Earnings Call Transcript
AMN HEALTHCARE SERVICES INC (AMN)
Earnings Call Transcript - AMN Q1 2022
Operator, Operator
Good afternoon, and welcome to the AMN Healthcare First Quarter 2022 Earnings Call. My name is Brika, and I'll be today's event specialist. There will be a question-and-answer session. Our host for today's call will be Randy Reece, Senior Director of Investor Relations. So, Randy, please go ahead when you're ready.
Randy Reece, Senior Director of Investor Relations
Good afternoon, everyone. Welcome to AMN Healthcare's first quarter 2022 earnings call. A replay of this webcast will be available at ir.amnhealthcare.com, following the conclusion of this call. Details for the audio replay of the conference call are in our earnings release issued this afternoon. Various remarks we make during this call about future expectations, projections, trends, plans, events, or circumstances constitute forward-looking statements. These statements reflect the company's current beliefs based upon information currently available to it. Our actual results may differ materially from those indicated by these forward-looking statements because of various factors and cautionary statements, including those identified in our most recently filed Forms 10-K and 10-Q, our earnings release and subsequent filings with the SEC. The company does not intend to update guidance or any forward-looking statements provided today prior to its next earnings release. This call contains certain non-GAAP financial information. Information regarding and reconciliations of these non-GAAP measures to the most directly comparable GAAP measures are included in our earnings release and on our financial reports page at ir.amnhealthcare.com. On the call today are Susan Salka, Chief Executive Officer; Jeff Knudson, Chief Financial Officer; Kelly Rakowski, Group President and COO of Strategic Talent Solutions; Landry Seedig, Group President and COO of Nursing and Allied Solutions; and James Taylor, Group President and COO of Physician and Leadership Solutions. I will now turn the call over to Susan.
Susan Salka, CEO
Thank you so much, Randy, and welcome, everyone. We're very grateful that you're here with us today and pleased to be able to share some good news. We are reporting strong results and a positive outlook, very consistent with what we discussed on our last earnings call. Over the last two years, the dedicated AMN team and our healthcare professionals enabled an all-out response to the pandemic, and now we are seeing light at the end of the tunnel. However, the pandemic has taken a significant toll on the healthcare workforce, and in particular, frontline clinicians. The extreme shortages of healthcare professionals have been accelerated and exacerbated in a way that we could not have foreseen. We are now in a situation that requires new methods of how the healthcare community approaches staffing and support of our workforce. A little over a decade ago, AMN identified the need and opportunity to bring workforce solutions into healthcare and create efficiencies for our clients, clinicians, and the industry. We and other innovative partners paved the way for technology-enabled solutions. Our MSP relationships and the diversification of our revenue mix have reduced our risk exposure to market and economic fluctuations. All stakeholders benefitted from these evolutionary leaps and with AMN as the leader in total talent solutions, our shareholders certainly experienced a significant benefit. I believe we are at the beginning of another evolutionary time in our industry. Healthcare job openings stand at an unprecedented 2.9 times the number of monthly hires. Clinicians are insisting on more flexibility and higher compensation, as well as a faster, more digital, seamless experience. Because of these factors, clients are reimagining their staffing paradigm. AMN is well-positioned to deliver what healthcare professionals and clients need and want in the coming years. Prior to the pandemic, AMN was already making significant investments in our digital platforms and tech-enabled solutions. Over the past two years, we have supercharged those investments and launched several new capabilities. Our conversations with clients today include questions like how can they embrace the changing preferences of a younger workforce? How can they attract clinicians from outside the region? And how can they embrace the local professionals who want flexibility to work across multiple facilities and get experiences to advance their careers? These all pose significant challenges for the healthcare ecosystem, but also great opportunities for those organizations able and willing to collaborate and drive innovation. AMN is the only organization capable of delivering large-scale managed services programs as well as providing three of the top VMS platforms. Just this week, we were again named the Number One healthcare MSP provider by HRO Today. We hit a new record high in the first quarter at an annualized rate of approximately $15 billion in VMS and MSP growth spend under management. While this run rate will come down as pricing returns to a sustainable level, we believe these relationships and the volume opportunity will largely continue into the future. Healthcare employers are increasingly requesting our comprehensive solutions to address the recruitment and staffing challenges. The power of our diversified solutions allows us to help clients with temporary, permanent, short-term, and