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Earnings Call: Q1 2022

May 5, 2022

Operator

Greetings, and welcome to the Allscripts first quarter 2022 earnings conference call. At this time, all participants are in a listen only mode. A question and answer session will follow the formal presentation. If anyone should require operator assistance during the conference, please press star-zero on your telephone keypad. As a reminder, this conference is being recorded. I would now like to turn the call over to Jenny Gelinas, Vice President of Investor Relations. Thank you. You may begin.

Jenny Gelinas
VP of Investor Relations, Veradigm

Thank you very much. Good afternoon, and welcome to the Allscripts first quarter 2022 earnings conference call. Our speakers today are Paul Black and Rick Poulton. We will be making a number of forward-looking statements during the presentation and the Q&A part of the call. These statements are based on current expectations and involve a number of risks and uncertainties that could cause our actual results to vary materially. We undertake no obligation to revise these forward-looking statements in light of new information or future events. Please refer to our earnings release and SEC filings for more information regarding the risk factors that may affect our results. Please reference the GAAP and non-GAAP financial statements as well as our non-GAAP tables in our earnings release that are available on our investor relations website. With that, I'm gonna hand the call over to Paul Black.

Paul Black
CEO, Veradigm

Thanks, Jenny. Good afternoon, and thank you all for joining us today. Roughly 10 years ago, I stepped off the board as an independent director to take over the role of CEO because I believed in our company, our clients, and most importantly, our people. Over the past 10 years, we've seen unparalleled change in our industry as providers, payers, and pharma adopted the technology and solutions Allscripts helped pioneer. This week's closing of the sale of our hospital large physician practices segment marks yet another dramatic change in our company's history and positions all of our stakeholders, employees, clients, and investors for continued success. As the company transforms and launches into its next evolution, focusing on our Veradigm business, it is a natural time for the next generation of leaders to step forward. As such, I have decided to step down as CEO effective Friday, May 6th.

While obviously a difficult decision, I leave knowing the company is stronger than ever and in the hands of an accomplished and proven leadership team. I'm incredibly proud to announce Rick Poulton, whom all of you know will be assuming the CEO role effective tomorrow. Rick has been an amazing partner to me and a staunch supporter of our clients, employees, and shareholders over the past 10 years. I will be working with Rick through the end of the second quarter to ensure a smooth transition and will remain an avid supporter of Veradigm. In wrapping up my last earnings call, I want to thank our investors for placing their confidence in Veradigm, thank our clients for repeatedly choosing our technology and solutions, and thank our employees for their undying dedication to serving our clients and making things all possible.

Let me now turn the call over to Rick Poulton, Veradigm President and CEO.

Rick Poulton
President and CFO, Veradigm

Wow. Okay. Thanks, Paul, for the very kind words. It's truly been a pleasure to partner with you through all the highs and the lows that we faced together over the last 10 years. Your leadership and confidence allowed us to accomplish a tremendous amount, particularly over the last two years, and I will always appreciate both your mentorship and your friendship. I don't know if it will be a fishing pole, a golf club, or an ice-cold Corona that you'll have in one hand, but I know your phone will always be in the other. I look forward to many more phone calls together, sharing thoughts on the challenges and opportunities that lie ahead. I could share many funny stories from the last 10 years, but if I keep rambling, this is gonna start sounding like a eulogy.

I know neither one of us want that. Let me get back to the task at hand by just saying a big thank you.

Paul Black
CEO, Veradigm

You're welcome.

Rick Poulton
President and CFO, Veradigm

Okay. Thanks to everybody in the audience for joining us today for our first quarter earnings call. We are, of course, very pleased to have successfully closed the transaction with Constellation Software. This transaction completes a multi-year journey to streamline and recapitalize the operations of the company. It leaves us as a more focused, differentiated company with significant growth opportunity, strong margins, and strong cash flow, all underpinned by a very powerful balance sheet. While it is a little bittersweet to say goodbye to more than 5,000 of our colleagues, we know these associates and the clients are in a good home with Harris Healthcare, and we wish them nothing but the best for the future. I wanna start by orienting you on how we have reported our first quarter numbers.

