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DATE

Wednesday, April 22, 2026 at 11 a.m. ET

CALL PARTICIPANTS

  • Chief Executive Officer — Kevin Hammons
  • Chief Financial Officer — Jason Johnson

TAKEAWAYS

  • Adjusted EBITDA -- $309 million, declining 17.8% year over year, with margin at 10.4%.
  • Same-store Net Revenue -- Up 3.1% year over year, driven by a 3.7% increase in net revenue per adjusted admission but partially offset by a 0.5% decline in same-store adjusted admissions.
  • Same-store Inpatient Admissions -- Decreased 1.3% year over year.
  • Same-store Surgeries -- Down 2.2% year over year.
  • Same-store ED Visits -- Declined 2.8% year over year.
  • Contract Labor Spend -- Decreased 11% year over year on a same-store basis.
  • Average Hourly Rate -- Grew approximately 2.3% year over year.
  • Medical Specialist Fees -- Increased about 11% year over year, slightly above forecast, but remained 5.5% of net revenue.
  • Supplies Expense -- Declined by 60 basis points to 14.9% of net revenue, reflecting lower surgical volumes and improved procurement.
  • Cash Flow from Operations -- Was a use of $297 million, versus positive $120 million in the prior year; company attributed roughly 25% of the decline to core operations and the remainder to timing for Medicaid supplemental and provider tax payments, bonus payouts, Medicare Advantage receivable, and deferred note interest.
  • Debt Reduction Activities -- Generated more than $1.1 billion in gross proceeds from divestitures and redeemed $223 million of 2032 notes at 103, reducing net debt from $11.4 billion at year-end 2024 to an estimated $9.3 billion pro-forma for the pending Arkansas divestiture.
  • Major Investments in Surgery Centers -- Announced the pending acquisition of a majority stake in the Surgical Institute of Alabama (over 8,000 annual cases) and purchased majority interest in South Anchorage Surgery Center, plus opened two new ASCs; combined recent and pending ASC investments total about $85 million.
  • Arkansas Divestiture -- Announced agreement to divest four hospitals in Arkansas to Freeman Health Systems for $112 million in cash and assumption of leases, expected to close in the second quarter.
  • Hospital Quality Ratings -- Management expects up to 80% of hospitals to receive a Leapfrog A or B safety grade (up from 48%) and 56% to be rated at least three stars by CMS (up from 45%) when new ratings are released.
  • Guidance for 2026 -- Reaffirmed with adjusted EBITDA range of $1.34 billion to $1.49 billion; Arkansas divestiture and ASC investments expected to largely offset each other in guidance impact.
  • Payer Mix and Volume Trends -- Volume softness was broad-based and seen more in commercially insured and health exchange patients, which management linked to macroeconomic pressures and increased managed care preauthorization denials.
  • Staffing Investment -- Added 30 net physicians, increasing salaries expense by approximately $5 million and in-sourcing anesthesia for $2-$2.5 million in additional costs.
  • Leapfrog and CMS Quality Scores -- Management said, "we expect as many as 80% of CHS' hospitals to receive a Leapfrog A or B grade," reflecting anticipated quality improvement.

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RISKS

  • Adjusted EBITDA fell 17.8% year over year due to volume and payer mix softness, and negative EBITDA contribution from divested operations.
  • First-quarter cash flow from operations was negative $297 million versus positive $120 million last year, with management citing working capital timing but also a 25% impact from core operational results.
  • Ongoing payer mix deterioration and lower elective procedure volumes, especially in commercial and exchange patient cohorts, pressured margins in the period.

SUMMARY

Community Health Systems, Inc. (CYH 15.65%) reported lower adjusted EBITDA and margin, citing volume and payer mix headwinds concentrated among commercially insured and exchange plan patients. Management highlighted major capital allocation moves, including significant ambulatory surgery center investments and divestitures, which together are expected to have a neutral effect on 2026 financial guidance. The call provided explicit detail on timing-related cash flow headwinds, with expectations for reversal in subsequent quarters and reaffirmed full-year adjusted EBITDA guidance.