long-term workforce challenges. We are clearly differentiated by our unmatched portfolio of more than 20 distinct workforce solutions, working closely with clients to address their complex labor needs. Over the last few years, our clients have increased the number of AMN solutions they use. Today, AMN's top 30 clients use, on average, eight of our solutions, which represents great progress, but also gives us tremendous growth potential. Before we talk more about the future, I'd like to first recognize the outstanding achievements of the AMN team in the first quarter. Consolidated revenue for the quarter was $1.55 billion, and adjusted EBITDA was $258 million, both record levels. Our Nurse and Allied Solutions segment reported revenue of $1.23 billion, with growth of 87% year-over-year. Travel nurse staffing grew by 95% year-over-year due to both volume and bill rate growth, driven by higher compensation for clinicians. Allied Staffing revenue increased by 64% year-over-year in the first quarter, including more than 40% growth in volume. Imaging, lab, respiratory, and therapy were all strong. As we projected, we are very pleased to see the crisis demand has subsided since the peak earlier in the year. In the Nurse and Allied segment, we are now seeing a more normalized demand level, which is still more than 80% higher than the same time period before the pandemic. This also means compensation expectations have come down, and resulting bill rates have reduced. This is in line with where we thought we would be as we move through the second quarter. Based on this, we expect our Nurse and Allied segment revenue to grow approximately 70% year-over-year in the second quarter. More than half of our growth is coming from increased volume of clinicians on assignment. Our Physician and Leadership solutions segment reached a new record with first quarter revenue of $180 million, up 28% year-over-year. Locum Tenons had its highest quarterly revenue ever, reaching $113 million with 30% year-over-year growth. Core business grew 60% year-over-year, while pandemic-related revenue was down. Interim leadership also had record revenue with mid-teens growth year-over-year. Physician and Executive Search revenue grew an impressive 46% year-over-year in the first quarter. New physician searches remained strong, and the pipeline for mid-level and executive search is strong, bolstered by multi-search opportunities from larger clients. In the second quarter of 2022, we expect revenue for the Physician and Leadership search solutions segment to grow approximately 20% year-over-year. Our Technology and Workforce Solutions segment reached another new high with first quarter revenue of $145 million, up 64% year-over-year. The greatest portion of revenue growth came from our VMS Technology business. Language Services and Recruitment Process Outsourcing also delivered strong growth as clients are requesting more diversified solutions. In the second quarter of 2022, we expect Technology and Workforce Solutions segment revenue to be up about 45% year-over-year. With most of the pandemic behind us and certainly many lessons learned and relationships strengthened, our focus is on how we make a greater impact and deliver greater value for all stakeholders in the future. The pandemic accelerated workforce and market changes that would have otherwise taken many years to unfold. Because of the strategic actions we took during the pandemic, AMN moved forward in a better position than ever before. We swiftly embraced operational changes and made technology investments that are making us faster, more agile, and empowered with real-time views of healthcare professionals and clients. We proved our business and our team can scale effectively across a wide range of market conditions. And we showed that we can manage strong growth while increasing our commitment to ambitious environmental, social, and governance goals. Over the last year, we increased our alignment with organizations focused on diversity, equity, inclusion, and resiliency of the healthcare workforce. The crisis amplifies the strength of our values, and that has enabled AMN to create opportunities for talented people who seek meaningful work in a purpose-driven culture. In fact, in an environment where most companies are experiencing higher than normal levels of attrition, in the first quarter, AMN saw lower than normal attrition. In our latest employee engagement survey, team members ranked AMN well above industry benchmarks across all key categories. Team members specifically called out the strength of AMN's culture and the fact that their colleagues and the organization care about supporting them in pursuing their personal and professional goals. We remain confident that the post-pandemic environment will include persistent labor shortages, increasing need for flexibility, and a growing appetite for total talent solutions. These significant market drivers give our industry a long-term growth opportunity. AMN is uniquely positioned to excel in the market with the power of our diversified portfolio. Our team, our leadership, and our culture are exceptionally strong, and we have strengthened our customer intimacy, giving us great insight into what clients need from us now and in the future. In just a few minutes, James, Kelly, and Landry will join us for the Q&A session. For now, though, I will turn the call over to our colleague Jeff, who will provide more insight into our financial results.
