Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for standing by. I am Nikola, your Chorus Call operator. Welcome, thank you for joining the Fresenius Medical Care Report on fourth quarter and full year 2022. Throughout today's recorded presentation, all participants will be in a listen-only mode. The presentation will be followed by a question and answer session.
If you would like to ask a question, you may press star followed by one on your touch-tone telephone. Press the star key followed by zero for operator assistance. I would now like to turn the conference over to Dominic, Head of Investor Relations. Please go ahead, sir.
Thank you, Nikola. Good afternoon or good morning, depending on where you are. I would also like to welcome you to our earnings call for the fourth quarter. As always, I need to start out the call by mentioning our cautionary language that is in our safe harbor statement, as well as in our presentation and in all the materials that we have distributed yesterday. For further details concerning risks and uncertainties, please refer to these documents and to our SEC filings.
Due to the deconsolidation announcement, I have to add that we will be filing a registration statement with the SEC with respect to the conversion. The prospectus for the conversion will be available on the SEC website and will contain important information. You should read the prospectus and other documents we filed with the SEC for the conversion when they are available.
With this Q4 results, we traditionally share an update on our strategic ambitions. We have more to cover than in the other quarters. I'm aware that there is a lot of information from Fresenius and us to digest today. Given that we have only 60 minutes, we need to limit the number of questions again to two in order to give everyone the chance to ask questions.
Should there be further questions and time left, we are happy to go a second round. It would be great if you could make this work again. With us today is Helen Giza, our new CEO and Chair of the Management Board. Helen will start with insights in the new strategic aspirations, followed by a short review of the quarter and the outlook. We are happy to take your questions. I will now hand over to Helen. The floor is yours.
Thank you, Dominic. Warm welcome to you all. It really is an honor to be speaking with you today as CEO of Fresenius Medical Care. These are exciting times for sure as we embark on the next chapter in the company's history. There is a lot I want to cover today, as Dominic already mentioned.
Before I start with my prepared remarks, I would like to take a moment to recognize the hard work and dedication of our great teams around the world. We are all united behind our common vision of creating a future worth living for our patients worldwide every day. I would also like to express my special thanks to our teams in the Ukraine and in Turkey.
My thoughts and prayers are with all of those affected, and I thank you for being on location, working tirelessly to provide aid and helping our patients. I will begin on slide five with our strategic aspiration. As the new CEO, my overarching strategic aspiration is to unlock value as the leading kidney care company and to drive up shareholder return. Today, I will introduce the key elements of the strategy roadmap. We will also host the Capital Markets Day on April 19th to delve deeper into these topics.
The right corporate structure is key in our ability to unlock value, and we are taking important steps to simplify and optimize our structure. Since the first of the year, we have fully implemented our new operating model, reorienting to two globalized operating segments, Care Delivery, our healthcare services business, and Care Enablement, our MedTech business.
This new operating model not only provides increased transparency internally, but it will also bring enhanced transparency to our external financial reporting. We will spend time detailing the new reporting structure along with historical figures and future expectations during our Capital Markets Day. As you will have seen in yesterday's announcement, Fresenius is planning to deconsolidate Fresenius Medical Care.
The necessary change in our legal form will create a simplified, more agile and efficient governance structure, which will enable full independent decision making and at the same time strengthen the rights of our free float shareholders. I will speak more about that later. Another critical step is taking a more rigorous approach to capital allocation. I have implemented a disciplined financial policy to drive the much-needed improvement in our return on invested capital.
I am proud of what we've accomplished to date with our FME25 transformation program. We will further accelerate and extend it within the new operating model. In addition, we are implementing operational efficiency and cost reduction measures beyond FME25. With a disciplined lens and focus on the core business and improving profitability, we are further optimizing our portfolio. I will speak about what these measures entail for both Care Delivery and Care Enablement, respectively, in a moment.
I am a firm believer that culture eats strategy for breakfast. None of these measures will be successful if we don't have a winning culture in place. This includes fostering a clear culture of accountability. With the successful implementation of our global sustainability program through 2022, we have laid a strong foundation to drive integration of sustainable principles into our business.
We have decided on new global sustainability targets for the coming years, focusing on enhancing quality of care and access to health care, reducing the company's environmental footprint, and building the best team to serve our patients. As part of this, we continue to promote diversity, equity, and inclusion, I'm proud of the initiatives we continue to advance here. On to slide six. As I mentioned earlier, our new simplified operating model went into effect as of January first.
Our two global segments now have complete end-to-end P&L responsibility. This new structure provides increased transparency and enables us to compare directly to our peers. It also provides the basis to drive targeted improvements of our business performance. With our globalized and fully allocated G&A functions, we have the flexibility to scale these functions as needed to provide an appropriate level of support to the respective segments.
