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Heidrick & Struggles InternationalR1 RCM INC. FORM 10-K (Annual Report) Filed 02/18/21 for the Period Ending 12/31/20 Address Telephone CIK 401 NORTH MICHIGAN AVENUE SUITE 2700 CHICAGO, IL, 60611 312-324-7820 0001472595 Symbol RCM SIC Code 8741 - Services-Management Services Industry Healthcare Facilities & Services Sector Healthcare Fiscal Year 12/31 http://i-metrix.edgar-online.com © Copyright 2021, EDGAR Online, a division of Donnelley Financial Solutions. All Rights Reserved. Distribution and use of this document restricted under EDGAR Online, a division of Donnelley Financial Solutions, Terms of Use. UNITED STATESSECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSIONWashington, D.C. 20549 Form 10-K ☒ANNUAL REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIESEXCHANGE ACT OF 1934For the fiscal year ended December 31, 2020OR ☐TRANSITION REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIESEXCHANGE ACT OF 1934For the transition period from to Commission file number 001-34746 R1 RCM Inc.(Exact name of registrant as specified in its charter)Delaware02-0698101(State or other jurisdiction of incorporation or organization)(I.R.S. Employer Identification No.)401 North Michigan Avenue60611ChicagoIllinois(Address of principal executive offices)(Zip Code)(312) 324-7820Registrant’s telephone number, including area codeSecurities registered pursuant to Section 12(b) of the Act:Title of each classTrading Symbol(s)Name of each exchange on which registeredCommon stock, par value $0.01 per shareRCMNASDAQSecurities registered pursuant to Section 12(g) of the Act:Indicate by check mark if the registrant is a well-known seasoned issuer, as defined in Rule 405 of the Securities Act. Yes ☒ No ☐Indicate by check mark if the registrant is not required to file reports pursuant to Section 13 or Section 15(d) of the Act. Yes ☐ No ☒Indicate by check mark whether the registrant (1) has filed all reports required to be filed by Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 during the preceding 12 months (or forsuch shorter period that the registrant was required to file such reports), and (2) has been subject to such filing requirements for the past 90 days. Yes ☒ No ☐ Indicate by check mark whether the registrant has submitted electronically every Interactive Data File required to be submitted pursuant to Rule 405 of Regulation S-T (§232.405 of thischapter) during the preceding 12 months (or for such shorter period that the registrant was required to submit such files). Yes ☒ No ☐ Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a large accelerated filer, an accelerated filer, a non-accelerated filer, a smaller reporting company, or an emerging growth company. See thedefinitions of “large accelerated filer,” “accelerated filer,” “smaller reporting company,” and “emerging growth company” in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act. (Check one):Largeacceleratedfiler☒Accelerated filer☐Non-acceleratedfiler☐Smaller reporting company☐Emerginggrowth company☐If an emerging growth company, indicate by check mark if the registrant has elected not to use the extended transition period for complying with any new or revised financial accountingstandards provided pursuant to Section 13(a) of the Exchange Act. ☐Indicate by check mark whether the registrant has filed a report on and attestation to its management’s assessment of the effectiveness of its internal control over financial reporting underSection 404(b) of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act (15 U.S.C. 7262(b)) by the registered public accounting firm that prepared or issued its audit report. ☒Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a shell company (as defined in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act). Yes ☐ No ☒Aggregate market value of the voting and non-voting common equity held by non-affiliates of the registrant, based on the last sale price for such stock on June 30, 2020: $1,286,428,886As of February 11, 2021, the registrant had 261,066,217 shares of common stock, par value $0.01 per share, outstanding.Portions of the registrant’s definitive proxy statement for its 2021 Annual Meeting of Stockholders are incorporated by reference into Part III of this Annual Report on Form 10-K.R1 RCM INC.TABLE OF CONTENTS PagePART IItem 1.Business5Item 1A.Risk Factors25Item 1B.Unresolved Staff Comments39Item 2.Properties39Item 3.Legal Proceedings39Item 4.Mine Safety Disclosures39PART IIItem 5.Market for Registrant's Common Equity, Related Stockholder Matters and Issuer Purchases of Equity Securities40Item 6.Selected Consolidated Financial Data41Item 7.Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations42Item 7A.Qualitative and Quantitative Disclosures About Market Risk56Item 8.Consolidated Financial Statements and Supplementary Data56Item 9.Changes in and Disagreements with Accountants on Accounting and Financial Disclosure57Item 9A.Controls and Procedures57Item 9B.Other Information60PART IIIItem 10.Directors, Executive Officers, and Corporate Governance61Item 11.Executive Compensation61Item 12.Security Ownership of Certain Beneficial Owners and Management and Related Stockholder Matters61Item 13.Certain Relationships and Related Transactions, and Director Independence62Item 14.Principal Accountant Fees and Services62PART IVItem 15.Exhibits and Financial Statement Schedules63Item 16.Form 10-K Summary63SIGNATURES64FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTSThis Annual Report on Form 10-K contains forward-looking statements, within the meaning of the federal securities laws, that involve substantial risks and uncertainties. Youshould not place undue reliance on these statements. All statements, other than statements of historical facts, included in this Annual Report on Form 10-K are forward-lookingstatements. The words “anticipate”, “believe”, “designed”, “estimate”, “expect”, “forecast”, “intend”, “may”, “plan”, “predict”, “project”, “target”, “will” or “would” and similarexpressions are intended to identify forward-looking statements, although not all forward-looking statements contain these identifying words. These forward-looking statementsinclude, among other things, statements about our strategy, our future operations, our future financial position, our projected costs, our prospects, our plans, objectives ofmanagement, our ability to successfully deliver on our commitments to our customers, our ability to deploy new business as planned, our ability to successfully implement newtechnologies, our ability to integrate acquisitions as planned and to realize the expected benefits from acquisitions, the expected outcome or impact of pending or threatenedlitigation and expected market growth. All forward-looking statements are subject to risks and uncertainties that may cause actual results to differ materially from those that weexpected, including:•our ability to retain existing customers or acquire new customers;•our ability to manage our operations effectively;•the development of markets for our RCM service offering;•our ability to maintain profitability;•variability in the lead time of prospective customers;•competition within the market;•breaches or failures of our information security measures or unauthorized access to a customer’s data;•delayed or unsuccessful implementation of our technologies or services, or unexpected implementation costs;•disruptions in or damages to our global business services centers and third-party operated data centers;•the impact of the novel coronavirus (“COVID-19”) pandemic on our business, operating results, and financial condition;•risks related to our indebtedness;•the loss of key personnel;•our ability to integrate our customers’ revenue cycle management employees;•fluctuations in our results of operations or cash flows;•our potential liability resulting from future errors;•negative perceptions of the collection of medical co-pays and other payments from patients;•negative perceptions of offshore outsourcing and proposed legislation related thereto;•the impact of litigation;•our legal responsibility for obligations related to our customers’ employees;•our dependence on the A&R MPSA with Ascension;•our ability to realize the anticipated benefits of acquisitions, strategic initiatives, and other investments;•our ability to comply with healthcare laws and regulations;•developments in the healthcare industry, including national healthcare reform;•our ability to comply with information privacy laws;•our ability to comply with debt collection and other consumer protection laws and regulations;•our ability to protect our intellectual property; and•other factors set forth in Part I, Item 1A “Risk Factors” and elsewhere in this Annual Report on Form 10-K.We may not actually achieve the plans, intentions or expectations disclosed in our forward-looking statements, and you should not place undue reliance on our forward-lookingstatements. Actual results or events could differ materially from the plans, intentions and expectations disclosed in the forward-looking statements we make. We have includedimportant information in the cautionary statements included in this Annual Report on Form 10-K, particularly in Part I, Item 1A “Risk Factors,” that could cause actual results orevents to differ materially from the forward-looking statements that we make. Our forward-looking statements do not reflect the potential impact of any future acquisitions, mergers,dispositions, joint ventures or investments we may make.You should read this Annual Report on Form 10-K and the documents that we have filed as exhibits to the Annual Report on Form 10-K completely and with theunderstanding that our actual future results may be materially different from what we expect. We do not assume any obligation to update any forward-looking statements, whether asa result of new information, future events or otherwise, except as required by law.PART IUnless the context indicates otherwise, references in