  • The company stated that recently acquired and pending ambulatory surgery centers are integrated into existing care networks and not as standalone market entries.
  • Jason Johnson said, "same-store contract labor spend down 11% from the prior year period," referencing ongoing labor efficiency efforts.
  • Net leverage improved to 6.5x at quarter-end.
  • Delays in Medicaid supplemental payments and Medicare Advantage collections are temporary, with management expecting collection throughout the remainder of the year.
  • The company indicated no updates yet on anticipated ACA exchange disenrollment impacts, reiterating that material financial effects are not expected until the second or third quarter.

INDUSTRY GLOSSARY

  • ASC (Ambulatory Surgery Center): Outpatient facilities where surgeries not requiring hospital admission are performed; typically focus on cost efficiency and high procedure volumes.
  • Leapfrog Safety Grade: A hospital rating system evaluating performance in preventing medical errors, infections, and patient harms, with scores ranging from A (best) to F.
  • CMS Stars: Star ratings issued by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) to hospitals based on quality and patient experience indicators; a higher number indicates stronger performance.
  • Provider Taxes: State-imposed taxes on healthcare providers, which are sometimes used to secure or match federal funding for Medicaid or associated state payment programs.

Full Conference Call Transcript

Kevin Hammons: Thank you, Anton. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining our first quarter 2026 conference call and for your continued interest in CHS. Before we begin, I want to acknowledge our employees, physicians and all of our teammates who have embraced our vision to make the health care experience exceptional for our patients, our communities and each other. As people across our organization share in this commitment, I am confident we will see the benefits of making that health care experience exceptional. And as we do, more patients will choose our health systems and will create an even stronger company.

Earlier this week, we announced some significant investments in ambulatory surgery centers in our core markets including the pending acquisition of a majority ownership interest in the Surgical Institute of Alabama, our largest acquisition since 2016. This surgery center performs more than 8,000 cases annually, and is the largest multi-specialty surgery center in Alabama. We expect to close this transaction during the second quarter. During the first quarter, we also purchased a majority interest in South Anchorage Surgery Center in Alaska and opened 2 de novo ASCs in Birmingham and Foley, Alabama.

These targeted investments extend CHS' ability to provide outpatient surgical care in the most advantageous way for our patients while delivering excellent outcomes, optimizing the surgical experience for our physician partners and driving future growth for our health systems. Turning to our operating performance for the first quarter of 2026, adjusted EBITDA was on the low end of our internal expectations, declining 17.8% from the prior year period, reflecting our strategic transactions to reduce our debt, macroeconomic disruptions across the country, as well as the investment CHS is making in our future.

The quarter's results include an approximate $50 million year-over-year EBITDA drag from recently completed divestitures that went from being positive contributors in the prior year period to negative in the first quarter of 2026. Closing these divestitures will remove the negative EBITDA drag from future quarters. Additionally, while we benefited from some out-of-period revenue related to the Georgia State Directed Payment Program, this tailwind was partially offset by out-of-period provider tax increases related to the Indiana program. Same-store net revenue increased 3.1% year-over-year, driven by 3.7% growth in net revenue per adjusted admission, partly offset by a 0.5% decline in same-store adjusted admissions.

We believe volume and payer mix challenges in the first quarter reflect a temporary disruption in demand for health care services in our markets. Largely driven by consumer fears related to geopolitical instability and increased cost of living as well as ongoing aggressive practices used by the managed care companies that drive inefficiency, unnecessarily delayed payment and interfere with the delivery of medical care. I'd like to spend just a minute on our top priorities this year as we work to enhance quality, patient experience, physician experience and employee satisfaction.

We are realizing operational improvements at an accelerating pace, and our ability to advance in each of these areas will also ultimately drive enhanced financial performance and long-term value creation for our organization and shareholders. For example, in the area of quality, when the spring 2026 leapfrog safety grades are released next month, we expect as many as 80% of CHS' hospitals to receive a Leapfrog A or B grade, up significantly from just 48% this time a year ago. We also expect 56% of our hospitals to receive a CMS rating of 3 or more stars when those metrics are published next month, up from 45% in the 2025 ratings.