For me, it's remarkable to see the difference the new structure has made already, particularly around visibility and transparency, and it has opened up further possibilities to unlock value and improve profitability. This new model also positions us to truly realize the full extent of benefits from our vertically integrated business model. Next on slide seven. After simplifying the structure we are working with, the simplification of the structure we are working in is an important step.
The announced intent by Fresenius to deconsolidate Fresenius Medical Care and the proposed corresponding change of legal form to a German stock corporation would significantly simplify the governance structure of Fresenius Medical Care. With this change, we would move from a controlled structure with several decision-making boards to a standard German two-tier system with one supervisory board and one management board. This will strengthen the rights of the free float shareholders.
One clear hurdle will be overcome with this proposed change. The KGaA structure has been a challenge for many investors. Turning to slide eight. In addition to the improved shareholder rights, there are important business relevant benefits too. This governance structure enables faster and fully independent decision making, and it also provides more optionality on our future strategic direction. The change removes the operational and coordination burdens of us being part of a larger group organization.
It frees up time and capacity of the executive and management team and enables them to focus solely on Fresenius Medical Care. It also avoids potential conflicts of interest within the group. The new legal structure enhances our flexibility to manage capital allocation and shareholder returns. It also provides us with an unrestricted approach to access capital markets from a financing perspective.
With the conversion of the legal form, Fresenius will not be a controlling shareholder anymore. Consequently, as a large German corporation, we would move from an indirect codetermination via the Fresenius supervisory board to a direct codetermination where all supervisory board members would be committed solely to the future of Fresenius Medical Care.
With the separation, the credit ratings may not benefit from the group structure, which some rating agencies take into account. With our focused capital allocation priorities, to which I come later, and our strong track record of deleveraging, we expect only limited rating pressure resulting from the deconsolidation. As a well-known issuer, we are confident to maintain our good access to the capital markets.
We will also need to carve out in some of our rather limited areas where we share services with Fresenius in Germany, such as G&A services for payroll taxes or treasury, which are already contracted at arm's length. There will be an additional administrative activities needed to convert to the new legal form.
An extraordinary shareholder meeting is required later in the year, currently assumed to be in July. The one-time costs associated and corresponding carve-out measures are assumed to range from EUR 50 million-EUR 100 million, which we will treat as a special item. The final decision will require a 75% approval by our shareholders. We expect that the entire process of the conversion into a German stock corporation will be completed by no later than the end of this year. Next on slide 9.
Additionally, we are working towards strengthening our financial position with a disciplined approach to capital allocation and improving our return on invested capital. Given our current leverage position and the high interest rate environment, deleveraging is our primary capital allocation priority. We are committed to maintaining our investment grade status and to managing our net financial leverage in the self-imposed range of 3-3.5 times.
Any potential divestiture gains from portfolio optimization will be used for deleveraging. We are committed to a dividend policy in line with our earnings development. Consistent with the decline in earnings in 2022, we are proposing a 17% reduction in our dividend. Finally, with a laser focus on driving organic growth in our core portfolio, our investment activities will be limited. We expect minimal acquisition activity and restrictively managing CapEx. Turning to slide 10.
I'm very excited about what's been achieved to date with our FME25 transformation program, as well as the extended opportunities to improve profitability. With particular acceleration in the fourth quarter, our FME25 program delivered sustainable savings of EUR 131 million, well above our expected range for the year.
Additionally, we have increased the scope of the program, largely comprising of additional opportunities to improve the profitability of our Care Enablement segment that continues to be heavily impacted by inflationary pressures. We now expect sustainable savings of EUR 650 million by 2025, with one-time costs of up to the same amount. We expect incremental EUR 120 million-EUR 170 million in sustainable savings in 2023, which will bring us to EUR 250 million-EUR 300 million exiting the year.
To achieve this, we now expect one-time costs of $250 million-$300 million. Moving to slide 11. With our new operating model in place, we now have clear line of sight and the leadership accountability in place to drive performance and run the segments like the two separate businesses that they are. This will allow for further operational efficiencies and portfolio optimization beyond FME25.
On this slide, we have outlined our path to unlock value in each of our operating segments. In Care Delivery, our turnaround efforts are focused on productivity and efficiency measures, and in the U.S. specifically, we are focused on labor stabilization, growth, and improving our operating leverage, and we have already started clinic closures. We have around 50-100 clinic closures in the U.S. in our first wave.
We are streamlining our portfolio by exiting unsustainable international markets and divesting non-core service assets. In Care Enablement, our product margin has been severely impacted by macroeconomic inflationary and supply chain pressures and is falling short of our aspirations. To improve profitability, we are focused on pricing initiatives, productivity measures, and reviewing our manufacturing footprint.