Jeff Knudson, CFO
Thank you, Susan, and good afternoon everyone. First quarter revenue of $1.553 billion was 3% above the high end of our guidance range, driven by outperformance from all three segments. Consolidated revenue increased 75% year-over-year and 14% sequentially. Excluding labor disruption revenue, consolidated revenue grew 22% sequentially. Gross margin for the quarter was 32%, 60 basis points lower than the prior year, and up 10 basis points sequentially. Year-over-year, the margin was lower from higher clinician compensation and nurse staffing and a revenue mix shift towards our lower-margin staffing businesses. Consolidated SG&A expenses were $258 million or 16.6% of revenue compared with $161 million or 18.2% of revenue in the year-ago quarter and $239 million or 17.5% of revenue in the previous quarter. SG&A expenses increased year-over-year and sequentially, primarily due to higher expenses for growing, rewarding, and supporting our team members. Adjusted SG&A excluding certain non-recurring expenses and stock-based compensation expense was $239 million this quarter, or 15.4% of revenue compared with $148 million or 16.8% of revenue in the year-ago quarter. The improvement in SG&A margin came from operating leverage on the revenue growth, partially offset by higher growth-related expenses. On a sequential basis, adjusted SG&A was higher by $27 million due to higher team member-related expenses. In the first quarter, Nurse and Allied revenue was $1.228 billion, 87% higher than the prior year and up 14% sequentially. Our travel nurse business grew revenue 95% over the prior year and 27% sequentially. Travelers on assignment grew 42% year-over-year. Demand for travel nurses hit a record high level in January. As a result, travel nurse volume grew 20% sequentially. Allied revenue was $214 million, growing 64% from the prior year and up 16% sequentially. Allied volume was up 41% over the prior year. Nurse and Allied gross margin of 26.2% was 70 basis points lower than the prior year and down 80 basis points sequentially. The crisis-driven spike in demand drove pay expectations faster than bill rate. As a result, compensation for healthcare professionals increased as a percent of revenues by 520 basis points year-over-year. This increase was partially offset by improved leverage over housing, travel, and other expenses, as well as favorable workers' compensation reserve and health insurance costs. The sequential decline in gross margin is primarily due to high-margin labor disruption revenue in the fourth quarter of 2021 that did not recur in the first quarter of 2022. Segment EBITDA margin of 15.9% was 40 basis points higher than the prior year and 50 basis points lower than the prior quarter. These comparisons were affected by lower gross margin, partially offset by the SG&A leverage from higher revenue. Physician and Leadership Solutions revenue in the first quarter was $180 million, 28% higher year-over-year and up 10% sequentially. Locum Tenons' revenue was $113 million, 30% higher than the prior year and up 13% sequentially. Interim leadership revenue increased 14% from the prior year and was up 2% sequentially. Search revenue increased 46% from the prior year and was up 8% sequentially. Gross margin for this segment was 35%, 200 basis points lower than the prior year and down 10 basis points sequentially. Year-over-year margin decline was primarily due to revenue mix changes and lower gross margins for Locum Tenons and Interim Leadership. Segment EBITDA margin was 11.4%, down 370 basis points from last year and 20 basis points sequentially. The sequential and year-over-year decline in EBITDA margin was primarily due to a lower gross margin, as well as a higher performance in incentive compensation accrual. Technology and Workforce Solutions revenue was $145 million in the first quarter, growing 64% year-over-year and 23% sequentially. VMS revenue of $75 million grew 136% year-over-year, and 43% sequentially, driven by a significant increase in gross spend under management. All other service lines in the segment achieved strong revenue growth on a year-over-year basis. Segment gross margin was 76.7%, up from a year-ago margin of 67.7% and up 470 basis points sequentially due to growth of the higher-margin VMS business. Segment EBITDA margin of 54.4% was up 690 basis points year-over-year and 700 basis points sequentially. Consolidated first quarter adjusted EBITDA of $258 million was higher by 83% year-over-year and 60% sequentially. Adjusted EBITDA margin of 16.6% was 70 basis points higher year-over-year and better by 30 basis points sequentially. We reported net income of $146 million and diluted earnings per share of $3.09 in the quarter. Adjusted earnings per share was $3.49 compared with $1.70 in the year-ago quarter. Days sales outstanding were 57 days, in line with the prior year, and four days higher than last quarter due to the cadence of billings through the quarter. Operating cash flow for the quarter was very strong at $200 million and capital expenditures were $14 million. As of March 31st, we had cash and equivalents of $113 million, long-term debt of $850 million, and a net leverage ratio of one time to one. From a capital allocation perspective, the company used $228 million of cash to repurchase 2.3 million shares of our stock in the quarter. As of March 31st, $250 million remained under our stock repurchase authorization. With a strong balance sheet and ample liquidity, we remain focused on internal investments as well as our acquisition pipeline. Our priority is to add more technology-enabled solutions and select staffing assets that would improve our sustainable revenue growth and profit margins. Now, turning the second quarter guidance, we are projecting consolidated revenue to be in the range of $1.34 billion to $1.38 billion, up 56% to 61% over the prior year. Revenue guidance includes $65 million to $70 million of labor disruption revenue, which amounts to approximately 7% of the year-over-year revenue growth. The second quarter gross margin is projected to be 31.5% to 32%. Reported SG&A expenses are projected to be 16.4% to 16.9% of revenue. Operating margin is expected to be 12.5% to 13% and adjusted EBITDA margin is expected to be 15.8% to 16.3%. Other second quarter guidance details can be found in today's earnings release. Our guidance carries the message that the second quarter is playing out the way we had expected, excluding the labor disruption revenue. We continue to expect our third and fourth quarters to settle out around $1 billion of quarterly revenue at 15% adjusted EBITDA margins. For Nurse and Allied, the average bill rate was up low double-digits sequentially in the first quarter, and bill rates plateaued in March. We expect low double-digit declines for bill rates sequentially in the second quarter. Based on current placements and rate changes we have seen thus far, we expect the third quarter to have the largest sequential decline in bill rates. Our expectation remains that we will exit the year with Nurse and Allied bill rates stabilizing at approximately 35% lower than the first quarter level. Our outlook for Nurse and Allied volumes and bill rates is based on our efforts working with clients to determine their needs and expectations through the rest of the year. This fourth-quarter view represents average annual bill rate growth of about 8% compared with pre-pandemic levels. We believe this is reasonable considering that hospital industry wages rose 10% in 2021 and in the fourth quarter of 2021, nurse compensation in the U.S. rose at an annualized rate of 11%. As we said in our previous call, after our business levels out in the second half of 2022, we expect a more normalized sequential growth trend off the Q4 base. According to CMS projections, healthcare spending is expected to grow 5% to 6% in 2023 in an environment where the workforce is not expanding fast enough to serve that need. A recent report by the Conference Board warns that healthcare labor shortages will not improve, but worsen over the next decade. In addition to the underlying staffing needs this creates, our portfolio of diversified solutions enables us to continue to help clients and also deliver growth in the coming years. And now, we'd like to open the call for questions.