These achievements demonstrate our commitment to continuous improvement and our ability to drive stronger performance in this area. We are hyper-focused on improving the experiences of the people working in our organization. especially our physicians and employees. And we have numerous initiatives underway to increase patient satisfaction as well. On the physician experience front, we are currently deploying an ambient listening technology in our clinics and hospitals which will help reduce administrative burdens and optimize the time physicians and other providers spend face-to-face with their patients.

Investment CHS has made to expand service lines, add new access points, recruit positions to our markets and improve our quality and experience have us better positioned and prepared to accommodate demand as soon as it returns to normal levels. Before I pass the call over to Jason, I'd also like to discuss the policy backdrop. Similar to our hospital peers and others in the health care industry, we continue to monitor developments related to Medicaid supplemental payment programs in the Rural Health Transformation Fund as well as ACA enhanced premium tax credit expiration and Medicaid work requirements and redeterminations among other changes.

It is still very early to gauge the impact of these external factors, while there are a lot of moving pieces, unknown variables and potential consequences. Given CHS' historical and current presence in many rural and underserved markets, we remain actively engaged with policymakers across each of our states to help ensure that programs under the rural health fund are directed towards hospitals and other providers delivering care in these communities, which we believe was the original intent of the fund.

We've set up a formal structure with dedicated internal and external resources working to evaluate each state's various programs as details emerge and to apply for any and all funding available to us in order to ensure continued access to quality care in our rural communities. At this point, I will turn the call over to our Chief Financial Officer, Jason Johnson, to review financial results and other information in greater detail. Jason?

Jason Johnson: Thank you, Kevin, and good morning, everyone. For the first quarter, CHS delivered financial results toward the low end of expectations. The company continued to execute well on the controllable aspects of our business, demonstrate significant progress on our top priorities and further deleverage the balance sheet. However, volumes and payer mix were below expectations, including noteworthy softness in elective procedures such as hips and knees, which along with negative contribution from recently divested operations led to margin compression. Adjusted EBITDA for the first quarter was $309 million with margin of 10.4%. Recently divested hospitals produced approximately $25 million of negative adjusted EBITDA in the first quarter compared to positive $25 million in the prior year period.

A portion of the negative results from the hospitals divested in the first quarter was attributable to impact from winter storm firm. Results included approximately $25 million in contribution from Georgia state directed payment program that was approved in mid-March, approximately 2/3 of which related to prior periods since the program was retroactive to July 1, 2025. As Kevin previously noted, half of this out-of-period benefit was offset by higher operating expense related to out-of-period Indiana provider taxes. Same-store net revenue for the first quarter increased 3.1% year-over-year, again, driven primarily by rate growth as net revenue per adjusted admission was up 3.7% year-over-year, including the benefit from new state-directed payment programs, partly offset by unfavorable payer mix shift.

Same-store inpatient admissions declined 1.3% and adjusted admissions were down 0.5% year-over-year. Same-store surgeries declined 2.2% and ED visits were down 2.8%. Labor cost was well managed overall with approximately 2% year-over-year growth in average hourly rate and same-store contract labor spend down 11% from the prior year period. However, salaries and benefits expressed as a percentage of revenue increased 50 basis points year-over-year on a same-store basis due partly to increased physician employment consistent with the investments Kevin highlighted as well as continued in-sourcing, which we believe position the company well to capture share of patients in our markets return to the health care system.

Supplies expense remained well controlled, declining 60 basis points year-over-year to 14.9% of net revenue, which largely reflected the decline in surgical volumes along with better procurement and inventory management under our ERP. Medical specialist fees were up approximately 11% year-over-year on a same-store basis. Slightly ahead of our forecast for 5% to 8% growth, but were generally consistent as a percentage of net revenue at 5.5%. Cash flows from operations were a use of $297 million for the first quarter versus positive $120 million in the prior year period.

Approximately 1/4 of the year-over-year decline was due to core operating performance, but the remainder primarily attributed to timing of certain items such as Medicaid supplemental payments and provider tax payments that should reverse in future quarters. We also experienced a large buildup of AR related to Medicare Advantage accounts due to delayed payments, which we expect to collect throughout the remainder of the year. As expected, during the quarter, we completed the Clarksville, Tennessee, Pennsylvania and Huntsville, Alabama divestitures, generating more than $1.1 billion in gross proceeds and in early February, used a portion of the proceeds to redeem $223 million of the 2032 notes at 103 via a special call provision.

As Kevin previously noted, the company's leverage was down slightly at quarter end to 6.5x versus 6.6x at year-end 2025 and down from 7.4x at year-end 2024. Our next significant maturity is in 2029, and at quarter end, we had no amounts drawn on our ABL. In early March, we announced a definitive agreement to divest four hospitals in Arkansas to Freeman Health Systems for $112 million in cash and the assumption by the buyer of certain real estate leases. The transaction is expected to close in the second quarter of 2026, further enhancing liquidity to continue to reduce net debt and leverage or to fund growth investments.

Following the completion of the Arkansas divestiture, our net debt will be approximately $9.3 billion, down from $10.1 billion at year-end 2025 and $11.4 billion at year-end 2024. As Kevin previously noted, earlier this week, we announced several ASC investments in Alabama and Arkansas that are either pending or recently completed with a combined price tag of approximately $85 million. We will continue to evaluate opportunities for growth investments across each of our core markets. Our financial guidance for 2026 remains unchanged.

While new developments have emerged relative to the outlook that we provided in February, including the approval of Georgia's State direct repayment program, the pending divestiture of our Arkansas operations and the ASC investment, we believe these are captured within the initial range for adjusted EBITDA of $1.34 billion to $1.49 billion. There are multiple items on the horizon that could affect guidance in the future, most notably the potential approval of new or enhanced state direct repayment programs and potential tailwinds from the rural health transformation program. We don't have sufficient data to adjust the outlook at this early stage in the year. This concludes our prepared remarks.

So at this time, we'll turn the call back over to the operator for Q&A.

Operator: [Operator Instructions] Our first question comes from Brian Tanquilut from Jefferies.

Meghan Holtz: This is Meghan Holtz on for Brian Tanquilut. I guess it would be helpful if we could start on the payer mix and volume pressures that you saw in the quarter. Is it due to the macro environment? Or are you seeing particular pressures in your markets, particularly as you start to see some green shoots in Q4 around your commercial book? And then how should we be just thinking about volume for the full year as you had been originally guiding to 1.5% to 2.5% of that 5% revenue growth? Should we still be thinking about that as comps get easier in the second half and you guys hopefully recover some volume.

Kevin Hammons: Sure, I'll start off and then Jason, feel free to jump in. The volume pressures really saw were across the board. I wouldn't call out any specific markets that were worse than others. So we really do believe that it was a broad pressure on volume. It was also concentrated more so in individuals with commercial and health exchange coverage. So that leads us to believe a couple of things. One, it's macroeconomic issues because those are the individuals with high deductibles and the more aggressive behavior by the managed care companies is we understand, at least anecdotally, that there's kind of been -- they've turned the dial up on denying preauthorizations in more cases.

So oftentimes, those patients are not even getting to us because of that.

Jason Johnson: Yes. Maybe I would just add as it relates to our guidance, we're assuming low single-digit volume growth for the year. So we're at negative 0.5% adjusted admission for the first quarter. We do think that, that should recover. And I think payer mix was the other piece that came in less than our expectations for the full year. And similar, we think that comes back as the economy continues to improve.

Meghan Holtz: Okay. And then as a quick follow-up, operating cash flow looked a little weak in the quarter. We assume it's working capital timing-related headwinds that you'll ultimately recapture. But can you just kind of give us the moving pieces on what was going on in the operating cash flow line in the quarter?