We are also taking a hard look at our product portfolio and are in the process of rationalizing our global R&D programs and divesting non-core product lines. This will enable, in the future, a more focused capital allocation towards the areas of higher profitable growth in the core business. As I mentioned earlier, the proceeds from these disposals will be used to further deleverage. With the move to the new operating segments, a reallocation of goodwill and the recoverability of goodwill is required. The current estimate indicates no impairment risk.
I have flagged throughout the last year that our products business has faced significant margin pressure. As the evaluation also takes into account interest rates, WACC, and changes to the macroeconomic environment, possible changes to those factors may result in a goodwill impairment in Care Enablement in the future. To be transparent about a potential risk, I wanted to share this reorientation of the goodwill calculations.
Before I turn to our financial performance, I would like to emphasize that our strategic aspiration and planned initiatives are tangible. We are actively implementing and executing on these initiatives already. This gives me the confidence for a recovery of earnings growth in 2024 and beyond. I look forward to sharing more details during our Capital Markets Day in April. I'd like to change course and move to our fourth quarter business update on slide 13.
In the fourth quarter, we continued to deliver organic growth. Currency effects extended our revenue growth to 8% reported and 2% at constant currency. In line with expectations, our operating income declined by 8% on a constant currency basis and before special items. Our net income declined by 14% on the same basis. In the fourth quarter, our headwinds and tailwinds developed roughly as communicated.
As expected, our business developments continued to be impacted by higher labor costs and macroeconomic inflationary pressures. While the US labor market remained challenging, our labor stabilization efforts continued to drive gradual improvement in our labor KPIs. Next, on slide 14. On a constant currency basis, healthcare services delivered revenue growth of 2%. This was mainly driven by organic growth in EMEA and Asia Pacific.
The North American region delivered stable organic growth and improvement from the third quarter, despite the impact from accumulated excess mortality, staffing challenges, and capacity constraints in certain clinics. Revenue for the products business was flat for the quarter as higher sales of incentive disposables were offset by lower sales of machines for chronic treatments, also resulting from delays from the lifted FDA shipment hold.
Turning to slide 15. On a year-over-year basis, we experienced the largest margin contribution from business growth, including COVID effects. This was partly driven by reimbursement increases as well as a negative Humacyte investment remeasurement effect in the fourth quarter of 2021. The most significant margin detractors were macroeconomic inflationary pressures, including labor cost increases and the year-over-year headwind from applied U.S. provider relief funds.
These headwinds were partially offset by the acceleration of our FME25 program, which led to higher savings in the fourth quarter. The FME25 one-time costs, which we treated as a special item, was also higher in the fourth quarter. Other one-time costs consist of the remeasurement effect of our investment in Humacyte and impacts from the Ukraine war, which included the impairment of a production plant resulting from economic sanctions imposed on Russia. Next on slide 16.
The year-over-year decline in our operating cash flow was mainly due to the lower net income. However, the focus on lower CapEx resulted in a stable free cash flow development year-over-year. At 3.4 times net debt to EBITDA, we were at the upper end of our target leverage corridor, and it is a priority for us to stay within this self-imposed range.
For me, cash is king. As I mentioned earlier, future deleveraging is at the top of our capital allocation priorities. Turning to our outlook on slide 18. With our new financial reporting structure, in line with our DAX peer group, we will now change to an annual outlook for revenue and operating profit. It's important to me to continue to be transparent about the assumptions we are making.
For 2023, I really want to focus on the key assumptions and drivers of expected earnings development. Despite some stabilization, we are assuming a continued headwind of EUR 200 million-EUR 240 million from the inflationary cost environment, resulting from the annualization impact from these costs, plus, although on a lower level, a continuation of the inflationary environment. This remains a high headwind, in particular in Care Enablement.
As you know, we have many moving parts on labor. However, we are seeing gradual improvement in the challenging US labor market. As outlined last year, of the defined labor cost headwind, a portion was expected to become a tailwind for 2023, and some of the permanent measures we implemented in 2022 were always expected to have an annualization effect.
We are assuming a merit increase of 3%-4% across the group. When we net all of these effects and assumptions, it results in a labor cost headwind year-over-year of EUR 140 million-EUR 180 million. In the US, we are assuming a broadly stable dialysis treatment volume development for the full year that could range from a +1% growth to a -1% decline.
As I mentioned earlier, we are assuming sustainable FME25 savings of EUR 250 million-EUR 300 million by the end of 2023. Last year, as we all know, operating income was supported by EUR 277 million of US provider relief funds, and we do not assume any additional funds will be made available in 2023. To provide a comparable basis for our 2023 operating income outlook, we have adjusted the base accordingly.
Next on slide 19. As always, our outlook is in constant currency and excluding special items. In 2023, we expect low to mid-single-digit revenue growth. On the adjusted basis that I just explained on the previous slide, we expect a flat to high single-digit percentage weight decline for operating income in 2023.