Operator, Operator
Thank you. We'll now begin the question-and-answer session. The first question we have from the phone lines comes from Tobey Sommer of Truist Securities. Your line is open.
Jasper Bibb, Analyst
Hey, good afternoon. This is Jasper Bib on for Tobey. I was just hoping you could speak to nursing gross margins. As we started to see the market normalize a bit, do you expect to recapture some of that bill pay spread? And how long do you think it would take to reprice the book and get to a kind of pre-COVID gross margin?
Jeff Knudson, CFO
Yes, Jasper, this is Jeff. I would say with the demand that we saw in Q1, we did see some erosion and some of those assignments will spill over into Q2. Obviously, with bill rates coming down, we are seeing improvement, which we would expect to see more fully in the back half. On a consolidated basis, the improvement we are seeing in Q2 sequentially is impacted by the workers' comp adjustments in Q1 as we roll over those in the second quarter. But like I said, we would expect to see more improvements as we reprice into the back half.
Jasper Bibb, Analyst
Thanks. And then can you just quantify the expected decline in deliveries for the third quarter? I think you mentioned and any changes to how you're thinking about Nurse and Allied volumes over the balance of the year?
Jeff Knudson, CFO
Yes, so we said we would expect low double-digit declines in the second quarter, and that we would expect the third quarter to be steeper than that. From a volume perspective, I'll let Landry give a little bit more color, but we would expect overall in the second quarter to be flattish to the first quarter. And then just some normal seasonality trends into the back half.
Landry Seedig, Group President and COO of Nursing and Allied Solutions
Yes, just some travel nursing specifically there, so the first of the second quarter, we're seeing a bit of a mix change there and I'll explain that a little bit. So, our just our traditional travel nursing volume, which is that kind of typical 13-week to 26-week assignment, so that's growing nicely sequentially from Q1 to Q2. And then also the international business is growing nicely from Q1 to Q2. The offset to that would be some lower volume in the second quarter for our crisis placements. So, of course, the first quarter saw quite a bit of that. And those are not continuing into the second quarter. So, whenever you combine those, that's where we get to that Q1 to Q2, we're expecting pretty flat volumes sequentially.
Jasper Bibb, Analyst
Yes, that makes sense. Last question for me, I was just hoping you could update us on your tech investments. Are there any kind of updated metrics around the adoption of AMN Passport, they could quantify the progress you're making there?
Susan Salka, CEO
Absolutely, continue to add more features and functionality which drives efficiencies, certainly for the clinicians using them, but then also for our team members. And we think that's certainly contributing to the productivity improvement that we're seeing across the board, both for recruiters and also for some of the support staff that now doesn't have to touch some of the transactions that used to be dealt with more manually. And we now have 125,000 users on Passport. I think the last time we reported, it was around 100,000, so really great progress in that utilization and we expect to continue to see certainly more going forward. But we also continue to roll it out across our different business lines, as we continue to add more functionality.
Jasper Bibb, Analyst
Thanks for taking the questions.
Operator, Operator
Your next question comes from A.J. Rice of Credit Suisse. Your line is now open.
A.J. Rice, Analyst
Hi, everyone. Just wondering if you could give us an update on your fill the orders that you have? Are you seeing the ability to fill more orders today? Or do you still have about the same percent that are going unfilled as you did a quarter or two ago?
Kelly Rakowski, Group President and COO of Strategic Talent Solutions
Hi A.J., it's Kelly Rakowski. Thanks for the question. As demand levels have started to decrease, we are noticing improvements in our fill rates. However, demand is still higher than it was before the pandemic. We are definitely working to enhance these fill rates for our clients by leveraging our extensive network of supplier partners. The situation is improving, but there is still potential for further enhancement, and we anticipate continued improvements as demand normalizes.
A.J. Rice, Analyst
And I think during the heat of the crunch, the last few quarters, you've talked about the fact that your MSP clients obviously have taken priority, and there's been some non-MSP customers that's traditionally supported that you couldn't prioritize, have you been able to move to build more of those orders? Or are you seeing some of those people decide now that they need to go ahead and enter into an MSP? Are you seeing activity around MSP contracting pick up?
Landry Seedig, Group President and COO of Nursing and Allied Solutions
A.J., it's Landry. I'll hit the first part of that, and then maybe Kelly will hit what we're hearing from customers about entering into a new MSP relationship. So yeah, you're right. So over the pandemic, whenever demand was so high, we had shifted most of our recruitment resources and account management resources to focus on our MSP customers. And we've changed that slightly, demand is still elevated. So, there's still plenty of support needed at our MSP customers. But to your point, within the kind of direct and third-party, there's quite a bit of demand there. So we've opened those up a little bit more. We never fully closed them. We did support those clients, where appropriate during the pandemic, but demand has still remained elevated, and our MSP demand is elevated. So, we still need to make sure that we're focused on those most important customers.
Kelly Rakowski, Group President and COO of Strategic Talent Solutions
Yes, and A.J., I'll just add from what we're seeing in the market, we are seeing an increase in our pipeline, particularly for our full MSP solutions. If you look back a year ago, and even a quarter ago, we are seeing more of a percentage of our new opportunities be vendor neutral and administered through our technology and our three strong technology platforms. So, now we're seeing more clients interested in a full-service MSP and our ability to add more, you know, the capacity to do that has improved as well. So, yes, we are seeing demand. We had Q1 was slightly ahead from a sales perspective, we're seeing even a stronger Q2 ahead of us.
A.J. Rice, Analyst
Okay, maybe a last question on the M&A pipeline. I know, I think last quarter you guys talked about potentially broadening the scope being open potentially to even staffing acquisitions. Again, any update on what you're seeing out there, whether there's likely to be opportunities over the near term, intermediate term?
Jeff Knudson, CFO
Yes, A.J. I would say if you were to look back a year ago, the M&A pipeline is certainly more active than it was. From our perspective, probably a little distorted towards the staffing assets right now than those tech enabled solutions, but we're still seeing healthy activity there as well. And that's really what we're focusing our efforts in the near term.
Operator, Operator
Thank you. We now have Tim Mulrooney of William Blair. Please go ahead when you're ready.
Tim Mulrooney, Analyst
Yes, good afternoon. Just a housekeeping question. First, I want to make sure I heard you correctly during the Q&A. Did you say for the Nurse and Allied segment, you expect volumes to be essentially flat sequentially from the first quarter to the second quarter?
Susan Salka, CEO
Yes, and that is a combination of travel nurse being up in our longer-term 13 to 26-week assignments, international nursing being up, some areas of allied being up, and then offset by the shorter crisis assignments that are typically more like four to six weeks, maybe eight. And those are typically at the higher bill rate. So not surprisingly, we saw a lot of that disproportionately in the first quarter. So those on unwind, we're seeing a decrease in that volume. But the more long-term assignments are the ones that are growing into the second quarter. We did have a little bit of headwind with schools, which tend to fall off at the end of the second quarter as well, but that's pretty minor.
Tim Mulrooney, Analyst
Got it. Thank you. So, then based on your guide for the back half of the year, that billion-dollar run rate per quarter, I assume that means you'd then expect volumes to tick down somewhat more sequentially from the first half of the year into the second half of the year. Am I thinking about that correctly? Or is it mostly driven by bill rate?
Jeff Knudson, CFO
Bill rate, Tim, is by far and away the largest driver of that decline in the revenue base in the back half of the year.
Tim Mulrooney, Analyst
Okay, thank you. And then maybe one more, this is more of just a high-level thing. But I wanted to hear your guys' opinion on this. We've noticed an uptick in money being raised for tech startups for the per diem RM market. It seems like more and more smart money's being deployed in the space. But, you know, per diem is only a small piece of your business today. I'm just curious why AMN hasn't also made a bigger push in this area, given your strong relationships with healthcare systems across the country. There are structural reasons why you've kind of avoided getting bigger in this area of the market.
Susan Salka, CEO
I mentioned earlier that you want to know what clients are discussing with us is how do they better optimize that local labor force and talent pool not just the clinicians that are currently working for them, but the broader maybe regional talent pool that is available? There are a few interesting things going on already where either hospitals have created a kind of new version of a float pool where clinicians can actually float from facility to facility. It's something that we've helped clients to do in the past, even perhaps bringing in travelers that can be a part of that float pool. The discussion is more how do we help them manage that because they aren't structurally set up, nor have the technology and the expertise to be running an operation like that. And so the technologies that we can bring to the table, both existing things that we have in place that could be utilized for the management of a local, so-called float pool of clinicians that perhaps traveled from system-to-system and facility-to-facility. That's more where we're working with them is on that technology workforce and management solution, as opposed to just providing the people. Now we can provide the people as well and augment what they have. But their first objective is really to optimize the talent pool that already exists within a region. So we think that's probably the more strategic partnership for us. We can grow our local staffing capability, and we will do it if that's the best solution for them. But they're really thinking more of the tech-enabled solutions and our expertise. So hopefully, that helps answer that.
