Matt McKee
Chief Communications Officer
Yes. Obviously, something that we continue to monitor, A.J. Looking at the fourth quarter CPU for all items was 90 basis points compared to 60 basis points in the third quarter. Food at home inflation continued to increase sequentially, showing 90 bps of inflation, which compared to 50 bps we saw in Q3, and actually 10 basis point deflation that we saw in the second quarter. So, this is now the highest level that we've seen since the fourth quarter of 2022. So, notably, the month of November was 50 basis points in and of itself, which is the highest monthly inflation we've seen since October of 2022. So certainly, to your point, something that we'll continue to be mindful of and monitor. On the wage side, we did see specifically in the nursing and residential care facilities across the U.S., 70 basis points of inflation continuing the sequential declines that we saw throughout 2024. So declining from 1.2% in Q1 to 0.9% in Q2 and 0.8% in Q3 and then as I mentioned 0.7% in the fourth quarter. So, we've seen substantial increases since the kind of introduction of the massive wage inflation that came on the heels of COVID. But since then, it's definitely moderated in 2023 and 2024. So, favorable trends there. And as that relates to the labor market in general, labor market remains relatively steady. The most recent data show job postings are stable and November and December both saw reasonably strong job growth. And wage growth, like I said, has stabilized. So, unemployment rate remains only moderately elevated from historic lows. And to the nursing care industry, which is how the data are reported, still close to 100,000 about 95,000 jobs short relative to pre-pandemic levels, but improved from an overall loss of nearly quarter of a million at its peak. So, in 2024, the industry jobs recovery averaged about 3400 per month compared to 2023, where we saw about 5600 jobs recovered per month. So, a little bit of a slowdown. But what does that mean for Healthcare Services Group? Ultimately, we're in a good spot, A.J., as we head into 2025 here. Wage growth for us specifically has remained stable. Our at job applications are high nearly across the board relative to both line staff employment opportunities and those management opportunities that Ted just discussed in his, recent comments. So, there are some markets with ongoing challenges, but we're able to allocate resources to focus and address those situations as they arise. And the final bow that I would put on this whole conversation is the fact that having gone through the bottoms up laborious exercise of the contract modification initiative, we now have rights to pass through not only food related inflation, chemical and supply related inflation, but also the wage inflation that we're experiencing something closer to real time. So, with respect to the durability of our contract structure, as it relates to managing the business, of course, we'll be mindful of inflationary factors on both food, supply, purchases and wages specific to any given market. But we do have that confidence in the durability of the contract model to be able to recapture any and all such increases.