| [OTC Journal] Hello and welcome
to the second in a series of four interviews the OTC Journal is presenting
every Wednesday through the month of August. Today we are fortunate
to be joined by Bill Cronin, the Chairman and CEO of MedGrup Corporation,
which trades under the symbol on the OTC bulletin board of CODX.
As we mentioned in the first interview we’ve come through a very brutal
eighteen-month period in the market, with many small company failures,
and investors need as much information as possible to help evaluate their
current holdings as we get closer to a market rebound. These interviews
are designed to help you evaluate the investment merits of these companies.
At the OTC Journal, we believe the market will begin to improve sometime
in the fourth quarter. Now is the time to be evaluating your current
holdings and plan for the next bull market. This series of interviews
is designed to help you understand the four companies we continue to focus
on. It is a very, very quiet August out there and people who are
looking for value right now will have a very exciting fourth quarter.
As always we remind you the companies the OTC Journal features are very
risky. Please go to our website at www.otcjournal.com, read the mission
statement on our homepage, read the articles titled are “Micro Caps For
You,” and our section entitled “Rules For Successful Micro Cap Investing.”
It’s very important. So before getting into the interview let me
read the Safe Harbor Statement. Certain of the statements contained
in this interview are forward-looking statements. While these statements
reflect the corporation’s current beliefs, they are subject to uncertainties
of risk that can cause actual results to differ materially. These
factors include, but are not limited to the demand for the corporation’s
products and services, economic and competitive conditions, access to borrowed
or equity capital on unfavorable terms, and other risk details in the corporation’s
SEC filings. Now we are going to interview Bill Cronin, the Chairman
and CEO of MedGrup Corporation. Let me first mention that we love
MedGrup for a lot of reasons. The company has been profitable and
has grown consistently for the past four years. They have a totally
unique market niche and it makes them an ideal candidate for a potential
takeover or some other type of merger or acquisition. They are the
largest single company in their space that we know of and their business
model allows them to expand rapidly without tremendous capital expenditures.
They often have more business than they can handle and also coincidentally
the company announced their second quarter financial performance accorded
to the end of June and Bill can go through the numbers with us.
[OTC Journal] Bill before
we get started on the numbers can you please give us a brief description
of what MedGrup is and what you guys do?
[Bill] Certainly, MedGrup
provides medical records work with the health care industry. We provide
assistance to hospitals that insures they will receive all the legitimate
revenue. And we assign the codes on the medical records so they can
input those codes into their billing system and they can send to Medicare,
Medicaid, and all the commercial insurance companies. This is sometimes
not done very well by hospitals throughout the country and actually throughout
the world. We also have a consulting business and a rapidly growing
consulting division, where we do hospital back office work and HIM work
with the medical records department, HIM is Health Information Management
consulting.
[OTC Journal] So in other
words hospitals outsource the coding of their charts to MedGrup, is that
correct?
[Bill] Correct.
[OTC Journal] Can you give
people a little bit about the background as to what happened during the
Clinton administration to make your service so valuable to hospitals?
[Bill] During the Clinton
administration, there were several bills that came into law or were enacted.
One was the balance budget act, in 1996, the other was HIPA, Health Information
Patient Availability Act. Both of those acts forced the hospitals
to actually put a much greater effort into the coding of their charts.
One of the acts, the balanced budget act, in fact, reduced the payments
to hospitals by a substantial amount and other items that were associated
with this act were the implementation of APC’s on the outpatient side,
which is a specific type of mechanism where we reimburse the hospital,
but it was never around before. And HIPA actually mandates how the
hospitals treat and want all the information from the patients, which makes
it increasingly difficult for the hospitals to do all internal work.
Both those together, along with a million other laws, rules, and regulations
that come every quarter has increased our business tremendously.
[OTC Journal] And what about
the illegal activities that were going on in fraudulent practices with
regard to Medicare billing, wasn’t that something that helped enhance your
market?
[Bill] That in fact, has made
the hospitals so scared because some of them were overcoding. What
we call overcoding, they were signing the codes that were in fact not applicable
and some were paid for work they never did. There was a massive fine
levied and the most famous is the Columbia HCA fine, which I believe now
is in excess of a billion dollars. It was $775 million, and then
it went up from there. So now hospitals throughout the company are
actually running scared, they are afraid to assign the correct codes, so
they are undercoding, which means they are getting paid less money than
they should be, which means they are losing money. Hospitals were
making 15% profit not too many years ago, now they are lucky to be making
1% or ½ % profit.
[OTC Journal] And it all relates
to how much they are able to bill the insurance companies for services
and your company offers an out service that signs a code by which they
can be reimbursed by the insurance company, is that correct?
[Bill] That is absolutely
correct. That is exactly how it works.
[OTC Journal] What is the
potential size of the market Bill?
[Bill] The potential size
of the market, I’ll give you this in specific numbers. There were
in excess of one billion patient visits last year in the U.S. Each
of these charts must be shouldered. Now our average revenue per chart
at MedGrup is close to $8 a chart for an average of all our charts.
If you look at those two numbers, that means our potential market size
is $8 billion.
[OTC Journal] Bill, give us
an idea of where you see the company at MedGrup, where do you feel you
can take this company over the next year and then give us a longer range
view of where you feel you will be five years from now.
[Bill] The future is very
bright at this point. Our market has barely been scratched and industry
experts have said that no more than a $100 million has been taken out of
the $8 billion market. Now we are the largest pure coding company
in our niche industry, which is $8 billion large and there has only been
a $100 million taken out of it. We have an unlimited potential to
grow. We’ve been doubling growth every year for the last several
years. We’ve been making our revenue projections, we’ve been
making profit projections, and we expect this to keep going. We’ll
be coming very attractive at both an acquirer and an acquiree in mergers
and acquisitions.
[OTC Journal] So there are
potential candidates out there that could be merger and/or acquisition
type candidates now that you are growing and getting up to critical mass
where you are coming up on the radar screens in your industry group right?
[Bill] Absolutely, we get
several phone calls from multiple companies wanting to do really good deals
with us, in one form or another.
[OTC Journal] Are you starting
to consider any of those ideas?
[Bill] Absolutely, we are
looking at some of them very seriously.
[OTC Journal] So in other
words, even though you’ve doubled in size every year for the past four
years, you could, whether through a merger or acquisition, you could grow
much more dramatically than even that correct?
[Bill] It could go on an exponential,
absolutely.
[OTC Journal] Bill I’m looking
at the numbers you guys released this morning. Through the first
six months of 2001, your revenues were up 57%, which is keeping with your
past track record, but net earnings were down 31% from just over $200,000.
Can you give the members of the OTC Journal some insight as to what the
reason for that is?
[Bill] Absolutely. The
largest single reason for the shortfall in net earnings is that we have
to take a substantial one-time charge of a $147,000 to reflect the cost
of exercising stock options of an employee who separated from the company
during the last quarter. This is a non-cash expense recognized under
GAP. However we do anticipate our rate of growth in both revenue
and profit will improve during the balance of the fiscal year based on
our new planned contract implemented in the first half of the fiscal year.
[OTC Journal] So in other
words the reason for the shortfall was just a one-time non-cash event,
which will not be returned correct?
[Bill] That is correct.
That was actually the bulk of it, we also hired an additional 22 coders
in the second quarter alone. They are not even working anywhere close
to full capacity yet. They were hired and trained in anticipation
of new contracts that we were signing in the second quarter and pending
contracts we expect to close over the next quarter. And just as a
matter of interest, these 22 coders that we hired in the second quarter
represent an additional $3 million plus in business to us as they become
fully productive.
[OTC Journal] Based on conversations
earlier in the year the OTC Journal, when we covered you earlier,
believed you could achieve $8 million in revenue in 2001. Based on
the first half of the year you are not quite on track to achieve that.
Is that revenue target still viable for this year?
[Bill] Yes, the $8 million
revenue target is still viable, however I will be honest, the way business
is going at the moment; we are looking at revenue of just over $7 million.
Having said that, do not be surprised if we reach and exceed the $8 million
mark because our third and fourth quarters are looking very profitable.
And don’t be surprised if we meet and exceed that mark.
[OTC Journal] As I understand
it Bill you currently have 71 coders trained and prepared to handle business
for you, is that correct?
[Bill] That is correct.
[OTC Journal] Each coder represents
about an average of $140,000 in revenue for the company on an annual basis,
is that also correct?
[Bill] That is also correct.
