risk of unfavorable publicity Promotes integrity among employees

Corporate Practice of Medicine Laws In some jurisdictions, only physicians (or other licensed professionals) may practice medicine through professional services entities Focus is on maintaining the independence of the health care professional Enforcement may be strict or not

Corporate Practice of Medicine Laws From the valuation perspective, the following areas may be of concern Employment relationships Personal services agreements Operation of medical and related professional practices Joint venture relationships Potential universe of buyers issues

Corporate Practice of Medicine Laws States with active clear prohibitions include: California Illinois Iowa Kansas New York Tennessee Texas Washington

Emerging Business Strategies and Relationships Industry consolidation through: Acquisitions Mergers Divestitures Partnerships Equity & Non-equity arrangements Joint Ventures

Current Uses of External Opinions Acquisition and divestiture Employment/compensation agreements Joint venture agreements Operating agreements Hospital conversions (NFP to FP)

Current Trends in Transactions Strategic decisions still drive buyers in acquisitions Unreasonably high prices continue to be paid in many markets Risk rates continue to remain low despite capital market response WACC to Invested Capital currently as low as 15% Anecdotal information is confusing

Current Trends in Transactions Essential elements: Justification for action Documentation of independent valuation, business review or fairness opinion No double counting (avoid conferring excess benefit)

Impact of Fair Market Value FMV is not intrinsic value, nor investment value, nor strategic value The regulators know this Many buyers do not seem to care

Impact of Fair Market Value Cash concept of FMV sometimes difficult to convey when stock deals are offered Willing buyer, willing seller and leverage Regulatory guidance requires adaptation of hypothetical parties Universe of buyers issues abound

The Disparate Universe Of Buyers in Healthcare PPM 3 PPM 2 PPM 1 $$$ Hospital Network 1 HMO 3 Hospital Network 2 PPM 4 Strategic Buyers Hospital A Hospital B $$ Practice A Practice D Hospital D Practice B HMO 4 Hospital C HMO 1 Practice E HMO 2 Willing Buyer - Willing Seller $ Physician A Practice F Low Ball Buyers

Increasingly Typical Valuation Engagements FMV of provider compensation Employed physicians, medical directors, consultants, physician assistants, nurse practitioners, midwives Joint venture relationships Valuation of partnership contributions for new ventures, dissolution of old ventures Valuation for disintegration

Increasingly Typical Valuation Engagements Medical practices - minority interests Restrictive and network agreements Right of first refusal to purchase Option to purchase Network participation Exclusive or non-exclusive Non-solicitation provisions

Increasingly Typical Valuation Engagements Valuing invested capital of failed ventures What defines failed when one partner chooses to continue? Valuing contracts for service when intangibles exist Identifying and valuing assets in strategic acquisitions

Case Study 1 For Sale: Assets of hospital, FFE, real property, physician network of practices Engagement: FMV of physician network How is the value of the network s referrals to the hospital included? How is the value of the in-place provider network to support managed care contracts considered? Result: Value of physician network is a fractional asset valuation of the whole entity - value is based on network alone - hospital-referred income and other benefits must be valued on the hospital s valuation

Case Study 2 For Sale: Assets of a physician practice opened 3 years ago under a physician recruitment guarantee. Practice has $300,000 in cumulative start-up losses, partially because it depreciated its purchases rapidly. Engagement: FMV of practice assets for sale to physicians How do you handle the start-up losses? If all losses were reclassified as equity, would the physicians receive an excess benefit? Result: Health law attorneys will interpret this in various manners. Attorneys will seek to convey that the deal will result in no excess benefit being conferred

Case Study 3 For Sale: Assets of a 2 year old clinical ancillary services business with losses over $400,000 including third party debt. Two partners each own 50%. Projections estimate break-even in 12 months; one partner wants out now. Engagement: FMV of business assets to transfer via partnership agreement to one partner to yield 100% and control. Is this a going concern? What about release of debt guaranty? Result: Transfer of the 50% interest for release of guaranty and pro rata share of other payables

Case Study 4 Issue: Hospital wants to get out of the physician billing issues for a group of solo, independent contractor hospitalbased physicians. Hospital offers exclusive multi-year contract for physician group. Physicians want to be kept whole in the start-up of their new corporation and want the working capital forgiven. Engagement: Can the hospital do this? What assets or services are offered? What is the market price for comparable services? Do intangibles exist? Result: Hospital pays under the service contract inclusive of a one-time payment for goodwill

Summary A rapidly changing and consolidating industry Many opportunities for experienced appraisers Pick areas suited to your expertise Seek assistance - spread the risk CYA - Cover Your Assets

1999 ASA International Appraisal Conference CURRENT ISSUES IN THE VALUATION OF HEALTH CARE ENTITIES Presented by CHRISTOPHER J. EVANS, FACHE THE HEALTH SERVICE GROUP, INC.

