Q2 2025 Premier Inc Earnings Call

Speaker Change: Good morning and welcome to Premier's Fiscal 2025 Second Quarter Conference Call.

Speaker Change: All participants will be in listen-only mode. After today's presentation, there will be an opportunity to ask questions.

Speaker Change: Should you need assistance, please signal a conference specialist by pressing star then zero on your telephone keypad.

Speaker Change: After today's presentation, there will be an opportunity to ask questions.

Speaker Change: To ask a question, you may press star then 1 on your telephone keypad. To withdraw your question, please press star then 2. Please note this event is being recorded. I would now like to turn the conference over to Ben Krasinski, Senior Director, Investor Relations. Please go ahead.

Speaker Change: Thank you, and welcome to Premier's Fiscal 2025 Second Quarter Conference Call. Our speakers this morning are Mike Alkire, Premier's President and CEO, and Glenn Coleman, our Chief Administrative and Financial Officer.

Speaker Change: Before we get started, I want to remind everyone that our earnings release and the supplemental presentation accompanying this call are available in the investors section of our website at investors.premiereinc.com.

Speaker Change: Please be advised that management's remarks today contain certain forward-looking statements

Speaker Change: such as statements regarding our strategies, plans, prospects, expectations, and future performance.

Speaker Change: and actual results could differ materially from those discussed today. These forward-looking statements speak as of today and we undertake no obligation to update them.

Speaker Change: Factors that might affect future results are discussed in our filings with the SEC, including our most recent Form 10-K and our Form 10-Q for the quarter, which we expect to file soon. We encourage you to review the detailed forward-looking statement and risk factor disclosures in these reports.

Speaker Change: Also, during this presentation, we will refer to adjusted and other non-GAAP financial measures, including free cash flow, to evaluate our business.

Speaker Change: Information on why we use these measures, in addition to GAAP financial measures and reconciliations of these measures to our GAAP financial measures, are included in our earnings release and in the appendix of the supplemental presentation accompanying this call.

Speaker Change: Information on our non-GAAP financial measures will also be included in our Form 10-Q for the quarter and our earnings Form 8-K, both of which we expect to file soon. Now turning the call over to Mike Alkire.

Mike Alkire: Thanks, Ben. Good morning and thank you for joining us for our fiscal 2025 second quarter earnings call. This morning, I'll spend a few minutes giving you an update on our business strategy and performance, then pass it over to Glenn for a more detailed review of our financials.

Mike Alkire: As a preview, overall revenue and profitability for the first half of fiscal 2025 were in line with our expectations resulting from better than expected results in our supply chain services segment.

Mike Alkire: As a result, we are reaffirming total net revenue guidance and increasing our adjusted earnings per share guidance despite not achieving our objectives in the performance services segment.

Mike Alkire: Overall, the team continues to execute and deliver on our long-term vision of technology enabling performance improvement and supply chain excellence for health care.

Mike Alkire: In the second quarter, we continue to make the progress advancing our strategies and remain committed to our goal of enabling better, smarter, and faster healthcare.

and the Supply Chain Services segment.

Mike Alkire: We are excited to announce the successful transition of our digital supply chain strategy beyond the pilot phase.

Mike Alkire: marked by the signing of our first agreement with a major partner.

Mike Alkire: This partner is one of many in our pipeline that will leverage our unique clinical and supply chain data sets for innovation across research, development, clinical utilization, and supply chain resiliency.

Mike Alkire: As we have shared previously, the digitization of invoicing and payables for healthcare providers is a critical step towards creating a more transparent and efficient healthcare supply chain.

Our strategy encompasses the following key areas.

first

Mike Alkire: We are AI-enabling manual back-office processes for providers and suppliers, delivering significant time improvement and cost savings.

Mike Alkire: Second, we are enhancing our data to deliver a comprehensive view of total non-labor health care spend to further enable actionable performance improvement insights for providers.

Mike Alkire: And finally, by enhancing supply chain transparency, we are helping the industry anticipate and address potential shortages before they impact patient care.

Mike Alkire: On the topic of shortages, we are encouraged by the growing demand for Premier's provider-focused data, market intelligence, and expertise in objectively navigating the 503B program, which is a key differentiator for us in the market.

Mike Alkire: As background, suppliers typically rely on the FDA drug shortage list to target which drugs to manufacture, but often lack the actionable insights to act quickly.

Mike Alkire: However, they can leverage our market-leading capabilities to shorten the time it takes to bring new supply to market, providing much-needed relief to health care providers experiencing shortages.

Speaker Change: We are thrilled to welcome David Zito as our new President of Performance Services.

Speaker Change: Dave brings an impressive 40 years of healthcare consulting expertise with deep experience in financial turnaround and revenue diversification strategies for providers.

Speaker Change: His leadership and insights will be invaluable as we continue to innovate and grow.

Speaker Change: We also continue to strongly believe in the transformative potential of automation and AI-enabled guidance.

to streamline workflows and enhance satisfaction for providers.

This will ultimately lead to better care for patients.

Speaker Change: In addition, our pipeline of providers eager to modernize through digitization remains robust.

Speaker Change: Both Glenn and Dave joined me at the JP Morgan Healthcare Conference last month where we participated in over two dozen meetings with investors, customers, and key prospects.

Speaker Change: Their feedback was overwhelmingly positive, reinforcing Premier's ability to harness our health care data to drive provider performance improvements and deliver real-world evidence that drives appropriate utilization of the most efficacious products at the right price for the right patients.

Speaker Change: With our strategic direction and talented leadership team, we are well positioned for continued success.

With that, I'll now turn the call over to Glenn.

Thanks, Mike. Good morning, everyone.

Speaker Change: As a reminder, all results discussed during this call reflect continuing operations and do not reflect S2S Global, which was divested on October 1st, 2024.

Speaker Change: I'm also pleased to report that we completed the sale of the network assets of Contigo Health in January of 2025.

Speaker Change: And we continue to work towards divesting the remaining assets before the end of this fiscal year.

Speaker Change: As such, actual results for the quarter include contributions from the Contigo business.

Speaker Change: However, we are continuing to exclude the results in our guidance.

Now, turning to second quarter consolidated results.

Speaker Change: Our second quarter revenue in Adjusted EBITDA were below our expectations, however for the first six months of fiscal year 2025, we are on track with these metrics and ahead of our expectations for Adjusted EPS.

Speaker Change: Net revenue of $240 million for the quarter decreased from the prior year period, driven by decline in net administrative fees revenue in supply chain services.

Speaker Change: In addition, we experience lower revenue in consulting services and an unfavorable product mix in applied sciences within the performance services segment.

Speaker Change: Gap net loss from continuing operations of $46 million was mainly due to an impairment charge to Goodwill of $127 million.

Speaker Change: related to our data and technology business in the performance services segment.

Speaker Change: which included an $18 million cash distribution from one of our minority investments.

Speaker Change: Just to give you an idea, that was $50 million dollars, translating to a margin of 20.8% and declined largely due to lower revenue.

Speaker Change: Adjusted earnings per share was 25 cents and excluding the impact of Contigo Health was 27 cents and in line with our expectations.

Speaker Change: Adjusted EPS benefited from a lower weighted average share count as a result of the share repurchases under our $1 billion dollar authorization.

Speaker Change: As of January 2025, we repurchased over 29 million shares of Class A common stock for $600 million.

Turning to segment results.

Speaker Change: In our Supply Chain Services segment, lower net administrative fees revenue is driven by the expected increase

Speaker Change: and the Aggregate Blended Fee Share to the low 60% level in the quarter.

Speaker Change: However, gross administrative fees grew as existing members continued to increase penetration of contract spend and as we recruit and onboard new members.

Speaker Change: The group of GPO members that were part of the August 2020 restructure represent approximately 70% of our total gross administrative fees.

Speaker Change: As of December 31st, we've addressed members representing approximately 69% of this group's fees.

Speaker Change: And we expect to address greater than 75% by the end of fiscal year 2025, with the majority of the remainder occurring in fiscal 2026.

Speaker Change: In addition, we continue to expect our aggregate funded fee share to be in the low 60% range for the full fiscal year 2025.

Speaker Change: and that it will likely stabilize in the high 60s once we've completed the renewal process.

Speaker Change: To date, while the increase in our aggregate funded fee share has negatively impacted our year-over-year results, it has been less of a headwind versus our expectations.

Speaker Change: And as a result, it's one of the reasons we're increasing our revenue guidance for supply chain services.