Jason Johnson: Sure. I'll take that one. This is Jason. Yes, there are several items that are timing related that we expect to flip through the rest of the year. I'll name a few here. There's about $90 million of Medicaid supplemental payments and provider tax payments timing.

In other words, we -- timing difference between when we either recognize the revenue or the expense of the provider taxes versus when we receive those payments or make the tax payments. $50 million to $60 million, I mentioned I referenced this in my comments, that there was a buildup of managed care -- Medicare Advantage accounts, and that's about $50 million to $60 million, which we do expect to collect at the rest of the remainder of the year. We make our bonus payments annually in the first quarter every year, that's about $50 million. So that will continue to flip back the other way as the accrual for this year builds up.

There's $25 million to $50 million of AP timing that occurs and usually does kind of happen at year-end versus the first quarter. And then there's -- the final thing I'll mention is about a $15 million initial interest payment on the 2034 notes that were deferred from September 2025 and made this quarter. Those notes were issued in August of last year. And rather than make the initial payment a month or so later, it was deferred until the first quarter.

Operator: Our next question comes from Ben Hendrix with RBC.

Benjamin Hendrix: Great. I appreciate that it's early in the quarter, but just wanted to talk about kind of the HIX exchange headwind from the ETC expiry that we -- that you are assuming in your guidance. I think in the bridge that we have here, we had about $110 million of revenue, about $25 million of EBITDA assumed. I just wanted to see kind of based on some of the reports that have come out intra-quarter and your experience, just if there's any kind of change to that progression and if you're seeing any kind of regional variation.

Jason Johnson: Yes. So we haven't made any changes to our assumptions yet. I don't -- we're still really don't have a lot more data than we had in February. I do know that our hits revenue and adjusted admissions remained between 4% and 5%, both the first quarter of this year and last year. Our revenue actually went up, but we did see about a 3.9% drop in adjusted admissions amongst the exchange plan patients. But that's, I think, similar to what we see with a lot of plans that have the high deductibles at the beginning of the year that we think are staying out of the system.

Certainly, there's some portion of those people that may have lost dropped the coverage or moved to another plan or self-pay, we don't really have any new information yet. I think that's still going to be second or third quarter before we get a better feel for that.

Benjamin Hendrix: And then just on the core growth that you're anticipating, obviously coming a little bit softer than expected in the first quarter, but -- but how do we think about that phasing through the rest of the year? And I know that you've kind of mentioned some consumer confidence and how do you see that developing as we get closer to the end of the year?

Kevin Hammons: Sure. I think we indicated even at the fourth quarter earnings release, we expected this year to be more heavily weighted in the back half. We had anticipated starting off the year a little softer given the consumer confidence coming out of December was muted and low. And then kind of throughout the first quarter, we saw a jobs report come out that was much worse than expected. And then the conflict in the Middle East that transpired in March and the rise of price of oil and gas and price of the pump and so forth. We do believe that we'll see some economic recovery in the back half of the year.

Second quarter will be a little bit of an easier comp for us as well. And we think that with the work that we're doing on improving, as I mentioned, improving quality, improving our patient experience as that gets more traction we'll really be positioned well that with this deferred business as people ultimately will come back and have these procedures done, we believe we'll be positioned well to capture that business and maybe uniquely positioned to capture that business in our markets, and that should serve us well. But that is likely not to happen until the back half of the year.

Operator: Our next question comes from A.J. Rice with UBS.

Albert Rice: Maybe first on these acquisitions, the Surgical Institute of Alabama and the Alaska one. I know traditionally, I've tended to think of you guys as doing when it's something like an ASC within your existing markets. I'm not sure whether you describe these as being adjacent to existing hospitals? Or are you pivoting to now maybe looking more at freestanding ASCs as an investment opportunity? And should we think that there'll be some capital devoted to that -- incremental capital devoted to that going forward?

Kevin Hammons: Thanks, A.J. Great question. These acquisitions, we would still characterize as being part of our networks of care, extending the care area that we're treating patients from those hospitals but still connected within our markets and just an extension of those networks. So not going into what I would call new markets with just an ASC strategy.

