Privia Health Group, Inc. (PRVA)
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Earnings Call: Q1 2022

May 12, 2022

Operator

Good day, and thank you for standing by. Welcome to the Privia Health Q1 2022 Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. After the speakers' presentation, there will be a question and answer session. To ask a question during the session, you will need to press star one on your telephone. Please be advised that today's conference is being recorded. If you require any further assistance, please press star zero. I would now like to hand the conference over to your speaker today, Robert Borchert, SVP of Investor & Corporate Communications. Please go ahead.

Robert Borchert
SVP of Investor and Corporate Communications, Privia Health Group

Thank you, Gigi, and good morning, everyone. Joining me today are Shawn Morris, our Chief Executive Officer, Parth Mehrotra, President and Chief Operating Officer, and David Mountcastle, our Chief Financial Officer. This call is being webcast and can be accessed from the investor relations section at priviahealth.com. Today's press release highlighting our financial and operating performance and the slide presentation accompanying our formal remarks are posted on our IR website. Following our prepared comments, we will open the line for questions, and we ask that you please limit yourself to one question and one follow-up so we can get through the queue in a timely fashion. The financial results reported today and in the press release are preliminary and are not final until our Form 10-Q for the quarter ended March 31, 2022 is filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

Some of the statements we will make today are forward-looking in nature based on our current expectations and our view of our business as of May 12, 2022. Such statements, including those related to our future financial and operating performance and future business plans and objectives, are subject to risks and uncertainties that may cause actual results to differ materially. As a result, these statements should be considered in conjunction with the cautionary statements in today's press release and the risk factors described in our company's most recent SEC filings. Finally, we may refer to certain non-GAAP financial measures on the call and reconciliations of these measures to comparable GAAP measures are included in our press release and the accompanying slide presentation posted on our website. Now I'll turn the call over to Shawn.

Shawn Morris
CEO, Privia Health Group

Thank you, Robert Borchert, and good morning, everyone. We are very proud of the success that Privia Health and our provider partners have achieved prior to and since our IPO a year ago. The physician-patient relationship is the cornerstone of our healthcare ecosystem, and we are honored to be one of the nation's leading physician enablement organizations. This past Tuesday, we were excited to celebrate our one-year anniversary as a public company at the Nasdaq marketplace, along with 17 physician leaders representing our more than 3,300 physicians and providers across 8 states and the District of Columbia. With our continued momentum in the existing markets, Privia Health posted another strong quarter of financial and operating performance in the first quarter of 2022.

We remain highly confident in our growth outlook for 2022 and beyond as we continue to organize physicians into scaled provider networks across our country. This morning, I'll present an overview of the key highlights. Parth will provide a business update, and then David will conclude with our recent financial performance and updated outlook for 2022 before we take your questions. Privia Health is continuing to execute at a very high level, and our first quarter results clearly highlight this. Our practice collections increased more than 63% year-over-year, and our operating model is already working at scale. Adjusted EBITDA was a quarterly record and was up over 48% while we're investing across our enterprise to support this accelerated top-line growth. The business momentum and high forward visibility into our growth metrics is reflected in our updated financial guidance for 2022.

Our growth is being driven by a balanced set of strategic initiatives. This includes continued same-store growth driven by the strength in ambulatory utilization across all of our existing practice locations. This patient volume is a benefit to both our fee-for-service collections as well as supporting the performance in our value-based arrangements as we serve patients in lower cost care settings. As we align with and enable our provider partners and expand our number of attributed lives, our operational execution and clinical performance is continuing to drive strong results across our value-based arrangements. We generated another solid quarter of new provider additions in existing markets and in combination with a sustained high level of provider retention. In addition, our active business development pipeline remains robust as we look to enter many new markets over the next few years.

With that, let me ask Parth to provide more details on market position and expansion.

Parth Mehrotra
President and COO, Privia Health Group

Thanks, Shawn. Privia Health is building one of the largest primary care-centric ambulatory care delivery networks in the country. Our business model has a number of distinct attributes that are replicable across all 50 states as we partner with all provider types, serve all patients across all reimbursement models, and participate in value-based arrangements in the broadest possible way. Our model offers a tremendous market opportunity for growth in the physician enablement space as we scale nationally and partner with independent providers as well as health system or other facility-affiliated or employed providers. We introduced Privia Care Partners in the second half of 2021 as a highly complementary partnership model. This is offered to provider practices looking to partner with Privia, but wanting to start first with a risk-bearing entity only, such as our ACOs.

One advantage of our platform is that we contract across commercial, Medicare, and Medicaid programs. This offers much broader value-based care opportunities for our payer and provider partners in many states. It also brings balance and diversity to Privia's overall operating and financial profile. A unique component of our growth strategy is our ability to monetize our at-scale medical groups and risk-bearing entities as we gain density in our markets. We are able to offer a number of these value-added services to our physician and payer partners as part of an integrated ambulatory care delivery system. Underlying our integrated medical groups and risk-bearing entities in each of our geographies is Privia's tech-enabled clinical and management services platform. This enables us to maximize physician alignment and deliver superior outcomes in value-based arrangements without owning the underlying practice.

