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Bank of America Global Healthcare Conference 2026

May 12, 2026

Kevin Fischbeck
Managing Director in Equity Research, Bank of America

It's my pleasure to be hosting the meeting with DaVita. We have Joel Ackerman, who's the CFO of the company, as well as Nic Eliason, who's president of the capital markets and investor relations. I think we're just gonna jump right in if you're good with that. All right, excellent. I know your favorite topic is volumes, maybe we should start with volumes.

Joel Ackerman
CFO and Treasurer, DaVita

Sounds good.

Kevin Fischbeck
Managing Director in Equity Research, Bank of America

I guess, Q1, you know, incremental treatment guidance was raised from flat to kinda up, you know, call it 25, 50 basis points. You know, what drove the increase there, and how confident are you in the durability of that improvement?

Joel Ackerman
CFO and Treasurer, DaVita

Sure. First, good afternoon, everyone, and thanks for having us, Kevin. We really divided the increase in the guide into two buckets. First is increased census from Fresenius clinic closures. They have announced the closing of about 100 clinics, we expect to get our fair share of the patients that they don't retain. That would be about half the volume increase. The second is just what we observed during Q1. Our treatment volume came in about 20 basis points better than expected, largely as a result of census being ahead of plan and we expect that to continue. You know, you can look across all the different inputs and tweak any one of them. The one I'd highlight as that really came in above plan was mortality.

As you know, mortality has been elevated since COVID relative to pre-COVID levels, and it's nice to see it starting to come back down, and we would hope it will continue to come down given all the great clinical work our team is doing.

Kevin Fischbeck
Managing Director in Equity Research, Bank of America

Yes. How do you separate the improvement in mortality relative to, like, the light flu season, which I think would also kinda lift the mortality side of things?

Joel Ackerman
CFO and Treasurer, DaVita

Yeah. First, you're absolutely right. Relative to last year, flu was easier and less of a headwind on mortality. I would remind everyone it was still relative to the last 15 years, it was still quite a tough flu season. We think we've gotten pretty good at modeling the impact flu has on mortality, so we can look through that, not just in Q1, but over the last few quarters, and believe we see some signal in what is a relatively noisy number.

Kevin Fischbeck
Managing Director in Equity Research, Bank of America

Okay. I guess, like, Fresenius was closing sites through kind of the quarter. I think they're still maybe even doing it into this quarter. Does the benefit, they're gonna be more back-end loaded or ramp more? How do we think about next year as the starting point? Like, is it the half that we should kinda think about as the starting point for next year, or is it, you know, just ramping?

Joel Ackerman
CFO and Treasurer, DaVita

Yeah. We saw almost no benefit in Q1. They did start closing clinics in the quarter, but it was very much back-end loaded. Almost none of the volume performance in Q1 above plan was related to that. What they have announced is that they expect the clinics to be largely closed by the end of Q2. Our expectation, if you wanted to kind of decide from when to annualize this, it would probably be the end of April or the end of May. We would expect to get most of the benefit this year, but there'd be a bit of a tailwind again next year.

Kevin Fischbeck
Managing Director in Equity Research, Bank of America

All right. When you think about the core growth, like, is this the improvement in mortality, is that something you expect to build as the year goes on as well? Or, you know, can you pinpoint anything that drove the improvement in mortality if it's not flu?

Joel Ackerman
CFO and Treasurer, DaVita

Yeah. I'd start with the history of the industry. If you go back to a timeframe, call it 2000 to 2015, when the industry was growing 3%, 4%, 5% a year. I think there's a misperception that the growth then was because of increasing incidence of diabetes and obesity and all that, and that really is not the major driver of volume growth in those periods. The major driver growth, about two-thirds of the growth, was declining mortality in the industry. The industry investing in better clinical outcomes to drive better mortality is really the history of volume growth. Our belief is we are at the beginning of seeing that reinvigorated. It's about new medications. It's about higher flu vaccination rates. It's about time on therapy and other clinical interventions.

