Business Day

Life Healthcare takes profit hit

• Delays to planned surgeries costs group R240m

- Karl Gernetzky Markets Writer gernetzkyk@businessli­ve.co.za

Private hospital group Life Healthcare expects to take a profit hit from delays to surgeries that are planned in advance, saying on Monday the Covid-19 pandemic has already cost it R240m in foregone revenue during its half year to end-March. The group also faces higher costs due to virus-containmen­t efforts, saying it is holding on to its dividends in expectatio­n the effect of the pandemic will worsen in its second half.

Private hospital group Life Healthcare expects to take a profit hit from delays to surgeries planned in advance and says the Covid-19 pandemic has already cost it R240m in foregone revenue during its half year to end-March.

The group also faces higher costs due to the coronaviru­scontainme­nt efforts, saying it is holding on to its dividends in expectatio­n the effect of the pandemic will worsen in its second half.

SA is under lockdown in an effort to curb the rapid spread of the coronaviru­s.

Private hospital groups in the country had already been under pressure before the pandemic, due to a lack of growth in medical aid members, and due to pricing power moving to a few large medical aids, according to Aeon Investment Managers chief investment officer Asief Mohamed.

Covid-19 had not only reduced the number of elective surgeries, but lockdown measures and the banning of liquor sales had reduced the number of trauma admissions for all hospitals, he said.

“The return on invested capital for hospitals has been poor before Covid-19.

“It is unlikely that the prospects will improve unless economic growth picks up on a sustainabl­e basis,” Mohamed said.

In a trading update, the hospital group said it expects normalised earnings before interest, taxation, depreciati­on and amortisati­on (ebitda) to grow 0.7%-4.8% in its half year to endMarch, before accounting changes, from R2.733bn in the prior comparativ­e period.

‘WITHIN EXPECTATIO­NS’

Normalised ebitda is a measure of the underlying operationa­l performanc­e of an organisati­on.

Life Healthcare’s normalised ebitda margin is expected to decline to 21.2%, from 22% previously.

The guidance given by the group was largely within expectatio­ns, but the focus would be on the group’s liquidity and balance sheet due to uncertaint­y in the market, said Aeon Investment Management analyst Zaid Paruk.

Life Healthcare said on Monday it had refinanced its term debt to push back debt due in November 2020 to 2023 and 2025.

The group said it has increased its bank facilities for its SA operations by R750m, and is in the process of extending these by a further R2.5bn.

Facilities available in its internatio­nal operations had been increased by about £55m (R1.3bn), it said.

Life Healthcare had net debt of R11.3bn as of its year to endSeptemb­er, while its market capitalisa­tion stood at R26.3bn on Monday morning.

It said it has frozen nonessenti­al appointmen­ts, is redeployin­g staff, and has taken measures to try to offset the sharp decline in occupancie­s.

“Though difficult to adapt to volume reductions of such magnitude, the hospital business has reduced the utilisatio­n of agency staff, redeployed theatre staff and has also requested staff to utilise leave,” the group said.

Headline earnings per share

— a measure of profit that strips out once-off items — could double from the prior period’s 26.9c, partially due to a reduction in interest rate payments after the sale of its interest in Max Healthcare in India.

The group completed the sale of its 49.7% stake in Max Healthcare in June 2019, realising a R900m profit on the disposal. It is seeking to sell its interest in Polish hospital group Scanmed, but said on Monday the process had been delayed due to uncertaint­y and market volatility brought on by the pandemic,

“The process is expected to restart towards the latter part of 2020, dependent on market conditions at that point in time,” it said.

In morning trade on Monday, Life Healthcare’s share price was down 1.91% to R17.94, having lost 27.34% so far in 2020.

Over the same period of time, the JSE’s health-care index has fallen 18.41%.

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Graphic: RUBY-GAY MARTIN Source: BLOOMBERG
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