U.S. Physical Therapy, Inc. (USPH) Q3 2022 Earnings Call Transcript

U.S. Physical Therapy, Inc. (NYSE:USPH) Q3 2022 Earnings Conference Call November 3, 2022 10:30 AM ET

Company Participants

Christopher Reading – President, CEO & Director

Jake Martinez – SVP, Finance & Accounting

Carey Hendrickson – CFO

Graham Reeve – COO, West

Conference Call Participants

Brian Tanquilut – Jefferies

Madeline Mollman – William Blair & Company

Michael Petusky – Barrington Research

Operator

Good day, everyone, and welcome to the U.S. Physical Therapy Third Quarter 2022 Earnings Conference Call. [Operator Instructions].

I’d now like to turn the call over to Chris Reading, President and CEO. Please go ahead, sir.

Christopher Reading

Thanks, Ashley. Good morning, and welcome, everyone, to our third quarter 2022 U.S. Physical Therapy earnings call. Today I’m calling in from Denver, where we have the largest aggregation of private practices for the annual physical therapy private practice meeting. It’s a great place for us to seek friends and colleagues and work on deal-related opportunities for the future.

Additionally, this year in conjunction with this PPS meeting, we held our annual APTQI Board meeting, where we continue to work on behalf of our profession in areas such as fair reimbursement for the amazing life altering results we produce for our patients.

We continue to push the reduction — for the reduction of administrative burden. We’re working to ensure that we have an adequate supply of therapists to serve the growing needs of our aging population, replacing unnecessary and excessive pharmaceutical and other more expensive interventions with proven functionally restoring care. We focus on other legislative and long-term efforts.

I’m proud of the work that we’re doing within APTQI and our member company’s ongoing support of those efforts, which to date have helped mitigate some of the significant harmful cuts proposed by CMS these past few years.

Joining me on the call this morning include Carey Hendrickson, our CFO. I’m really happy Carey’s part of our team. He arrived here 2 years ago as we worked our way through year 1 of the pandemic. He’s doing a great job.

Eric Williams, Graham Reeve, our co-COOs, are also here with me. They’ve been working extremely hard, along with our regional presidents in conjunction with our partners and our local staff who work every day to provide outstanding care, while we work to make ongoing adjustments during what has been a rather continuously evolving environment in this year to include a rather sharp and significant inflation across all cost areas, coupled with some employee scarcity, which I think we’re beginning to deal with more effectively at this point.

Finally, Rick Binstein, who, in addition to being our Executive Vice President and General Counsel, is my right arm in so many important areas and ways, including, especially in our acquisition-related work, where we’ve tried hard recently to make sure Rick stays as busy as possible. Rick is also unfortunately a Phillies fans, so that’s the only real strike against him at this point.

Before I continue further, I’ll ask our Senior Vice President of Finance and Accounting, Jake Martinez, to please cover a brief disclosure. Jake, if you would.

Jake Martinez

Thank you, Chris. This presentation contains forward-looking statements, which involve certain risks and uncertainties. These forward-looking statements are based on the company’s current views and assumptions. The company’s actual results may vary materially from those anticipated. Please see the company’s filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission for more information. Thanks.

Christopher Reading

Okay. Thanks, Jake. I’m going to start this morning with some color on highlights on our third quarter performance, and then Carey can fill in any gaps as he thoroughly reviews our financial results. This year, we have seen the resumption of our long-standing seasonal pattern, which seems to really be absent in 2021. With the advent of summer and school letting out, we normally slowed just a little bit and then later we pick up. And that return as per our normal seasonal pattern this year.

June, July with vacations and travel slowed modestly with July coming in at 28.4% visits per clinic per day, and then started to pick up with the kickoff of fall football and the start of school. Ultimately, we finished the quarter averaging 28.8% visits per clinic per day in spite of a very active de novo and development year, which can sometimes mute those volumes somewhat.

And considering we were impacted about 3,500 visits at last week of September, and into early October — into the early October quarter by Hurricane Ian, which devastated parts of Florida and did considerable damage across several Southern states along the Southeast Coast. Overall, patient visits increased 2.8% from the prior year quarter.

One of the bright spots showing up this quarter from the very good work our payer contracting team has initiated around negotiating some of our payer contracts, which has been a stated focus of ours all year, those efforts are beginning to bear fruit. Our net rate for physical therapy came in at just over $104, which was $1.08 improvement from our Q3 2021 performance and $0.83 sequential improvement from Q2 this year. I will point out, we’re still in very early innings here. We’ve got a lot more work to do and a lot of contracts to touch before it’s over.