Tim Mulrooney, Analyst
It does. Thanks, Susan. Appreciate it.
Operator, Operator
Thank you, Tim. We now have Kevin Fischbeck of Bank of America. Please go ahead when you're ready, Kevin.
Joanna Gajuk, Analyst
Good afternoon, this is Joanna Gajuk filling in for Kevin today. Thanks for taking my question. I wanted to follow up on a discussion from last quarter. You mentioned the increasing demand for flexibility among nurses and healthcare workers as the gig economy expands into this field. However, we've also heard from various providers that they anticipate some employees who took on travel assignments, often remaining in their local areas, may return to full-time positions. Have you noticed any of your nurses making that transition back to permanent roles?
Jeff Knudson, CFO
It's difficult to pinpoint exactly where clinicians are going. We monitor a couple of key metrics related to turnover and retention. First, regarding cancellations by our clinicians, we are seeing levels consistent with or slightly below pre-pandemic numbers, indicating that cancellations are not increasing. Another important metric we track is rebook retention, which reflects the retention of our clinicians and the extensions of their current assignments. In the first quarter, our retention rate was six percentage points higher compared to the same period last year. This shows that clinicians are remaining with us at a faster rate than before. Although last year’s first quarter was somewhat weak, this year’s first quarter represents the strongest average we've seen historically. It's challenging to determine where clinicians go when they aren't taking assignments from us. We have noticed significant growth among clinicians under 35 years old; in fact, 50% of our current clinicians fall into that age group. However, we observed a decline in the group of clinicians aged 61 and older, as they seem to have exited the workforce, which aligns with various public reports we have examined.
Susan Salka, CEO
I think at the other end of that kind of metric spectrum is how many people are applying with us and coming in to travel nursing or allied and as we first quarter certainly was a very high point, a lot of interest in the crisis assignments. But even in April, we still have very high new application flow. In fact, it's above prior year and well above pre-pandemic levels. So, I think that's indicative that there's still great interest in coming into the industry.
Joanna Gajuk, Analyst
Yes, thank you. Thanks for this color. And thanks for sharing some of these metrics because it's the one of the questions everybody's trying to figure out you know, whether some of these nurses are going to come back. So thanks for sharing the call on with from me. Thank you.
Operator, Operator
Your next question comes from Brian Tanquilut of Jefferies. Brian, your line is open.
Brian Tanquilut, Analyst
Hi, thanks. Good afternoon. My first question is for you, Susan. In your prepared remarks, you mentioned the bill rates and the discussions you are having with the hospitals. I’m interested in hearing about those conversations. Do the hospitals recognize that we will exit the year at 35% lower than Q1? Is that the correct figure, or are there significant objections? What are those discussions like?
Susan Salka, CEO
I'm going to ask my colleagues to join in here in a moment, but at a high level to answer the question that the conversations are, don't stop filling the jobs that we have today because we still have very elevated needs. And we don't see that changing anytime soon. In fact, they acknowledged that the shortages are likely going to get worse. Now, for the next year, maybe not as extreme as going out into even future years, Jeff referenced the Conference Board Study that was just put out that calls out healthcare as the highest risk of worsening shortages across almost all categories. And that aligns to exactly what we hear from our clients. And so yes, they're very concerned about getting costs down. And bill rates are a part of that. But they're also very concerned about getting their current and future jobs filled, which is why there's so many conversations. Also around are multiple solutions, particularly I would say the longer-term solutions, things like international nursing, which is at an all-time high in demand in even within our current placement businesses, our RPO business and how do they set up a more efficient, effective model? And how can they come to more of a single partner who can help them strategize? We're doing a lot more planning with our clients to help understand what their needs are not just today, but in the future. But then it translates to, okay, how can we navigate this year? And part of that navigation is understanding their staffing needs, which again, is very elevated and not going to go down likely to go up? And how do we get the bill rates down along with that. So with our most strategic clients, our team lays out a roadmap of where we think we're going that aligns with their demand needs. So it's going to be a little different from client to client. And we lay out what we think we can accomplish from a rate reduction standpoint. So I would say it's more of a collaborative discussion because ultimately, they decide where the rates are. But it's more of a collaborative discussion on where is the staffing demand going to be for them and for hospitals across the country? And how does that translate into getting down to these numbers? And, yes, we have put these numbers in front of them. And at this point, this is how we're trying to triangulate where that that rate will come out.
Brian Tanquilut, Analyst
Got it. And then I guess my follow-up to that, as we think about supply. What are you seeing as bill rates go down in terms of nurses staying in the temp world versus going back to perm? And how are you driving supply growth or market share gains? If that's the case, as the theoretically the pool shrinks with that sort of dynamic?
