Good morning, everyone. Welcome to Medical Facilities Corporation's 2024 first quarter earnings call. After management's remarks, this call will include a question and answer session whereby qualified equity analysts will be permitted to ask questions. Before turning the call over to management, listeners are reminded that today's call may contain forward-looking statements within the meaning of Safe Harbor provisions of Canadian provincial securities laws. Forward-looking statements involve risks and uncertainties, and undue reliance should not be placed on such statements. Certain material factors or assumptions are applied in making forward-looking statements, and actual results may differ materially from those expressed or implied in such statements. For additional information, please consult the MD&A for this quarter, the Risk Factors section of the Annual Information Form, and Medical Facilities' other filings with Canadian securities regulators. Medical Facilities does not undertake to update any forward-looking statements.
Such statements speak only as of the date made. I would now like to turn the meeting over to Mr. Jason Redman, President and CEO of Medical Facilities. Please go ahead, Mr. Redman.
Thank you, operator, and good morning, everyone. With me on the call is our Chief Financial Officer, David Watson. Earlier this morning, we reported our first quarter results. Our news release, financial statements, and MD&A are available on our website and have been filed on SEDAR+. Also, please note that many of the income statement variances discussed by Dave and I this morning will exclude the results from the divested MFC Nueterra ASCs, or MFCN for short. We had a solid start to the year. Our surgical hospitals performed well, driving higher revenues through increased surgical case volumes. Excluding MFCN, revenues climbed to $108.3 million, marking a solid 4.5% increase over the same period last year, while our surgical case volumes were up 4.3% in the quarter.
Excluding MFCN, our income from operations and EBITDA were up 29.6% and 19%, respectively, during the quarter. The increases reflect a combination of higher facility service revenue, which exceeded the increase in operating expenses, along with cost savings at the corporate level. We continued to pay down our corporate credit facility, reducing the balance by a further $5 million in the quarter after reducing the balance by $20 million in 2023. We also continued to buy back shares, returning an additional $1.8 million to shareholders through the purchase of 253,900 common shares under our normal course issuer bid during the quarter. Lastly, in recognition of our continued solid cash flow performance, we were pleased to announce this morning an 11.8% increase to our quarterly dividend, commencing with the second quarter dividend.
The dividend remains an important part of our commitment to maximizing total shareholder returns, and with today's announcement, MFC will have increased its dividend by 28.6% over the past 2.5 years. I would now like to turn the call over to David to review our financial results in more detail. David?
Thank you, Jason. Good morning, everyone. As usual, please note that all dollar amounts that follow are in US dollars. As Jason mentioned, excluding MFCN, our first quarter revenue increased 4.5% to $108.3 million. In addition to the higher surgical case volumes at our hospitals, the revenue increase was due to the combined impact of case and payer mix. Total surgical cases increased by 4.3%. Observation cases were up 12.7%, and outpatient cases increased by 8.2%, but inpatient cases were down 17.8%. In terms of case mix, we had a higher proportion of spine cases and higher acuity orthopedic procedures, resulting in higher reimbursements per surgical case.
Our operating expenses decreased 5.1% to $90.9 million, with a decrease attributable primarily to the MFCN divestitures. When excluding MFCN, our operating expenses were up slightly by 0.7%. Consolidated salaries and benefits were down 1.1%, primarily due to the MFCN divestitures, along with cost-saving initiatives at the corporate level and lower benefit costs from decreased health plan utilization. This is largely offset by higher salaries due to annual merit increases, full-time equivalent increases, market wage pressures, and more employed physicians. Consolidated drugs and supplies decreased 5.9%, mainly due to the impact of the MFCN divestitures. Consolidated G&A expenses were down 8%, mainly due to the impact of the MFCN divestitures, but also cost savings at the corporate level and a decrease in other various facility-related expenses.
Jason already covered the increase to our operating income and EBITDA, so I'll move on to our balance sheet. At the end of the quarter, we had consolidated net working capital of $7.8 million and cash and cash equivalents of $25.7 million, compared to net working capital of $19.8 million and cash and cash equivalents of $24.1 million at year-end.