So earlier this week, each month, we have for each of our industrial injury prevention partnerships, a partnership call, where we go over detailed performance and opportunity. I was on one of those calls earlier this week with our legacy IP injury prevention partnership. And they’re getting some nice wins with respect to contracted rate renegotiation.

These legacy partners are doing a tremendous job — excuse me, guys, I’m starting to lose my voice this morning. Hang on a second. Tremendous job this year in spite of the macro challenges affecting all of us. Injury prevention revenue was at an all-time high for this third quarter at just over $20 million, which was more than 92% improvement compared with our 2021 Q3, and the 27.1% same-store organic growth rate in that business. A gross profit percentage for our IIP services was approximately 22%.

Overall, our gross profit for the entirety of our injury prevention business increased 64.6% year-over-year, an excellent continued trajectory for that segment of our business. So shifting gears a bit. Our challenges at the moment center around making adjustments to deal with the current inflationary environment, including in our labor cost. And while we are taking steps in making progress towards mitigating some of those challenges, we need more time to completely impact and invest in a number of key areas, including as we’ve discussed in our net rate.

Total salaries and related costs were 58.6% of revenues versus 56% in the 2021 quarter. I will point out that for us, this includes the labor necessary to build and collect for the clinical work that we perform. Rent supplies and contract labor are also higher than historic levels. And as a percent of revenue, about 200 basis points above where we were a year ago at this time.

And these changes have come fairly acutely this year, starting really to appear for us in mid-Q2, and we continue to work our way through a series of mitigation efforts, which will be ongoing and require additional time to more significantly address resulting cost and margin impacts felt today.

I want to close my remarks by emphasizing 2 very bright spots for us, and the first of those is our people, starting with our partners and our clinical teams. They’ve been through a tough few years starting in early 2020 with COVID, where together, we were able to navigate that very early difficult time well.

COVID continued through ’20 into ’21, which meant they were spending long day screening patients while masked up all day. The job is very physical and the adjustments necessitated due to COVID made that work even harder. And the reality is, even though you don’t hear about it on the news anymore, COVID is still around and we continue to make adjustments in order to keep our staff and patients safe.

Throughout all of this time, our teams across the country and across the company have done an exemplary job adjusting and working to do the utmost for our patients. I just want them to hear how much we all appreciate those efforts and want them to remember they are making a huge difference in the lives and in the function of our patients.

The final bright spot I will highlight here has been our development in these past 2 years. We have onboarded some fantastic partners who brought us a lot of joint enthusiasm to continue this mission we’re on. Speaking personally, has helped to make this job one where we roll out of bed every day, excited and grateful in spite of any challenges that we may have in large part due to the wonderful people that I get to work with every day.

I’m supremely pleased with the deals we’ve announced this year, including the most recent one we announced earlier this week. The people and the talent are amazing, and I’m also excited about what we still have in the works to complete.

So that concludes my color on the quarter. I’ll ask Carey to provide a more detailed overview of the financials before we open things up for questions. Thank you. Carey?

Carey Hendrickson

Thank you, Chris, and good morning, everyone. As you saw in the release, we reported adjusted EBITDA for the third quarter of $17 million and operating results per share of $0.58.

Like all companies, we’re dealing with inflationary cost pressures and labor pressures. We expect those factors to continue to impact us in the near term, but our volumes remain strong by historic standards, and our team is focused, as always, on finding ways to become even more efficient so we can produce the best possible results for all of our stakeholders.

Looking at our volumes. Our physical therapy patient volumes per day per clinic, as Chris noted, were 28.8% in the third quarter. That’s the second highest per day volumes in the third quarter in the company’s history.

By month, our average visits per clinic per day for all clinics were 28.4 in July, 29.0 in August and 28.9 in September. Chris noted, we had some impact from Hurricane Ian. We lost about 3,500 visits at the end of September for that. That we would have been at about 29.0 in September as well were not for those lost visits.

We expect October volumes to be similar to August and September, which is a good place to be given some of the lingering impact of Hurricane Ian in Florida, Georgia and South Carolina in the first couple of weeks of October.