Speaker Change: Also we experienced growth in other supply chain services revenue driven by new agreements and our supply chain co-management business where members continue to express interest in leveraging Premier's expertise to help manage their end-to-end supply chain operations.

Speaker Change: Moving to the performance services segment, the revenue decline of 19% was due to lower demand and consulting services and product mix and applied sciences.

Speaker Change: In addition, we've begun to see a gradual shift in member interest favoring SAS subscription engagements versus license agreements.

Speaker Change: To echo what Mike said, despite these current short-term headwinds and timing-related items,

Speaker Change: We remain confident in our long-term strategy, and under Dave's leadership, we plan to reinvigorate this business.

Speaker Change: by recruiting new talent with a strong track record of delivering broad-based performance improvement at large health systems.

Leveraging our performance improvement collaboratives more broadly in the market.

Speaker Change: and extending our unique AI capabilities to new use cases while continuing to further penetrate the market in the areas we already serve.

Speaker Change: Shifting to the balance sheet, in the first half of fiscal year 2025, free cash flow is $74 million, increased by $33 million from the prior year period.

Speaker Change: This improvement was largely driven by cash received from the derivative lawsuit settlement and the distribution from a minority investment.

Speaker Change: These are partially offset by the timing of payments to Omnia and higher performance related compensation payments.

Speaker Change: Cash and cash equivalents total $86 million as of December 31st, 2024.

Speaker Change: We ended the quarter with an outstanding balance of $100 million on our $1 billion revolving credit facility, of which $65 million was repaid in January.

Speaker Change: With respect to capital deployment, we continue to remain disciplined and focused on taking a balanced approach and returning capital to stockholders in the near term.

Speaker Change: We completed the $200 million share repurchase in early January of 2025.

Speaker Change: We also continued to return capital through our quarterly dividend, which totaled $42 million in the first half of fiscal year 2025 and represented a 4% yield in calendar year 2024.

Speaker Change: In addition, our board recently declared a dividend of 21 cents per share payable in March.

Speaker Change: Our priority in capital deployment will be driving revenue growth through organic investments

Speaker Change: as well as potential tuck-in acquisitions to differentiate our core offerings in the marketplace.

Speaker Change: Based on actual performance for the first half of fiscal year 2025, which was in line with our overall expectations.

and the Outlook for the remainder of the year.

Speaker Change: We are reaffirming the midpoint of our consolidated revenue guidance range.

updating the underlying segment expectations and tightening all ranges.

Speaker Change: In supply chain services, we're increasing the midpoint of our revenue guidance range by $25 million to reflect higher net administrative fees resulting from a favorable blended fee share.

Speaker Change: In addition, we've added new members including all Spire Health partners and a recent competitive GPO win.

Speaker Change: Lastly, we expect a payment in the fourth quarter from a member that entered into a joint venture with another health system.

Speaker Change: which will require a phased termination of their agreement through fiscal 2028.

Speaker Change: In performance services, we're lowering the midpoint of our revenue guidance range by $25 million, resulting from the previously discussed short-term headwinds that we're experiencing.

Speaker Change: In terms of profitability, we're tightening our ranges as well as reaffirming the midpoint of our adjusted EBITDA guidance.

do the Better Performance in Supply Chain Services.

Speaker Change: and increase in the midpoint of our adjusted earnings per share guidance by 8 cents to reflect the favorable impact of the $200 million share repurchase completed in early January.

Speaker Change: For the second half of the year, we expect our GPO business to have flat to slightly higher net administrative fees in the third quarter as compared to the second quarter.

Speaker Change: Then, in the fourth quarter, we anticipate a sequential increase resulting from the expected member payment and ramping up of new member spend.

Speaker Change: The performance services, we anticipate our revenue will be more back end weighted in the fourth quarter.

Speaker Change: For profitability, we expect adjusted EBITDA and adjusted earnings per share to be slightly more fourth quarter weighted, mainly due to the timing and mix of revenue.

In summary, we remain on track for the year.

Supply Chain Services is doing better than expected.

We have an action plan to reinvigorate performance services.

Speaker Change: We believe we have the right strategy and differentiation in the market.

Speaker Change: And we have a flexible balance sheet and meaningful cash flow that provides us with the ability to continue to grow our business and return value to stockholders.