Susan Salka, CEO
Well, we don't think it's shrinking. I just mentioned that we're getting even more applications in on a year-over-year basis. And it's true on the physician front as well, which is part of what's driving the fantastic results within our Locum and in interim leadership. And as Landry mentioned earlier, our nurses are actually staying with it. And so, I don’t know if you want to recap a bit of what you shared to us with any other color?
Denny Lanfear, Analyst
Yes, Brian, our retention and extension numbers remain high, often exceeding pre-pandemic levels, which were already strong. Some of these rates are being observed mid-contract. We aim to see improvements in new placements and extensions, but currently, some changes are happening mid-contract. The team is effectively collaborating with nurses to reduce these rates, which is beneficial for our clients facing cost pressures in their health systems. Generally, nurses and allied professionals impacted by these adjustments are quite understanding, recognizing that the current environment is significantly different from December or January when hospitals were overwhelmed with serious COVID cases.
Brian Tanquilut, Analyst
Got you. Okay. And then for my last question, as I consider the $1 billion run rate with a 15% margin, given the CMS projections and growth rates you've mentioned, do you still think that this is a reasonable baseline to continue growing from, perhaps at a low double-digit rate going forward? Is that how you view the long-term perspective of the company?
Jeff Knudson, CFO
Yes. When we think about growing off that Q4 run rate, so obviously, we think pricing volumes will stabilize in the fourth quarter of this year. As we move through the year, we also expect our internal capture rate on MSP orders to recover and we don't believe the shortage of clinicians will change dramatically between. So I think when you couple that with the CMS data, we think that's the right way for us to frame up 2023. And where we see that playing out off of that fourth-quarter run rate.
Operator, Operator
We now have Bill Sutherland of The Benchmark Company. Please go ahead when you're ready.
Bill Sutherland, Analyst
Hey, thanks. Hello, everybody. I was thinking about this issue about the nurse practices as well. Obviously, top of mind. And Susan, I was curious if you guys have had a survey of some of your clinicians or using a third party that kind of asked them the reasons these would be new travelers, for instance, that they started to travel. And I guess maybe there's a certain type that started to travel because of the crisis rates. But have you seen anything that kind of rank orders, what's most important to them?
Susan Salka, CEO
As Landry mentioned, we are noticing an influx of younger individuals entering the field, which aligns with their desire for greater flexibility, extending beyond just healthcare. We anticipate this trend will persist. Those in permanent roles may not experience this flexibility and might feel pressured to take on additional overtime and shifts to support their colleagues they will continue to work with for years. This generational preference will likely continue to grow. Additionally, people are drawn to travel for various reasons, including the need for rejuvenation due to burnout or frustration in their current roles. They seek opportunities to learn and enhance their skills, feeling unable to do so in their existing environment, especially when understaffing contributes to their burnout. They aspire to work in environments where they can provide excellent care without the risk of burnout. Personal reasons also play a significant role; the motivations aren’t solely career-driven. It's evident that while personal factors have remained consistent, the preference of the new generation has recently become a more influential factor. Many individuals introduced to travel opportunities due to the pandemic, who might have previously dismissed it, now see it as a viable option. I’ve spoken to numerous nurses who express a definitive preference for travel roles over returning to permanent positions, as they realize they can pursue their passion while earning well and continuing to travel. Though this may not represent the majority, even a small shift can significantly impact our industry. With over 1 million travel nurses, which is less than 5% of that population, a slight increase could potentially expand our industry supply by nearly 50%. While there’s significant attention on the number of individuals returning to permanent positions, a slight uptick in travel nurses could have a positive effect on our industry, even if it doesn’t drastically change dynamics in hospitals with 1.7 million nurses. Concerns about rates and labor costs are important, but it’s crucial to remember that the permanent workforce constitutes a substantial portion of labor costs, particularly in nursing. Permanent wages recently increased by 10%, and the days of modest wage growth are likely over due to growing shortage projections. We are likely faced with several years of above-average wage increases for permanent nursing positions. This represents a significant cost for hospitals; when considering the average salary for these 1.7 million nurses, it accounts for around $150 billion in costs. Therefore, any increase in wages directly equates to substantial financial implications for hospitals. As a result, even if travel nursing rates decline by 35%, they still account for only a small percentage of the workforce. It’s essential to view the broader picture and focus on how we can assist our clients in maximizing efficiency and managing their total workforce, rather than just concentrating on travel nursing costs and rates. The larger opportunity lies in optimizing the entire workforce.
Bill Sutherland, Analyst
I understand. That's valuable insight, Susan. What we're all responding to is that a couple of health systems reported disappointing first quarters in terms of their margins, and they attributed much of that to the increase in contract labor during the quarter, promising to return to normal levels. This raises questions about how that will affect demand for your business. What you mentioned seems like an easy explanation for them on how to address their issues, but it might not be the complete truth. Additionally, I’m curious about what percentage of assignments in the first quarter were classified as crisis, if that can be defined.
Susan Salka, CEO
We don't really provide and carve it out that way, externally. So I'd be a little hesitant to provide that level of detail.