As Shawn noted, our business momentum has continued to be extremely encouraging across both existing and potential new geographies. Our national footprint now includes 3,370 implemented providers, caring for more than 3.8 million patients across our 870 practice locations in eight states and the District of Columbia. As one of the largest provider groups in the country, our scale and geographic density is also defined by our breadth of medical specialties. While approximately 65% of our practice partners are primary care-focused, including internal medicine, family medicine, pediatrics, and OBGYNs, we actually partner with more than 50 specialty types. This provides Privia with some unique advantages as we partner with payers to offer a broad ambulatory care delivery network that can improve patient outcomes and reduce costs across the value-based care spectrum.

Our operating model and strategy has led Privia to have one of the broadest, most balanced, and well-diversified value-based care platforms in the industry. Our more than 80 at-risk payer contracts now cover approximately 848,000 attributed lives across commercial, Medicare, and Medicaid programs. This is up 17.6% from a year ago and more than 10% since the end of 2021, giving us a lot of momentum and visibility for the remainder of 2022. We take upside and downside risk in many of our payer contracts, covering nearly two-thirds of the attributed Medicare lives across MSSP and Medicare Advantage programs. This thoughtful move to risk continues to provide significant opportunities for top line and EBITDA growth as we execute on our goals and earn greater shared savings in the years to come.

Now I'll ask David to review our first quarter financial results and updated outlook for 2022.

David Mountcastle
CFO, Privia Health Group

Thanks, Parth. Our outstanding first quarter performance highlights that our operating model is already working at scale, and our business momentum continued into 2022. Practice Collections increased to $561.9 million, up 63.3% from Q1 a year ago. As we noted last quarter, we will report our Capitated Revenue as a new line item in our sources of revenue section of our 10-Q. Capitated Revenue was $48.3 million in Q1. Care Margin increased 36.4%, and adjusted EBITDA was a record $14.8 million, up 48.8% over the same period last year. As expected, our top line grew faster than EBITDA this quarter due to the new capitated arrangements as well as investment across our business enterprise to support this accelerating top line growth.

At the same time, you can clearly see the operating leverage in our model as our top line and Care Margin growth is translating nicely into EBITDA growth and margin expansion. Our adjusted EBITDA margin as a percentage of Care Margin increased 100 basis points from a year ago to reach 20.7%. Given our first quarter performance, business momentum, and visibility through the rest of 2022, we have a high level of confidence in our updated financial guidance. We now expect Practice Collections, GAAP revenue, and Care Margin to be in the mid to high end of our guidance ranges, with Platform Contribution and adjusted EBITDA expected to reach the high end. Our guidance for Implemented Providers and Attributed Lives are unchanged at this early stage of the year. We remain focused on continuing to execute on our multiple growth initiatives.

This includes growing existing practices, increasing attribution and risk-based contracts, adding new providers, identifying opportunities to expand our platform, and opening new markets over time. Our underlying assumptions are unchanged from our previous 2022 guidance, and I wanted to note that our outlook includes only previously announced new market entries. One of Privia Health's key differentiators is our solid balance sheet and positive annual free cash flow. We ended Q1 with a net cash position of more than $283 million, with capital expenditures of less than $1 million. We continue to expect more than 90% of our adjusted EBITDA to convert to free cash flow for the full year 2022.

This financial flexibility and strength gives us confidence to invest in our growth initiatives and fund all strategic opportunities in the foreseeable future without reliance on any external sources of capital to continue to expand our platform nationally. We continue to grow and expand our business with all types of healthcare providers that are looking to partner with scaled, financially sound organizations to improve outcomes for their entire patient population. With that, Operator, we are now ready for our first question.

Operator

Thank you. As a reminder, to ask a question, you will need to press star one on your telephone. To withdraw your question, press the pound key. Please stand by while we compile a Q&A roster. Our first question comes from the line of Josh Raskin from Nephron Research. Your line is now open.

Josh Raskin
Research Analyst, Nephron Research

Hi. Thanks, and good morning. Just first numbers question. I think I heard you say, I think David said they were gonna put it in the 10-Q. With the Practice Collections, the $561, how much of that was value-based care? Was that the $48 million that you mentioned? What was that number a year ago? If you could just remind us the assumptions you make in terms of accruals for value-based care earnings, you know, sort of this early in the year.

Shawn Morris
CEO, Privia Health Group

Thanks, Josh, for the question. Look, you'll see the disclosure in the Q where we'll clearly mention the capitated piece of

The revenue or the Practice Collections. There's obviously other shared savings accruals and the care management fee that we've also broken out. You'll see that in the 10-Q. Roughly, you'll see that accreting much faster than last year because of the capitated arrangements that started this year.

David Mountcastle
CFO, Privia Health Group

We stated that the revenue from capitation was $48.3 million.

$48.3 million from the new capitated revenue, correct. Again, there's a table in the Q that's gonna break out the revenue.

Josh Raskin
Research Analyst, Nephron Research

Okay, the total value-based care portion of Practice Collections would be higher than that 48.3%. Is that right?

Parth Mehrotra
President and COO, Privia Health Group

Yeah, that's absolutely right.