Speaker Change: We appreciate your time today, and now we'll open the call for questions.

Speaker Change: We will now begin the question and answer session. To ask a question, you may press star then 1 on your telephone keypad. If you are using a speakerphone, please pick up your handset before pressing the keys. If at any time your question has been addressed and you would like to withdraw your question, please press star then 2.

Speaker Change: At this time, we will pause momentarily to assemble our roster.

Michael Cherney: The first question comes from Michael Cherney with Lyrinc Partners. Please go ahead.

Speaker Change: Good morning and thanks for taking the question. Maybe just a big-picture question for Mike first. Obviously we had a

Speaker Change: A lot of discussion, debate over the weekend and yesterday regarding potential for tariffs, which I know are not off of the radar. What are the discussions that you're having with your customers now to potentially

Speaker Change: excuse me, potentially prepare, for a world of tariffs given some of the supply constraints or supply components that come from areas that would be affected by tariffs, and I guess what can you do, or what are you doing proactively now to make sure that your customers have the best purchasing leverage, most opportunity for savings as possible?

Thank you, Michael, and I think, you know,

Speaker Change: The number one thing we've got to continue to focus on is just continuing to build the resiliency and diversification of the suppliers in the supply chain.

Speaker Change: I mean, it is constantly changing, you know, I've read about what's happened in Canada and what, you know, happened in Mexico and the, you know, potential of tariffs and maybe not having tariffs.

Speaker Change: I think at the end of the day, and you know this, the full impact of the tariffs are going to depend on the countries that have the tariffs, and so we obviously are being very, very focused on trying to understand that.

Speaker Change: In general, as it relates to us, most of our contracts have, you know, firm for the term pricing which includes protections against taxes and tariffs to help mitigate any short-term impacts on the health care providers. So that's number one.

Speaker Change: Number two, and I think again, as you've heard over the years from me.

Speaker Change: You know, our focus has really been how are we diversifying, not having an over-reliance on a country in Southeast Asia, but truly being able to spread some of that, if not most of that, production to other countries.

Speaker Change: We think that by doing that, that it'll lessen, you know, the potential for tariffs.

Speaker Change: And so there's a number of things that obviously we're doing to ensure that the healthcare systems are not impacted, truly to ensure we're writing contracts that are firm for the term.

Speaker Change: and that we're also, you know, creating as much diversification in the supply chain as possible.

Speaker Change: Thanks Mike, appreciate that giving your broad view of the world and then maybe just as a secondary question on the dynamics behind the net administrative fees.

Speaker Change: Glenn, you mentioned you came out a little better than you had anticipated to start the year. Obviously a lot going on with the broad-based recontracting. Can you give us a little sense as to the drivers that led you to that point as we

Glenn Coleman: work our way through the finalization of this recontracting effort? Yeah, no, thanks for the question, Mike. And overall, we were very happy with the performance of supply chain services, so I want to give you a couple of pieces in addition to the net administrative fees.

Glenn Coleman: We continue to see really good growth in our gross administrative fees. If you remember last quarter, Craig had highlighted this as a positive. So that continued into the second quarter. We actually grew.

Glenn Coleman: Close to 4% overall on the gross administrative fees which puts us close to 5% year to date And it's pretty broad-based if I look at food, pharmacy, diagnostics, medical, surgical

Glenn Coleman: construction facilities, all categories that were growing. So that was a very positive sign for us. When we look at the fee share situation, obviously we're going through the renegotiation. We're actually 69% of the way through now, which is also a positive.

And I did highlight also that the remainder...

Glenn Coleman: should pretty much be complete by the end of fiscal 2026. So we're trying to get these wrapped up by the end of fiscal year 2026, but we're making good progress. And so far, yeah, I would say relative to what we had laid out as a budget and our expectations, we're seeing some favorable fee share impacts.

Glenn Coleman: And so those are the key drivers about why we're confident in terms of raising our numbers for supply chain services.

Glenn Coleman: Coupled with the fact we're now going to see some upticks in additional members coming on board. We talked previously about the big Allspire win

Glenn Coleman: That's now kicking in January 1st, so that's going to help us here in the back half of the year.

Glenn Coleman: And we also had another new member win that we're not disclosing the name of the member, but that's going to help us as well. So on the whole, while the numbers are down year over year, things are trending in a positive direction when you look at our supply chain services business.

Thank you, Michael.

Speaker Change: The next question comes from Eric Percher with Nefron Research. Please go ahead.

Eric Percher: Thanks for the detail Glenn. I'd like to go a little bit further on that which is I'm looking out at fiscal year 26 and there's a wide range of

Eric Percher: Guidance and my concern is that the commentary around stabilizing in the high 60s may be leading us a little bit ahead of ourselves. Can I ask you when you look at

and this year and where you've progressed so far.

Thank you.

You know, how does that...

What's your expectation as you get into Q3 and Q4?

Eric Percher: And then, as you step off from that, the high 60s target, how much of that is because you see lower retention falling off?

Eric Percher: and any commentary you can give us on the kind of absolute value we should be looking for in the future versus, you know, kind of netting any groups leaving versus the new members you've announced.

Eric Percher: Thanks for the question, Eric. I think first and foremost, we do expect to see higher contract penetration on all of our contracts. So as we look at the situation with supply chain services going into next year, I'm encouraged by the momentum we have in terms of our contract penetration.

Eric Percher: There's even some really nice growth areas on the non-acute side, seeing some really good growth in some of the non-acute categories, so that's encouraging.

Eric Percher: On the fee share piece of it, I would just tell you from Q1 to Q2, it was relatively stable, so we didn't see a big uptick. I would expect some increase in the fee share as we get into the back half of the year, albeit very modest.

Eric Percher: And then we'll have to see where it ends up in fiscal year 2026, but...

Eric Percher: You know in my prepared remarks, I did mention we expected to end in the high 60s

Eric Percher: And I don't think our view has changed around that. Is it possible it could be a little bit better given where we are today? It's possible, but until we get through all the negotiations.

Eric Percher: I'm going to be careful on setting an expectation that's anything other than the high 60s for the moment. And Eric, this is Mike. Just real quickly, you know we've been making some pretty significant investment in the technology enablement of the supply chain.

Eric Percher: you know, design models that can drive additional value from an admin fee perspective, you know, we think that obviously that's going to be a very significant, you know, tailwind at least to the gross admin fees.

Eric Percher: And to put a fine point on that, you're saying that high 60s is through addition of opportunity, not through subtraction of lower retention customers.

Say that one more time.

Eric Percher: getting to a higher share of the customers you have today, not that you're seeing the roll off of lower retention customers. Yeah, I think it's a fair assessment.

Thank you.

Kevin Caliendo: The next question comes from Kevin Caliendo with UBS. Please go ahead.

Good morning, guys. Thanks for taking my question. Good morning.

The performance services, Glenn, you mentioned.

Kevin Caliendo: It's going to be a little bit more fourth quarter weighted.

Kevin Caliendo: I just want to maybe just understand sort of where the confidence lies in the improvement in that segment. Is it related to the new business win or Allspire or is there just something around the seasonality of that, some comfort around the sort of ramp to get to guidance there?

Speaker Change: Yeah, sure and some of my comments is going to play into why Q2 is a soft quarter and why we think the second half Of the year is actually going to be stronger So if I look at the different parts of our performance services business, I'll start off with applied sciences

Speaker Change: Yeah, December is typically a very strong quarter. It's the biggest quarter usually for life sciences Companies in the market overall and we didn't see that this year. It was a softer market in Q4 calendar year Than was typical and so we have an actual really strong funnel

Speaker Change: in Applied Sciences, and we think that we'll see some of those deals come to fruition in our fiscal Q3 and fiscal Q4. So with a strong funnel, the fact we didn't see the uptick at the end of the calendar year, we actually feel pretty good about the momentum going into Q4.

calendar year 2025.

Speaker Change: We're going to be looking at raw data or customized data moving more towards a data access type engagement. And this is more akin to a subscription model. So we actually have won a couple of deals where the revenue is going to be spread out over multiple periods versus up front.

Speaker Change: And so that gives us some confidence that we'll see some of that come through later this year.

Speaker Change: On the enterprise license agreements in our performance improvement technology area, we did see some of these deals shift from.

