Breaking: Teladoc’s Q2 sinks on $790M BetterHelp impairment; Wojcicki files to take 23andMe private

Teladoc posts Q2 loss of $838 million, takes $790 million impairment on BetterHelp’s sinking performance. New CEO Chuck Divita had nothing but bad news to deliver to Mr. Market (right below). It was so bad that they withdrew their FY2024 outlook for both consolidated operations and BetterHelp stated in April and all three-year outlooks. TTA Q1 Teladoc results and outlook  

  • Q2 revenue declined 2% versus prior year to $642.4 million. Integrated Care (main business) segment revenue increased 5% to $377.4 million while BetterHelp declined 9% to $265 million. Readers will recall that previous CEO Jason Gorevic assured investors that BetterHelp would carry Teladoc to profitability. Au contraire, along with his job.
  • The bright spot was that adjusted EBITDA increased to $89.5 million, up 24% versus prior year, but adjustments reflect all sorts of financial legerdemain, including impairments.
  • First half results were essentially flat versus prior year, with revenue up 1% to $1,288 million with Integrated Care up 7% to $754.5 million–but BetterHelp again sinking results with a decrease of 7% to $534.0 million.

BetterHelp’s rolling failure is almost inexplicable, with telemental health being the ‘IT’ clinical category in digital health funding. Spring Health just scored a $100 million Series E [TTA 31 July]. Younger companies such as Talkiatry and Brightside Health seem to have no problem raising funds or gaining partners/customers. One would think that with established customers in the enterprise space, Teladoc would have no problem adding on telemental services. This Editor has previously analyzed the problems that have led to the decline of both Teladoc and Amwell, but Teladoc stands apart in one factor. It is still recovering in its huge failure in buying and failing to integrate Livongo. But in the telemental health space, the profitable companies are largely in the enterprise and payer space. Even DTC, they have slicker solutions and extensive networks. It’s a cost-sensitive market, both to benefit admins and to prospective members. 

Here’s the pivot. On the earnings call, CEO Divita and CFO (former acting CEO) Mala Murthy announced a pivot for BetterHelp to international, non-English-speaking markets, where customer acquisition costs are lower. (This Editor would add that competition is also less.) They also blamed advertising cost inflation and jacked-up acquisition costs during a US election year–something that is completely predictable and should be baked in the 2024 marketing expenses. Unbelievably, if advertising costs remain high, Murthy stated that they expect a low double-digit revenue decline, whatever that means.

The shocker here is that it finally dawned on them that the big problem with BetterHelp is that it does not accept insurance and has a high DTC cost. Their leavers in research cite both as reasons why. Hellooooo? What took so long?  So their fix is to negotiate insurance coverage–but that won’t take effect till 2025. 

From FierceHealthcare in an on-point close of their article: “Divita was adamant that Teladoc runs BetterHelp well and that it’s an important part of the company.”  Morningstar (Teladoc release)  How much more can Mr. Market stomach? This story is developing.

As we predicted, CEO/founder Anne Wojcicki has made an offer to take 23andMe private. She has filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) amendments to their Schedule 13D form that confirm that on 29 July, she sent a non-binding proposal to the Special Committee that has been looking at alternatives since late March [TTA 20 April]. The Exploding Plastic Inevitable offer of $0.40 per share is to shareholders of Class A and B common stock. It became public yesterday (31 July). The current price is around $0.40, so there is no premium. 23andMe is also on a six-month delisting deadline with Nasdaq from November, which they have since passed but may have been extended due to the Special Committee formation.

Wojcicki holds supervoting privileges that have always given her effective control of the company. According to analyst TD Cowen, she currently holds 22.5% of the company’s outstanding Class A common stock and 59.2% of outstanding Class B common stock. In going private, she would be right in line to be paid out by outside funders (Other People’s Money). Other alternatives to her buyout, such as Chapter 11 or 7 bankruptcies, are even more bleak and would leave shareholders with effectively 0.

As TTA noted in our April coverage, the company is yet another cracked SPAC (2021) hitting a $4.8 billion valuation, acquiring companies, and falling precipitously. It never found a recurring revenue model, being largely ‘one and done’ on ancestry and genetic reports. Recently, it lost a lucrative contract with GSK for research data. It stumbled badly after a major data breach in Fall 2023 that exposed 6.9 million records. Then, they blamed members for their poor cyberhygiene and lack of security. This once bright light has burnt out; is it even relevant anymore other than giving the CEO a job? Yahoo Finance, CNBC, MedCityNews  Developing. Our recent 23andMe coverage: 29 May (FY24 earnings and the committee’s poor choices), 2 Feb (data breach timeline, financials)

Short takes/wrapup: fundings for Talkiatry, Heyday Health, CipherHealth; Brightside Health now 50 states for Medicare Part B; Neurabody’s sensor based posture therapy; below the radar global layoffs at Medtronic

The funding spigot seems to be on, even up to a Series C.

