by Nashville Business Journal | Eleanor Kennedy
Any health care expert will tell you: It’s a busy time in the world of health care finance, with an extremely active mergers and acquisitions market and high valuations for young companies. And according to the four experts who spoke at a Nashville Health Care Council panel Wednesday, the industry shows no immediate signs of slowing down.
Thanks to low interest rates and increased post-recession confidence in board rooms, the M&A market has “been quite robust” in 2015, said Philip Pucciarelli, managing director and head of health care services for BMO Capital Markets.
Wednesday’s panel touched on several consistent themes in health care today: unusual and creatively structured deals, focus on lower cost with higher quality, and the transition from fee-for-service medicine to pay structures based on outcomes.
That last issue is what makes it unclear how all of today’s deals will look five or 10 years down the road. Eb LeMaster, managing director of Ponder & Co., said many of his financial advisory firm’s clients – primarily nonprofit hospital companies – are living “with a foot in each boat.” That means they’re both trying to function in today’s fee-for-service landscape and prepare themselves for new payments models to come.
“Everybody’s trying to adjust the game,” LeMaster said, a task made harder by the fact that it’s not exactly clear what that new game will look like.
Pucciarelli agreed, channelling Wayne Gretzky with his comment that in today’s environment, most health care players are trying to “play where the puck will be.”
Panelists also offered a few tips for the entrepreneurs trying to predict – and solve – the new game’s challenges. A few big ones: