UHS posts softer-than-expected volumes for second consecutive quarter
Dive Brief:
Certain Universal Health Services growth targets for 2025 are looking less achievable after the for-profit health system reported another quarter of lackluster admissions on Monday.
Behavioral health volumes in the second quarter were essentially flat, with adjusted admissions rising just 0.4%. It's an improvement from last quarter, when behavioral health volumes declined. However, executives now consider UHS' plans to grow adjusted behavioral patient days by 2.5% to 3% a long-term target, instead of a 2025 goal.
CEO Marc Miller said one of the reasons UHS' patient day target has remained 'elusive' is payers' growing preference for outpatient care, a trend that hasn't favored UHS' inpatient-heavy portfolio. To be competitive in the long term, UHS plans to focus capital spending on outpatient projects, building 10 to 15 freestanding behavioral health facilities per year.
Dive Insight:
UHS raised the midpoint of its 2025 guidance after posting $353.2 million in net income on $4.3 billion in revenue in the second quarter.
The King of Prussia, Pennsylvania-based provider now expects to take in between $17.09 billion and $17.31 billion in revenue this year, compared to its prior range of between $17.02 billion and $17.36 billion.
UHS attributed the change to the approval of a Medicaid state supplemental payment program in Tennessee, which accounted for roughly $101 million of the system's guidance raise, and the opening of West Henderson Hospital in Las Vegas.
However, problems receiving Medicaid certification and other start-up issues in its newly opened Cedar Hill Regional Medical Center in Washington, D.C., tempered the guidance increase by about $25 million, CFO Steve Filton said on a Tuesday call with investors.
The modest lift in UHS' financial forecast was mostly overshadowed by investor concerns about the operator's volumes.
UHS' acute care unit didn't fare much better than behavioral, with adjusted admissions rising just 2% and surgical volumes 'slightly' down year over year, according to Filton. The modest growth in both behavioral and acute volumes underperformed analysts' expectations, according to a Tuesday note from Morgan Stanley.
Executives blamed lower volumes on numerous factors including staffing challenges, as well as the slower-than-expected opening at Cedar Hills. UHS' behavioral business has also suffered from payers shifting care to cheaper outpatient sides, a trend that's proved tricky for the company as it's historically focused on inpatient care.
UHS is the latest health system to report poorer-than-expected patient volumes during the second quarter, though health systems disagree on the reason behind the trend. CHS said consumers are less interested in spending on healthcare in an unstable economy, HCA blamed slow growth in public payer programs and Tenet brushed it off as a product of seasonal changes.
UHS said it hopes to ultimately capture more volumes by opening behavioral centers and referring more inpatient cases to UHS outpatient providers for so-called 'step-down' services.
'A number of the insurance companies, as they have been talking about their increase in medical loss ratios, have pointed to the increase in spending on behavioral care,' Filton said. 'We believe that a significant chunk of that increase is in outpatient, and we are determined to get a larger share of that, I'll call it, 'outpatient pie' as we go forward.'
Executives also commented on how the recently passed 'Big Beautiful Bill' will impact UHS' business over the coming years. Starting in 2028, the federal government will cap provider taxes and state directed payments in Medicaid, which previously have boosted the health system's revenue.
UHS said the changes could cost it between $300 to $400 million by 2032 if the law is carried out as currently outlined. Miller cautioned that this is a worst case scenario and one he hopes to avoid.
'In talking with all the folks in D.C., representatives from many of the states we cover, they are starting to recognize what they passed can't be left as is because of the effect on some of the healthcare programs in their state,' he said.
Still, Filton said that UHS will be ready for potential changes, noting the company weathered similar headwinds during the COVID-19 pandemic. The CFO said UHS would consider headcount reductions and other spending cuts if necessary.
'We have great confidence in our ability to shift and be flexible, especially with several years of notice and preparation that we'll have this time around,' Filton said.