Middle molecule clearance is coming, and we think that's largely what's gonna drive the mortality improvement. Timing is hard to predict. There is certainly a delay in some or all of these interventions between when you successfully drive the metric and when you start seeing it in mortality. We called out we would expect to get back to the 2-plus percent growth rate by 2029. What that curve looks like between now and then is hard to predict.

Kevin Fischbeck
Managing Director in Equity Research, Bank of America

I think that when people see weak volumes, they think GLP-1s and how that impacts things. I mean, can you talk a little bit about how you're seeing the impact there? I think in the quarter you said something along the lines of that the mortality improved, but the admissions were down. Was there anything, is that just noise, or was there anything to that side of the equation?

Joel Ackerman
CFO and Treasurer, DaVita

We haven't called out any trends with admissions. It is a noisy number, and Q1 was noisy. In terms of GLP-1s and SGLT2 inhibitors, they're two sides to the same coin. What we called out when this growth in the GLP-1s started was that , absolutely, these will delay progression for CKD4 patients who are taking these drugs. We think that there's a lot of clinical evidence to demonstrate that. There's equally good clinical evidence to say CKD4 patients will have lower mortality. Most CKD4 patients will unfortunately pass away before they're ever incident to ESRD because of their diabetes or their heart disease or some other issue. We see these two dynamics, slower progression offset by lower mortality, as roughly evening each other out.

We've re-looked at the data since we initially rolled out that hypothesis in late 2023, and our clinicians continue to believe that's the right way to think about it, with maybe a slight positive that our patients, ESRD patients who are taking GLP-1s, might benefit from lower mortality when they're on dialysis. That would be a bit of a tailwind. It's probably too early to really be seeing that effect though yet.

Kevin Fischbeck
Managing Director in Equity Research, Bank of America

What percentage of your people are taking GLP-1s now?

Joel Ackerman
CFO and Treasurer, DaVita

Roughly high single digits of our patients are on GLP-1s right now.

Kevin Fischbeck
Managing Director in Equity Research, Bank of America

Is there a way to is it something that everyone could be or should be taking, or is it we broke it that number ago?

Joel Ackerman
CFO and Treasurer, DaVita

No. It is not something everyone should be taking. Again, I'm not a clinician, so I'm maybe getting a little out over my skis here. Generally, you'd think of patients who are diabetic as being the ones. Roughly 60% of our patients are diabetic, and about 40% are on ESRD because they're diabetic. That might be a way to think about GLP-1s. GLP-1s, remember though, have been available to these patients for a lot longer than they've been available just for weight loss.

Kevin Fischbeck
Managing Director in Equity Research, Bank of America

When you—I know you said you weren't quite ready to talk about the progression back to 2% by 2029, but let's see if I can pitch on hole you into something. I mean, is there a reason?

Joel Ackerman
CFO and Treasurer, DaVita

You shouldn't warn me you're gonna do that.

Kevin Fischbeck
Managing Director in Equity Research, Bank of America

No, no. Is there a reason why it wouldn't be more ratable? Like, like, what would the reason why it would be happen sooner versus the reason why it would happen later?

Joel Ackerman
CFO and Treasurer, DaVita

You know, I'd start with the middle molecule clearance, which are either new machines or new dialyzers. They're not widely available yet, that will grow over time. I think there's reasonable evidence, and if you look at the CONVINCE trial, you can see it there, that it takes about 18 months from when this clinical intervention starts, when the better clinical care starts, till you really see the curve separate and the better mortality show up. There is a delay between the implementation of better clinical care and when you'll start seeing it in mortality. That delay is different depending on the intervention. It might be a lot quicker, for example, for higher vaccination rates.

It's that reason and some of the questions around what that path will look like that we would expect will have to wait a bit till we get back to the 2-plus percent.

Kevin Fischbeck
Managing Director in Equity Research, Bank of America

Okay. Let me maybe talk about the middle molecule then. Just so you know, Fresenius has a new device. They're very excited about it, but they're kinda doing it to themselves first. They are selling it externally. Like, how do you think about your potential adoption or the rate of your adoption of that? Start there.