this Annual Report to “R1 RCM,” “R1,” the “Company” or “company,” “we,” “our” and “us” mean R1 RCM Inc. andits subsidiaries.Item 1.BusinessOverviewR1 RCM is a leading provider of technology-driven solutions that transform the patient experience and financial performance of healthcare providers. Our services helphealthcare providers generate sustainable improvements in their operating margins and cash flows while also enhancing patient, physician, and staff satisfaction for our customers.We achieve these results for our customers by managing healthcare providers’ revenue cycle operations, which encompass processes including patient registration, insuranceand benefit verification, medical treatment documentation and coding, bill preparation, and collections from patients and payers. We do so by deploying a unique operating modelthat leverages our extensive healthcare site experience, innovative technology, and process excellence. We assist our RCM customers in managing their revenue cycle operatingcosts while simultaneously increasing the portion of the maximum potential services revenue they receive. Together, these benefits can generate significant and sustainableimprovements in operating margins and cash flows for our customers.Our primary service offering consists of end-to-end RCM services for health systems, hospitals, and physician groups, which we deploy through an operating partnerrelationship or a co-managed relationship. Under an operating partner relationship, we provide comprehensive revenue cycle infrastructure to providers, including all revenue cyclepersonnel, technology solutions, and process workflow. Under a co-managed relationship, we leverage our customers’ existing RCM staff and processes, and supplement them withour infused management, subject matter specialists, proprietary technology solutions, and other resources. Under the operating partner model, we record higher revenue andexpenses due to the fact that almost all of the revenue cycle personnel are our employees and more third-party vendor contracts are controlled by us. Under the co-managed model,the majority of the revenue cycle personnel and more third-party vendor contracts remain with the customer and those costs are netted against our co-managed revenue. For the yearsended December 31, 2020, 2019, and 2018, substantially all of our net operating and incentive fees from end-to-end RCM services were generated under the operating partnermodel. We also offer modular services, allowing customers to engage us for only specific components of our end-to-end RCM service offering, such as physician advisory services(“PAS”), practice management (“PM”), revenue integrity solutions (“RIS”), patient experience (“PX”), coding management, and business office services. Our PAS offering assistshealthcare organizations in complying with payer requirements regarding whether to classify a hospital visit as an in-patient or an out-patient observation case for billing purposes.Our PM services offer administrative and operational support to allow healthcare providers to focus on delivering high quality patient care and outsource non-core functions to us.Our RIS offering includes charge capture, charge description master (“CDM”) maintenance, and pricing services that help providers ensure they are capturing the maximum netcompliant revenue for services delivered. Our PX offering helps patients manage their data in one easy-to-use environment, enabling eligibility validation and insurance planattribution, demographic accuracy, meeting authorization and referral requirements, medical necessity validation, and patient out-of-pocket cost estimation. Our coding managementoffering drives performance, quality, and consistent results via business intelligence and analysis, human capital management, an accountability framework, and a qualitymanagement program. Our business office services can help providers with the entire billing function or to specifically recoup revenue that may otherwise be lost by focusing skilledresources in lower priority areas with significant revenue potential.Once implemented, our technology solutions, processes, and services are deeply embedded in our customers’ day-to-day revenue cycle operations. We believe our serviceofferings are adaptable to meet an evolving healthcare regulatory environment, technology standards, and market trends.5Revenue Cycle Software and Services MarketRevenue cycle is an important function for healthcare providers as they seek to collect payment due to them from health insurance companies and patients. Healthcareproviders operate their revenue cycle with a combination of labor, software, and services vendors. Third-party vendors offer various solutions including consulting services,software, and other services, including point solutions that cover one or multiple components of the revenue cycle and full outsourcing services, among others. The Centers forMedicare and Medicaid Services (“CMS”) projects hospital care expenditures in the U.S. to amount to $1.39 trillion in 2021. We estimate the cost of hospital revenue cycleoperations to be approximately 5% of revenue, resulting in a market size of $70 billion. Additionally, CMS projects physician care expenditures to amount to $838 billion in 2021.We estimate cost of physician revenue cycle operations to be approximately 5.5% of revenue, resulting in a market size of $46 billion. According to Research and Markets, revenuecycle spend is projected to grow at a compounded annual growth rate of 12% through 2027.Health systems are currently facing challenges in their revenue cycle operations based on several factors including: (1) more complex and clinical-outcomes basedreimbursement, (2) industry consolidation amongst hospitals and across the continuum of care, (3) increasing patient responsibility of their medical bills, and (4) capital constraintsto invest in the revenue cycle given financial difficulties and requirements to invest in improving clinical care. We believe these are positive trends for external vendors in therevenue cycle industry which we expect will drive further growth for the industry and our Company.SegmentAll of our significant operations are organized around the single business of providing revenue cycle operations for healthcare providers.We view our operations and manage our business as one operating and reporting segment. All of our net services revenue and trade accounts receivable are derived fromhealthcare providers, primarily domiciled in the United States. The information about our business should be read together with our consolidated financial statements and relatednotes included elsewhere in this Annual Report on Form 10-K. See Note 23, Segments and Customer Concentrations, to our consolidated financial statements for informationregarding our segment and customer concentrations.Our ServicesDrawing on the combination of our extensive healthcare-site expertise, innovative technology, and process excellence, we seek to deliver measurable economic value to ourcustomers across our RCM solutions.End-To-End Revenue Cycle Management OfferingOur primary RCM service offering consists of comprehensive end-to-end RCM services, which address the full spectrum of revenue cycle challenges faced by healthcareproviders. Our approach to deliver value for our customers is built on a holistic operating model designed to fit into a healthcare provider’s revenue cycle operations.This operating model consists of four components:Technology - Comprehensive revenue cycle workflow & analytics solutions - Our technology integrates across multiple host and payer systems and hard-wire our standardmethods, operating metrics, and daily routines into an end-to-end technology platform.Workflow - End-to-end workflow differentiated on outcomes - We deploy a fully cataloged, standardized methodology for revenue cycle execution from order intake andscheduling to claim reimbursement. The approach is based on standard structures and rigorous methods, tested and proven in multiple organizations and environments.6Operations - Scaled global delivery model & leading human capital - We bring experienced talent across global business services, centralized analytics, and deploymentteams who all deliver one operating platform. Our teams understand the missions and unique needs of non-profit organizations and are trained, certified, and continuouslydeveloped to deliver on customer revenue cycle needs.Analytics - Performance monitoring & management system - We use hundreds of operating metrics to drive comprehensive daily accountability and to enable front-lineoperators to deliver on differentiated business outcomes every single day.Our RCM service offering is designed to adapt to a provider's organizational structure. We seek to integrate our technology, personnel, our accumulated body of knowledge,and our culture within each customer’s revenue cycle activities, with the expectation that we will enjoy a long-term collaborative relationship with each customer. We delivertechnology and operational support in the form of both on-site management and centralized staffing to deliver improved efficiency and quality across all RCM functions.Our end-to-end RCM agreements generally provide us with the opportunity to earn net operating fees and incentive fees. Net operating fees include gross base fees we chargeour customers for operating the revenue cycle processes included in our agreements less corresponding costs of customers’ revenue cycle operations which we undertake to paypursuant to our RCM agreements, and agreements on a fixed fee, per-use, and/or volumetric basis. We help our customers reduce their revenue cycle costs by implementing newoperational practices, optimizing their technology suite, and deploying more efficient processes. We work with our customers to transfer aspects of their revenue cycle operations toour global business services operations, which typically results in lower operating costs than operating those aspects of the revenue cycle at the customers’ sites.Incentive fees are performance-based fees related to agreed-upon improvements in financial or operating metrics at our customers. When using these metrics to calculate thisimprovement, we typically utilize metrics that are already being tracked by, or easily calculated from, our or our customers’ respective information systems and compare the resultsof those metrics against the results for the same metrics for a defined prior period.We seek to improve our customers’ processes using a variety of techniques including:•Gathering Complete Patient and Payer Information. We focus on gathering complete patient information and validating insurance eligibility and benefits so patient careservices can be recorded and billed to the appropriate parties. For scheduled healthcare services, we educate patients as to their potential financial responsibilities beforereceiving care. Through our systems, we maintain an automated electronic scorecard which measures the efficiency of up-front data capture, authorization, billing, andcollections throughout the life cycle of any given patient account. These scorecards are analyzed in the aggregate, and the results are used to help improve workflowprocesses and operational decisions for our customers.