David Mountcastle
CFO, Privia Health Group

Correct. Right. For example, shared savings increased as an example.

Josh Raskin
Research Analyst, Nephron Research

Right. Okay. Of your providers, I'm just curious if you could give us just a sort of look on the pipeline, but how many providers are sold as of today, but not yet in that or as of March 31st, but not yet implemented? And maybe if you just have broad comments on that pipeline for physicians.

Parth Mehrotra
President and COO, Privia Health Group

Yeah, definitely. We don't disclose sold providers, but as you understand our model, it takes about 5 to 6 months to implement providers, credential them in our medical groups, and so forth. At this point, sitting in May, we almost have visibility through to the end of the year, and the pipeline's pretty full. We had a record sales year last year, and one of our best first quarters this year. A lot of momentum we continue to see in our existing geographies, and obviously, the business development pipeline's pretty robust. All of that will translate into the implemented provider growth for the rest of this year, and then going into 2023.

Josh Raskin
Research Analyst, Nephron Research

Okay. That's helpful. Thanks.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of A.J. Rice with Credit Suisse. Your line is now open.

A.J. Rice
Managing Director and Equity Research Analyst, Credit Suisse

Hi, everybody. First of all, I guess just on the capitated lives, I think at Q1, you said in Medicare Advantage, you had about 23,000. I'm looking at your 106,000 today. If 28% are in full risk, that puts you at about 30,000. Can you give us a sense of how that's likely to trend over the rest of the year, where they have a view of where you'll end the year on capitated MA lives? Is there a seasonality to the additions of those lives?

Parth Mehrotra
President and COO, Privia Health Group

Yeah, sure. We started with 23,000. Obviously, the intent is to grow that year-over-year. Now, as we stated previously, we'll be very thoughtful in adding lives to the capitated arrangements once we are certain that the financial profile is appropriate. You should see an accretion. While we're not gonna break out specifics, you know, that has trended up from the 23,000 number. Your estimate is ballpark, right. This should be pretty front-end loaded in the beginning of the year given the nature of these contracts, relative to, for example, the commercial or the MSSP attribution. Pretty much you should see that stable now going into the rest of the year.

As we add lives, it'll likely be at the beginning of next year.

A.J. Rice
Managing Director and Equity Research Analyst, Credit Suisse

Okay. Maybe just to follow up, another sort of clarification question on the Q1 Practice Collections that came in above the high end of your range. Is there any seasonality or step down that occurs in Q2, Q3 that we should think of, given the strong start?

Parth Mehrotra
President and COO, Privia Health Group

No. In fact, Q1 is typically the lowest quarter. We are seeing a lot of momentum, both in terms of our physician adds, ending last year, beginning of this year, so that's reflected in the strong trend. Also, utilization has continued to be ahead of our expectations. It's been tough to predict, but we've tried to be on the conservative side. If that comes in ahead of our expectations, that flows into the practice collection numbers and then down the P&L in the operating leverage with our EBITDA outperforming. Then finally, you know, the value-based arrangements continue to perform well across all our programs. Our accrual estimates reflect that for each of our programs.

You know, it's a pretty broad-based, you know, growth, and we like to see it that way.

A.J. Rice
Managing Director and Equity Research Analyst, Credit Suisse

Okay, great. Thanks a lot.

Parth Mehrotra
President and COO, Privia Health Group

Thanks for doing it.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Lisa Gill from JP Morgan. Your line is now open.

Lisa Gill
Managing Director, JPMorgan

Great. Thanks very much, and good morning. I just first wanna start with cash flow. I appreciate your comment around 90% of adjusted EBITDA for the year, but cash flow in the first quarter was negative, and it looks like you had a nice increase on the receivable side. Is that just a timing issue? Can you maybe just talk about how to think about cash flow, would be my first question.

David Mountcastle
CFO, Privia Health Group

Yeah. Thanks, Lisa. Yeah, it's definitely just a timing issue. You know, we're expecting the trend this year to kind of mirror last year. You know, we do have one unique item in Q1 where we pay our annual bonuses, so you know that's a relatively large cash outflow in Q1. Then you know just the timing of our value-based arrangements and when we receive that cash, we expect it to be similar to last year. Q1 is generally our you know equal to or negative cash flow quarter, and then it just builds from there. We are still expecting sort of 90+% by the end of the year.

Lisa Gill
Managing Director, JPMorgan

Okay, great. Just another question. As we think about just the timing of things, you had a nice beat, congratulations in the first quarter. As we think about the guidance for EBITDA for the rest of the year, is there seasonality? Do you have some kind of increased expectations, for example, around rising labor rates? Is there anything you would call out specifically as to how to think about the first quarter beat and the guidance for the rest of the year?

Parth Mehrotra
President and COO, Privia Health Group

Yeah, sure, Lisa. It's Parth. Look, it's a great start to the year and gives us a lot of confidence. We gave you our guidance six weeks ago, and you know, we are here guiding to the high end on EBITDA and Care Margin, so, and Platform Contribution. The bottom line metrics are really showing the operating leverage in the business as top line performs. Our hope is that continues. Obviously, you know, it's tough to predict utilization and things like that, but the EBITDA trend should mirror last year. Again, we should continue to hopefully see that same seasonality. Our hope is that, you know, this trend continues into the year, and we'll update the guidance as it goes.

Again, it's pretty early in the year, but we're excited to guide towards the high end at this stage.

Lisa Gill
Managing Director, JPMorgan

Great. Thanks very much.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Ryan Daniels from William Blair. Your line is now open.

Ryan Daniels
Analyst and Group Head of Healthcare, William Blair

Yeah, good morning. Thanks for taking the question. Maybe one financial and one more strategic. Just on the financial, obviously strong start to the year, but I'm curious what the delta is between the reiteration of lives and at-risk lives, and providers and then the revenue and profits. Are you seeing better utilization? Is that the key driver, better risk adjustment? Just any color there to give us some feel for that delta would be great.

Parth Mehrotra
President and COO, Privia Health Group

Yeah. Ryan, it's Parth. On practice collections, like I mentioned, it's fairly broad-based beat across both utilization on the fee-for-service, good performance on value-based care, and then provider adds were pretty strong ending last year. You know, with implemented providers and attributed lives, those metrics. It's still Q1 in the year, and we are nicely ahead sequentially from Q4 last year. It's still early in the year, so we're maintaining our guidance. Our hope is we keep seeing that momentum, and we'll update it. Obviously, the guidance does not include any new markets that we may add during the course of the year. We have a pretty active BD pipeline, so hopefully, you know, we'll update that as we did last year when we enter those markets.

Again, given the visibility and those two metrics move the slowest in terms of just how providers are implemented, how lives are added during the course of the year, so much more stable. It's great to see the outperformance on both collections and then flowing through the P&L down to EBITDA.

Ryan Daniels
Analyst and Group Head of Healthcare, William Blair

Okay. Absolutely. That's helpful. Then a more strategic question, and maybe I'm overthinking this a bit, but your partnership with Surgery Partners seems like an interesting case study for your business model in that, you know, it's in a pretty small state, which I assume you could only move into with your type of multi-payer platform. Then number two, you know, kind of speaks to the ability to manage a wide number of specialists and maybe downstream and ambulatory care. You know, can you speak to that a little bit? Again, I know it's not a huge revenue driver, but it seems pretty strategic to the strength of the model. Thanks, guys.

Parth Mehrotra
President and COO, Privia Health Group

Yeah, definitely. I'll start, and Shawn can add. Look, just broadly speaking, if you take a step back, our strategy is to build these very large-scale medical groups focused on primary care providers, and then we surround them with the right specialists. We partner with lower cost health systems, and then obviously, entities like Surgery Partners and providing these value-added ancillaries as part of this broader ambulatory care delivery system, if you will. You know, this is what we believe is fundamentally going to be a very valuable entity and where the buck is moving. It allows us to have a very broad access to the TAM, participate in 50 states, all patients, all payers, all reimbursement models.

You know, the only other company that does this at somewhat national scale, given the assets they've acquired, is Optum Care, as you know. You know, very similar strategy. We are a fraction of their size. Obviously, don't have the balance sheet, but you know, we are trying to do that in a very thoughtful, capital-efficient partnership model but we're trying to achieve the same result.

Shawn Morris
CEO, Privia Health Group

Yeah, Ryan, the only thing I would add or reiterate is you mentioned or noted too, and Parth mentioned this, the ability to move into a state like Montana and get there early, you know, teach the doctors of, you know, kind of value-based levers. It really, to your point, works with a company like Surgery Partners, kind of, and our strategies align really well. I mean, they're a low-cost setting, and we can go out, kind of build the medical group as we go, you know, kind of direct that care to the lowest cost setting, enter value-based arrangements, and move that market over a period of time as we kind of work and align with payers that wanna take the market that way. We are, you know, we would obviously seek other partners like that.

It makes a lot of sense for us and to get into a market early and establish ourselves with the relationships with those types of providers.

Ryan Daniels
Analyst and Group Head of Healthcare, William Blair

Perfect. Thanks, and congrats on the momentum.

Shawn Morris
CEO, Privia Health Group

Thank you, Ryan.

Parth Mehrotra
President and COO, Privia Health Group

Thanks.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Whit Mayo from SVB Securities. Your line is now open.

Whit Mayo
Senior Managing Director, SVB Securities

Thanks. I think I just wanna start first with the investments that you guys were making coming into 2022. I think given a lot of the growth, the momentum, the new markets, the ACOs, the risk platform, you needed to stand up some infrastructure. Has anything changed on those investments? Do you need to make more or less? Just any early observations or thoughts would be helpful.

Parth Mehrotra
President and COO, Privia Health Group

Yeah. Hey, Whit. Thanks for the question. No, you know, they stand as you stated and as we have communicated at our last earnings call. We're continuing to make those investments. It is obviously great to see the organization execution across the board. You're seeing that in the financials very clearly as we've outperformed on the top line. The beauty of the business is, despite those investments, we are outperforming on EBITDA and free cash flow. I think you're getting this business, given our guidance, that is now growing 35% this year on the top line and 35% plus on EBITDA. We're not sacrificing that you know, any compression from those investments.

