KND—
Thesis—
A healthcare sell off, fear over the impeding implementation of LTAC criteria, an OIG report on SNFs,
and a weakening high yield market have sent KND shares down ~50% in the last several months. These
fears provide the opportunity to buy a diversified post-acute provider at 7x 2015 guidance for adjusted
eps, 6x 2016 FCFe and <5x managements post synergy FCF guidance for 2017. On a sum of the parts, the
current valuation implicitly creates the LTAC segment at ~3x 2017 EBITDAR even after assuming a 15%
EBITDAR decline in that segment which takes into account the risks but not the potential benefits of the
implementation of LTAC criteria. In 2016, the absence of transaction and integration costs related to the
Gentiva and Centerre acquisitions will reveal the true cash generative abilities of Kindred and shares will
re-rate materially higher. I believe $21-25 per share is a reasonable 18 month price target based on 10-
12x 2016E FCF.
Background—
Historically Kindred was primarily a skilled nursing (SNF) and Long term acute care (LTAC) provider, but
has significantly diversified by shuttering money losing SNF operations burdened by legacy Ventas leases
and expanding into more attractive home health, hospice, and inpatient rehab (IRF) segments through
recent acquisitions of Gentiva and Centerre. The new Kindred is now more hedged from a
reimbursement perspective and better positioned to deal with the industry transition towards bundling
and ACO’s. Synergies and incremental growth from Gentiva and the Rehab segment will lead to better
organic growth rates for the consolidated company following any choppiness related to LTAC criteria
implementation.
Reimbursement—
Investors in healthcare services bear the risk that the most important customer is CMS. That said, in the
context of the recent past, the reimbursement visibility today for KND is good compared to just 2 years
ago before congress legislated the codification of LTAC criteria in late 2013. Prior to the codification of
criteria, investors feared that LTACs could go away completely. While 2016-2017 could be choppy for
the LTAC division, the opportunity to backfill compliant patients should allow the LTAC business to
continue its strong FCF generation over the long run. No existential risk exists in the business today, and
KND has significantly diversified into more attractive post-acute segments in the past two years, leaving
the company better positioned from a reimbursement perspective than it has been in many years. While
the LTAC segment produces less than 35% of my EBITDAR estimate for F2017, the implementation of
LTAC criteria that begins in hospital fiscal 2016 has been a source of extreme investor consternation and
is a major part of why KND is attractively valued at today’s prices.
LTAC Segment—38% of Pro forma EBITDAR
An in-depth discussion of the nuances of LTAC criteria is beyond the scope of the write up; however,
several analysts have published extensive 50-100 page reports that are worth reading. To keep it
extremely simple, it is my opinion that the stock already reflects a worst case scenario arrived at
reducing reimbursement for Kindred’s census of non-compliant patients and assuming no capture of
incremental compliant patients (roughly 25% decline in segment EBITDA). On the other hand, there are
several offsets to criteria which have a high probability of allowing KND to mitigate the EBITDAR losses
that investors fear and even grow EBITDAR in the long run. For reference, management has guided to
keeping LTAC EBITDA relatively flat through the transition. While this could be slightly optimistic, one
misunderstood aspect of criteria is that it should cause a mix shift towards higher acuity higher CMI
patients which carry higher margins so replacing lost census is not one for one. Additionally, the removal