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Universal Health Services misses quarterly profit estimates on lower medical care demand

By Thomson Reuters Feb 25, 2026 | 4:27 PM

Feb 25 (Reuters) – Hospital operator Universal Health Services on Wednesday missed estimates for quarterly results, hurt by lower-than-expected admissions.

Shares ​of the company were down 1.3% ‌in after-market trading.

As subsidies under Affordable Care Act or Obamacare plans expire this year, hospitals are set to face declining patient volumes for elective surgeries, ‌preventive ​visits and diagnostics, alongside rising ⁠medical costs from ⁠treating more uninsured patients.

Larger peer HCA Healthcare had said the company anticipates a decline of about 30% in utilization from those ​individuals no longer having coverage compared to when they had healthcare insurance through ⁠ACA plans.

For the quarter ⁠ended December 31, the King of ​Prussia, Pennsylvania-based hospital operator reported an adjusted profit ​of $5.88 per share, lower than analysts’ ‌estimates of $5.90 per share, as per data compiled by LSEG.

Quarterly same-facility adjusted admissions remained unchanged at its acute care hospitals during the ⁠quarter, while admissions at behavioral healthcare facilities grew by 1.8%.

Net revenues increased by 9.1% to $4.49 billion ⁠during the ‌fourth quarter, compared with analysts’ ⁠estimates of $4.50 billion.

The company also forecast ​2026 ‌net revenue to be in ​the range ⁠of $18.42 billion to $18.79 billion, above estimates of $18.25 billion.

It forecast 2026 adjusted profit to be between $22.64 and $24.52 per share, compared with estimates of $23.49.

(Reporting by Sneha S K in Bengaluru; Editing by ​Maju Samuel)