Our net rate for our physical therapy operations was $104.1 for the third quarter of 2022. That compares to $102.93 that we reported for the third quarter of ’21. Our rate has increased each quarter this year, moving from $103 in the first quarter to $103.18 in the second quarter and then to $104.01 in the third quarter.

This is despite the pressures on Medicare rates, some reductions that were put in place at the beginning of the year and the phase out of sequestration relief, which is now complete.

As we noted, we’ve seen the nice commercial rate increases this year. It is the hard work of our contracting team, which has resulted in our average commercial rates increasing each quarter in 2022. We still have a lot of work to do on this front, but it’s good to see some progress here.

Our workers’ comp average rate is up 2.5% in the first 9 months of 2022 compared to 2021. And our Medicare rates, they dipped in the first and the second quarters of the year, but then they increased in the third quarter due to the adoption of remote therapeutic monitoring, which is new in 2022 and other hard work on the ops team side.

Our physical therapy revenues were $117.5 million in the third quarter of 2022, which was an increase of $4.4 million or 3.9% from the third quarter of 2021. Our physical therapy operating costs were $95.5 million as compared to $86.2 million in the prior year, and our margin in physical therapy was 18.7%.

Looking at the revenue at our Mature Clinics, they were flat year-over-year with a 1.5% decrease in visits that was offset by a 1.4% increase in rate. Our physical therapy salaries and related costs for our Mature Clinics increased 5% in the third quarter of 2022 compared to last year. And then contract services and rents were also higher at our Mature Clinics.

Revenues for our industrial injury prevention business were an all-time high $20.2 million in the third quarter of 2022. That was a $9.7 million increase over the third quarter of 2021, which was 92.1%. Our industrial injury expenses increased $7.9 million to $15.8 million in the third quarter. That gave us a margin of $4.4 million, which was an increase of $1.7 million or 64.6% over the prior year. And our same-store IIP revenue increased 27.1% in the third quarter of last year versus third quarter last year.

Our gross profit was $26.8 million in the third quarter of 2022, and that compares to $29.8 million in the third quarter of last year, and our gross profit margin was 19.2%. Our corporate office costs remained steady. They were $11.9 million in the third quarter of 2022. That’s actually $1 million lower than they were in the third quarter of ’21 with the decrease primarily due to lower estimated bonus expense this year.

As a percent of revenue, corporate costs were 8.5% of revenues in the third quarter of 2022, and that’s down from 10.2% of revenue in the third quarter of ’21. A couple of unusual things. Our other income line includes a $2 million gain from the elimination of a liability for a potential contingency payment related to a prior acquisition. It also includes a gain of about $785,000 related to the revaluation of our put right liability associated with the potential second phase purchase of the IIP business that we acquired in November of 2021. Both of those items, though, were excluded from our adjusted EBITDA and operating results.

Our interest expense increased from $268,000 in the third quarter of 2021 to $2 million in the third quarter of 2022 due to an increase in our debt, primarily related to acquisitions closed since the third quarter of last year and also higher interest rates in the third quarter of this year than last year.

Our net income attributable to non-controlling interest was $3.3 million in the third quarter of ’22. That’s less than the $4.1 million we had in the third quarter of last year. As a percent of profits, our non-controlling interest were 12.1% in the third quarter of ’22 as compared to 13.8% in the third quarter of ’21.

That reduction in non-controlling interest percentage is due to our proactive purchases of non-controlling interest from existing partners, resulting in a greater percentage of profits being retained by USPH.

In 2021, we purchased $30 million of non-controlling interest from our existing partners, and we purchased another $14.1 million in the first 9 months of this year. Our balance sheet remains in an excellent position. We have $150 million term loan with a 5-year swap agreement in place that fixes the 1-month term SOFR rate on that $150 million at 2.815%. Including the applicable margin based on our leverage ratio, the all-in rate on that $150 million of debt is currently 4.665%.

In our statement of comprehensive income in our financial statements, you can see that our swap agreement currently has a mark-to-market value of almost $6 million, meaning that the current expectation is it will pay $6 million less in interest expense over the remaining term of our 5-year swap agreement that we would have paid without the swap at a variable interest rate.

In addition to the term loan, we have a $175 million revolving credit facility that had nothing drawn on it at September 30, and we had cash on our balance sheet of $37.9 million at September 30. We do now have $5 million on our revolving credit facility after closing on the Fourteen-Clinic acquisition that we announced earlier this week. The acquisition was primarily funded with our excess cash, but we did use the revolver to fund the remaining $5 million.