The results of the hospital and large physician practices business segment are reported in the financials as discontinued operations, and you should expect to see this again in Q2 on both the P&L and the cash flow statement for the stub period that we own the business. For the remaining continuing operations, Veradigm is our core operating entity, representing approximately 95% of our consolidated revenue. We continue to own a small unrelated product line that represents the remaining 5% of revenue. Additionally, we have some stranded corporate costs from the transaction that we expect to whittle down a fair bit over the next several quarters. I also anticipate some other modest one-time costs that we will incur in the months ahead to complete the physical separation of the companies.

Because of all that, for at least the remainder of 2022, we will report both Veradigm performance as well as full consolidated results for the company. Additionally, we have tried to streamline your review by putting all tables into the press release and scrapping the supplemental data package that we previously prepared each quarter. While at the same time, we're providing more enhanced disclosures of both revenue and gross profit of our provider versus payer and life science business lines. Our goal is simple and streamlined transparency and of course, welcome any feedback once you have digested this information. With all that framing, let me get to the numbers. We were pleased with our start to 2022. We saw strong year-over-year growth in revenue, gross profit, and adjusted EBITDA, as well as an overall improvement in margins, earnings per share, and free cash flow.

The Veradigm business segment saw a year-over-year revenue growth of 8% during the quarter, which was consistent with our expectations. The Veradigm provider platform continues its growth trajectory, adding over 500 new practices and 6,100 prescribing physicians during the quarter. Additionally, in April, the US Department of State selected our practice management patient registration and scheduling platform for deployment to over 200 designated health units housed within embassies and missions around the globe. This project will expand on the cloud-based EHR deployment that is already underway. On the payer and life science side of Veradigm, we continue to leverage our scaled provider network effectively using our proprietary datasets, our clinical data exchange platform, and point of care connectivity to create significant value for our payer and life science clients.

During the quarter, we went live with two more marketplace data partnerships, allowing us to continue to expand our reach and ease of use for our customers. Veradigm non-GAAP gross margin was 52.2%, which was up 420 basis points year-over-year, reflecting good operating leverage and good balance of improvement between our end market revenue areas. Further down the P&L, we continue to manage our operating expenses while also investing for the future. You'll see in our results that on a GAAP basis, we incurred approximately $7 million in transaction-related and legal costs, which we have excluded from our non-GAAP earnings calculation.

We will likely have a little more of this in Q2, but then I would expect to get back to clean reporting by Q3, with only adjustments for purchase accounting amortization, stock-based compensation, and a normalized tax rate representing the differences between our GAAP and non-GAAP reporting. We held the nice operating leverage with Veradigm, reporting 24% year-over-year adjusted EBITDA growth in the quarter, and this resulted in adjusted EBITDA margin of 25.8%, an increase of 330 basis points year-over-year. On a per share basis, we reported consolidated non-GAAP EPS of $0.13 per share, which was up 63% year-over-year, reflecting our growing earnings as well as our aggressive share repurchases over the last year. We continued this in the first quarter, repurchasing $50 million of common stock through open market repurchases.

Now I wanna turn to cash. We had an excellent quarter of free cash flow generation as we generated $35 million of cash flow from continuing operations and $25 million of free cash flow. I also wanna point out that accounting rules governing what is classified as continuing operations versus discontinued operations creates a little bit of confusion with what our true cash position was at the end of the quarter. As you can see at the bottom of table three of the press release, there was more than $68 million of cash sitting on the books of the discontinued operation at the end of the quarter. We received all of that cash on top of the acquisition price. Our balance sheet net debt position at the end of the quarter appears much higher than it really was.

Finally, last week, we announced that we amended our credit agreement to extend maturity of the facility for an additional five years as well as secured improved pricing. The amendment consists of a $700 million senior secured revolving facility with significant flexibility to expand as necessary in support of Veradigm's growth trajectory. Now turning to our outlook for 2022. We are maintaining our outlook and expect that Veradigm revenue to grow in a range of 6%-7% year-over-year. Veradigm adjusted EBITDA, we expect to grow in a range of 10%-15% year-over-year. We expect that our consolidated free cash flow from continuing operations to be in a range of $110 million-$120 million.

To wrap up, we feel 2022 got off to a strong start, and we look forward to maintaining that momentum in our new streamlined company. Now I'd like to open up the call for any questions.

Operator

Thank you. We will now be conducting a question and answer session. If you would like to ask a question, please press star one on your telephone keypad. A confirmation tone will indicate your line is in the question queue. You may press star two if you would like to remove your question from the queue. For participants using speaker equipment, it may be necessary to pick up your handset before pressing the star keys. One moment please while we poll for your questions. Our first question comes from the line of Sean Dodge with RBC Capital Markets. Please proceed with your questions.