•Improving Claims Filing and Collections. Through our proprietary technology and process expertise, we identify, for each patient encounter, the estimated amount duefrom the patient and the amount our customer should receive from a payer if terms of the applicable contract with the payer and patient policies are followed. Over time, wecompare these amounts with the actual payments collected to help identify which payers, types of medical treatments and patients represent various levels of payment riskfor a customer. Using proprietary algorithms and analytics, we consider actual reimbursement patterns to predict the payment risk associated with a customer’s claims to itspayers, and we then direct increased attention and time to the riskiest accounts.7•Identifying Alternative Payment Sources. We use various methods to find payment sources for uninsured patients and reimbursement for services not covered by payers.Our patient financial screening technology and methodologies often identify federal, state, or private grant sources to help pay for healthcare services. These techniques aredesigned to ease the financial burden on uninsured or underinsured patients, increase the percentage of patient bills that are actually paid, and improve the total amount ofreimbursement received by our customers.•Employing Proprietary Technology and Algorithms. We employ a variety of proprietary data analytics and algorithms. For example, we identify patient accounts withfinancial risk by applying proprietary analysis techniques to the data we have collected. Our systems are designed to streamline work processes through the use ofproprietary algorithms that focus revenue cycle staff effort on those accounts deemed to have the greatest potential for improving net revenue yield or charge capture. Weadjust our proprietary predictive algorithms to reflect changes in payer and patient behavior based upon the knowledge we obtain from our entire customer base. As newcustomers are added and payer and patient behavior changes, the information we use to create our algorithms expands, increasing the accuracy, reliability, and value ofsuch algorithms.•Using Analytical Capabilities and Operational Excellence. We draw on the experience that we have gained from working with some of the best healthcare providersystems in the United States to train our customers’ staff about new and innovative RCM practices. We use sophisticated analytical procedures to identify specificopportunities to improve business processes.•Increasing Charge Capture. We are able to help our customers increase their charge capture by implementing optimization techniques and related processes. We usesophisticated analytics software to help improve the accuracy of claims filings and the resolution of disputed claims from payers. We also overlay a range of capabilitiesdesigned to reduce missed charges, improve the clinical/reimbursement interface, and produce bills that comply with payer requirements and applicable healthcareregulations.•Leveraging our Global Business Services Operations. We help our customers increase their revenue cycle efficiency by implementing improved practices, streamliningworkflow processes, and outsourcing aspects of their revenue cycle operations to our global business services operations. Examples of services that can be completed at ourglobal business services operations in the United States and India include pre-registration, medical transcription, cash posting, reconciliation of payments to billing records,and patient and payer follow-up. By leveraging the economies of scale and experience of our global business services operations, we believe that we offer our customersbetter quality services at a lower cost.We believe that these techniques are enhanced by our proprietary and integrated technology, management experience, and well-developed processes. Our proprietarytechnology solutions include workflow automation and direct payer connection capabilities that enable revenue cycle staff to focus on problem accounts rather than on manual tasks,such as searching payer websites for insurance and benefits verification for all patients. We employ technology that identifies and isolates specific cases requiring review or action,using the same interface for all users, to automate a host of tasks that otherwise can consume a significant amount of staff time. Our proprietary technology enhances the ability ofour customers' revenue cycle staff to improve their interaction with patients. We use real-time feedback from our customers to improve the functionality and performance of ourtechnology and processes and incorporate these improvements into our service offerings on a regular basis. We strive to apply operational excellence throughout our customers'entire revenue cycle.Modular SolutionsOur modular service solutions allow customers to engage us for specific components of end-to-end RCM and expanded service offerings. These service offerings, includingPAS, PM, RIS, PX, coding management, and business office services, allow our customers to place their focus on delivering high quality patient care, while outsourcing non-corefunctions to us. Providing modular solutions allows us to expand our customer base utilizing technology and service offerings which have already been developed.8Business UpdateSCI Solutions, Inc. AcquisitionOn April 1, 2020, we completed the acquisition of scheduling.com, Inc. d/b/a SCI Solutions, Inc. (“SCI”) pursuant to a stock purchase agreement dated as of January 9, 2020(the “Stock Purchase Agreement”), by and among the Company, Clearsight Intermediate Holdings, Inc. (“Clearsight Holdings”), and Clearsight Group Holdings, LLC (the “Seller”)(the “SCI Acquisition”). At the closing of the transaction, we purchased from the Seller all of the issued and outstanding equity interests of Clearsight Holdings, which owns all ofthe issued and outstanding equity interests of SCI. SCI is a leading provider of software-as-a-service (“SaaS”)-based scheduling and patient access solutions. SCI’s platformstreamlines the patient and provider experience, creating efficient care networks where health systems’ capacity is digitally and conveniently accessible to all market constituents.The combination of R1 and SCI is expected to deliver enhanced value for healthcare providers by enabling them to expand digital front door strategies for their patients, improveoperating efficiency, and increase capacity utilization, among other benefits. The aggregate purchase price consisted of $190 million in cash, which was adjusted pursuant to theStock Purchase Agreement for estimated cash and working capital at the closing of the transaction, and is subject to a post-closing adjustment process. We will also be required tomake an additional earn-out payment of $10 million if certain financial and operational targets are met by April 30, 2021.On June 26, 2019, we entered into a senior credit agreement (the “Credit Agreement”) with Bank of America, N.A., as administrative agent and the lenders named therein forsenior secured credit facilities consisting of a $325.0 million senior secured term loan facility (the “Senior Term Loan”) and a $100.0 million senior secured revolving credit facility.On March 20, 2020, we entered into Amendment No. 1 to the Credit Agreement (the “Amendment”), pursuant to which the lenders named in the Amendment agreed to provide anadditional $191.1 million incremental delayed-draw term loan facility (the “Incremental Term Loan”) on the same terms as its existing Senior Term Loan provided under the CreditAgreement.The Incremental Term Loan was drawn substantially concurrently with the acquisition of SCI. The proceeds of the Incremental Term Loan were used to fund the purchaseprice for SCI and related expenses. The Incremental Term Loan has terms consistent with those of the Senior Term Loan, including with respect to interest, maturity, amortizationand prepayments and has the same affirmative and negative covenants and events of default as those applicable to the Senior Term Loan under the Credit Agreement.RevWorks AcquisitionOn August 3, 2020, we completed the acquisition of the RevWorks services business pursuant to an asset purchase agreement dated as of June 2, 2020 (the “RevWorksPurchase Agreement”) by and among the Company and Cerner Corporation (the “RevWorks Acquisition”). At the closing of the transaction, we purchased certain assets relating tothe RevWorks services business, as specified in the RevWorks Purchase Agreement. The combination of R1 and RevWorks is expected to provide enhanced revenue cyclecapabilities and expertise to RevWorks clients, helping drive sustainable financial improvements for providers while improving their patients’ overall experience.EMS DispositionOn July 19, 2020, we entered into a definitive agreement to dispose of our emergency medical services (“EMS”) business, including EMS Revenue Cycle Management andElectronic Patient Care Reporting (the “EMS Disposition”) for $140 million, inclusive of a $5 million hold-back amount subject to the completion of certain transition services, to bepaid approximately one year from the date of the disposition. On October 30, 2020, we completed the EMS Disposition. We recognized a gain on the sale of $55.7 million, which issubject to completion of customary working capital adjustments.9Coronavirus PandemicIn March 2020, the World Health Organization characterized COVID-19 as a pandemic. Restrictions on businesses and travel are occurring based on state and local guidelinesand vary by locality and cannot be reasonably predicted.Given the ongoing challenges associated with efforts to contain the spread of COVID-19 and related business impact for our customers, we initiated a number of actions in2020 to ensure (1) the health and safety of our workforce and (2) uninterrupted and, in many respects, expanded support for our customers and the patients and communities theyserve. Our efforts to date include: restricting all non-essential domestic and international travel; repositioning more than 15,000 global employees to a work-from-home operatingenvironment; offering free COVID-19 testing and telemedicine visits; expanding paid time off for employees impacted by low work volumes; providing appreciation bonuses to ourfront-line, patient-facing services employees; launching a new remote patient registration tool to minimize contact between patients and registration staff and conserve personalprotective equipment; leveraging capabilities acquired via our SCI acquisition to assist customers with processes to restart elective procedure scheduling; developing reporting toallow for detailed COVID-19 order tracking, scheduling, and follow-up; offering in-depth regulatory analysis and guidance for our customers given numerous changes to healthcareregulatory federal and state rules; and providing customers with operational best practices for implementation and revenue cycle management of telehealth services.We have been able to partially offset the revenue pressure faced during the year ended December 31, 2020 by implementing measures to control costs and cash spending,including freezing hiring for non-critical roles, reducing non-COVID-related and non-SCI-related capital expenditures, eliminating discretionary spending, and suspending our401(k) match and non-essential travel for the remainder of 2020. We are deferring our payroll tax remittances to the federal government as allowed under the CARES Act, allowingus to shift cash outflows from 2020 to 2021 and 2022. In addition, we are receiving an employee retention credit for allowable payroll expenses in conjunction with the CARES Act.We have also accelerated corporate cost savings initiatives that were originally planned for the fourth quarter into the second and third quarters. We have conducted a comprehensivereview of our cost structure and capital expenditure needs, which have contributed to our cost control measures that we have implemented and continue to implement. As wenavigate the uncertainties of the pandemic, our focus has been on the health and safety of our employees, while balancing long-term growth opportunities with short-term challenges.Given the ongoing impact of the pandemic, there continues to be decreased patient volumes for our customers. We have continued to employ our full customer-facingworkforce, even during lower patient volumes, because it is important to have that capacity available to serve our customers as volumes return. We anticipate continued volumeconstraints and corresponding revenue pressure associated with the pandemic. Despite the impacts of the pandemic, we have executed on inorganic growth opportunities, includingbeginning our integrations of both SCI and RevWorks.The impact of the COVID-19 pandemic is fluid and continues to evolve. We cannot predict the extent to which our business, results of operations, financial condition, orliquidity will ultimately be impacted. However, we continue to assess its impact on our business and are actively managing our response. For further details on the potential impactof COVID-19 on our business, refer to “Risk Factors,” in Part I, Item 1A of this Annual Report on Form 10-K.10Relationship with AscensionOn February 16, 2016, we entered into a long-term strategic partnership with Ascension Health Alliance, the parent of our largest customer and the nation’s largest Catholicand non-profit health system, and TowerBrook Capital Partners (“TowerBrook”), an investment management firm. As part of the transaction, we amended and restated our MasterProfessional Services Agreement (“A&R MPSA”) with Ascension Health (“Ascension”) effective February 16, 2016 with a term of ten years. Pursuant to the A&R MPSA and withcertain limited exceptions, we are the exclusive provider of RCM services and PAS with respect to acute care services provided by the hospitals affiliated with Ascension thatexecute supplement agreements with us. In addition, at the close of the transaction, we issued to TCP-ASC ACHI Series LLLP, a limited liability limited partnership jointly ownedby Ascension Health Alliance and investment funds affiliated with TowerBrook (“Investor”): (i) 200,000 shares of our 8.00% Series A Convertible Preferred Stock, par value $0.01per share (the “Series A Preferred Stock”) for an aggregate price of $200 million and (ii) a warrant with a term of ten years to acquire up to 60 million shares of our common stock,par value $0.01 per share, at an exercise price of $3.50 per share, on the terms and subject to the conditions set forth in the Warrant Agreement (“the Warrant”). The Series APreferred Stock was immediately convertible into shares of common stock. We refer herein to the foregoing transactions consummated on February 16, 2016 with the Investor andAscension as the “Transaction”.On and effective as of June 24, 2018, we and Ascension entered into a supplement (the “Supplement”) to the A&R MPSA. Pursuant to the Supplement, the Company willprovide RCM services for physician groups that receive services from Ascension’s National Revenue Service Center and other groups associated with Ascension hospital systems.Each such physician group will be required to execute an addendum to the Supplement for those physician groups to receive services under the Supplement. Ascension has agreedthat the Company may provide services to additional physician groups affiliated with or acquired by Ascension over time. The Supplement also provides for the re-badging ofcertain centrally-based revenue cycle operations employees who support Ascension’s physician groups.On January 15, 2021, the Investor converted all of its 294,266 shares (the “Current Shares”) of Preferred Stock into 117,706,400 shares of common stock of the Company intowhich the Current Shares were convertible pursuant to the Certificate of Designation of the Series A Preferred Stock, and, in consideration therefor, the Company (i) issued21,582,800 additional shares of common stock, and (ii) paid the Investor $105.0 million in cash.CustomersOur customers typically are healthcare providers, including health systems, hospitals, and physician groups. We seek to develop strategic, long-term relationships with ourcustomers and focus on providers that we believe understand the value of our operating model and have demonstrated success in both the provision of healthcare services and theability to achieve financial and operational results.Hospital systems affiliated with Ascension have accounted for a significant portion of our net services revenue each year since our formation. For the years endedDecember 31, 2020, 2019, and 2018, net services revenue from healthcare providers affiliated with Ascension accounted for 64%, 67% and 69% of our total net services revenue,respectively.Customer AgreementsWe generally provide our RCM offering pursuant to managed services agreements with our customers. In rendering our services, we must comply with customer policies andprocedures regarding charity care, personnel, data security, compliance, and risk management, as well as applicable federal, state, and local laws and regulations. Our end-to-endRCM agreements typically span two to ten years (subject to the parties' respective termination rights). In general, our end-to-end RCM agreements provide that:•we are required to staff a sufficient number of our own employees commensurate with the service offering and provide the technology necessary to implement and manageour services;11•in our operating partner relationship model, we are responsible for providing all revenue cycle personnel, technology, and process workflow;•a portion of our fees are tied to the achievement of certain financial or operating metrics; and•the parties provide representations and indemnities to each other. Our agreements for modular solutions generally vary in length between one and three years. Customers pay a contractually negotiated fee for these services on a fixed fee, per-use, or volumetric basis and, in certain cases, a portion of our fees are tied to the achievement of certain metrics.Sales and MarketingOur new business opportunities are generated by our sales and marketing team and other members of our senior management team. Our customer acquisition process utilizestraditional and non-traditional techniques to inform the marketplace of R1’s solutions. Broad outreach and interest are turned into selling opportunities through demand generationprograms and a marketing-sales pipeline management process. Initial interaction with a prospective healthcare provider begins with a key decision maker reporting to executivemanagement. The initial interaction begins by comparing the potential customer’s historical and projected results versus a standardized