Borrowings on the revolver are at a variable rate, which for November will be right around 5%. Our low leverage, coupled with very sufficient capacity remaining on our credit facility provides us tremendous flexibility for the right growth opportunities as we identify them at the right price.

As we look forward, our cost mitigation efforts we put in place early in the third quarter are ongoing, but we expect our costs to remain elevated due to the significant inflationary economic environment. With solid volumes and rates, we expect our full year results to be within our previous guidance ranges for operating results, which was $2.65 to $2.75 per share and EBITDA also, which was in a range of $73.5 million to $75.4 million, but most likely on the low end of those ranges.

In closing, I’ll say, we are all working very hard as a team to produce the best possible results for all of our stakeholders, as I noted in my opening comments.

And with that, Chris, I’ll turn the call back to you.

Christopher Reading

Yes. Thanks, Carey. Great job. Operator, let’s go ahead and open it up for questions.

Question-and-Answer Session

Operator

[Operator Instructions]. And we’ll take our first question from Brian Tanquilut with Jefferies.

Brian Tanquilut

I guess my first question, good rate growth performance this quarter. Chris, is this early signs of progress in terms of trying to negotiate better rates with payers? And how should we be thinking about the remaining opportunity to drive rate growth going forward?

Christopher Reading

Yes, it’s a good question. Yes, I do think it’s early progress. The team’s worked really hard. Our injury prevention team is having success there, too, although that doesn’t show up in our net rate that you just referenced.

We’ve got a lot more work to do, though. We have some contracts that just kicked in, in October that aren’t in those numbers. But I would encourage you guys not to get too far ahead of this. This is not going to be a linear process that’s easy necessarily to predict quarter-to-quarter. So hang with us. We’re continuing to work on it. And as I said, we’re early innings on this. So more to do, more to come.

Brian Tanquilut

Appreciate it. And then, Chris, obviously, good acquisition announced the other day, good size. It looks like it’s a good business. But as we think about the environment right now for deals with rates where they are, private equity, in theory, kind of like a little bit maybe slowing down. What are your conversations like now with some of the targets that — I know you cultivated a lot of these relationships over the years. So just curious what those discussions are today? And how should we be thinking about your opportunity set going forward?

Christopher Reading

Yes. The conversations haven’t changed much. In fact, we’re at the annual private practice meeting. I think the environment, as you referenced, certainly has changed. I think the multiples will change, quite frankly, they need to, and I think they will.

And so we’ll see what that does over the long run. I mean these are moment-to-moment conversations where you pick up the phone and say, okay, the world is different. But people — the conversations I’ve been having, people understand the marketplace is changing.

There are deals that have been right at the closing point, not our deals, but others that have stopped stalled or have been taken off the table, presumably because of leverage or bank issues and other things. And so that’s going to begin to seep in to this process.

And whether that slow deal flow or just adjust expectations, we’ll have to wait and see. We continue to be active, and we continue to know that we’ll be able to get things done, and we expect to make some adjustments accordingly.

Brian Tanquilut

And then, Chris, last question for me. As I think about the broader health care space, right, I mean there’s a lot of discussion about tightness in clinician labor. But I know you guys have done better in that front. But obviously, the center of your business is still the therapist in the centers and the PTAs. How are you thinking about turnover? And what are you seeing in terms of your ability to recruit clinicians in this supposedly tight labor market?

Christopher Reading

Yes. I think our — it’s feeling to me, like the recruiting side, we’ve made some adjustments. We’ve invested in some new tools. We’ve been able to, through the summer with the graduating classes to pick up a number of key people, moving some people from competitors in some cases.

It’s not easy, but it feels better than it did maybe 5 or 6 months ago. I think it’s feeling better for us as well on the injury prevention side. Again, I wouldn’t consider it normal.

At our APTQI meeting yesterday, one of our members presented an analysis — and I don’t have it in front of me at the moment. Actually, I may be able to hold up on my phone. But it indicated that there were 21,000 physical therapists that fell out of the workplace in — actually, 22,000 that fell out of the workforce in 2021, 300,000 total health care providers out of the workforce, 22,000 PTs.

To give you some perspective, the average graduating class that aggregates all of the PT clinics in the country produced 11,000 graduates per year approximately. So it’s 2 years’ worth of new workforce that evaporated at some point last year.

