Behavioral healthcare supplier Acadia Healthcare Co. Inc. is tapping the brakes on some growth tasks as a result of coverage uncertainty across the lately handed One Huge Stunning Invoice Act, CEO Chris Hunter mentioned Aug. 6.
Acadia, which is headquartered close to Nashville, runs greater than 270 therapy facilities in 39 states and Puerto Rico. Hunter and his crew are on monitor so as to add almost 1,000 beds to its community of about 12,000 this yr. The corporate spent $586 million final yr on growth tasks and is on tempo to place to work about $500 million this yr however 2026 and 2027 growth plans are prone to function smaller outlays.
“With the quantity of uncertainty created by the lately handed Huge Stunning Invoice, we’re going to utterly take a tougher look and are taking a tougher have a look at capital spending,” Hunter instructed analysts and traders on a convention name discussing Acadia’s second-quarter outcomes. “We’ve got the chance to take a pause on a few of our growth capital spending.”
Hunter and outgoing CFO Heather Dixon mentioned they have already got hit the pause button on two tasks in Acadia’s pipeline, a transfer that may save the corporate about $100 million over the following few years. Dixon famous a small a part of these financial savings will begin to be realized later this yr, when Acadia groups would have been engaged on components resembling planning and design.
Hunter famous that different spending pauses and/or cuts are probably due to uncertainty round funding that elements of the OBBBA have created.
“We’re nonetheless going by way of the method and we anticipate to have extra to say over the following few months,” Hunter mentioned.
Hunter commented on longer-term spending plans after Acadia, which serves greater than 82,000 sufferers each day, reported Q2 internet income of $37.9 million on revenues of $869 million. A yr in the past, these numbers had been $81 million and $796 million, respectively, however this yr’s earnings was dinged by greater than $53 million in settlement prices and authorized charges associated to governmental investigations and lawsuits in addition to about $10 million in spending on layoffs, facility closures and contract modifications.
Shares of Acadia (Ticker: ACHC) tumbled greater than 15% after executives’ earnings report and convention name. They rose about 1% on Aug. 7 to shut at $18.20 however are nonetheless down greater than 50% over the previous six months. The corporate’s market capitalization is now about $1.7 billion.