improvement model. The next step is a moredetailed assessment of the prospect’s existing operations versus our RCM model and a review of the potential opportunities. We begin negotiations with a standardized contract thatis customized, as necessary, after collaborative discussions of operational and management issues and our proposed working relationship. Our sales process for RCM managedservices agreements typically lasts six to 18 months from the introductory meeting to the agreement’s execution, while our sales process for our modular solutions typically laststhree to six months.Technology and ProductsTechnology and Product DevelopmentOur technology and product development process begins with interaction with the marketplace and understanding of healthcare providers’ and patients’ needs and challenges.Our product management team, working closely with our operations teams, leads these efforts with product development operations facilities in the United States and India. Wecontinue to invest in the improvement of our technology and products in order to enhance the services that we provide our customers. We devote substantial resources to ourdevelopment efforts and plan at an annual, quarterly, and monthly release level. We employ a structured system to assess the impact that potential new technologies, products, orenhancements will have on net services revenue, costs, efficiency, and customer satisfaction. The results of this analysis are evaluated in conjunction with our overall corporate goalswhen making development decisions. In addition to our technology and products development team, our operations personnel play an integral role in setting technology and productpriorities in support of their objective of keeping our software operating 24 hours a day, seven days a week.A key location for continued evolution of our technology is our R1 Technology & Innovation Center. Located in Salt Lake City, Utah, the 30,000 square foot facility wascreated to evaluate, test, and design new RCM technologies for health systems, hospitals, and physician groups, as well as serve as a client experience center. We use this hub tofoster innovation in cutting-edge areas such as the use of robotic process automation to help address high-value and currently unsolved RCM challenges associated with the cost tocollect, denials management, and improving the patient’s financial experience.12Another way we accumulate valuable intellectual property that extends our value proposition and competitive advantage is to selectively acquire leading companies insegments most pertinent to solving our customers’ high-value problems. As an example, in 2020 we acquired SCI, and began consolidating its technology capability with ours tocreate a more comprehensive patient and provider self-service platform. We will continue to assess what new capabilities could be of value to our customers, and plan to regularlyevaluate whether we are best suited to develop those capabilities internally, or to obtain them through acquisition of other market-leading technology solution companies.Proprietary Software SuiteOur integrated suite of RCM technology provides a layer of analytics, rules processing, and workflow capabilities that interface with provider systems to optimize processefficiency and effectiveness. These technologies power the detection of defects on patient accounts and enable staff workflow at point of service areas, customer sites, and our globalbusiness services operations. Our technology suite includes but is not limited to:•“R1 Access” powers workflow in customer central business offices and at our scaled global business services centers for pre-registration, financial clearance, and financialcounseling. The platform processes patient accounts through proprietary rules engines tuned to identify defects in demographic data, authorization processes, insurancebenefits and eligibility, and medical necessity. Our rules engines in R1 Access are also used to calculate patient cost estimates and prior balance accounts receivables. For theuninsured, the platform helps staff triage patients to find coverage for their visit. Our technology enables staff to work on an exception basis eliminating the need for manualintervention on accounts with no exceptions identified.•“R1 Link” delivers all of the insight and defect detection capabilities of our proprietary rules engines in real-time to point of service emergency department and registrationareas within healthcare organizations. When defects or inconsistent data are detected in the data entry or registration process, users receive targeted messages alerting them toresolve the issue while the patient is still in front of them.•“R1 Contact,” our patient contact application, provides the workflow and data for patient contact center representatives. It enables effective financial discussions with patientson outstanding balances. The platform is integrated into our call center, call-routing and auto-dialer capabilities, and facilitates improved outcomes through propriety processand technology approaches.•“R1 Insight,” our proprietary contract modeling platform, is used to accurately calculate the maximum allowed reimbursement for each claim based upon models of ourcustomer's contract with each payer. This platform is used to provide insight into the health of payer contracts and to power portions of the workflow tools described above.•“R1 Analytics,” our web-based reporting and analytics platform, produces over 300 proprietary reports derived from the financial, process, and productivity data that weaccumulate as a result of our services, which enable us to monitor and identify areas for improvement in the efficacy of our RCM services.•“R1 Decision” classifies defects in a proprietary nomenclature and distributes data to back end teams for follow up and resolution according to standard operating processes.Defects are identified and noted on accounts as they occur. The platform, along with our “Yield-Based Follow Up” application, is designed to power customer patient financialservices departments and our global business services.•“R1 Physician Advisor” assists our customers in the initiation of a service request by our PAS team. Our platform allows for the electronic submission, tracking, reviewing,and auditing of patient cases referred to us. The PAS portal environment is established as a secure site that enables us to receive patient records from customer case managersand route them to our physicians for review. This workflow is supported by an analytics engine within the web portal that provides our customers the ability to improve theircompliance and workflow with our real time reporting, dashboards, and worklists.13•“R1 Patient Experience” (“R1 PX”) streamlines the interface for patients and physicians with the revenue cycle across all settings of care. It includes enterprise scheduling,self-service appointment management, patient out-of-pocket cost estimation, online pre-registration, financial clearance, authorization automation, and patient payment. Thetechnology includes web-based, mobile-responsive applications for patient and provider self-service, which are all connected to R1’s proprietary rules engines. These rulesengines automate the complex tasks necessary to prevent revenue cycle defects, and with the addition of SCI technology, now also automate the matching of appropriateprovider appointment capacity with specific patient needs under any variety of clinical and administrative circumstances.•“R1 Automate” provides robotic process automation, data aggregation from disparate sources, desktop automation, and other technologies to automate work. With thistechnology, repetitive transactional processes are automated, delivering operating efficiency and freeing up staff members to focus on higher-order problem solving and highervalue-added work. The solutions target a wide range of functions including prior authorization, coding, accounts receivable follow-up, payment posting, and credit balances,among others.•“R1 Chart Manager” supports patient medical record deficiency management, by evaluating record completeness and optimizing the chart completion workflow. Theapplication creates an intuitive user experience, queuing work by defect and providing visibility to work in process. It allows hand-offs across departments, and tracking ofaccountability for chart completion, in order to drive velocity and accuracy of the medical record management and coding processes. Customers generally experienceimproved unbilled AR days and faster cash collection by utilizing the technology.•“R1 Post” supports the end-to-end cash posting function, including the matching of bank deposits to remittance advices, initiating the posting of the remittance advices withina client’s patient accounting system, balancing these transactions, and providing financial reporting. With this technology, unmatched deposits/remittances or unbalancedtransactions are able to be worked on an exception-basis.