From a phasing perspective, we do expect the low point in our operating income development in the first quarter. The first quarter is expected to provide only a mid-teens % share of the 2023 operating income. To help you with your 2023 modeling, we are assuming a tax rate of 25%-27% and financial cost of EUR 350 million-EUR 380 million at constant currency.
While 2023 will be a year of level setting, we are confident in our path to unlock value as the leading kidney care company. We expect to come out of 2023 stronger and well positioned to drive sustainable, profitable growth with a recovery of earnings growth in 2024 and by 2025 with an improved operating profit margin of 10%-14%.
When you look at the 2025 margin aspiration, please keep in mind that this includes the assumed strong revenue growth of our value-based care business, which comes with an incremental but lower margin and therefore dilutes the overall margin. With that, I know I've covered a lot and I imagine you have some questions for me, and I'll hand it over to Dominic to begin the Q&A.
Thank you, Helen, for the presentation and the many insights. With that, I hand it over to Nicolas. Please open the lines for the Q&A.
Thank you, ladies and gentlemen. At this time, we will begin the question and answer session. Anyone who wishes to ask a question may press star followed by one on their touchtone telephone. If you wish to remove yourself from the question queue, you may press star followed by two. If you're using speaker equipment today, please lift the handset before making your selections. In the interest of time, please limit yourself to two questions only. Anyone who has a question may press star followed by one at this time. One moment for the first question, please. The first question is coming from Graham Doyle from UBS. Please go ahead.
Good afternoon, guys. Thanks a lot for taking my questions. Just one firstly on this year's guidance. When I look to the sort of pushes and pulls you've kindly given us, it kind of implies that there's maybe $130 million of business growth in 2023 to hit the midpoint of your guidance. Is that fair? How would you go about doing that? The extended FME25 program, if you do deliver that, sorry, does that allow you to then hit the top end of that 10%-14% range? Should we assume that all cost savings drop through to the EBIT line? Thank you very much.
Maybe I'll take your second question first. In terms of the margin, range for 2025, as I'm sure you can appreciate, there's, you know, there's a lot of these initiatives that I've outlined today that will, you know, gradually pay off between 2023 and 2025. You're absolutely right. Of course, FME25 is a big piece of that.
However, you know, these underlying measures that I speak about in efficiencies on productivity, improving the operating leverage, as well as some pricing measures will also contribute to that margin expansion. Additionally, you know, we do expect some reimbursement to catch up here with the PPS over this period through 2025, as well as the patient growth recovery.
I think that what we can see is we're kind of looking at this three-year window is the combination of all of these measures coming to fruition. That gets us back, you know, closer to historical profits. I think with a leaner, more focused approach on the, you know, kind of on the operations here. With regard the 23 guidance, of course, the delta is business growth. Bear in mind that that labor number is a net number, which includes the merit increase as well. Of course, what we were trying to do was just tease out the main headwinds and tailwinds. Of course, there's an underlying business performance here as well.
Rather than just putting that in. Maybe last year, we had it in as a plug for everything else. We're just now this year just trying to focus on the main pluses and minuses, and it's, you know, not meant to be a complete exhaustive list, as I'm sure you can appreciate.
Okay. Super clear. Thanks a lot, guys.
The next question is coming from Hassan Al-Wakeel from Barclays. Please go ahead.
Thank you for taking my questions. I have a couple, please. Firstly, can you talk about the bridge to 2025 margin targets and the key building blocks to achieving this? What are your assumptions around pricing, wage inflation, and cost out, given EBIT growth at the midpoint, based on your margin target vastly outpaces revenue growth over this period.
Secondly, could you talk a bit about the potential for disposals, where these could sit perhaps in the care coordination portfolio or maybe some of the lower growth or margin regions? How long is this list? Is anything being assumed for 2025 in terms of the margin target? How significant could it be?
Thanks, Hassan. Appreciate the questions. We're not gonna lay out a bridge for 2025 today. We will have the CMD in April that will speak to the plans for both segments and the kind of the margin building blocks, if you will. More to come in April with more detail there. At that time, we'll also roll out, you know, the kind of the segment reporting, and we'll have the historical, you know, kind of views on that as well. You'll be able to see products and services in the way you've all been asking to see it for many years.
In terms of potential disposals, we've taken a hard look at the portfolio. I guess all I would say right now is we're looking at what really is too far removed from the core, and also what maybe isn't performing at the kind of margin level we would expect. That does include, you know, non-core dialysis services assets, as I mentioned. You know, we're also looking at international service markets where either the reimbursement or profitability or scale is, you know, maybe no longer viable for us. More to come. Right now, we don't have these built in.
As we bring them to fruition and execution over the course of the, of the, probably the next, you know, 12 to 18 months, with some in 2023, we'll update on those in real time. You know, Let me get all your questions here. You asked a question on the margin for 2025. Of course, as I mentioned, VBC will be a little bit of a driver of that dilution as that medical cost under management grows. We'll still get the, you know, the low single-digit % of margin, but that does dilute the overall margin. I think the key piece here will be what we cover in Capital Markets Day in April on the bridges to the services and products margin improvements.