Speaker Change: Our fiscal Q2 into fiscal Q3 and Q4. We actually just closed one of them in the month of January. That was supposed to happen last quarter So some of it is timing around

Speaker Change: building out a significant funnel of new opportunities and new logos and new customers and such a big focus for us right now to

Speaker Change: continue to drive better momentum in the second half of the year.

Speaker Change: Yeah, just a couple of other things. I, you know, Dave's been on board here for a couple of months now. I

Speaker Change: I will tell you, he has a much stronger focus on

Speaker Change: really building out our collaborative capabilities. So it's something that historically, Premier has had a very, very significant focus on.

Speaker Change: And for us, obviously, it's an opportunity for us to work with health systems.

And then also, for those that are interested,

Speaker Change: potentially use more capabilities for Premier, like one-on-one advisory and those kinds of things.

excited about, you know, getting that really refocused around

Speaker Change: And that's, again, that's the collaboratives. I also think, you know, obviously with Dave's background,

He's, you know, a very experienced industry veteran.

Speaker Change: You know, I think his focus is how are we going to continue to build up.

capability in our advisory.

Speaker Change: That's great. If I can ask a follow-up on the tariffs. I kind of don't understand how this would would all work if the tariffs were to, let's just say, kicked in on February 1st, right?

Speaker Change: Can you just sort of take me through how it impacts the channel, like who actually gets impacted?

Speaker Change: as a product that costs, you know, $100 would have been cost $125. Like, who takes on that responsibility? Where does that cost end up?

Speaker Change: from a sourcing perspective, the distributor that might have the product, the provider that might have to.

Speaker Change: and the insurer that would have to reimburse the product or the consumer. Like, where does that extra money, who gets affected by that? It's somewhat unclear to me.

Speaker Change: Look, it depends on how the tariff is actually implemented. So I'm going to answer it with, you know, a bit of a...

Speaker Change: Comment that sort of covers my answer so it depends on how the tariff actually gets implemented. That's number one number two If a tariff actually gets applied to a product

and you know this, even if...

There's political commentary about how we're going to...

Speaker Change: different things. So you have to really pay attention to the detail of what actually is going to be included in that tariff. Having said that, a tariff is.

you know, seller of that product. And so, for example,

Speaker Change: If somebody has a product that gets manufactured partially in China...

Speaker Change: you know, their cost to actually produce that product is going to go up, you know, that commits sort of amount. That's the reason.

That's really important.

Speaker Change: that we have these firms for term pricing in our agreements.

Speaker Change: So that that price as much as possible as much as possible does not end up

Speaker Change: you know, with having the health systems, the hospitals, and the providers pay for that.

Speaker Change: you know, given that they're not getting increased reimbursement to cover that cost. So, those contracts do matter.

Speaker Change: in terms of, you know, how you contract those. But that's the best I can...

Speaker Change: give you an answer around just because it's such a, it's a volatile sort of situation in terms of what's really happening and how these things get applied.

Speaker Change: The next question comes from Eric Caldwell with Robert W. Baird. Please go ahead.

from the Minority Investment. Was that Omnia or something else?

Speaker Change: Could you talk about its recurring or one-time nature, and then most specifically, is that included in adjusted EBITDA net income or earnings, or is there a little bit of confusion about where that distribution wound up in your adjusted numbers or how it's embedded in your guidance going forward?

Speaker Change: Yeah, so that distribution came from one of our minority partners. It did not come from Omnia. It is really one-time. I say one-time. It could happen every couple of years, but it's not an annual-type distribution.

Speaker Change: and we did adjust it out of our numbers, so it's not included in our results.

Speaker Change: Perfect, thanks very much. And then for me more specifically, there was a mention of, in the end of the prepared remarks, there was a mention of a number of member departure

Speaker Change: that's going to be phased over multiple years it sounds. Could you...

Speaker Change: That scenario is is still kind of moving around as well. So that you know

partnership that occurred, we are still providing services in there.

Speaker Change: So that's the reason you saw that part, you know, that multi-year.

Speaker Change: sort of comment. Like for example, there are parts of the portfolio they still wanna leverage.

Speaker Change: because they're the strongest in the industry and so they want to leverage those for as long as they can leverage those, but

Speaker Change: So that's the reason that you're going to see this over time. And I still think it's very fluid, so we're still working through what that looks like. Having said that, yes, there was a one-time...