•“R1 QA Suite” provides a standardized technology for performing quality assurance across the various operational verticals. The technology provides audit workflow,statistically-driven sampling, domain-specific audit templates, and alerting/staff feedback gathering functionality.These proprietary technology applications run on an integrated platform built on a modern, event-driven architecture and rules engines that enhance integration of systemsand operational workflows. Our applications are deployed on a highly-scalable architecture based upon Microsoft and other industry leading platforms. We offer a commonexperience for end-users and believe the consistent look and feel of our applications allows our customers and staff to use our software suite quickly and easily.Technology OperationsOur software interacts with our customers’ software through a series of real-time and batch interfaces. We do not require changes to the customer’s core patient care deliveryor financial systems. Instead of installing hardware or software in customer locations or data centers, we specify the information that a customer needs to extract from its existingsystems in order to interface with our systems. This methodology enables our systems to operate with many combinations of customer systems, including custom and industry-standard implementations.When these interfaces are in place, we provide a holistic application suite across the healthcare provider's revenue cycle. For our purposes, the revenue cycle starts when apatient registers for future service or arrives at a hospital or clinic for unscheduled service, and ends when the healthcare organization has collected all the appropriate revenue fromall possible sources. Thus, we provide eligibility, address validation, skip tracing, charge capture, patient and payer follow-up, analytics and tracking, charge master management,contract modeling, contract “what if” analysis, collections, and other functions throughout the customer’s revenue cycle.14Our core RCM and PAS applications are hosted within enterprise-class, industry-leading, third-party data centers located in Dallas, TX and Ashburn, VA. Our internalfinancial application suite is hosted in various locations in a U.S.-based cloud model. The third-party partners we use for hosting are compliant with the Statement on Standards forAttestation Engagements, or SSAE, No. 16, Reporting on Controls at a Service Organization (Service Organization Controls 1). We have agreements with our hardware and systemsoftware suppliers for support 24 hours a day, seven days a week. Our operations personnel also use our resources located in our other U.S. facilities, as well as our India facilities.Data and information regarding our customers’ patients reside within the continental U.S. data centers and is encrypted both when transmitted over the internet and at-rest. Wehave dedicated links for data replication between our primary and secondary production data centers for resiliency and redundancy. We also have data backups that occur atappropriate intervals.If a combination of events were to cause a system failure, we would follow our IT incident management and IT disaster-recovery processes to isolate the failure and restoreservices. We believe that no combination of failures by our systems can impact a customer’s ability to deliver patient care because our systems run parallel to the client’s hostsystem, which is the system of record for all patient-related information.Our third-party data centers are designed to withstand many catastrophic events such as blizzards, hurricanes, and power grid anomalies. To protect against a catastrophicevent where our primary data center is destroyed and service cannot be completely restored within a few days, we continuously replicate our data from our primary data center to oursecondary data center. In addition, we store backups of our virtual servers, applications, and databases off-site, which would be utilized to make our systems and IT infrastructureoperational. We would re-establish operations by pointing to secondary data-center servers and, where appropriate, restoring data from the off-site backups and re-establishingconnectivity with our customers’ host systems. There would be minimal changes needed on the customer host systems, and no changes on customer workstations would need to bemade for customers to reconnect to our systems.Digital Transformation OfficeIn November 2018, we launched a Digital Transformation Office (“DTO”) to systematically automate our transactional environment on an end-to-end basis. The DTO's threeprincipal objectives are: (1) digitization of the patient and physician interface with the revenue cycle; (2) automation of manual tasks using robotic process automation technology;and (3) using advanced data analysis methods to improve complex revenue cycle processes such as denials via machine learning and predictive modeling. The original pipeline ofautomation was delivered between the launch and the second quarter of 2020. The Automation Center of Excellence, established as part of the DTO, continues to uncoveropportunities for both net new automations and extending existing automations to capture incremental value. The Automation Center of Excellence is charged with developingautomation solutions beyond the original pipeline, and we believe there are substantial opportunities for additional automation over the short, medium, and long-term.15Information SecurityOur priority is protecting our customers' confidential and protected health information (“PHI”). Our security strategy employs various best practices, multi-layered defenses,and relevant technologies designed to control, audit, monitor, and protect access to sensitive information. Our senior officers, including the Chief Information Officer and ChiefInformation Security Officer, are responsible for the operation of our information security program and regularly communicate with the Compliance & Risk Management BoardCommittee on the program, including with respect to the state of the program, compliance with applicable regulations, current and evolving threats, and recommendations forchanges in the information security program. In addition, the Audit Committee monitors cybersecurity as it relates to financial and reporting systems and controls. As part of theinformation security program we employ a National Institute of Standards Technology (“NIST”) based cybersecurity strategy and framework with real-time monitoring, activetesting protocols, and continual workforce training. Further, we rigorously investigate cybersecurity risks and threats to address and ensure mitigation, resolution, and processimprovement efforts in a timely manner.With our comprehensive, cross-functional approach, we have received and maintained certification from the Health Information Trust (“HITRUST”) Alliance since January2013. The HITRUST Common Security Framework (“CSF”), the most widely adopted framework in the healthcare industry, provides a comprehensive set of baseline securitycontrols that leverage nationally and internationally accepted standards, including ISO, NIST, PCI, HIPAA, and COBIT. Our HITRUST certification validates our continuedcommitment to compliance with the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996, as amended, and the regulations that have been issued under it, such as the HealthInformation Technology for Economic and Clinical Health Act, or HITECH Act (“HITECH”) and OMNIBUS regulations, which we collectively refer to as “HIPAA”, and to state-specific security and privacy laws regarding the creation, access, storage, or exchange of protected health information (“PHI”) and financial information. With continual receipt ofHITRUST CSF Certified Status, we believe we are recognized as meeting key healthcare regulations and requirements for protecting and securing sensitive private healthcareinformation and appropriately managing risk.CompetitionThe market for our solutions is highly competitive and we expect competition to intensify in the future. We believe that competition for the services we provide is basedprimarily on the following factors: •knowledge and understanding of the complex healthcare payment and reimbursement system in the United States;•a track record of delivering revenue improvements and efficiency gains for healthcare organizations while enhancing patient satisfaction;•predictable and measurable results;•the ability to deliver a solution that is fully-integrated along each step of a healthcare organization's revenue cycle operations;•cost-effectiveness, including the breakdown between up-front costs and pay-for-performance incentive compensation;•reliability, simplicity, and flexibility of technology platforms;•understanding of the healthcare industry’s regulatory environment; and•sufficient and scalable infrastructure and financial stability.16We face competition from various sources, including other end-to-end RCM providers and the internal RCM departments of healthcare organizations. Healthcare providersthat previously have made internal investments in their RCM departments sometimes choose to continue to rely on their own internal RCM staff.We also compete with several categories of external market participants, most of which focus on specific components of the healthcare revenue cycle. External marketparticipants include: •software vendors and other technology-supported RCM business process outsourcing companies;•traditional consultants; and•information technology outsourcers.These types of external participants also compete with us in the field of modular solutions.Although we believe that there are barriers to replicating our end-to-end RCM solution, competition may intensify in the future. Other companies may develop superior ormore economical service offerings that healthcare providers could find more attractive than our offerings. Moreover, the regulatory landscape may shift in a direction that is morestrategically advantageous to existing and future competitors.Government RegulationThe customers we serve are subject to a complex array of federal and state laws and regulations. These laws and regulations may change rapidly and unpredictably, and it isfrequently unclear how they apply to our business. We devote significant efforts, through training of personnel and monitoring, to establish and maintain compliance with allregulatory requirements that we believe are applicable to our business and the services we offer.Government Regulation of Health InformationPrivacy and Security Regulations. The Administrative Simplification Provisions of HIPAA and implementing regulations contain substantial restrictions and requirementswith respect to the use and disclosure of a subset of individually identifiable health information, referred to as PHI and require covered entities, including health plans, health careclearinghouses, and most health care providers, to implement administrative, physical, and technical safeguards to protect the confidentiality, integrity