Sean Dodge
Equity Research Analyst, RBC Capital Markets

Yeah, thanks. Good afternoon. I'll start by saying congratulations to you, Paul, for a hard fought 10 years, and congratulations to Rick, to you as well.

Paul Black
CEO, Veradigm

Thanks, Sean.

The free cash flow guidance. You're welcome. The free cash flow guidance for Veradigm, the $110 million-$120 million for the year. Rick, can we think about that as being a good r epresentation of the run rate going forward, if I'm interpreting this correct, it was $24.5 million of free cash flow attributable to Veradigm, kind of the continuing op in the quarter. Is that a good kind of run rate going forward, or is there something you'd point out there as being kind of noisy, contributing?

Rick Poulton
President and CFO, Veradigm

Yeah. Well, first off, Sean, thanks for the kind words. With respect to free cash flow, I wanna just be clear, that guidance is for the consolidated entity, okay? That actually reflects, you know, what we expect in terms of some of the costs and whatnot that I referred to at the consolidated level. As to, is that an unusual number? Do I think that's part of our, you know, steady state? Yeah, there was nothing unusual in the quarter, and we're not really counting on anything unusual for the year. You know, we think that's reflective of the business, and obviously, as we look to grow the business, I would hope that would continue to grow as well.

Sean Dodge
Equity Research Analyst, RBC Capital Markets

Okay. On the margins, you've said payer and life sciences, those oriented offerings are gonna grow faster than the provider business. How do gross margins on each of those businesses compare? I guess, what if anything is that revenue mix shift gonna do to margins, growth margins over time?

Rick Poulton
President and CFO, Veradigm

Yeah. Actually, I know we just sent the press release out not long before the call, so I'm sure you haven't had full time to digest. You'll see, with some of the tables we've augmented to the press release is the answer to a lot of that question, Sean, with respect to how it breaks down. In particular, I would point you towards tables nine and 10, where we give detail at the revenue line item and gross profit and gross margin line item. The short answer, though, to your question is, you'll see when you get a chance to digest that the difference in margins between the provider side and the payer life science side are not very large. They're actually pretty comparable to each other.

As revenue mix changes, we won't see a lot from the revenue mix. I think we'll instead see improvement come from continued operating leverage.

Sean Dodge
Equity Research Analyst, RBC Capital Markets

Okay. That's very helpful. Thanks, Rick Poulton.

Rick Poulton
President and CFO, Veradigm

Great. Thanks, Sean.

Paul Black
CEO, Veradigm

Thanks, Sean.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Jeff Garro with Piper Sandler. Please proceed with your questions.

Jeff Garro
Senior Research Analyst, Piper Sandler

Yeah, good afternoon, and thanks for taking the questions. I'll echo the congrats to Paul and whatever next steps are ahead, and to Rick for stepping into the CEO role. Wanted to ask about revenue on the payer and life science cohort. Curious what headwinds and tailwinds that piece of the business saw in the first quarter, and what can drive an inflection up towards the 20%-25% growth expectation for the year.

Rick Poulton
President and CFO, Veradigm

Yeah. Thanks for the wishes, Jeff. You know, the payer and life science area, you know, first of all, there's definitely some seasonality. You'll see that, you see that if you look backwards, and we'll continue to experience that going forward. I would say this, the quarter was a little slow. We had added some new folks to our sales team effort there. We're looking forward to a little more momentum later in the year. But that. There's not really a seasonal story beyond that, Jeff. So I mean, we're still confident in those numbers. I think we'll see those numbers rise in Q2, that year-over-year growth. But you know, we're...

The real power of the growth that we had forecasted will come as we continue to build momentum through the year.

Jeff Garro
Senior Research Analyst, Piper Sandler

Great. Maybe dive a little more into the details there now that we have more disclosure on the revenue. I'm just curious in terms of product mix for the payer and life science revenue contribution. You know, don't wanna overlook the common technology elements and that, you know, you have a portfolio of products and, you know, I think a growing set of use cases. But are there any particular products that you'd call out as just key drivers that investors should focus on?