It speaks to the scale of the business already and where we are with our margin profile, pretty much halfway there or more than halfway there from a long-term margin. You know, we feel pretty good about where we are with the investments. We're looking to enter new markets, but we are thoughtfully investing in the business. The momentum's helping us not sacrifice EBITDA as we make those investments.

Whit Mayo
Senior Managing Director, SVB Securities

Yeah. No, that's helpful. You've sort of alluded to this a couple times, but I wanted to get more directly and specific on the ACO performance in the quarter. I know it's early, but you're getting some feed of data in from CMS that should give you some visibility into sort of how you're tracking versus expectations. You know, how are you tracking versus your internal plan there just with the new ACOs and also those that have converted into the extended track? Thanks.

Parth Mehrotra
President and COO, Privia Health Group

Yeah, definitely. The data we typically get is lagged, as you know. The data we get now is reflective of our performance in the performance year 2021. It's still early stages for the new ACOs, but all the data we've received is reflected in our accruals. As we stated, that's a little bit ahead of our expectations, and that's reflected in the financial statements and both the top and the bottom line. I think we've, you know, we expect to perform pretty well when it's all said and done, by the time August comes and we get the final true-up, and hopefully our accruals are reflecting that. As far as the new ACOs are concerned, again, pretty early stage.

You know, we just got started January 1, so we continue to get that data over the course of this year, and we reflect that appropriately in our guidance.

Whit Mayo
Senior Managing Director, SVB Securities

Okay, great. Thanks, guys.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Jessica Tassan from Piper Sandler. Your line is now open.

Jessica Tassan
Senior Equity Research Analyst, Piper Sandler

Hi, good morning. Thank you for taking the questions. I just have one quick one on the Implemented Providers count and then, a follow-up. On Implemented Providers, you guys announced Montana in early February. Can you just confirm whether or not those 65 Montana providers are now included in the Implemented Providers count?

Shawn Morris
CEO, Privia Health Group

Yeah. Hey, Jess. They're expected to be implemented at some point in Q2. They'll likely be reflected when we report our Q2 results.

Jessica Tassan
Senior Equity Research Analyst, Piper Sandler

Got it. That's helpful. Just maybe any comments on fee-for-service volume trends 2Q quarter to date relative to 1Q? Then maybe just on a historical basis, I don't know if we should be thinking about fee-for-service practice collections per provider as normal in 2018 or 2019. Comping Q/Q 2Q quarter to date relative to historical periods would be helpful. Thank you.

Parth Mehrotra
President and COO, Privia Health Group

We continue to see the trend, you know, with utilization well above our expectations. That continued from Q4 last year into Q1 this year, nothing's changed, you know, in the first couple of months here in Q2. Hopefully that continues. Again, we like to be conservative. It's been tough to predict these last 24 months, but hopefully that momentum continues. We are well over pre-COVID baselines, you know, by a wide margin. We think our practices are gaining market share on a same store basis, given the strength of the platform and the strength of these practices during that time. I think we see a lot of momentum and hopefully that continues.

Jessica Tassan
Senior Equity Research Analyst, Piper Sandler

Got it. Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes on the line of Sandy Draper from Guggenheim. Your line is now open.

Sandy Draper
Senior Managing Director, Guggenheim Securities

Thanks very much and good morning. Just I think still a clarification here. I'm not quite sure. I think you may have addressed it, but I didn't quite get it, so I apologize. Looks like in the first quarter, your Care Margin was about 12.7%. If you look at your full year guidance, you're, you know, implies close to 13.5%. When we're thinking about that trending up, just remind me, what are the key drivers, and do you expect that to be linear, or are there any sort of notable quarters where you get true-ups for any of the capitated lives or shared savings where, you know, you have a big jump that pushes that up and then it comes back down?

Just trying to think about pacing that line and the trajectory going from 12.7 in the first quarter to get to sort of a 13.5 for the year. Thanks.

Parth Mehrotra
President and COO, Privia Health Group

Hey, Sandy. Thanks for the question. The trend should pretty much mimic 2021 or previous years, where you'll see you know, it's low in the beginning of the year and then ramps up by Q3. You know, the one thing that does get trued up is you know, our accrual estimates for prior periods when we get most of our value-based care results later in the year. If there's a big deviation on the positive side, you should see that Care Margin as a percentage of Practice Collections trend up. You know, obviously we entered capitated arrangements this year, so we are accruing for those and not expecting much to flow down to Care Margin from those this year. There'll be some anomaly driven by that.

Again, that should be the trend and that's reflected in the guidance.

Sandy Draper
Senior Managing Director, Guggenheim Securities

Great. That's helpful. The follow-up, this relates to, I think, some of the questions at the very beginning. One of the ways I look at it is practice collections per provider, and that was up really nicely on a year-over-year and sequential basis. Should we generally think about outside of a really big add that should be, you know, the level you think you saw this quarter of practice collections per provider should be relatively stable unless obviously if you add a big chunk of providers, you may actually see just based on the math, it dropped down a little bit?

is there anything that, you know, that wasn't related to the individual providers, again, going back to some of the shared savings, other stuff that maybe not be purely provider based to think about with some as I'm building that out? Thanks.