As you remember, last year was a blow and go year for us. We had record earnings last year and record volumes. So we’re making adjustments. Those adjustments take some time. It’s beginning to feel a little bit better.

And I think, for us, the important thing is that the clinicians, our partners understand the importance of their work that connected to the difference they make. They’re given the support that they need, which we’re working hard to do, and we’ll work our way through it from that.

Operator

And we’ll take our next question from Matt Larew with William Blair.

Madeline Mollman

This is actually Madeline Mollman on for Matt Larew. I know you mentioned last quarter that you were engaging in some cost control efforts, including switching suppliers. And I was wondering if you could sort of quantify the impact that you’ve seen from that this quarter and what you see going forward into 2023?

And then, also I know that contract labor was a big headwind last quarter, and it was an impact on the take down of your guidance. I was wondering if you could talk about whether you think the contract labor costs are going to be more transitory or if you see those continuing into 2023?

Christopher Reading

Well, we definitely see contract labor continuing. We’re never without contract labor. I think this environment would be crazy to think that we’re going to be without it.

I would tell you that the guidance change was not particularly impacted by the amount of contract labor, certainly slightly, but that was a minor part of our guidance adjust much more significant on the cost of capital side and on the general inflationary side.

So we continue to work. Look, the works — we’re working our way through this. We’re rolling out, as you mentioned, some vendor changes through a GPO rollout that’s in its early stages. We continue to make careful adjustments with respect to our staffing. We’re rolling out some improvements in our onboarding for our patients at our front desk areas that will hopefully, as we get in further into 2023 will allow us to make some further adjustments in our front office staff.

But this is going to be kind of a slow study process. This isn’t a one-and-done kind of opportunity. It’s going to take us a little bit more time.

Madeline Mollman

And then just as you think about acquisitions, I know you mentioned that you drew down on your debt to fund the most recent acquisition this week. Is there a leverage ratio that you want to stay below? Are you focusing more on acquisitions you can pay for in cash in order to not draw down on the debt? Just wondering how you’re thinking about that.

Christopher Reading

Yes. Well, I mean certainly, we have covenants and us understanding with our bank, those ratios right now, we get credit from prospective EBITDA that gets annualized in these deals. But our leverage ratio, including that prospective credit would be at 3x, and we’ll stay under that.

Carey Hendrickson

Just to be clear, that’s the covenant. Just making sure that’s clear. We’re currently at about like 6x or around that. So go ahead, I’m sorry, Chris, go ahead.

Christopher Reading

Yes. No, that’s fine. I mean the point is we’re well within those ranges that keep us comfortable. Will we use cash? Look, we always have cash available, $20 million and $25 million to fund the ongoing needs of our business will actually pay down that credit facility, that $5 million that we borrowed as we’re able and then re-borrow as we need to. And so, that will be a rather fluid process that occurs each and every week, in fact, depending upon cash availability and outflow.

Operator

[Operator Instructions]. Then we’ll go next to Mike Petusky with Barrington Research.

Michael Petusky

So I guess I wanted to ask just on the — and I understand it thoroughly, but on the GPO rollout, I mean, what kind of buy-in or pushback are you getting from your therapist partners? I mean are they sort of getting onboard? Or was this somewhere in between?

Graham Reeve

Yes. This is Graham. So far, it’s been well received. I mean we’re working through partner by partner. But so far, we’ve had a good adoption on it, and we’re working to move it out for more people.

Christopher Reading

Yes, Mike, I think like anything else, will it be 100% uniform? And will the sensitivities around it be 100% one way or the other? No. But I think our partners understand where they are and where we are and where the world is right now. And buying the same stuff and paying more for it just doesn’t make a lot of sense. And we have a new opportunity, and it will be changed, but we’re working our way through it.

Michael Petusky

And Chris, I guess, given that you’re in a meeting, I’m extra curious what the current view is in the industry, yourself as far as reimbursement sort of a more rational reimbursement approach, including specifically for 2023, any thoughts?

Christopher Reading

Yes. So we had our APTQI meeting. Again, that’s the vehicle that we use to do a lobbying our congressional work, all of the important work that we’re doing to elevate. Physical therapy, there are a few good studies out right now that indicate that not only this physical therapy been downward and light in their health care span.