Rick Poulton
President and CFO, Veradigm

Yeah. I mean, you can see the total of it all, Jeff, is, you know, about 20% of revenue, and we expect that mix to shift. You know, I think you've picked that up from us by now. You know, the numbers are not large, and so percentages can change a lot with even, you know, with singular transactions that happen. I think we're not gonna get into really product line level details at least not yet. As we look ahead to, you know, I think later in the year, we're gonna think about doing an investor day. When we do that, we'll take a little deeper dive.

Jeff Garro
Senior Research Analyst, Piper Sandler

Oh, great. Look forward to more to come there. One last one from me, more on the reporting side of things. You know, lot to digest and, you know, not surprising to, you know, not see a bookings number because of potential lack of comparability there. I'm just curious what we can expect going forward there and also on backlog, whether that'll show up in the 10-Q and what the right way might be to interpret that number, if it'll be in there.

Rick Poulton
President and CFO, Veradigm

The business changed a lot. Backlog, we'll probably not go get into because it's not a business that has long-term contracts the way the hospital side did. Backlog changes don't, to me, aren't as good a predictor of stable revenue ahead. That's our current thinking on that. Bookings, we will bring back into the fold. It has been a busy week, and I didn't actually really intend to leave that out, to be candid with you. We'll work on that, and we'll get that back in gear next quarter.

Jeff Garro
Senior Research Analyst, Piper Sandler

Great to hear. Thanks again.

Rick Poulton
President and CFO, Veradigm

Thanks.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Stephanie Davis with SVB Securities. Please proceed with your questions.

Stephanie Davis
Senior Managing Director, SVB Securities

Hey, guys. Thank you for taking my questions. Paul, congrats on retirement. Rick, congrats on the new title. Well deserved.

Rick Poulton
President and CFO, Veradigm

Thank you, Stephanie.

Stephanie Davis
Senior Managing Director, SVB Securities

How should we think about the CFO role? Is that something you guys are going to actively look to fill, or are we just declaring Rick the supreme leader of Veradigm?

Paul Black
CEO, Veradigm

We're gonna have to put that in quotes. Did he set you up for that question, Stephanie? Thanks, Stephanie. Rick is actually blushing, and he doesn't do that very often.

Rick Poulton
President and CFO, Veradigm

That sounds like Paul. We'll be making some announcements about the rest of the leadership team, soon, Stephanie. That will come out probably later today, actually. It's in the 8-K. Oh, it's in the 8-K already. My legal counsel is telling me it's already in the 8-K that's coming out. We're promoting from within to fill the CFO role. I look forward to introducing you and, you know, passing the baton. But I'll, you know, I will be here. The goal of all of this is to have very smooth transitions.

Just as Paul will work with me over the next couple months to make sure we try not to miss anything at the top, I will continue to, you know, help as much as necessary to make sure we have the financial reporting consistent and everybody understands what we're doing.

Stephanie Davis
Senior Managing Director, SVB Securities

Super helpful. Looking forward to the announcement. On the strategy side, I'd be curious what you guys are interested in focusing in on for the Veradigm business now that you can hone in on entirely. Is there any efforts or any strategies you wanna really target now that it has your full attention?

Rick Poulton
President and CFO, Veradigm

Yeah. I mean, I think, Stephanie, you know, the big question obviously will be, and this will be something we'll discuss with our board as well. You know, we have a nice organic growth that we've, you know, shared our expectations with already. You know, the question is, you know, should we augment that? Should we accelerate that through potentially some acquisitions? You know, we have a lot to do organically right now, and we have a good runway, so you know, that's the immediate focus. You know, as we look out ahead, we'll have to entertain that. Certainly, we have the balance sheet capacity to do whatever we want.

I think in terms of specific strategy stuff, and I kinda, probably defer a little bit. Same answer I gave Jeff earlier is, we're gonna look to do a Investor Day, later in the year. When we do that, I think we'll get into a little more depth of, you know, how we're making money today and where we expect to take that going forward.

Stephanie Davis
Senior Managing Director, SVB Securities

All right. Sounds like a plan. Looking forward to it, and congrats again, all around.

Rick Poulton
President and CFO, Veradigm

Thanks, Stephanie. Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of George Hill with Deutsche Bank. Please proceed with your questions.

Speaker 9

Hi, this is Pragya on behalf of George Hill. My question is, are you seeing the slowdown in fundraising in the early-stage biotech market have any impact on demand at Veradigm, or are you seeing any changes in demand from CROs you partner with?