Talkiatry closed a $130 million Series C for a total funding of $245 million. The round was led by Andreessen Horowitz (a16z) with participation from Perceptive Advisors. Debt financing was provided by Banc of California. Talkiatry’s offering in virtual behavioral or telemental health is psychiatrically-based with a national network of 300 psychiatrists performing to date over 1 million patient visits. Their differentiation is stronger outcomes and reduced utilization of higher levels of care. Their footprint is in health plans: Aetna, Blue Cross Blue Shield, United Healthcare, Cigna, and Humana, covering more than 70% of commercial lives in the US–but plans to expand to provider networks. Release, FierceHealthcare

Heyday Health‘s raise of $12.5 million was from Gradient Ventures (Google’s early stage fund), Lionbird, a large national payor, Great Oaks Capital, and Kate Ryder, CEO of Maven Clinic. Heyday’s technology provides 24/7 in-person’s home, telehealth, and phone visits for Medicare and Medicare Advantage beneficiaries in Ohio and Kentucky. Each person is connected to a personalized care team comprised of a physician, a nurse practitioner, and a Health Ally that works with them to design and manage care plans. The funding will be used for geographic expansion into the Cincinnati/Dayton area in Southwest Ohio and the Louisville area in Kentucky. Release, FierceHealthcare

CipherHealth received an undisclosed capital investment from Atalaya Capital Management for growth and expansion. Cipher provides communication solutions for patient engagement such as secure texting, appointment setting, rounding, and patient feedback. Release 

Brightside Health, another telemental health provider that had its own $33 million Series C in April, announced that it has expanded its reach to Medicare Part B recipients in all 50 states and the District of Columbia, making it the first and only telepsychiatry provider to do so. With this, they now have a total reach of 130 million covered lives. Older adults are an underserved market for mental health support, with 15% utilizing ERs for care, one in four recipients living with a mental illness, and those 65+ having the highest rate of suicidal ideation. Release

We don’t often hear of digital health coming out of Luxembourg, but startup Neurabody located there is combining sensor-based data with AI to address the causes of and therapy for lower back pain. The current Posture AI device is a smart posture estimation sensor and an optional posture correction ergonomic shirt that provides personalized feedback and advice on improving posture and reducing pain via a smartphone or tablet app. If the user begins to slouch, the sensor detects it and buzzes to remind the user to sit up straight. Future products in the next two years are a smart posture seat and smart lumbar support devices. Co-founder William Choi is a serial entrepreneur, an investor and founding member of BackJoy Orthotics, an Inc 500 Fastest Growing Company. Right now the app is available on Google Play and the Apple App Store. The shirts are listed at $149 but the sensor and chest strap are not listed for sale and the shirt purchase pages are not functional. The pages need some work (e.g. typos, ‘coming soon’ pages). Release

But layoffs are still with use, even for the powerful ‘giants’.

Med device giant Medtronic has been quietly proceeding with a global layoff. The only publications that have been on this are Mass Device, which initially was unable to receive confirmation but pursued, and the local Minneapolis Star-Tribune. The layoffs started in April and May, with posts from former employees on LinkedIn and on TheLayoff, which are coded in Medtronic-speak. The company confirmed earlier this month to the Strib that it was laying off staff but would not give details, from the number of employees affected to impacted business divisions or geographic locations.

At the end of 2023, Medtronic offered employees an early retirement program, usually a first sign of major layoffs. Then, at the start of 2024, Medtronic announced the closure of five manufacturing plants and six distribution centers as part of an effort to improve the company’s supply chain, but again refused to disclose where or when. Medtronic relocated to Dublin years ago but maintains an operational HQ near Minneapolis. 11,000 employees of 90,000 total work there, making Medtronic the world’s largest medical device company and still a major employer in Minnesota. None of the layoffs are showing up on state WARN sites either because they are below the thresholds or Medtronic is simply not filing, though states do not except foreign companies.

Did they really think that they could keep this on the QT and Strictly Hush-Hush in the age of social media and layoff trackers (apologies to James Ellroy)?

News, deals, rumors roundup: Cerner’s DOD and VA go-lives, Akili’s ADHD therapy SPACs, Talkiatry’s $37M raise, Alto sings a $200M supper–and the Cigna-Centene rumors don’t stop

While Cerner’s acquisition by Oracle is winding its way through regulatory approvals, their EHR implementations are moving forward through both the Military Health System (Department of Defense) and the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA).