Joel Ackerman
CFO and Treasurer, DaVita

I'd start with we're very excited about this new modality. Everything I know says it's gonna be great for patients and extend their lifetime and they feel better. It's not just about living longer. The reports are that patients who've had middle molecule clearance, they're less tired, and they just feel better, and that could have other benefits. It might mean patients miss fewer treatments, for example. There are two paths forward here. There's the new machine, high-volume HDF, and that's the machine you're referencing. There are also dialyzers that could potentially deliver a similar benefit of middle molecule clearance. We are watching the data carefully to see what these different paths have to offer clinically. There are other considerations as well. There are supply chain considerations.

There are operational considerations as well. We're testing both out, and we're excited to see where this goes and the benefits it can deliver to our patients.

Kevin Fischbeck
Managing Director in Equity Research, Bank of America

Yeah. I think, you know, they're talking about a 2030 kind of full penetration to themselves. Is if this other option of the dialyzers, you know, potentially delivering similar efficacy, like, is that something that could happen much sooner? When could you start to roll that out?

Joel Ackerman
CFO and Treasurer, DaVita

Well, it depends on a whole bunch of things. It depends on the FDA. It depends on supply chain and the manufacturer's ability to create it as well. I think it's a little early to speculate what sort of speed that could happen at.

Kevin Fischbeck
Managing Director in Equity Research, Bank of America

Okay. Can you talk a little bit about it always seems like there's something new from the reimbursement side of things, like phosphate binders or calcimimetics or what have you. I guess maybe just start with phosphate binders. Like, how much is that going to be adding to your kind of OI this year, and how should we think about it into next year? Is there some next drug that you're kind of looking at and saying, "This has an opportunity to be meaningful"?

Joel Ackerman
CFO and Treasurer, DaVita

Yeah. Last year, we called out $50 million of contribution from OI. We expect this year to be something similar to that. In terms of 2027, it is too early to tell. There are a lot of dynamics yet to play out, largely from CMS about how they're gonna think about binders next year and when they fully bring them into the bundle and how they fully bring them into the bundle. I would expect we'll get a lot more clarity on that when the preliminary rule comes out, typically at the end of June or early July. TBD on that one.

In terms of other drugs coming down the pipeline, what I would observe is DaVita has, I believe, a core competency in terms of how we manage drugs to deliver great care to our patients, deliver great savings to the systems, but also deliver OI to our shareholders. I think you saw that with calcimimetics. You're seeing it with binders now. You can see it with how we're able to manage down the cost of EPO over time, I think this will continue to deliver. There's no specific drug I would call out, I do think as we think about how we continue to maintain our margins and deliver cost savings for our payers in the system, I think there will be more pharma opportunities going forward.

Kevin Fischbeck
Managing Director in Equity Research, Bank of America

Yeah. Then, like, the RPT number in the quarter was pretty strong, 4%. I guess is there a way to break that out, as to why it would only be 1% or 2% kind of for the year?

Joel Ackerman
CFO and Treasurer, DaVita

Sure. RPT is a source of a lot of variability from quarter to quarter, and we've called that out. We called it out in Q4, called it out in Q3 about Q4, and it came out as we expected. Q1 benefited from positive variability this year. It also suffered from negative variability in Q1 of 2025. Those two things combine to partially explain the high growth in Q1. There are two other dynamics that you have to think about in terms of progression for the year. One is enhanced premium tax credits, and as we've called out about a $40 million headwind from lower commercial mix as patients leave the exchanges, that's a number that will grow over the course of the year. That's one reason you would expect lower RPT growth later in the year.

The second would be binders. We think RPT contribution from binders will come down over the course of the year. No impact to OI because we think costs will come down as well. That would be the other thing. I said about variability, Q4 had very positive variability in 2025. We called that out. You would expect Q4 of 2026 to have a very tough comp as well.

Kevin Fischbeck
Managing Director in Equity Research, Bank of America

Is the binder impact, is that just a natural result of the way that the rates are based off of ASP on a lag? Is it because I guess there's, like, a new generic that's coming out this year? Like, is that influencing that or is that separate?