Bill Sutherland, Analyst
Okay.
Susan Salka, CEO
Maybe we'll try to figure out how we can give a little color going for, but I apologize. I don't think we've carved it out that way in the past.
Bill Sutherland, Analyst
Okay. And one last question, is the takeaway in Nursing and Allied that the rate is still trending down to more normal levels? Do you believe that, setting aside seasonal fluctuations, the volumes are relatively stable from quarter to quarter for the remainder of the year?
Jeff Knudson, CFO
Apart from seasonality, that's correct, Bill.
Operator, Operator
Thank you for your questions, everyone. We now have Andre Childress from Baird. Sir, please go ahead when you're ready.
Andre Childress, Analyst
This is Andre Childress on for Mark Marcon. Yes, thank you for taking our question. So you've been pretty successful over the past few years cross-selling, adding different solutions and cross-selling it to your client base, you know that your top 30 clients now use eight different solutions? Could you somehow break out how that was or what that was a couple of years ago and how that's trended? What opportunities are you most excited for in terms of cross-selling back into the base, what's your strategy, their go-to-market strategy? And what your targets, you know, a couple of years down the road in terms of how many solutions you think the top clients would be using?
Kelly Rakowski, Group President and COO of Strategic Talent Solutions
Yes, great question. And thank you for picking up on that. And it's certainly been a part of our strategy not only for us as an opportunity for growth and extending our business across our top clients but also for our clients as they seek more comprehensive strategies, as we've been talking about the complexity of the challenges, certainly require them to look at many different levers around not only their contingent staff utilization, how to effectively build that into their workforce plans, but also to help them have a permanent side across all of their workforce capabilities. So that increase up to eight, and that's an average some of our clients use nearly all of our solutions, on an annual basis. So, what we've been seeing from a trend perspective is, number one, as they look for more cost containment strategies, bringing more service lines like our non-clinical services, like our locums, like our interim leadership, where they see those as better and more effective ways to bring them the quality staff they needed. And under a managed program, we've seen a real appetite and increase lately, particularly with our renewals as well and adding more of those service lines. And then beyond that, as they look for workforce optimization and planning that Susan talked about, how can they have, you know, better internal utilization of flexible programs, helping them with more predictive modeling and staffing around that. We're strategizing with them on a long-term basis around where we can innovate and help them bring those solutions to them so that they can meet those total needs. I think one of the areas we are seeing some, some increases, particularly around our physician services. And James, maybe you can talk a little bit about our locums strategies around adding those to our MSPs and what we're seeing there?
James Taylor, Group President and COO of Physician and Leadership Solutions
Thank you, Kelly. Andre, I think Kelly is spot on in a sense of our clients are looking for the total workforce solution and optimization, which is out of their portfolio. Some of the metrics that sit behind that we estimate this within the pls business, that we've captured a third of our plan for 2022 already in the first quarter centered on really building on MSP activity, we have had 100% retention from both our local clients and our interim client in 2021. And that's given us some tailwind as well as we think about total workforce solution. And then also at the end of the day are we are new into the journey from a PLS standpoint, in the sense of building MSP our goal is to drive a percentage of where it is today and double it within the next two to three years. And I think that by doing that it will offer both to the client and provider a better experience and more solutions.
Andre Childress, Analyst
Great, thank you. And just one more for me, so you had really strong cash flow in the quarter, you've got accounts receivables of nearly $1.3 billion, which you're going to harvest over the next 12 to 24 months, you clearly bought back over $20 million of shares in a quarter and you emphasize what your capital allocation strategy is? But could you provide a little bit more detail about what your thought process went into the buybacks and how you would think about that going forward, obviously, understanding that the emphasis is on, you know, investing internally in organic growth as well as potentially M&A, but just some thoughts there would be great? Thank you.
Jeff Knudson, CFO
Yes, Andre, thanks. So first and foremost, we want to make sure that we're investing in the business from a CapEx standpoint. So we're continually focusing on our digital offering, looking to drive efficiencies and productivity there, we think, you know, at the $70 million to $75 million annual range that that's the right level of CapEx for the business today. And so, after we do that, we are going to look to grow the business inorganically through M&A and absent any compelling opportunities there. We will opportunistically repurchase shares, obviously $200 million of cash flow in the quarter is an extraordinary cash flow quarter for us, but we're also set up given our receivable profiles you mentioned to have an incredibly strong free cash flow year in 2022. And so we'll be active on the M&A front, but we'll also continue to look at share repurchases in the absence of any M&A transactions.
Operator, Operator
We have no further questions at this time. So, I'd like to hand it back to Susan Salka for some closing remarks.
Susan Salka, CEO
Wonderful. Thank you, Brika, and thank you everyone for joining us for a great discussion. And we look forward to updating you on our progress on our next earnings call.
Operator, Operator
Thank you for joining. This does conclude today's call. You may now disconnect your lines and enjoy the rest of your day.