Parth Mehrotra
President and COO, Privia Health Group

Sure. Generally speaking, it should be stable, accounting for any healthcare inflation or contractual adjustments that we have on the fee-for-service book. I do think it should be important that you separate out the capitated revenue and then calculate that number from the practice collections because that started this year, so there'll be a big jump in practice collections due to those capitated arrangements. I think once you normalize for that, you should see a fairly stable trend ticking upwards slightly. Hopefully that should remain fairly stable over time.

Sandy Draper
Senior Managing Director, Guggenheim Securities

Okay. Yeah. That's helpful. I guess we'll wait for the Q and make those adjustments and do that going forward. Thanks, Parth.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Adam Ron from Bank of America. Your line is now open.

Adam Ron
VP of Equity Research, Bank of America

Hey, thanks. Going back to the discussion about multi-specialty groups and the comparison to Optum Care. You two, I guess, are one of the only ones that I cover at least in value-based care that are connecting both primary care assets and specialists. You mentioned that it creates some synergies in value-based care. To me, I still don't really understand how exactly that works. Like, it makes a lot of sense on the commercial side to add scale and get, you know, negotiating leverage and higher unit costs. You mentioned utilization being stronger than you expected. How exactly is it creating efficiencies on the value side? Do specialists get any of the shared savings, for example?

Parth Mehrotra
President and COO, Privia Health Group

Yeah, good question, Adam. I'll start, and Shawn will add. Look, fundamentally, you know, what we recognize is in any value-based arrangements, 80% of the costs downstream from a primary care provider are largely fee-for-service, so whether it's the specialist, facilities, inpatient, outpatient, and obviously the drug spend. The strategy is therefore to have a broad delivery system that can impact some of that cost trend with alternative site of care strategies, lower cost, higher quality specialists and so forth.

More importantly, play the value-based game where the primary care provider may not be fully at risk in pools like the commercial pool that we have, or even in upside only MSSP, where, you know, the primary care provider doesn't need to take full risk, but you're impacting enough of the cost trend that is accruing to the payer of healthcare. I think that's our strategy going in. Obviously, you know, we do participate in bundles and programs like that, where appropriate, where the specialists can really impact with an alternative site of care strategy. It's something we're looking closely with our partnership with Surgery Partners as an example. Obviously that helps us participate much more broadly than most.

Shawn Morris
CEO, Privia Health Group

Adam Ron, this is Shawn Morris. So if you think about, kinda just at a high level what we do, we build medical groups. They're always primary care focused. That's where the attributed lives come from. Over 80 value-based arrangements. At the end, you know, primary care focused, so it's, you know, that's what we're always gonna be. At the same time, as we build these medical groups, we're very strategic about when we begin to see density in a market, in a state, you know, what type of providers should we be adding depending on the level of risk we're taking and what that cohort of patients looks like. I'll give you the example of Medicare Advantage.

As we get dense and build density in a certain geography, there you'd say there's, you know, 5-6 specialties that you really wanna to get the right volume to the right providers, you know, think about sites of service and ambulatory surgery, all those type of things that are the levers of just traditional, you know, any type of traditional managed care. You know, they, you know, our primary care physicians have compacts, is what we say, with these types of doctors, and then we're, you know, kind of looking to add those specialists to our group. You're beginning to manage the professional risk. Then you have a huge input, you know, I guess, outcome then on the institutional pools.

When we talk about taking risk in a thoughtful manner, that's what we're talking about, where maybe it's primary care risk initially, but then we're moving upstream to professional and then 50/50 and really starting to kinda think about how we impact that institutional pool. We've been very open about, you know, we think the best long-term, most sustainable arrangements are where the payer is accepting risk with us, and they have incentives to, you know, build the right benefit structure for their patients. They have incentives to go out and get the most competitive arrangements with the acute care facilities and so on. I mean, we're in the business of building, you know, highly aligned, primary care-focused medical groups that can take care of every type of patient, regardless of the type of program they're in.

I hope that's helpful.

Adam Ron
VP of Equity Research, Bank of America

Yeah, no, it is. Appreciate it. One more follow-up to what you said earlier. You said that you wouldn't expect Practice Collections per doctor, I think, to rise over time aside from cost inflation. My understanding was that you were helping the doctor, you know, build out their patient panels and maximize revenue and lift their, you know, rates. Why wouldn't that number trend up significantly over time?

Parth Mehrotra
President and COO, Privia Health Group

Yeah. Over two- or three-year period, you should expect that to happen, absolutely. On a quarter-by-quarter basis, you would not see that kind of movement. Again, you'll have to, as I mentioned with Sandy, separate out the value-based components. If you're looking at just the fee-for-service line, obviously there's a good uptrend when the doctors join us, and then it stabilizes and then it creeps up with better productivity and with any contract adjustments that we have. Again, at our size, you know, with 3,300 providers, it's a much more stable metric now than it was a few years ago. Again, it's impacted by specialty mix and the maturity of each of our markets.