Albert Rice: Okay. All right. And just maybe some -- any update on what you're seeing with labor, hourly wages, contract labor and then professional fees as well?

Jason Johnson: Yes. The average hourly rate increase was 2.3% during the first quarter versus the prior year. We did make an investment in physicians. We have 30 net physicians added in the first quarter. That's probably about $5 million of salaries, wage and benefits. And we in-sourced anesthesia program in November of 2025, and that's about $2 million, $2.5 million of additional expenses this quarter. Contract labor came down 11%. I think we're continuing to see a return to rate and usage that are more consistent with prior to the pandemic.

Kevin Hammons: And maybe if I could just add a little more color. I think Jason absolutely got that right. But as I think about Jason's comments that we added some additional positions during the quarter, part of what we experienced and as we're being intentional about working on physician experience, our physician turnover decreased during the quarter. We were able to continue to hire new positions that the previous pace we have been hiring at, which has allowed us to add net new physicians. That positions -- it's another area that positions us well.

It comes at a little bit of a cost right now without the volume, but -- and adding new physicians to the labor cost, but that will position us well in the future that as this business comes back, we'll have more capacity to take on additional patients with the additional physicians. So again, we look at that as a net positive for us, even though it's coming in a little bit of an extra cost this quarter.

Operator: Our next question comes from Stephen Baxter with Wells Fargo.

Unknown Analyst: This is [ Mitchell ] on for Steve. Can you give us a sense of the financial profile of the four Arkansas hospitals you announced are going to be divested as well as the large ASC investment. Just trying to better understand how that fits into the guidance.

Jason Johnson: Yes, Stephen, thanks for the question. The $112 million proceeds, Arkansas, that's about, I think, a 10 to 12 multiple. And that was not reflected in our initial guidance in February. So that will come out for about half a year. But the ASC investments, which are going to -- are largely going to offset that, they're just about a wash. So no effect on our guidance between netting those...

Operator: Our next question comes from Andrew Mok with Barclays.

Thomas Walsh: This is Thomas Walsh on for Andrew. Can you help us better understand the uncompensated care and self-pay mix shifts in the quarter as ACA exchange disenrollment picked up? What's the most direct driver of higher uncompensated care higher uninsurance or worsening collections from the insured population?

Jason Johnson: Yes. Over time, the collections experience does continue to drive a natural trend that we see. I don't think there was anything outsized this quarter. There was an increase in self-pay volumes this quarter. So relative to the overall net revenue, it increased as a percentage of total. I don't know that there's any one thing that we can point to, except for I don't know, part of this could be the behavior of those folks don't have insurance if they continue to come into the health systems regardless of what's happening in the broader macro environment.

Kevin Hammons: I do think it's a fair point, and we've taken into consideration the additional risk of collectibility of co-pays and deductibles in that amount and have adjusted accordingly.

Thomas Walsh: Great. And following up, there are a number of moving parts inside the pricing 3.7% in the quarter. Could you help us understand the contribution of normal course rate increases, incremental state directed payments and then the payer mix or acuity headwinds?

Jason Johnson: Yes. The normal rate increases are, I think, consistent with our guide around 3% of the impact. And then the Medicaid supplemental payments, Georgia, which I mentioned was approved this quarter. That was about $30 million of revenue, $25 million of EBITDA. That's 9 months worth or 3 quarters. So that's worth about $10 million a quarter on revenue and $8 million or $9 million on EBITDA. And then the rest of the decline was volume and payer mix -- or I'm sorry, that netted against those benefits, probably evenly between slight drop in acuity as well, but it's more about payer mix and volume offsetting those total rate increases.

Operator: This concludes our question-and-answer session. I would like to turn the conference back over to Kevin Hammons, Chief Executive Officer, for any closing remarks.

Kevin Hammons: Thank you, everyone, for joining the call today. If you have any additional questions, you can always reach us at (615) 465-7000. Have a good day, everyone.

Operator: The conference has now concluded. Thank you for attending today's presentation. You may now disconnect.