Helen, if I could just follow up, please. In the absence of a margin bridge and looking forward to getting that in a couple of months. You know, what are your assumptions in terms of pricing and wage inflation? Do you expect a meaningful amelioration of the latter? You know, how are you thinking about reimbursement rates next year and beyond?
Yeah, I'm not, I'm not giving that today, Hassan. We'll come back, as I said, in April, with more detail on that.
Thank you.
The next question is coming from Oliver Metzger from ODDO BHF. Please go ahead.
Oh, hi, Helen Giza. Thanks for taking my question. The first one is also on your 2025 EBIT margin guidance. You have increased your exposure to value-based care quite strongly through a pre-merger of InterWell Health. The question is, it's a highly dilutive business, but still brings some EBIT. How many revenues have you baked into your 2025 assumption?
That would be quite interesting to know. The second question is on, I understand that you don't incorporate any potential governmental support in your guidance. That's quite prudent. I would say while magnitude and timing is highly uncertain, how do we evaluate from a top-down perspective the chances that some funds will be granted as otherwise smaller dialysis centers would not survive?
Thanks, Oliver. Let me take your questions. In terms of the, you know, the EBIT guidance. Yeah, you're right. You know, on VBC, when we talk about the dilutive, we had, you know, previously said that we expect the medical cost under management to be around EUR 11 billion by 2025, and we had said that low single digit around 1% margin there.
Obviously, that is baked into these projections, and I don't really... I mean, obviously it's an accretor of absolute EBIT contribution, but it does dilute the percentage. Obviously we are seeing with all the other efficiency measures and productivity measures and pricing measures along with FME25, we do see a path to that margin range that we outlined and of course, that's why we have published it.
In terms of government support, we really don't see any path to that. There is no funding left in any of the bills that have been issued. Of course, we continue to, you know, kind of along with many providers, speak to the concerns that we have. Obviously we know that the reimbursement system is in a lag. Obviously, you know, we do have the benefit of a 3% PPS rate this year. You know, our expectation is that that will increase in 24 and 25 in line with the, you know, kind of the increased costs that will get submitted. We'll get the benefit of that, hopefully, as inflation starts to tail off. I think, you know, you're right.
It's not just a prudent assumption, I think it's a real assumption. You know, this time last year, we felt that we had line of sight into something, but not here. Obviously, if anything changes, we will update the markets accordingly.
Yeah. Okay. Thank you. Potentially one follow-up. How do you evaluate the risk that some smaller operators will go out of business?
Sorry, Oliver, I did miss that. Look, it's a question we get asked a lot on... You know, obviously, we are larger in scale, and obviously, it's impacting us quite significantly. We can only imagine that it's hitting the, you know, the smaller operators harder. If you recall, you know, there was more funding available for the rural providers, but of course, that's used up too. I guess the hypothesis here is that it could put stress on the smaller operators and maybe that becomes a benefit for us if, you know, we're able to pick up those patients. Obviously that's not built into this, and I'm, you know, speculating on what duress they're under.
I can honestly say we're not having them knocking at our door saying, "Buy us," and we're not buying anyway. You know, obviously, it's something that we are keeping our ears to the ground on and watching carefully.
Okay. Thank you very much, Helen.
The next question is coming from Christoph Gretler from CS. Please go ahead.
Yes, thank you, operator. Good afternoon, Helen and Dominic. Can I ask, first of all, congratulations on this steep career from, you know, CFO to CEO and now to a fully public company. It's quite remarkable. I have now two questions now for you. The first is just on a same-store market growth in the U.S.
You know, it keeps on, you know, declining, you know. I was just wondering, you know, if you could share your thoughts on what's going on there. You know, I guess, you know, kind of now the excess mortality is probably kind of passed, you know, it's still kind of not showing any signs of improvement, you know. That would be very interesting.
The, the second question with respect to, you know, payer mix, you know, whether you could, you know, indicate, if you had seen, you know, any impact, you know, from this Marietta Memorial Hospital case, particularly on the small and midsize, you know, customer base. You know, it's been a while now, so, just wondering, you know, whether that's, kind of, an issue or not at all. Thank you.
Thanks, Christoph. It's. I appreciate the congratulations. It's been a busy 78 days. It's, let me unpack your questions. Same-store market growth. In Q4, that was minus 1.9%. That was an improvement over Q4. Obviously, to be clear, that's the U.S. It has been improving every quarter. Obviously, as you correctly point out, there is this, you know, the accumulation of the excess mortality.