and availability of electronicPHI maintained or transmitted by them or by others on their behalf.Certain provisions of the privacy and security regulations promulgated pursuant to HIPAA apply to business associates (entities that perform functions on behalf of, or provideservices to, covered entities involving the handling of PHI), and business associates are subject to direct liability for violation of these provisions. Violations of the HIPAA privacyand security regulations may result in criminal penalties and in substantial civil penalties per violation. The civil penalties are adjusted annually based on updates to the consumerprice index. In addition, a covered entity may be subject to penalties as a result of a business associate violating HIPAA, if the business associate is found to be an agent of thecovered entity. Most of our customers are covered entities and we are a business associate to many such customers under HIPAA as a result of our contractual obligations to performcertain functions on behalf of, and provide certain services to, those customers. As a business associate, we sometimes also act as a clearinghouse in performing certain functions forour customers.In order to provide our covered entity customers with services that involve the use or disclosure of PHI, HIPAA requires our customers to enter into business associateagreements with us. Such business associate agreements among other things, (i) dictate how we may use and disclose PHI, (ii) require us to implement reasonable administrative,physical, and technical safeguards to protect PHI from misuse, (iii) report security incidents and other improper uses or disclosures of PHI, and (iv) impose these same obligationsthrough agreements with our agents and subcontractors that have access to PHI.17Transaction Requirements. In addition to privacy and security requirements, HIPAA also requires that certain electronic transactions related to healthcare billing beconducted using uniform electronic data transmission standards and code sets for certain health care claims and payment transactions submitted or received electronically. We arecontractually required to structure and provide our services in a way that supports our customers’ HIPAA compliance obligations.Data Security and Breaches. In recent years, there have been well-publicized data breach incidents involving the improper dissemination of personal health and otherinformation of individuals, both within and outside of the healthcare industry. Covered entities must report breaches of unsecured PHI to affected individuals without unreasonabledelay but not to exceed 60 days after discovery of the breach by a covered entity or its agents. Notification also must be made to the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services(“HHS”) and, in certain situations involving large breaches, to the media. HHS is required to publish on its website a list of all covered entities that report a breach involving morethan 500 individuals. Impermissible uses or disclosures of unsecured PHI are presumed to be breaches unless the covered entity or business associate establishes that there is a lowprobability that the unsecured PHI has been compromised. Various state laws and regulations also may require us to notify affected individuals in the event of a data breachinvolving individually identifiable information. In many cases, these state laws are limited to electronic data, but states are increasingly enacting or considering stricter and broaderrequirements. In addition, the U.S. Federal Trade Commission (“FTC”) uses its consumer protection authority to initiate enforcement actions in response to data breaches. We haveimplemented and maintain physical, technical, and administrative safeguards intended to protect all personal data, and have processes in place to assist us in complying withapplicable laws and regulations regarding the protection of this data and properly responding to any security incidents and data breaches.State Laws. In addition to HIPAA, most states have enacted patient confidentiality laws that protect against the unauthorized disclosure of confidential medical information,and many states have adopted or are considering further legislation in this area, including privacy safeguards, security standards, and data security breach notification requirements.Such state laws, if more stringent than HIPAA requirements, are not preempted by the federal requirements, and we must comply with them even though they may be subject todifferent interpretations by various courts and other governmental authorities. For example, the California Consumer Privacy Act of 2018 (the “CCPA”) affords consumers expandedprivacy protections effective January 1, 2020. The potential effects of this legislation are far-reaching and may require us to modify our data processing practices and policies and toincur substantial costs and expenses to comply. For example, the CCPA gives California residents expanded rights to access and require deletion of their personal information, optout of certain personal information sharing, and receive detailed information about how their personal information is used. The CCPA provides for civil penalties for violations, aswell as a private right of action for data breaches.Other Requirements. In addition to HIPAA, there are numerous other laws and legislative and regulatory initiatives at the federal and state levels addressing privacy andsecurity concerns. We and our customers may be subject to any federal or state privacy-related laws that are more restrictive than the privacy regulations issued under HIPAA. Theselaws vary and could impose additional penalties. The FTC has issued guidance for, and several states have issued or are considering new regulations to require, holders of certaintypes of personally identifiable information to implement formal policies and programs to prevent, detect, and mitigate the risk of identity theft and other unauthorized access to oruse of such information. Further, federal and state legislation has been proposed, and through rule making or executive action, several states have taken action, to restrict ordiscourage the disclosure of medical or other personally identifiable information to individuals or entities located outside of the United States.18International Laws. In addition to data privacy and security statutes in the United States, the European Union (“EU”) introduced the General Data Protection Regulation2016/679 (“GDPR”). GDPR became applicable on May 25, 2018, and applies to our activities conducted from an establishment in the EU or any targeting activities toward the EU.GDPR creates an enhanced range of compliance obligations, including duties as to privacy notices, legal bases for processing, data retention, data security, and rights for individuals.Additionally, GDPR significantly increases financial penalties for non-compliance, including possible fines of up to 4% of global annual turnover for the preceding financial year or€20 million (whichever is higher) for the most serious infringements. The extent to which our activities conducted from an establishment in the UK or targeting activities toward theUK remain subject to the same or similar requirements as GDPR depends upon how the UK chooses to regulate privacy and data security now that the UK has left the EU.Government Regulation of ReimbursementOur customers are subject to regulation by a number of governmental agencies, including those that administer the Medicare and Medicaid programs. Accordingly, ourcustomers are sensitive to legislative and regulatory changes in, and limitations on, the government healthcare programs and changes in reimbursement policies, processes, andpayment rates. During recent years, there have been numerous federal legislative and administrative actions that have affected government programs, including adjustments that havereduced or increased payments to physicians and other healthcare providers and adjustments that have affected the complexity of our work. For example, the Medicare Access andCHIP Reauthorization Act of 2015 (“MACRA”) established a Quality Payment Program (“QPP”) that requires physician groups to track and report a multitude of data relating toquality, clinical practice improvement activities, use of an electronic health record, and cost. Success or failure with respect to these measures may impact reimbursement in futureyears. Similarly, in 2021, hospitals participating in the Medicare Value-Based Purchasing Program, which requires the reporting of quality and cost measures, may receive a netdecrease in payments of up to 1.62%. It is possible that the federal or state governments will implement additional reductions, increases, or changes in reimbursement in the futureunder government programs that adversely affect our customer base or increase the cost of providing our services. Any such changes could adversely affect our own financialcondition by reducing the reimbursement rates of our customers.Fraud and Abuse LawsA number of health care fraud and abuse laws apply to hospitals, physicians, and others who (i) furnish health care services to patients and submit claims for reimbursement togovernment programs and/or commercial insurers, and (ii) refer patients to one another. Given the breadth of these laws, they may affect our business, either directly or because theyapply to our customers. These laws and regulations include:False Claims Laws. There are numerous federal and state laws that forbid (i) submitting a false claim, (ii) causing the submission of a false claims, (iii) retaining a knownoverpayment, or (iv) engaging in similar types of conduct. The federal civil False Claims Act (“FCA”), 31 U.S.C. §3729 et seq., for example, prohibits (i) knowingly presenting, orcausing to be presented, a false or fraudulent claim for payment or approval, or (ii) knowingly making, using, or causing to be made or used, a false record or statement material to afalse or fraudulent