Speaker Change: Contractual, I think Glenn go ahead. You know, I would just say the one-time payment we haven't received yet. That's coming in the fourth quarter

Speaker Change: How much, Glenn, how much is that payment? And I assume that is embedded in the guidance. It's embedded in the guidance and we are not disclosing the actual amount of payment, but it's in the guidance and it's one of the reasons why we're taking our supply chain services number up by $25 million at the midpoint.

Thank you.

Okay, thanks very much. Thank you.

Speaker Change: The next question comes from Jessica Tesson with Piper Sandler. Please go ahead.

Jessica Tesson: Hi guys, thank you for taking the question and congrats on the strong results. I was just hoping to come back to just the firm for the term pricing comments. Can you just be clear on that? Does that imply that Premier would be on the hook for tariffs and that the customers or your member organizations would be kind of insulated from pricing pressure? Or is the firm for the term embedded in your supplier contract such that Premier would maintain unchanged price guarantees?

Jessica Tesson: for whatever period of time. No, good question. No, that is embedded in the contracts.

Jessica Tesson: So that's that's not you know something that you know premiere is on the hook for that is a

Speaker Change: Got it. That's really helpful. And then I wanted to ask, just kind of in light of the tariff environment, can you comment on, you know, the extent to which you think that within gross purchasing volume, you saw any pull forward, and then the extent to which guidance kind of contemplates that that pull forward moderates with or without, yeah, moderates in the second half of your fiscal year? Thanks.

Speaker Change: I think the answer to that, Jessica, is it's too early to tell.

Speaker Change: I will have to get back to you with any specifics of if in fact we, you know, we felt any of that, but at this point I think it's going to be too early to tell as to whether or not there was any substantial purchasing, you know, in light of people worried about a tariff.

Speaker Change: Okay, that's helpful. And then I guess maybe my last one, I think you mentioned just that in your prospecting conversations, the kind of two dozen years at J.P. Morgan, you guys were selling SDS digital supply chain services. Can you just remind us like how that is distinct from the initial offering or just what additional kind of wraparounds are provided there that are appealing to prospects? Thanks.

Speaker Change: Sure, so I think the number one most appealing, you know, opportunity for our, you know, our supplier partners is, you know, really focused around what Glenn was talking about, which is, you know, access to the data. And then we do a whole bunch of stuff for like around real world evidence studies.

Speaker Change: which is, you know, really all about how to ensure that

Speaker Change: products that are being launched are actually driving the clinical value that they're supposed to be driving and that You know there really is true innovation. That's actually happening

Speaker Change: So then when you start to sort of layer in also some of the supply data, it also gives perspective on...

Speaker Change: What's happening from a cost basis? So are there real-world evidence, opportunities that also are having a dramatic impact on the cost?

Speaker Change: associated with the category. So those are some of the nuances of what we're talking to these suppliers around, but it's really just combining the two different data cycles with two different data points.

Thanks again. Appreciate it.

Speaker Change: The next question comes from Richard Close with Canaccord Genuity. Please go ahead.

Yeah, thanks for the question.

Speaker Change: Just curious to dig in a little bit more on the consulting services You know seems more negative than in the past

Speaker Change: commenting on a turnaround here. Just if you could just dig in a little bit deeper on that, what exactly is going on in that business and what are the proposed changes?

Speaker Change: Yeah, I think I hit it a little bit. I think, you know, a couple of things that, you know, I wouldn't wouldn't

Speaker Change: As we refresh the business, I think it's probably a better way to say that there's still a significant need on behalf of the health systems.

Speaker Change: from a performance improvement standpoint, obviously, you know, significant opportunities around helping our health systems, you know, deal with

Speaker Change: you know, issues associated with labor. Obviously, huge opportunities as our health systems are thinking through using advanced technology and the like.

Speaker Change: We're just constantly looking at ways that we can refresh our advisory services capability to...

Speaker Change: bring that additional value to the customer that's all around performance improvement. What are those things that historically...

Speaker Change: especially those back-office functions that historically have been manual. Are there ways that we can technology-enable those things? And, you know, are there ways that we can do co-management capabilities to obviously, you know, reduce the overall cost?

Speaker Change: for these providers, you know, in a time where they're looking for any way to really, you know, reduce those cost curves. So, it's really all about building up those capabilities and making the appropriate investment in those so that for the long-term

Speaker Change: We've got a robust offering that's really meeting the needs of the market.