You know, I think it's why we are being quite narrow and flattish with our range on, you know, kind of the growth projection for 2023. We're also seeing, you know, kind of the mortality coming down quite significantly from the peak consistently. That's giving us the confidence that, you know, we will return to growth.
I think this question of when do we see it fully back to what it was pre-pandemic, you know, we keep talking about this 18-24 month period. Every time we see an improvement that gives us confidence. In terms of the payer mix, it's been quite sticky throughout. We've obviously spoken about that. We continue to see, you know, kind of slight improvements now, with the Medicare Advantage book of business. That also helps us as well with MA being in the high 30s. The last comment on Marietta, we're still expecting that bill to be passed and the language in the MSP amended.
We had hoped it would be at the end of last year in the lame duck period, but it didn't happen. We're still confident that that will happen in 2023, where obviously all the plans were locked and loaded last year for this year. No impact in 2023. You know, it's still going through the CBO scoring, and we expect it to be a net cost to the government when that all gets resolved. Obviously we'd like it resolved and the overhang of the questions to go away.
Of course. Thank you. I appreciate your comments.
You bet. Thank you.
Yeah.
The next question is coming from Ed Ridley-Day from Redburn. Please go ahead.
Great, thanks. I'd also add my congratulations, Helen. Thanks for what you've laid out today. Great to see some commentary around return on capital. Obviously a clearly an important metric and obviously something that the company has struggled with in recent years. Can you give us some idea of your... the level you would like to see?
I know what you've laid out, but that'd be helpful if you could give us some color about how you would like ROIC to develop. Also, a second question would be, have you yet or, what are your thoughts on the opportunity in PD in the US in particular, following your peers exits from the market?
Sorry, Ed, we had a little bit of connection problem here. Can you repeat the last question? Sorry.
Sure. Your peer Baxter has announced an exit with some PD, and presumably that might offer an opportunity. I don't know if you have any thoughts on that at this stage. Thank you.
Thanks, Ed. Thank you for repeating that question. We got lost you at the back end of that. Look, return on invested capital, there's no question it's disappointed being in the 3s. I haven't put a target range out there, but clearly we need to minimally clear our cost of capital here. You can see the financial policy I've put out. It needs to improve, and it needs to improve quickly and concertedly.
We'll think through whether we put some targets out there for April, haven't really got that far on the ROIC target, but obviously we're so low it needs to improve and I'm very mindful of the, you know, the increasing cost of capital and the impact on our WACC. Very much a focused effort internally.
On your Baxter, it'll be interesting to see how that all plays out. We know that some of those assets had been shopped for sale. There wasn't take up on there. Now they're doing the spin off. We'll also see how customers react to it and what that means and if there is opportunity. Obviously, our team are staying close to it and looking at it.
I think for us, we're clear where we are with our portfolio, but maybe it'll help with pricing in the market overall. We're all suffering with the same inflationary and cost pressures on the product side here. I think we're just watching and waiting to see what happens as they complete this spin out and whether what kind of transaction happens as a result of it.
Great. Thank you.
The next question is coming from Lisa Clive from Bernstein. Please go ahead.
Hi, Helen. Been a while. Congratulations on the promotion, and good luck with the big changes ahead. Just a few questions on just your thoughts on treatment volumes. Can you comment on what the COVID excess mortality was in Q4 and what are your assumptions for that for 2023? Second part of that is DaVita made a lot of noise at Q3 around missed treatments having ticked up and stayed quite high through 2022, which they said was 100 basis point headwind to their treatment volumes, which they had expected to continue into 2023. We'll see what they update us on that later.
Can you just comment on how missed treatments have been trending for you and whether we should expect a year-over-year change in any way and whether it's sort of elevated. The last piece relating to your treatment volumes is just around transplants. There's about 20,000 transplants in the U.S. every year.
You know, I assume, given your market share, that roughly, you know, 30%, you know, 35%, 40% of that is your patients. Has that number stayed pretty steady? Has it actually gone down in the pandemic due to lack of operating room capacity? There was a big push under a Trump initiative to try and increase transplants. Has that number been going up?
I'm just sort of curious and also in light of the regulatory change where there's now drug coverage for patients under Medicare, which could help some of those patients, maintain those transplants, in a healthy way. Just trying to think about some of the puts and takes around patient volumes, as you know, the next few years unfold. Thanks.
Thanks, Lisa. It's great to hear your voice. Let me make sure I capture all of those, and if I miss something, just tell me at the end, 'cause I think I was scribbling furiously here. Treatment volumes in Q4 were pretty flat, we, you know, we didn't see anything untoward there. In terms of the mistreatments, I think, you know, we saw this, you know, kind of phenomena in, you know, lower growth in Q2. DaVita saw it in Q3.