Joel Ackerman
CFO and Treasurer, DaVita

Yeah. You're right about both. It's more the former than the latter. There is a new generic AURYXIA, which has been approved, but there isn't much supply of it, so it's really not having an impact on ASP.

Kevin Fischbeck
Managing Director in Equity Research, Bank of America

Just talk a bit about the rate updates that you're getting because I guess the Medicare rate is, you know, 2%, so, you know, why is it only 1%-2% overall?

Joel Ackerman
CFO and Treasurer, DaVita

You're right. 2% is probably a more typical average rate increase we would get. The big headwind is on the binders, that the decline in ASP in the binders is about a 40 basis point headwind for us in the year, which is why we're at 1%-2% rather than 1.5%-2.5%. I would remind you, as I said before, that has no impact on OI because cost per treatment is coming down with that.

Kevin Fischbeck
Managing Director in Equity Research, Bank of America

Yeah. The commercial side is in that 2% range as well. Why aren't you able to get something more than that?

Joel Ackerman
CFO and Treasurer, DaVita

I ask our payer partnerships team that every day. Look, it is full contact sport, as our former CEO used to say. We would love to get better rates. I think we're comfortable forecasting 2%, and that's kinda where we are.

Kevin Fischbeck
Managing Director in Equity Research, Bank of America

Although, you know, the market has been very much focused on volumes, you guys have been pretty confident in your ability to do your 3%-7% OI growth, even if, you know, volumes are a little bit lighter. Can you talk a little bit about the cost side of the equation? What gives you confidence in being able to manage costs down to deliver that?

Joel Ackerman
CFO and Treasurer, DaVita

It's been a strength of DaVita's for a very long time. We are a provider with a national footprint at scale, and there's no doubt that gives some advantages on the cost side. We benefit from just staying ahead of the curve. We have been investing in IT for many, many years now, even through some of the more challenging years in 2022 and 2023. We did not take our eye off the ball in investing in the future. The best example is CWOW, which is our electronic medical record system. What you see in our P&L is true this year and has been true in the past, and I think will be true in the future.

We continue to invest in IT and our future, and you see the benefits of that in other parts of the P&L. You see it in cost per treatment. You see it in revenue per treatment through better revenue operations, and we think that will continue.

Kevin Fischbeck
Managing Director in Equity Research, Bank of America

I guess, like, Say 50 basis points of volume growth. How do we get from 50 basis points of volume growth plus 1% or 2% pricing to 3%-7% OI?

Joel Ackerman
CFO and Treasurer, DaVita

I'd start with 1 point of OI growth from international and a point of OI growth from IKC, our value-based care business. They won't be exactly a point every year, but as you think about the theoretical model, I think you can count on call it $20 million or so of OI from each of those. You know, you're dependent on, you know, 1%-5% from the U.S. dialysis business. To get to 3%, you need, call it, two points of RPT growth and a point of volume growth and constant margins. There are other equations you can get there. We got there with zero volume growth by tweaking some of the other components of our trilogy. There's no doubt it gets easier as volume growth comes back.

Kevin Fischbeck
Managing Director in Equity Research, Bank of America

How durable is the 1% from each segment? I guess internationally you can keep investing potentially. Theoretically, the value-based care side probably has a upper limit to where that could be. How many more years do we have of that?

Joel Ackerman
CFO and Treasurer, DaVita

Yeah. International is just inherently a higher we're in higher growth markets than in the U.S., and we've got more room to run on margin improvement. I think the model there is relatively easy to see. On IKC, we've had a lot of strength in delivering shared savings, and that continues to improve. What I think you will see over time is growth in lives under management and dollars under management and some fixed cost leverage which doesn't lead me to worry that somehow this $20 million a year model is gonna fall apart in IKC anytime soon. I think we've got a few years of visibility to continue to deliver that.

Kevin Fischbeck
Managing Director in Equity Research, Bank of America

Why is international so interesting? It seems like, you know, Fresenius, obviously some of the clinics you bought was from them. They were getting out of some markets, you were getting into those markets. What makes it interesting to you and why were you able to make that work for you?

