Q4 Earnings Highs And Lows: agilon health (NYSE:AGL) Vs The Rest Of The Outpatient & Specialty Care Stocks

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Q4 Earnings Highs And Lows: agilon health (NYSE:AGL) Vs The Rest Of The Outpatient & Specialty Care Stocks

Let’s dig into the relative performance of agilon health (NYSE:AGL) and its peers as we unravel the now-completed Q4 outpatient & specialty care earnings season.

The outpatient and specialty care industry delivers targeted medical services in non-hospital settings that are often cost-effective compared to inpatient alternatives. This means that they are more desired as rising healthcare costs and ways to combat them become more and more top-of-mind. Outpatient and specialty care providers boast revenue streams that are stable due to the recurring nature of treatment for chronic conditions and long-term patient relationships. However, their reliance on government reimbursement programs like Medicare means stroke-of-the-pen risk. Additionally, scaling a network of facilities can be capital-intensive with uneven return profiles amid competition from integrated healthcare systems. Looking ahead, the industry is positioned to grow as demand for outpatient services expands, driven by aging populations, a rising prevalence of chronic diseases, and a shift toward value-based care models. Tailwinds include advancements in medical technology that support more complex procedures in outpatient settings and the increasing focus on preventive care, which can be aided by data and AI. However, headwinds such as reimbursement rate cuts, labor shortages, and the financial strain of digitization may temper growth.

The 7 outpatient & specialty care stocks we track reported a mixed Q4. As a group, revenues beat analysts’ consensus estimates by 0.6% while next quarter’s revenue guidance was 0.7% below.

Amidst this news, share prices of the companies have had a rough stretch. On average, they are down 6.1% since the latest earnings results.

Weakest Q4: agilon health (NYSE:AGL)

Transforming how doctors care for seniors by shifting financial incentives from volume to outcomes, agilon health (NYSE:AGL) provides a platform that helps primary care physicians transition to value-based care models for Medicare patients through long-term partnerships and global capitation arrangements.

agilon health reported revenues of $1.52 billion, up 44.2% year on year. This print was in line with analysts’ expectations, but overall, it was a softer quarter for the company with full-year EBITDA guidance missing analysts’ expectations.

“While the underlying strength of our model continues to deliver significant value to patients, payors, and our PCP partners, we are still managing through a challenging Medicare Advantage environment.” said Steve Sell, CEO.