Adam Ron
VP of Equity Research, Bank of America

Okay, got it. Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of David Larsen from BTIG. Your line is now open.

David Larsen
Analyst and Managing Director, BTIG

Hi, congratulations on the good quarter. Can you talk a little bit about the nature of the value-based care deals that you're working in? We've heard from Washington, there's a little bit of exhaustion from legislators around like the Provider Relief Fund and sending dollars to providers. There's sequestration, where I think there was a 1% thing in April. There's another 1% thing in July. There's less sort of tolerance for upside-only risk deals. How is that impacting your book, if at all, or your provider clients? Is it a headwind or is it actually a tailwind? Thanks.

Shawn Morris
CEO, Privia Health Group

David, thanks. This is Shawn. We talk a lot about, you know, it's important and the type of providers that are attracted to Privia. They want value-based arrangements across their whole panel. I mean, that gets into the 80+. It gets into today, you know, if you look at just kind of breaking those pools out, commercial tends to be across the country upside. I can tell you, if you're any sophisticated provider, and you're doing well, you're wanting to move upstream. You know, payers are coming to you and saying, Hey, how can we share risk in certain corridors or in some way on the commercial? There's discussions about that. We have those discussions. You start breaking down the other Medicaid. Medicaid tends to be upside.

It's very state specific, what opportunities you have, how you can affect that. Then you get into the Medicare population, you break that out into two buckets. Obviously, we've been in the government business a long time. The team here at Privia has a lot of experience in government programs. We like them. We break those out into. We participate in MSSP. A lot of discussion about the success recently, you know, by CMS being pretty vocal about kind of, you know, stopping doing as many programs that they don't feel they're getting shared savings for the taxpayer and doing more of the programs that are being successful.

We've been in MSSP, I guess, since the beginning, 7 years ago, really successful, you know, have the number one out of the top 100 ACOs in the Mid-Atlantic and in the shared savings percentage. A lot of success there. Medicare Advantage, the team has a lot of that. We've moved into that. You know, I think this is me speaking, I don't wanna speak for CMMI and CMS, but they're narrowing their programs. We support, you know, that the. Because, you know, these programs are built over decades. They're not built over two or three years. You know, we think that as these programs continue to improve, you'll see us in those programs. We're gonna do analysis, and should we move, you know, our positions in from one program to the next?

We do that with our doctors. They're sharing risk with us. They're putting up money, and they have skin in the game, so we're very thoughtful in how we move from program to program. We were measuring the headwinds and the tailwinds when we make those decisions. We're pretty supportive of the decisions that's coming out of CMS now, and that be very thoughtful, be very supportive, continue to improve upon the programs. I think the other thing I haven't mentioned is I think you'd agree what they're saying is they'd like to see more, I guess, similar, the payer, the commercial payers doing programs such as they are. I think you're gonna start seeing some of that, where their programs, I don't wanna say the quality metrics are the same, but they're gonna be, you know, upside.

CMS is being, you know, you're saying they'd start off upside, but they want you to move to risk. Like, your last question is, I think that's exactly what we're built to do. We're very thoughtful about it, and we, you know, maybe we're kind of monotonous in our discussions, but that's what we believe. The worst thing you can possibly do is take risk too soon and fail, and you set yourself back with doctors, and they lose confidence. This is them. We're very supportive of what they're out there saying and the way they're taking the programs.

David Larsen
Analyst and Managing Director, BTIG

Okay, great. Thanks very much. Just one more quick one. There's a lot going on in the market with inflation, labor costs, rising interest rates, and a slight pullback in the stock market, which I imagine is impacting the physician groups that probably have their capital invested in the market. How is that impacting, you know, volumes to your practices and your cash collections? And like, how are April, March, April, May volumes, how do they compare to January? Did you get a bump up from COVID in January, and that's what drove the sort of cash collections upside? Or are you just sort of seeing continued strong volumes as we progress through the year?

Parth Mehrotra
President and COO, Privia Health Group

Yeah. I think it's two things for us. One is, obviously, we continue to see utilization much higher than what we expected. As the world normalizes and, you know, we're seeing that come in much, much stronger. We said that last quarter. We see the same trend continuing. That's obviously helping on the fee-for-service book. We also think our practices are gaining market share, you know, on a same-store basis. That's reflective of how well they're doing with us, with our platform. We're able to enhance productivity, and they're able to add patient panels and so forth, add other providers to the same practice. I think that's helping us on a same-store basis.

Look, the model today is really set up well, where we're seeing this flywheel effect with our existing physicians asking their colleagues to join an entity like Privia, where you know there are all these challenges, complexity of

Value-based programs, the infrastructure, the technology stack, and so forth. I think independent physicians are realizing our model of being best of both worlds, where they're part of something bigger, yet maintain their autonomy, and are supported by a bigger entity from all of these things, and have a real governance structure around our medical group entities. It gives them this best of both worlds dynamics, which is hard to get, relative to selling their practice to somebody, whether it's a health system, whether it's a private equity entity and so forth. I think we're seeing all that momentum our way in terms of you know, and that's all reflected in the growth in the financial statements.