I think at this point, both of us are saying, "Oh, we don't know." We are turning that into, okay, all we can look at now is where we are with our organic growth, and that's why I think we're for us, for sure at FMC, calling it, as you know, the +1, -1 for 2023. Then as it relates to COVID and the excess mortality, we'd always guided 5,000-6,000 for the full year. We ended the year, and bear in mind, these are still somewhat not completely final because of the data lag, but we ended the year with around 5,200, so a little less than we had expected.
You know, it's at the peak, we were seeing, you know, this excess mortality driving around 400 basis points, and now we're seeing that at around 250 basis points. I think that gives you the swing of where, you know, where we're seeing that. You know, just maybe, you know, as we think about our, you know, say, market decrease, you know, that's been coming. As I already mentioned, that's been coming down a little bit every quarter, where we were at -1.9 at the end of the year. On transplants, you mentioned 20,000. We're seeing that a little bit higher, maybe around 25,000.
I think that there is a little bit of an increase, which, you know, obviously is likely to be supported by some of the, you know, the executive orders there as well. An increase, but still, you know, quite small, you know, numbers in terms of the overall patient volumes. Did I miss anything, Lisa?
No. I suppose, Well, I guess maybe just one follow-up on the excess mortality around COVID. You know, essentially, you know, the average has been that roughly 20% of your patients die each year. COVID's increased that by a few percentage points. Do you think we're sort of stuck at a, at a slightly higher mortality rate, just because these are such clinically vulnerable patients? You know, just trying to think about how that looks going forward.
Yeah, great question. That's actually maybe a little bit of a bright spot for us because historically, we were sitting around 17%. Through, you know, COVID, it went up to around 20%. Now we're seeing that come back down quite quickly actually to around 18%. I think that's what also gives us the confidence on the, you know, the growth recovery, in the, you know, in the short term as well. You know, that was, you know, obviously the numbers I'm giving you, is kind of more US numbers, but international normalized even quicker, I would say, because obviously we didn't have the same impact from COVID that we did in the US.
I think that's really encouraging for us that these, you know, the underlying business fundamentals that we speak about with the, you know, kind of, you know, patient, new patients coming in and the growth, you know, is somewhat normalizing post-COVID. I guess it all took longer than we all ever imagined.
Yeah. Great. I know you guys have done an incredible job keeping your patients as safe as you can. Thank you for that detail. That's super helpful.
Thanks, Lisa.
The next question is coming from James Vane-Tempest. Please go ahead.
Hi. Thanks for taking my questions. It's James Vane-Tempest from Jefferies. Just coming back to 2025, outside of your own execution and numbers, I'm just curious what you're assuming for any industry changes for your projections. For example, value-based care. Is progression to ESRD being delayed?
If our patients essentially joining that sicker and missing treatments, are business models increasingly stretched over time for value-based care at-risk models. Secondly, on volumes, I'm curious if patient flow may slow if drugs are more effective in CKD three or four, patients potentially starting ESRD are not living as long if they're sicker. Is this a trend you think is happening and/or getting better over time?
Thirdly, apologies if this was mentioned earlier about the DaVita Marietta ruling, given we're talking about 2025, just wondering if you are assuming in your assumptions any impact on commercial mix in 2024?
Thanks, James. Yeah, we're not really assuming anything different in the underlying fundamentals in our, you know, our market situation, you know, due to the ESRD or CKD. Now, what we are doing, of course, with our value-based care efforts is moving more into managing that CKD population, which we feel, you know, is an important part of our strategy that ultimately we should get healthier patients coming in into the funnel.
That feels, you know, kind of all aligned with the strategy there. In terms of the, you know, what we are feeling there is that if we're getting a, you know, a healthier patient coming in, then that means that they would be on, you know, dialysis for longer.
You know, it's an interesting question on the drug piece because, you know, obviously we're watching SGLT2s closely. What we see there is a, you know, a cardiovascular benefit, and a, you know, a kind of a diabetes benefit. That means that we should, you know, ultimately They will still end up on ESRD. Again, we'll have a healthier patient for longer. We see that impact is, you know, maybe, what? Six, eight years away. You know, obviously if we can get, you know, the benefits on the CKD population, that will ultimately benefit us there. Then, you know, we have, as I say, just healthier patients for longer.
On the Marietta situation, we're still assuming that that will have a positive ruling and there is no impact, you know, negative assumed in this outlook. You know, obviously we're just waiting to get that, get that resolved with the, with the MSP language.
Thank you. Just a quick follow-up on one of your slides on for 2023 guidance on treatment growth of -1% to +1%. Is that all in or if there's any impact from clinic closures, you know, would that we'd have to consider that separately? Thank you.
That does include clinic closures.
That's great. Thank you.
The next question is coming from Victoria Lambert from Berenberg. Please go ahead.
Thanks for taking my question. I just had one on your home treatment strategy. Is the target still to reach 25% of treatments at home by 2025? Yeah, just an update on the progress of that would be useful. Thank you.