Christopher J. Evans, FACHE Christopher J. Evans, FACHE has been with The Health Service Group, Inc. since 1994 and directs our physician services division. Having directed community hospital referral relationships and the physician faculty outreach clinical activities at a major academic medical center, Chris brings a wealth of experience in affiliation and transaction relationships, physician compensation, valuation, feasibility studies, and administrative contracting issues. A prolific writer, he is the principal author of Integrated Community Healthcare: Next Generation Strategies for Developing Provider Networks and author of Financial Feasibility Studies for Healthcare: A Practical Guide for a Changing Industry by McGraw-Hill and Healthcare Financial Management Association.

Appendix Materials Expanded Industry and Transaction Issues

Drivers of Change in Healthcare Business Arrangements Financial Competition Medical staff relationships Managed care penetration Payer relationships and position Personnel General management

Factors Driving Business Practices in Healthcare Financial Overhead escalation and control Decreasing reimbursement - form and amount Lack of capital for growth Inability to see the need to invest in their business - little or no strategic financial management

Factors Driving Business Practices in Healthcare Competition Increasing competition between providers Network development steering patients to specific delivery systems Pure play competitors entering markets and diluting patient base Outreach activities capturing market share

Factors Driving Business Practices in Healthcare Medical staff relationships Cooperative or competitive between hospital and medical staff Frequent poor communications Sources of income and diversification Short term vs. long term thinking

Factors Driving Business Practices in Healthcare Managed care penetration Stage and form of managed care penetration Discounted fee for service, capitation, direct contracting Competition, market share, and contract access Capturing the premium dollar

Factors Driving Business Practices in Healthcare Payer relationships and position Complement of payers in market Carnivore, omnivore Health plan equity position or not Data analysis and data capabilities

Factors Driving Business Practices in Healthcare Personnel Availability and quality of staff Compensation Investment in staff - training and retention issues Use of staff and cost minimization - benchmarking

Factors Driving Business Practices in Healthcare General management Old paradigm mind set Short term leadership horizon Broad governance issues and strategic direction of the organization Failure to follow-through

Hospital - Physician Equity Opportunities Joint ventures Ancillary services - PT, OT, therapies Surgical and other diagnostic centers Skilled nursing and assisted living facilities Medical office buildings Condominiumization of hospital services - boutique model of delivery

Hospital - Physician Equity Opportunities Wellness, behavioral health, urgent care, occupational medicine, hospice and dialysis centers Creation of new delivery and contracting systems - PHOs, IPAs Privatization of health departments

Hospital - Physician Equity Opportunities Methods for acquiring & selling equity Cash buy-in / pay-out Earn out method - certain circumstances Deferred compensation / buy-in Buy-sell agreements Recruitment agreements

Hospital - Physician Equity Opportunities Valuation/Fairness/Documentation Standard of value FMV, fair value, liquidation value, intrinsic value, strategic value Purpose and function of valuation Complete or limited valuation

Hospital - Physician Equity Opportunities Valuation issues cont. What is being valued: assets, stock, contract, capital contribution, etc. Universe of buyers Control or minority interest Marketability issues Actual or hypothetical

Hospital - Physician Equity Opportunities Valuation issues cont. Purchase - cash, stock or terms Timing of valuation

Hospital - Physician Equity Opportunities Operating issues Nature of the agreement (e.g., JV, operating, management, etc.) Operating agreement provisions Control, succession and reporting mechanisms Management composition

Hospital - Physician Equity Opportunities Operating agreement, cont. Capital account contributions, events and provisions (failure to make additional contributions) Distributable cash Partner liabilities Tax exempt status issues Dissolution of company & buy-sell

Hospital - Physician Equity Opportunities Transaction issues Timing of transaction - current valuation (e.g., within 3 months of closing date w/ updated balance sheet) Terms and fairness - FMV Normally judged from the viewpoint of one side only in a deal (the other side has to concern itself with fairness from its viewpoint)

Hospital - Physician Equity Opportunities Transaction issues, cont. A fairness opinion is no guarantee that the proposed deal is the best possible deal Price is an important consideration Not all prices are comparable How should a stock deal compare with an allcash deal?

Hospital - Physician Equity Opportunities Transaction issues, cont. Not all stocks have equivalent attractiveness Liquidity is a concern Historical performance and the outlook for future performance Some stocks have more potential for rapid appreciation than others

Hospital - Physician Equity Opportunities Transaction issues, cont. Re: Stock appreciation and attractiveness The market will judge Look at PPM stock price changes from 1/15/98 to 10/15/98