In addition to using cash to pay down the corporate credit facility by $5 million and to purchase $1.8 million of shares under the NCIB, the decline in net working capital reflects a $7.6 million increase in the obligation for purchase of common shares to $9.7 million at the end of Q1, which reflects the maximum potential purchase liability under the automatic share purchase plan in relation to the NCIB. However, subsequent to quarter end through to May 3rd, we were only able to purchase 93,500 shares for total consideration of $0.7 million under the automatic share purchase plan. This concludes our prepared remarks. We would now like to open up the call for questions. Operator?
Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, we will now begin the question and answer session. Should you have a question, please press star followed by one on your touchtone phone. You will hear a prompt that your hand has been raised. Should you wish to decline from the polling process, please press star followed by two, and if you are using a speakerphone, please leave the handset before pressing any keys. Our first question comes from the line of Sahil Dhingra from RBC Analyst. Please go ahead.
Hi, this is Sahil for Doug Miehm. Thank you for taking our questions, and congrats on the good quarter. My first question is on the pain cases that were down 6% year-over-year, and I think on the last call, you alluded to that you were looking to replenish the physicians in that pain management cases. Can you provide us an update with what's going on?
Sure. Hi, Sahil, how you doing? Thanks for the, for the question. As you know, we don't, we don't discuss the individual physician hires at the facilities. But it, it is a priority for us to, to address this both at our level and each of the facilities. So it remains an ongoing item that, that we want to continue to addressing going forward.
Okay. And my second question is related to the wage pressures that you commented on during the prepared remarks. Can you comment on the inflation dynamics currently? And are there any further cost savings initiatives at the corporate level, or are we fully done with those?
Sure. Hi, Sahil, it's David. Yeah, with respect to the wage pressure, you know, we continue to be in competitive markets for staff. As we mentioned, though, in the prior quarter, you know, some of the, you know, significant wage inflation, sign-on bonus, things like that, have certainly slowed down. But, you know, that said, we do continue to see, you know, pressure on wages, but it's certainly better than it has been.
Okay. Okay, thank you. My last question is on the competitive dynamics in the marketplace. So we saw, I think, new hospital at Arkansas and previously, a few in South Dakota, if you can update us on the competition in those markets. And also, like, the Sioux Falls revenues were quite strong. Was it just the case mix, or are you also seeing higher volumes there? Thank you.
Sure. Let me address the Ashe question first, and I'll let David address your Sioux Falls. So on the Ashe side, we haven't seen the impact of the competitive environment. I mean, that has always been a competitive area for us. But we continue to remain strong in that market. And we haven't seen any adverse impact of the university hospital that it was that's been in place.
With respect to your question about Sioux Falls, it's a couple of factors. Revenue growth came both from case mix with higher acuity orthopedic cases as well as increased volume.
Okay. Okay. Sorry, my last question is on capital allocation going forward. It was nice to see a dividend increase this quarter, but how are you going to prioritize among further debt repayment, NCIB and dividend increases going forward?
Yeah. So as, as we've said, previously, Sahil, it's, it's really a balance between those three components. We continue to be as active as we can in the NCIB. We wanna continue to pay down our debt, and then the board thought it was appropriate at this point in time to to increase the dividend. We believe it's sustainable. But it is, it is a balancing act between between the three. And, and a lot of it depends on, on how active we can be under the NCIB program.
Thank you for taking our questions.
Thank you.
Our next question comes from the line of Douglas Loe. Please go ahead.
Yeah, good morning, gentlemen. Congratulations on a strong Q1. Quick question for me, just, with regard to, your strong case volumes and case mix in the quarter. I was just wondering, you know, you're still within shouting distance of the pandemic era, during which some of your procedural volumes would have been curtailed by pandemic logistics. Just wondering, is there... Have you been able to quantify how much backlog from deferred cases through the 2020 to 2023 period might actually impact the next several quarters across, you know, any of your facilities in South Dakota, Oklahoma, Arkansas?
Yeah. Hey, Doug, good morning. I would say-
Good morning.
From a, you know, a backlog perspective, that backlog's worked through at this stage.
Okay. Fair enough. Thanks, David.
Sure.
Thank you.
There are no questions at this time. Please go ahead, Mr. Edmund.
Thank you, operator, and thank you to everyone joining our call this morning. We look forward to updating you again next quarter.
Ladies and gentlemen, this concludes today's conference call. Thank you for your participation. You may now disconnect.