Recommended Reading
Tenet's net income tumbled in Q3
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Business Wire
14 minutes ago
- Business Wire
adjoe Expands U.S. Presence with New Boston Headquarters & Announces Open Roles
BOSTON--(BUSINESS WIRE)-- adjoe, the leading rewards-based mobile ad platform, today announced the opening and expansion of its first U.S. headquarters in Boston, serving as the company's strategic North American hub as it continues to scale throughout the region. adjoe first launched its Boston operations in 2023 with a single remote employee. Since then, the company has grown to an 18-person team and plans to double its headcount by the end of 2025. The new Boston headquarters will be centrally located at 10 Post Office Square, a landmark building with convenient access to the city's key train lines. The facility features an upgraded gym, wellness areas, new restaurants, and modern executive facilities to support a collaborative and energized work environment. By establishing a hybrid office model, adjoe is reinforcing its long-term commitment to the region with a physical space for face-to-face collaboration while still offering employees the flexibility of remote work. 'Just as we helped shape Hamburg into an unexpected adtech powerhouse in Europe, we see the opportunity to contribute to Boston's rise as a serious player in the global adtech scene, grounded in real investment, talent development, and long-term commitment,' said Thomas Yannopoulos, VP of Revenue, Americas at adjoe. 'Boston has proven to be the right environment for building meaningful, long-term relationships with partners, talent, and the community, and this investment will only fuel continued growth.' While U.S. cities like San Francisco, Los Angeles, and New York City are known for their adtech markets, Boston offers a unique edge: a high concentration of top-tier universities and a collaborative tech ecosystem featuring a strong, growing pool of talent. adjoe is investing in the city's local, emerging talent with hires from schools like Suffolk University and plans to partner with additional institutions to develop a pipeline of future adtech professionals. In 2018, adjoe launched Playtime, a user-centric rewarded-ads format that ultimately reshaped the ad-monetization landscape. The format quickly became popular with users and was adopted across the industry, helping establish adjoe as a market leader in rewarded advertising. Now, adjoe is hiring Boston-based talent to be part of its next growth phase, with open roles in Sales & Partnerships, Account Management, Marketing & Ops, and a New University Partnerships Program. To learn more about career opportunities, please visit About adjoe adjoe is a leading mobile advertising platform committed to challenging the industry status quo. The company's market-changing technologies and engaging ad formats, from unique in-app monetization solutions to its own marketplace, help app developers and publishers unlock new ways to exceed their user acquisition and revenue goals. Founded in 2018 with headquarters in Hamburg, adjoe has expanded into the U.S., Europe, LATAM, and APAC, engaging 500 million mobile users annually and partnering with over 500 gaming studios and 1,000+ games globally. Find out more at

15 minutes ago
Air Canada to gradually resume flights after reaching settlement with union
After multiple days of canceled flights, delaying and derailing thousands of passengers' travel plans, the Air Canada flight attendant strike is officially over. Canada's largest airline announced it will "gradually restart its operations" on Tuesday "after reaching a mediated agreement with the Canadian Union of Public Employees through a process overseen by a mutually agreed-to mediator." Some 10,000 flight attendants refused to return to work despite a government order on Sunday, amid a dispute with Air Canada over wages and unpaid labor. The Air Canada Component of the Canadian Union of Public Employees, or CUPE, says the carrier's wages are below inflation, market value, and the federal minimum wage and has asked that flight attendants be paid for groundwork, which includes labor performed prior to takeoff and after landing. The airline said Tuesday it participated in the mediation discussions "on the basis that the union commit to have the airline's 10,000 flight attendants immediately return to work" to allow the carrier to resume Air Canada and Air Canada Rouge operations that had been grounded since Saturday. "The suspension of our service is extremely difficult for our customers. We deeply regret and apologize for the impact on them of this labour disruption. Our priority now is to get them moving as quickly as possible," Michael Rousseau, Air Canada's president and chief executive officer, said in a statement. The "complex undertaking" to full restoration, as Rousseau referred to it, could take up to a week or longer. The first flights are scheduled for Tuesday evening, and Air Canada has advised customers that full, regular service could be seven to 10 days out as the fleet of aircraft and its crews get in position. "During this process, some flights will be cancelled over the next seven to ten days until the schedule is stabilized," Tuesday's announcement stated. Air Canada was forced to cancel hundreds of flights as a result of the work stoppage and and said nearly 500,000 customers were impacted in Canada and the U.S. United, the American-based partner for Air Canada, told ABC News in a statement that very few United customers were affected.


CNBC
15 minutes ago
- CNBC
Blockchain lender Figure Technology reveals revenue surge in U.S. IPO filing
Figure Technology Solutions' revenue surged 22% in the first half of 2025, the blockchain lender disclosed on Monday in its U.S. initial public offering paperwork, the latest crypto-linked firm set to hit the new listings market. A crypto-friendly environment under the Trump administration and the blowout debut of stablecoin issuer Circle have set the stage for a flurry of listings from the digital asset industry. Figure joins a growing list of crypto players looking to tap public markets this year. Winklevoss twins — Tyler and Cameron — crypto exchange, Gemini, also filed for New York IPO last week. Figure's revenue surged 22.4% to $191 million in the six months ended June 30. The company reported a profit of $29 million, compared with a loss of $13 million in the same period a year earlier. The New York-based company and some of its existing stockholders will sell shares in the offering. "Crypto is becoming one of the big pillars of the IPO market, with more deals expected not only via IPO- but also through deSPAC transactions," said IPOX CEO Josef Schuster said, referring to companies going public through blank-check mergers. Figure, co-founded in 2018 by technology entrepreneur Mike Cagney, is a blockchain-native platform that powers lending, trading, and investing in areas such as consumer credit and digital assets. The company and its more than 160 partners have originated over $16 billion of home equity to date. "Blockchain can do more than disrupt existing markets. By taking historically illiquid assets – such as loans – and putting these assets and their performance history on-chain, blockchain can bring liquidity to markets that have never had such," Cagney said in the filing. "The IPO is one step in a long process to bring blockchain to all aspects of capital markets." Cagney, who was also the co-founder of fintech SoFi, will continue to control a majority of Figure's voting power after the offering. In 2021, Figure raised $200 million in a funding round at a $3.2 billion valuation. Goldman Sachs, Jefferies and BofA Securities are the lead underwriters. Figure will list on the Nasdaq under the symbol "FIGR."