And so the congressional champions that we’re speaking to, they understand that. Many of them have had physical therapy themselves. We’re now collectively of the age where people have things that are beginning to happen. All of us do, our kids do our parents, certainly, and they recognize it.

So CMS is not the rational arbiter now at this point of where rates should be. And we hope and expect that we’ll get some relief here at the end of the year with group and with some congressional action that isn’t certain at this point. It won’t be certain until it happens, but we’re making progress, and we expect to be there.

Longer term, look, I think we’re going to begin to see a shift in commercial payers. And this is just my view. This is not based on anything else. But I think payers are beginning to see that they can’t eliminate physical therapy and they can’t cut their way to improving the total cost dynamic because if people don’t have access to PT, which is what’s going to happen.

I mean, we’re in the process right now, quite honestly, looking at contracts that no longer make sense to us to take at a certain reimbursement rate. We’ve actually begun to drop some of those contracts.

And so with anything, I think as there’s consolidation in our PT world, we have larger companies with more resources, better ability to negotiate. Some of this low-hanging fruit for these payers are making immense on Medicare Advantage and booking record earnings. It’s going to have to flow to providers, and we’re certainly going to fight for our fair share. I’m tired of taking low rates, frankly.

Michael Petusky

This one is more of a housekeeping, but does anybody there have the payer mix for the quarter?

Jake Martinez

Sure.

Christopher Reading

Jake?

Jake Martinez

Yes, I got it. So for commercial insurance, it was 45.7%. Medicare was 34.4%. Medicaid was 4.1%. Workers’ comp was 9.5%, and then everything else together was 6.3%.

Michael Petusky

Okay. And just a quick follow-up related to that. Honestly, over time, Medicare, Medicaid has sort of moved up a bit as a percentage, workers’ comp looks like it’s moved down over time. I mean, is there any way for you guys to sort of intentionally take steps that can sort of shift towards the $130, $140 reimbursement versus whatever it is, $95 or whatever that might be government paying?

Christopher Reading

Right. Yes. A few months ago, I think effective beginning July, we brought back the key exec who had actually been the driving force and the author behind a lot of our comp-based activities a number of years ago, which helped us meaningfully grow our comp rate.

Obviously, at the beginning of the pandemic, our comp and from my perspective, a lot of our competitors’ comp business fell. And we’ve yet to get that back, as you pointed out. But we’ve added resources in this area, rolling out new programs. We’ve updated our training. We’ve updated our web presence and our marketing and our sales efforts.

And we’ve yet to see meaningful change, but we’re beginning to feel like we’re moving back in the right direction. And we hope to make some progress there. We’re obviously early, but we’re focused on it.

Michael Petusky

Okay. Can I sneak one more, quick one. Just on the recent acquisition, the one from earlier this week. The press release was sort of vague. It’s sort of seemed to say that the 14 facilities maybe were in a single state, but maybe that could get bigger. Can you just talk about what’s the possibility, either geographically, if you’re willing to talk about that, or from a facility standpoint, how much that particular practice could grow?

Christopher Reading

Yes. That practice is primarily in one state, although it does technically cover 2 states. Let me tell you, Mike, these guys are as capable as any group that we’ve ever worked with. They opened new clinics, which get the profitability in what I think is a record time. We have a number of new clinics slated to open with them. And we have some activities that are beyond the 2 states that they’re in currently, again, primarily one, technically 2, that would take them in some other areas. And they have relationships that go beyond those 2 states.

So I think this is a group that can grow very, very significantly over the next few years and then beyond that. So very excited about it. Happy to have them part of the team and the family and looking forward to helping them recognize their vision.

Michael Petusky

Are you willing to share the geography or no?

Christopher Reading

Not right now, and it sounds fun. But the reason is we have so much in development with them. They want to jump on the market before the word gets out so that people don’t shore up their defenses. And so it’s crazy as it seems. We’re going to keep that quiet as long as we can. It’s a good market, though.

Operator

[Operator Instructions]. And there appears to be no further questions at this time. I’ll turn the call back over to the speakers for any closing remarks.

Christopher Reading

Okay. Ashley, thank you. Thanks, everyone. We appreciate your time this morning. I’m going to be tied up a little bit this afternoon with activities that are slated at this private practice conference. I think Carey is expected to be available. And certainly, I’ll be available once I get back. So thank you for your time, and have a great day.

Operator

Thank you. And this does conclude today’s program. Thank you for your participation. You may disconnect at any time.

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