Speaker Change: Okay, and then, Glenn, maybe on applied sciences, you talked about license going to subscription. Is that the product mix that you're talking about, or is it something else? Yeah, that's the product mix.

Speaker Change: Okay, and then final question with respect to Contigo Can you talk a little bit about that sale? And then you said there's some additional assets You know ongoing

Speaker Change: You know, what's left, any details there? Sure. So, we did sell the network assets of Contigo in January for $15 million. It's obviously subject to normal working capital adjustments.

Speaker Change: So we've disclosed that in our 10-Q filing. We are still moving forward with selling the third-party administrative aspect of the business and COE, or Center of Excellence, so that's still in process of being divested.

Speaker Change: I don't have an update on that at this point in time.

Alan Lutz: The next question comes from Alan Lutz with Bank of America. Please go ahead.

Alan Lutz: Good morning and thanks for taking the questions. One for Glenn.

Alan Lutz: you talked about gross admin fees of about 5% year-to-date. Can you talk about what's embedded in the updated net admin fee guide as it relates to gross admin fees? And then as we think about the utilization in the business in the tail-end of calendar 24 versus 2025, is there anything different you're expecting as we flip the calendar year? Thanks.

Alan Lutz: You know, I think in terms of our guy, we're being a little bit conservative on our gross admin fees, meaning I'm assuming a slower or lower number than what we saw in the first half of the year.

Not based on anything

Alan Lutz: in terms of what I'm seeing in the business, but more just to be a bit conservative. So there's an opportunity to potentially overachieve there.

Alan Lutz: But in the guide, I would say we've got a lower number versus the 5% that we generated in the first half of the year. And then obviously when we look at kind of the 24 versus 25 numbers, we do have the one time member payment that's coming in.

Great, thanks.

Thank you.

Speaker Change: The next question comes from Bill Sutherland with the Benchmark Company. Please go ahead.

Speaker Change: Thank you. Hey, good morning guys Thinking about the you know, you're sourcing Percentages have you all ever talked about kind of where you stand in terms of the geographies that you're sourcing from at this point Yeah, you know we we don't get into

specifics, but over time, you've heard us refer to

Speaker Change: having an over-dependence on, you know, one specific country, for example, like China.

Speaker Change: and that, you know, our focus has been to, you know, create more diversity in that.

Speaker Change: And so, yeah, we don't get into specific numbers, but, like, for example, we, you know, are very supportive of, you know, moving, you know, exam blood production to Malaysia, for example, and, you know, isolation gowns to other countries in Southeast Asia and those kinds of things, but it has been a practice of ours for a number of years.

Speaker Change: certainly, you know, since COVID to create more diversity in that, in the production of those products. So, we will continue to look at all those kinds of things as that's really important to creating a healthy supply chain.

Speaker Change: Right, and so did you even talk as broadly as just Asia-Pac, for instance?

Speaker Change: No, we don't we don't spend a lot of time first of all it it moves

Speaker Change: very, very quickly. Somebody comes up with production of a product.

Speaker Change: So, we're very thoughtful around, you know, how that movement occurs. I think the most important thing is that, you know, we want to make sure we have the capability to truly understand where that production capability is.

Speaker Change: and then helping the suppliers who produce those products through those contract manufacturers, you know, point them in the right direction where they could get high quality products produced.

Speaker Change: Okay. And on the firm for term, just wondering, is this a one-year contract typically? And are these continually being...

Speaker Change: recontracted? Yeah, typically our contracts, as soon as I say this, it won't be accurate, but typically our contracts are three-year contracts. But we do have some contracts that are less than that, but for the most part, they're three-year agreements.

Okay, thanks Mike. Thank you.

Speaker Change: This concludes our question-and-answer session and Premier's fiscal 2025 second quarter conference call. Thank you for attending today's presentation. You may now disconnect.

Q2 2025 Premier Inc Earnings Call

Demo

Premier

Earnings

Q2 2025 Premier Inc Earnings Call

PINC

Tuesday, February 4th, 2025 at 1:00 PM

Transcript

No Transcript Available

No transcript data is available for this event yet. Transcripts typically become available shortly after an earnings call ends.

Want AI-powered analysis? Try AllMind AI →