Hi, Victoria. Great to have you on the Berenberg team. The home target, it's still aspirational to be at 25% by 2025. We recognize that our home home growth has been impacted by, you know, obviously the labor challenges and, you know, kind of staffing shortfalls that we had in 2023. At the end of Q4, we were at roughly, you know, just around 16%.
Definitely a focus for us to continue to accelerate. Now, you know, obviously as we see this labor situation stabilizing, we should be able to kind of get back on the training and really continue to drive that like we had, you know, kind of maybe this time last year when we were seeing that momentum come through. Yeah, still really excited about home.
Very much a key pillar of our strategy to, you know, kind of offset in some ways this, the labor challenges that we have, but ultimately also feed into our value-based care strategy of really improving outcomes in a home setting, which should ultimately reduce cost as well.
Thank you.
The next question is coming from Falko Friedrichs from Deutsche Bank. Please go ahead.
thanks a lot. Hi, Helen. My first question is, can you provide an update on the labor shortage situation in the U.S. and also the amount of open positions that you're still looking to fill at the moment? Related to that, how important is a significant improvement in that regard when thinking about achieving your new 2025 target? My second question is whether you can provide an update on the CFO search, can you provide a rough timeline for when the new person might be announced? Thank you.
Thanks, Falko. Labor, yeah. As you know, it's been a many moving parts on that, as I mentioned, which was one of our more difficult numbers to kind of size for 2023. I'm really starting to feel that we've got our arms around this, you know, this labor situation and stabilizing it. In terms of the open positions, we are currently around 4,400, down from around 5,000 last quarter. I'm also really happy to see that the, you know, the use of temporary labor, the spend overall has come down quite significantly. Not just the volume that we're using, but the rates are declining as well, which is really important.
You know, the other part that was a challenge for us, was, you know, this constant churn of labor through the summer. We're seeing some significant improvements in our employee turnover rates, particularly in that less than one-year period. That is, you know, kind of a better, a better hiring adherence, but you know, kind of longer training classes, kind of a buddy system.
We're really seeing a lot of these benefits take hold. I think we're also seeing, you know, maybe this is some of the inflationary measure, the hot kind of market has subsided, you know, and we're seeing that show up in, you know, a little bit lower rates as well overall. I feel really good about what we're doing there.
On top of that, not just the shortages and the costs, but the productivity improvements that we have, you know, we have those baked into this, you know, kind of this midterm view on margins. With regard the CFO search, that is being initiated by the supervisory board of the MAG, that is, it is progressing. There are slates of candidates and, you know, that will move into an interview timeline shortly. I truthfully don't know how long it's going to take, and obviously it depends on anyone's availability and timeline as well. I have no date, but I can assure you the search is ongoing. And I am, yeah, looking forward to that.
Okay. Due to time, we can take one last question.
Yes. The next question comes from Robert Davies from Morgan Stanley. Please go ahead.
Thank you. Yeah, my question was, just one, just in terms of the clinic closures you're doing, just if you could give us some sort of idea of the sort of share of your overall installed base or the overall kind of clinic number that you're taking out. Is there some sort of ballpark figure per clinic or is there too big a variability as you take these out to get some idea of how much cost would come back?
Then, one other thing I wanted to just touch on was just your return on capital employed targets. How do the trends towards home care potentially impact that just from a kind of, I guess, capital employed and equipment standpoint and the way that business would run, just the different structure over the medium term? Thank you.
Thanks, Robert. In terms of clinic closures, we're targeting around 50-100 in this first wave. That's on a base of 2,600 in the U.S. It's, you know, it's a pretty quick payback usually, you know, kind of 2-ish, 2-3 years payback there. Obviously, you know, we're quickly accelerating that and ensuring that we, you know, we keep our proportionate, patient volumes as well.
Then on your second question, you know, in terms of ROIC, I think that was always a, you know, kind of part of the positive business case here with home that, you know, home should positively impact that because you don't need as much, you know, kind of, capital infrastructure. It's quite capital light as you don't need the clinics and so on.
I think that's also why we want to continue to make sure we're accelerating that and making sure it reaches its full potential.
Okay. Thank you.
Thank you.
In the interest of time, we have to stop the Q&A session, and I hand back to Dominic.
I'm sorry that we couldn't take all the questions, but we'll need to catch a plane, unfortunately. I apologize for that one. Thank you for taking the time and, the many interesting questions. That was very helpful. Thank you to Helen for doing that again on her own, the third time.
Thank you, Dominic. Thank you, everybody. I appreciate there was a lot of data today and a lot of information to unpack, but I appreciate your continued interest and support of Fresenius Medical Care. Have a great day, and we'll talk to you soon. Take care.
Thank you. Bye.
Ladies and gentlemen, the conference is now concluded and you may disconnect. Thank you for joining and have a pleasant day.