Dive Brief:
- Nonprofit hospital and health plan giant Kaiser Permanente reported a $7.4 billion net gain for the first quarter ended March 31, compared to an income of $1.2 billion reported in the same period last year.
- The Oakland, California-based operator’s earnings were boosted by its completed acquisition of Geisinger Health, which netted Kaiser a one-time operating gain of $4.6 billion.
- Kaiser reported a quarterly operating margin of 3.4%, but noted the first quarter tends to be its strongest due to the timing of the open enrollment cycle. Kaiser predicts revenues will remain steady during subsequent quarters but expenses will likely rise.
Dive Insight:
Kaiser operates 40 hospitals, according to its website, and serves nearly 12.6 million health plan members as of the first quarter.
During the quarter, Kaiser subsidiary Risant Health — a nonprofit health network created last year to independently buy and operate other nonprofit health systems — completed its purchase of Geisinger Health. Kaiser received a one-time payment, boosting earnings. Net income for the quarter excluding the Geisinger transaction was $2.7 billion.
Kaiser increased its operating income year over year by more than 300% to total $935 million. Still, the nonprofit provider said that figure fell short of income logged prior to the pandemic.
Continued cost pressures from high utilization, care acuity and rising prices of goods and services drove quarterly expenses up 6% year over year to total $26.5 billion.
Kaiser has conducted at least three rounds of layoffs since the fall. It most recently cut 76 employees at the beginning of this month, a spokesperson confirmed to Healthcare Dive.
The cuts were done to “reduce costs across our organization,” and primarily impacted information technology and marketing roles, the spokesperson said via email.
Kaiser is not on a hiring freeze, the spokesperson noted. The organization has increased headcount by 5% since 2022 and has open positions currently listed online.
The Wall Street Journal also reported this weekend that Kaiser is attempting to sell $3.5 billion of its private investment holdings due to liquidity issues, citing sources familiar. Kaiser may attempt to sell further holdings later in 2024, according to the report.
Kaiser did not respond to requests for comment by press time about the possible sale.