Shawn Morris
CEO, Privia Health Group

Yeah. Parth's last point was what I was gonna, you know, kind of add on. I mentioned in my prepared remarks, I spent, you know, time at the Nasdaq with 17 of our physicians we invited. You know, there's no one is immune to what's going on in the inflationary markets are seeing. But it's reflecting on, you know, kind of I think our growth, where physicians are—they're seeing pressures that they probably hadn't seen in the last few years, and our physicians have performed really well. They understand value-based care is in their market. They wanna perform better. Their peers are seeing them be successful, and they're telling their peers about it. A lot of our pipeline is full of where our providers have spoken with their colleagues about joining.

You know, I think, you know, they're not immune to it. It's, I guess, in an odd way, driving some and fueling some of the, I guess, some of our growth, if that's helpful.

David Larsen
Analyst and Managing Director, BTIG

Great. Thanks so much. Congrats on a good quarter.

Shawn Morris
CEO, Privia Health Group

Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Richard Close from Canaccord Genuity. Your line is now open.

Richard Close
Managing Director of Digital and Tech-Enabled Health Equity Research, Canaccord Genuity

Yes, Shawn, I wanted to just expand on that. Obviously, you know, you've been around this business for a long time, seeing ups and downs in the economy and whatnot. How do you think, you know, if things deteriorate from here, how do you think that changes the pipeline for you guys? Do physicians choose different models or prefer different models? Just curious, you know, based on your experience.

Shawn Morris
CEO, Privia Health Group

Richard, you almost offended me in calling me old. No, just kidding. You know, it's kinda, I guess, an addition to the last question. I mean, they're not immune to it. I mean, but the providers have been pretty open over the, you know, last year, but the providers that come to us are kind of they self-select in. They're not looking to sell their practice. You know, they're not looking to, you know, join a hospital. Some are actually leaving systems in some markets. We've seen some of that in some markets we're out in and talking to different physicians. But I think it's, you know, like I said, in an odd way, I hate to admit it almost, it's helpful.

I mean, doctors are looking to, you know, it is a little bit of the best of both worlds. They want their autonomy. You know, these doctors, some of them came to our recent board meeting, and the board members said, Why do you join? They said, you know, Number one, autonomy. Number two is we perform better, you know, on in this market, and it's better to be part of something larger, but we want that autonomy.

Hey, we're getting the tools necessary to move into arrangements that we've either been you know, somewhat successful, but we know those type of arrangements are gonna grow over time. You know, the great thing is we've got a lot of sales momentum, and the pipeline is very robust, as we continue to say. You know, I think it's driving some growth, but you know, at the end of the day, we've got to be successful, and results are what drive success for physicians.

Parth Mehrotra
President and COO, Privia Health Group

Richard, the one thing I'll add is, you know, we offer something to also health systems and other facility affiliated or employed providers, as we mentioned and as you know. You know, they are facing a lot more of these pressures in a much more acute manner than in the community independent doctor practices. Obviously, the staffing issues, inflationary pressures in the hospitals and so forth. I think, you know, 40%-50% of the providers are in that ecosystem in the country today, and our ability to offer and partner with health systems and entities like Surgery Partners, as an example, you know, is also really positive for our business as we go through this period.

Shawn Morris
CEO, Privia Health Group

That's a good point, Parth. It's just those discussions have really grown over the last 18 months, and I think the pressures of COVID and now the inflationary, you know, factors we're seeing are gonna continue that momentum.

Richard Close
Managing Director of Digital and Tech-Enabled Health Equity Research, Canaccord Genuity

Do you think that if, you know, valuations come down from the perspective of, you know, selling your practice, that ultimately, you know, that benefits you guys in terms of, you know, deciding to, you know, partner with someone like yourself, is that a tailwind for you?

Parth Mehrotra
President and COO, Privia Health Group

I think, in summary, it should be. You know, we've all obviously shied away from buying practices. As you know, in our model, we think that misaligns interests. Obviously, you know, as physicians, those who are looking to sell or were on the borderline and are not getting what they expected, you know, I think it's a tailwind for us.

Richard Close
Managing Director of Digital and Tech-Enabled Health Equity Research, Canaccord Genuity

Okay. Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. Our last question comes from the line of Brian Tanquilut from Jefferies. Your line is now open.

Brian Tanquilut
Equity Research Analyst, Jefferies

Hey, guys. It's Brian Tanquilut. All our questions have been answered. Thank you so much. Appreciate it.

Shawn Morris
CEO, Privia Health Group

Thanks, Brian.

Parth Mehrotra
President and COO, Privia Health Group

Thanks.

Operator

Thank you. Thank you. At this time, I'm showing no further questions. I would like to turn the call back over to Mr. Morris for closing remarks.

Shawn Morris
CEO, Privia Health Group

Thank you, operator. Wanna thank everybody for joining and listening in today. We're excited, as you can tell. We're looking forward to continue to execute at this high level through the remainder of 2022, and we look forward to speaking to you again at the next quarter. Appreciate your continued interest and support of Privia. Enjoy the rest of your day. Thanks.

Operator

This concludes today's conference call. Thank you for participating. You may now disconnect.

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