  • Within the MHS, Brooke Army Medical Center and Wilford Hall Ambulatory Surgical Center, both in the San Antonio (Texas) Market, went live with MHS GENESIS on 22 January. The change most visible to patients is the transition from TRICARE Online to the MHS GENESIS Patient Portal which enables 24/7 access for visit notes, secure messaging, test results, appointment scheduling, and online prescription renewal. MHS covers military retirees, active military, and family beneficiaries. According to the MHS’s website, the goal this year is to get to halfway–to implement MHS GENESIS in more than half of all military hospitals and clinics. It’s been taking place since 2017 and, in true military fashion, it’s planned in waves. Coming up are Naval Medical Center Camp Lejeune in South Carolina on 19 March and William Beaumont Army Medical Center in El Paso in summer.
  • VA is moving far more slowly, just getting to its second hospital. The Columbus VA go-live has been pushed back from 5 March to 30 April, citing training slowdowns due to a spike in staff COVID cases. Walla Walla, Washington is set for after Columbus, but the date is to be confirmed. The first, failed implementation at Spokane’s Mann-Grandstaff VA Medical Center in late 2020 was the subject of Federal hearings and a complete redo in VA’s plans and procedures in cutting over from VistA to Cerner Millenium. TTA 28 July and previous. Federal News Network

Akili Interactive, which has developed tech-driven, game-based cognitive therapies for ADHD and other psychiatric and neurological conditions, has gone public through a SPAC via a merger with Social Capital Suvretta Holdings Corp. I, The transaction is expected to close in mid-2022. Akili will be listed on the Nasdaq stock market under the new ticker symbol AKLI.

The SPAC is expected to provide up to $412 million in gross cash proceeds and value the company at over $1 billion. Investors in the $162 million PIPE are Suvretta Capital Management’s Averill strategy, Apeiron Investment Group, Temasek, co-founder PureTech Health, Polaris Partners, Evidity Health Capital, JAZZ Venture Partners, and Omidyar Technology Ventures. The funds raised will support the commercial debut of EndeavorRx, a FDA-cleared and CE-marked prescription digital therapeutic for pediatric ADHD. The technology is termed the Selective Stimulus Management Engine (SSME) and will be rolled out for ADHD, ASD, MS, and MDD treatment.

TTA noted Akili last year in a trial of AKL-T01 at several hospitals for treatment of long-COVID-related cognition problems. Unfortunately, the writing in their SPAC release made this Editor feel like she needed a few treatments.

Mentalhealthtech (psychtech?) continues to attract funding. Psychiatric care startup Talkiatry topped off its July $20 million raise with an additional $17 million from Left Lane Capital for a $37 million Series A financing round. CityMD founder Dr. Richard Park, Sikwoo Capital Partners, and Relevance Ventures also participated. Talkiatry uses an online assessment for a preliminary diagnosis and then matches you with a participating psychiatrist.  It is in-network with payers such as Cigna, Aetna, UnitedHealthcare (Oxford Health Plan), Oscar, and Humana. Funding will be used to expand beyond NYC. Mobihealthnews

Digital pharmacy is also hot. Alto, which promises same-day filling and courier delivery, raised a $200 million Series E led by Softbank Vision Fund. Their total to date is over $550 million. Alto serves selected areas mainly in California, Nevada, Texas, and NYC (Manhattan, Queens, Brooklyn). Competitors Capsule had another raise of $300 million in April for a total of $570 million and Medly raised a $100 million Series B in 2020. Mobihealthnews

In the wake turbulence of Centene’s dramatic management shakeup last month [TTA 18 Dec], rumors continue to surface that insurer Cigna is interested in acquiring all, or possibly part, of Centene. Bloomberg News in publishing its article earlier this week cited ‘people familiar with the matter’ said that talks took place last year, but that they are not ongoing. Seeking Alpha picked this up, adding market activity boosting Centene. Perhaps the disclosure and the ‘denials’ align with what this Editor has heard–that it’s very much ongoing but under wraps.

A Centene buy makes sense, but only with Cigna. While Cigna is almost double the market value of Centene, it does not have the sprawling business model the latter has, nor do their businesses overlap much. However, some divestiture would be needed to do a deal, given the constrained regulatory environment in the US on the Federal and state levels. Any insurer merger is seen as anti-competitive, unless it is an acquisition of a smaller, struggling plan. 

It certainly would vault Cigna into the top rank of insurers with non-Centene branded exchange, Medicare Advantage and Medicaid plans, a provider network, an established MSO, and other lines of business including Magellan behavioral health management. Cigna might also value Centene’s international holdings, such as private hospitals Circle Health in the UK and Ribera in Spain. A sale would also create a quick and profitable ROI for Politan Capital Management, the activist investor company that initiated the retirement of 25 year CEO Michael Neidorff last month, rather than managing and reorganizing the sprawl of Centene’s businesses to make it more profitable.