Rick Poulton
President and CFO, Veradigm

Can I ask you to repeat the first part of the question? You cut out a little bit. You reduced funding, and I lost you after that.

Speaker 9

Are you seeing the slowdown in the early-stage biotech market have any impact on the demand at Veradigm, or are you seeing any change in demand from CROs you're partnering with?

Rick Poulton
President and CFO, Veradigm

We're not seeing any real impact from early-stage biotech companies and any funding issues they have there. That's not really ever been our target audience. We definitely work with more mature, much larger pharma companies. As for CROs, they also tend to be quite large as well, so these are not companies dependent on new infusions of capital.

Speaker 9

Okay.

Rick Poulton
President and CFO, Veradigm

Have we seen a slowdown? No. I mean, I think the market continues to operate, where we expect it to. You know, I think to me, again, the best evidence of that is in the results we had for the quarter.

Speaker 9

Okay. Another one from me. You know, now that you've shed most of your enterprise EMR assets, does this change the willingness of other EMR vendors to partner with you for data to be used within the life science space?

Rick Poulton
President and CFO, Veradigm

Yeah. I think that's a fair question, and we'll see what the answer to that becomes. I mean, we have partnerships today with

Speaker 9

Mm-hmm.

Rick Poulton
President and CFO, Veradigm

Some that are, you know, might be viewed as competitive in some aspects of our business. I would point out to you that I think healthcare is full of coopetition, if you will, if that's a word. There's a lot of folks that are in some aspects of their business compete, in other aspects of their business, they partner. I don't think that's an unusual dynamic. So far our partnership agreements I think are quite successful, and my hope is that we will continue to expand those.

Speaker 9

All right. Okay. Thank you so much.

Rick Poulton
President and CFO, Veradigm

Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question has come from the line of Michael Cherny with Bank of America. Please proceed with your questions.

Allen Lutz
Director and Equity Research Analyst, Bank of America

Hey, this is Allen Lutz in for Mike. I wanna talk about the Veradigm TouchPoint Media business, really, I guess, the advertising hub for you guys. I'm not sure how big it is, but can you talk about the uptake with big pharma, and then how fast can it grow, and is this business material to your top line at the moment?

Rick Poulton
President and CFO, Veradigm

Well, the answer to all of them, I guess, are yes. You see a lot of that media type business, or at least I think that's what you're referring to, reflected in the seasonality. That tends to happen, tends to be a bolus later in the year. Our outlook right now is that we'll have another strong year there. We do business with, you know, very large pharma companies. So the US dollars, you know, they can be significant. You know, you can. Again, I guess significance always beauty is in the eye of the beholder.

I'll start by saying or remind you that 80% of our revenue today is coming from healthcare providers, the balance coming from payer and life science companies. We do expect the payer and life science segment of our business to grow faster, and that growth is certainly a part of that growth is coming off of that media platform. Absolutely.

Allen Lutz
Director and Equity Research Analyst, Bank of America

Thanks. Rick, you mentioned a comment on the net debt that I missed. What's the right net debt number that we should think about?

Rick Poulton
President and CFO, Veradigm

If you look at the balance sheet, I would just, you know, I think the right way to look at it is add another $68 million in cash effectively to what's on the balance sheet, listed as cash, and then you can do the math off of that.

Allen Lutz
Director and Equity Research Analyst, Bank of America

Great. Thank you very much.

Rick Poulton
President and CFO, Veradigm

Gets you to net, it gets you to net debt of around $230 million.

Operator

Thank you. There are no further questions at this time. I would now like to turn the call back over to Paul Black for any closing comments.

Paul Black
CEO, Veradigm

Thanks everybody for your time today. It's been great to be at the helm of this great company. It's even greater to see the leadership step up and the ability to have a no-brain choice, if you will, a no-brainer choice for the successors to run this company. I'm thrilled to have worked with everybody on this call for the past 10 years. You've helped to encourage us, you've helped to ask tough questions, and importantly, as we've always tried to do, we try to reward your trust and confidence in us with performance. Certainly over the last 24 months, your forbearance and your patience with us has paid off. We're also quite proud of that. Thank you very much. Thank you for the nice comments, and I will bid you all a final adieu. Goodbye.

Operator

This does conclude today's teleconference. We appreciate your participation. You may disconnect your lines at this time. Enjoy the rest of your day.

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