[OTC Journal] In other words,
you are currently staffed up to handle, if you do the math, approximately
just under $10 million in annual revenue.
[Bill] That is actually correct
too.
[OTC Journal] Then in the
year 2000, if I remember correctly, to refresh my memory, weren’t you at
about $4 million for 2000.
[Bill] Correct.
[OTC Journal] So currently
based on your infrastructure you can handle up to $10 million in business,
where will that new business come from? Tell the listeners a little
bit about your contracts and your hopes for future contracts.
[Bill] We have contracts with
hospital organizations from the state of California to hospitals in northern
Indiana, a big group in Texas; we have a large group of hospitals in Texas
where their largest hospital has just outsourced their entire operation
to us with the exception of some of the outpatient literature. Which
is a very big change for the hospital group. That is a very large
group of hospitals. We just took over another large hospital in the
Southwestern part of the United States; they outsourced their entire department
of coding in the middle of the second quarter, which again is very unusual.
This is the trend that is out there now. In the state of California,
it is one of the biggest markets in the United States and we have had rave
reviews from our first two hospitals, from a group of fifteen or sixteen
hospitals that we have a contract for and they are saying that we are the
reason why they have been able to bring their numbers down from an accounts
receivable point of view and an unbilled point of view. Both are
very well for us because we spent a lot of money and a lot of time putting
these large clients together in the last six months.
[OTC Journal] Would it be
fair to say that you currently have enough business in your pipeline to
where you can put these 71 coders that are working for you right now to
work full-time or do you need to go out and find more contracts to keep
them busy full-time?
[Bill] We have work in the
pipeline right now that we fully expect to have our coders working on at
an acceptable capacity by the end of the third quarter.
[OTC Journal] The end of the
third quarter would be the end of September?
[Bill] Correct.
[OTC Journal] You’re on a
calendar year correct?
[Bill] Correct.
[OTC Journal] Okay, here’s
my next question, this comes from one of our readers. Aside from
the OTC Journal and friends and family of the company there really is no
following for your stock. Do you have plans and place to expand your
audiences as the stock market begins to improve in the coming months?
[Bill] Yes, we certainly do,
in fact we’ve discussed many ways of doing this with our investment banking
advisors and over the past six months we feel we will be in a good position
to do this in late third quarter or mid fourth quarter of this year.
[OTC Journal] In other words
you expect to start to tell the story of MedGrup to the financial community
in the fourth quarter of this year?
[Bill] Absolutely.
[OTC Journal] Also another
question from one of our subscribers, do you have any plans to upgrade
your stock exchange. In other words, you’re on the bulletin board
right now, any thoughts of how you can upgrade to the Nasdaq Small Cap
or the American Stock Exchange and in what time frame?
[Bill] We fully expect that
we could meet minimum Nasdaq or AMEX requirements as early as the fourth
quarter and once as this happens we will be applying for listing.
That is as factual as we can say.
[OTC Journal] So your hope
is you will be applying for an upgrade of listing sometime in the fourth
quarter of this year?
[Bill] That is our hope.
[OTC Journal] One last question,
MedGrup is one company that we don’t get a lot of news from, you seem to
have all the contracts in place you need, you’ve built out your infrastructure,
and now you are just implementing your business plan. Our readers
want to know, is there a way we can get additional news flow out of your
company, kind of an up to date, blow by blow of what is happening to you?
[Bill] We’ve been asked this
several times actually. And we could put out more frequent releases
explaining what is going on and what is happening with our contracts.
We have some very exciting news sometimes and we will remember to do that.
[OTC Journal] I think that
is an excellent question from one of our readers who just wanted to be
more frequently updated on what is happening in the company.
[Bill] Absolutely and people
can always give us a phone call. They can get on our website and
access us through the website and ask us questions. We answer every
question that we get.
[OTC Journal] MedGrup.com,
am I right?
[Bill] Correct.
[OTC Journal] Well Bill thanks
so much for joining us today. Congratulations on 57% revenue increase
for the first half of the year. Let’s hope you make the $8 million
by the end of the year and have an excellent profitable second half of
the year. This is a very exciting company ladies and gentlemen, deep
product niche, deep market niche, doubling in size every year, profitable,
EPS is not “Eyeballs Per Share” it’s Earnings Per Share in the case of
this company. Have a great day everybody, we will be back next week
with the President of XML Global Technologies. |