Joel Ackerman
CFO and Treasurer, DaVita

I'm reluctant to speculate about why Fresenius chose those, chose to sell those markets. I think based on what they've said publicly, they were solving for its lower leverage and higher margins. Neither of those were issues that we were solving for. We were solving for return on capital and OI growth. We're quite happy with the markets we bought from them. It's been enough time right now where I feel like those were good investments for us. We expect higher returns internationally because of the risk and we are getting those. I like the international markets. We're cautious. We're hesitant when we get into new markets to make sure they meet our criteria.

The thing that I would emphasize that I think I and Robert Lang, the head of international, are all very proud of is in every single market that we enter, we demonstrably improve the quality of the clinical care.

Kevin Fischbeck
Managing Director in Equity Research, Bank of America

Great. Maybe just pivoting back to the ACA for a minute. You guys talked about the impact of that growing, you know, bigger to 27.

Joel Ackerman
CFO and Treasurer, DaVita

Correct

Kevin Fischbeck
Managing Director in Equity Research, Bank of America

Into dialysis, not having coverage. Like, is there a way to think about how that will progress for the rest of the year? Is that kind of like a growing number each quarter? What are you seeing now? I don't know. We're now in May, it seems like with the effectuation rates, maybe you'd start to have some color on how that's trending.

Joel Ackerman
CFO and Treasurer, DaVita

Yeah. It's still early to tell on exactly how it's trending, but what you called out is exactly right, that the way we expect this to really play out would be our newly incident patients, you said, won't have coverage, just to be clear. We would expect they'll have Medicare coverage. They won't have commercial coverage, and we get a lower rate on Medicare, as you know. That's the impact. We would expect that to continue to build over the rest of the year and into 2027. The big question is: What has happened to CKD4 patients, and how many of them have retained coverage on the exchanges despite the higher premiums? Because that ultimately will dictate what the incident commercial mix rate is for us.

Kevin Fischbeck
Managing Director in Equity Research, Bank of America

To be clear, you're basically assuming that exchanges go back to 2019 as a percentage total, or is it different than that?

Joel Ackerman
CFO and Treasurer, DaVita

Yes. Well, yeah, using our numbers, we are expecting that roughly 1% of our patients were on the exchanges as a result of enhanced premium tax credits, and we would expect that number to go away.

Kevin Fischbeck
Managing Director in Equity Research, Bank of America

Over multiple years. Three-year period. Over the three-year period.

Joel Ackerman
CFO and Treasurer, DaVita

Correct.

Kevin Fischbeck
Managing Director in Equity Research, Bank of America

Yeah. Okay. Then, one of the things that everyone seems to be really excited about is AI. Can you talk a little bit about what you guys see AI as, what the opportunity is for you? Is there anything that maybe the market gets too excited about, gets all their skis on?

Joel Ackerman
CFO and Treasurer, DaVita

I'm not gonna touch the second part of that question. Look, AI is something that we are absolutely leaning in on. We're investing a lot in it, both in the infrastructure that is ultimately needed to deliver AI, and that's both having clean data and having good systems because I'd say in general, our AI benefits will come through our core systems. For example, the AI benefits I would expect to see in accounting would largely come through our Oracle system rather than some standalone AI system. I would expect similar things for a lot of our technology. We're excited about it. We are moving, I think, at a judicious pace, recognizing there's a lot of infrastructure that needs to be put in so we can really take advantage of AI.

We would expect benefits in lower software development cost, better revenue operations. Labor productivity is an area where we're excited about call centers, so in line with what I think most people are looking at initially, then ultimately opportunities in clinical care.

Kevin Fischbeck
Managing Director in Equity Research, Bank of America

Can you give a little sense of timing of when we should start to see some of these things? The fact that ultimately clinical care makes it seem like it's a farther out thing. Is there a way to think about timing?

Joel Ackerman
CFO and Treasurer, DaVita

Well, I think each of these things has many, many sub-projects, and there are areas of clinical care that are, you know, dosing being one of them, that you could attribute benefits to AI already today. I would say using a CFO's lens, I would expect AI to be a net cost to us at least for 2026 and probably much of 2027 before the benefits start outweighing the expense.

Kevin Fischbeck
Managing Director in Equity Research, Bank of America

I guess when you think about the best ROI, what's the best ROI of the things that you kind of mentioned?

Joel Ackerman
CFO and Treasurer, DaVita

I mean, a lot of them are quite inexpensive to implement, so I'm not sure ROI is the right lens. It'd be more about what's the total dollar savings you could benefit from. I would say right now the largest ones would be software development, productivity, and revenue operations. Those aren't necessarily about the percentage savings, just two of those things, revenue operations and labor productivity in particular, are just very big items on our P&L.

Kevin Fischbeck
Managing Director in Equity Research, Bank of America

When we look at the P&L, you know, probably the cost number that jumps out the most is that G&A has been up a couple hundred basis points over the last several years. On the call, Javier was kinda saying he didn't really care where the cost per treatment came from, as long as you keep it in that 2-2.5% range. I mean, the outside debt looks high, but is that not the case, or is there opportunity to bring that G&A number down?

Joel Ackerman
CFO and Treasurer, DaVita

I think the point Javier was making is that if we can invest $20 million in G&A to drive $40 million of better revenue collections or $40 million of lower labor costs, we don't care if G&A goes up for that reason. We're investing in G&A, and the returns are excellent. We will continue to do that. I think most of our AI and technology costs wind up in G&A, and they generally result in savings that are in another line or benefits that are in another line in the P&L. We're comfortable with G&A going up as long as we're getting the right return for those investments. DaVita for many, many years that certainly preceded my time as CFO has been praised for its cost management. I think it's well deserved.

We bring the same lens to G&A, but we are comfortable with G&A growing as long as we're getting the value for it.

Kevin Fischbeck
Managing Director in Equity Research, Bank of America

Right. When we think about capital deployment, because I think it was one of the things that probably wasn't well understood by the market when you guys came out with Q4 results and just kinda showed how much cash you have and how much share repo you could be doing. You guys have invested in some things along the way, whether it was a, you know, device JV and then a home health investment. Like, how should we think about share repo versus some of these ancillary things, is there a view that there should be another leg to the stool, or how should we think about that?

Joel Ackerman
CFO and Treasurer, DaVita

Yeah. Share repurchases are the last thing on the list. When we don't have other appropriate good uses of capital where we're investing in our future at good risk-adjusted returns, we'll buy back stock. I love finding other uses like, you know, the Mozarc, the joint venture you mentioned, or Elara, the home health investment. We will continue to do those. I don't think of either of these as another leg to the stool. These are supportive of our dialysis and kidney care strategy. In terms of are we out looking to put billions of dollars of work to diversify, the answer is no, we are not.

Kevin Fischbeck
Managing Director in Equity Research, Bank of America

Maybe just the last question on that. How do you think about leverage? You know, obviously, you're growing OI now, so do we think about leverage as something that you plan to use for share repo or like, would you use it for share repo?

Joel Ackerman
CFO and Treasurer, DaVita

Yeah. We think about it differently. We think about our comfort is with our leverage in the 3 to 3.5 turns range. If EBITDA is growing, and it has been growing, to stay in 3 to 3.5 times, we have to take on more debt. We don't do it because we wanna buy back more shares. We do it because of a fundamental view on how we're gonna fund the business between debt and equity. To keep in that 3 to 3.5 times, we borrow more money. We don't generally like to have a lot of cash sitting around on the balance sheet, so if we can't find other uses for it, we buy back stock. It's not that we're taking on debt to buy back stock.

We're taking on debt to keep our leverage levels where we want them to be. As we think about what are we gonna do with that cash, buying back stock happens to be the option we end up needing.

Kevin Fischbeck
Managing Director in Equity Research, Bank of America

That's all we have time for. Thank you very much.

Joel Ackerman
CFO and Treasurer, DaVita

Great. Thank you, Kevin.

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