claim. Further, under its so-called “reverse false clams” provision, the federal FCA imposes liability on any person who knowingly conceals or knowingly andimproperly avoids or decreases an obligation to pay or transmit money or property to the government. An obligation to pay or transmit money or property to the government, in turn,may arise if a person identifies an overpayment and fails to report and return the overpayment to the government within 60 days. Violations of the FCA may result in treble damagesand per claim fines ranging from $11,665 to $22,331. The FCA may be enforced by the government or by private whistleblowers under the “qui tam” provisions of the statute.Whistleblowers are entitled to a share of any recovery in an FCA case. Other federal laws, such as those governing the imposition of civil monetary penalties, 42 U.S.C. §1320a-7a,prohibit similar conduct, as do many state laws.19Anti-Kickback Laws. There are numerous federal and state laws that prohibit one person from providing anything of value to another person if one purpose of thearrangement is to induce the payee to refer patients or other business to the payor for services that are covered by a government program (or, in the case of some state laws, acommercial insurer). For example, the federal health care program anti-kickback statute (“AKS”), 42 U.S.C. §1320a-7b(b), prohibits one person from “knowingly and willfully”offering or paying any “remuneration” to another person to induce the recipient to (i) refer an individual for the furnishing or arranging for the furnishing of any item or service forwhich payment may be made in whole or in part under Medicare, Medicaid, or any other federal health care program, or (ii) purchase, lease, order, or arrange for or recommendpurchasing, leasing, or ordering any good, facility, service, or item for which payment may be made in whole or in part under a federal health care program. The AKS also prohibitsa person from soliciting or receiving remuneration in exchange for engaging in any of these activities. Violation of the AKS can result in imprisonment, fines, exclusion fromparticipation in federal health care programs (“program exclusion”), and exposure under the FCA. Many states have adopted anti-inducement laws similar to the AKS. In somecases, these state laws are narrower than the federal AKS (applying only to certain categories of persons, such as physicians). In other cases, the state laws are broader than thefederal AKS (covering inducements to refer not only government program patients and business but commercially insured patients and business as well).Physician Self-Referral Laws. Under the federal physician self-referral law (or “Stark Law”), 42 U.S.C. §1395nn, if a physician (or one or his or her immediate familymembers) has a financial relationship with a health care provider (such as a hospital), then, in the absence of an applicable exception (i) the physician may not refer Medicarebeneficiaries to that provider for certain so-called “designated health services,” and (ii) in the event of such a referral, the provider may not bill Medicare, the beneficiary, or anyother person for those services. Violations of the referral and billing prohibitions of the Stark Law can result in civil monetary penalties, program exclusion, and exposure under theFCA. Many states have their own physician self-referral laws. These state laws vary widely, in some cases being narrower, and in other cases broader, than the Stark Law.Health care fraud and abuse laws, such as those described above, apply to many of our customers and, under some circumstances, could apply to us. Although we believe thatour practices and our customers’ practices are generally in compliance with these laws, we cannot be certain that governmental officials or others will not assert otherwise.Emergency Medical Treatment and Labor ActThe federal Emergency Medical Treatment and Labor Act (“EMTALA”) was enacted to ensure public access to emergency services regardless of a patient’s insurance statusor ability to pay. Specifically, EMTALA requires Medicare-participating hospitals to conduct an appropriate medical screening examination of every individual who presents to thehospital’s emergency room for treatment. If the individual is suffering from an emergency medical condition, the hospital must either stabilize the condition or make an appropriatetransfer of the individual to a facility able to handle the condition. The obligation to screen and stabilize emergency medical conditions exists regardless of an individual’s ability topay for treatment. There are severe penalties under EMTALA if a hospital fails to screen or appropriately stabilize or transfer an individual or if the hospital delays appropriatetreatment in order to first inquire about the individual’s ability to pay. Sanctions for violating EMTALA include program exclusion and civil monetary penalties. These civilmonetary penalties are adjusted annually based on updates to the consumer price index. In addition, the law creates a private right of action for any individual who suffers personalharm as a direct result of a violation of the law. A hospital that suffers a financial loss as a direct result of another hospital’s violation of the law also has a similar right.EMTALA generally applies to our customers that are Medicare-participating hospitals, and we assist our customers with the intake of their patients. Although we believe thatour customers’ practices are generally in compliance with the law and applicable regulations, we cannot be certain that governmental officials or others will not assert that we or ourcustomers are in violation of EMTALA nor can we predict what obligations may be imposed by regulations to be issued in the future.20Laws Limiting Assignment of Reimbursement ClaimsVarious federal and state laws limit whether and the extent to which claims for reimbursement from a government program can be assigned (by a patient to a provider) orreassigned (by one provider to another person). We do not believe that our customers reassign their claims for Medicare or Medicaid reimbursement to us. Any determination to thecontrary, however, could adversely affect our ability to be paid for the services we provide to our customers, require us to restructure the manner in which we are paid, or havefurther regulatory consequences.Regulation of Debt Collection ActivitiesThe federal Fair Debt Collection Practices Act (“FDCPA”) regulates persons who regularly collect or attempt to collect, directly or indirectly, consumer debts owed orasserted to be owed to another person. Certain of our accounts receivable activities may be deemed to be subject to the FDCPA. The FDCPA establishes specific guidelines andprocedures that debt collectors must follow in communicating with consumer debtors, including the time, place, and manner of such communications. Further, it prohibitsharassment or abuse by debt collectors, including the threat of violence or criminal prosecution, obscene language, or repeated telephone calls made with the intent to abuse orharass. The FDCPA also places restrictions on communications with individuals other than consumer debtors in connection with the collection of any consumer debt and sets forthspecific procedures to be followed when communicating with such third parties for purposes of obtaining location information about the consumer. In addition, the FDCPA containsvarious notice and disclosure requirements and prohibits unfair or misleading representations by debt collectors. Finally, the FDCPA imposes certain limitations on lawsuits tocollect debts against consumers.Debt collection activities are also regulated at the state level. Most states have laws regulating debt collection activities in ways that are similar to, and in some cases morestringent than, the FDCPA. In addition, some states require companies engaged in the collection of consumer debt to be licensed. In all states where we operate, we believe that we(1) currently hold all required licenses, (2) are in the process of requesting and retaining all applicable licenses, or, (3) are exempt from licensing.We are also subject to the Telephone Consumer Protection Act (“TCPA”). In the process of communicating with our customers’ patients, we use a variety of communicationsmethods. The TCPA places certain restrictions on companies that place telephone calls to consumers.The FTC has the authority to investigate consumer complaints relating to the FDCPA and the TCPA, and to initiate or recommend enforcement actions, including actions toseek monetary penalties. State officials typically have authority to enforce corresponding state laws. In addition, affected consumers may bring suits, including class action suits, toseek monetary remedies (including statutory damages) for violations of the federal and state provisions discussed above.Regulation of Credit Card ActivitiesWe process, on behalf of our customers, credit card payments from their patients. Various federal and state laws impose privacy and information security laws and regulationswith respect to the use of credit cards. If we fail to comply with these laws and regulations or experience a credit card security breach, our reputation could be damaged, possiblyresulting in lost future business, and we could be subjected to additional legal or financial risk as a result of non-compliance.Foreign RegulationsOur international operations are subject to additional regulations that govern the creation, continuation, and winding up of companies, as well as the relationships between theshareholders, the company, the public, and the government.21Intellectual PropertyWe rely upon a combination of patent, trademark, copyright, and trade secret laws and contractual terms and conditions to protect our intellectual property rights, and havesought patent protection for aspects of our key innovations.We have been issued four U.S. patents which expire between 2027 and 2030, upon payment of U.S. Patent maintenance fees, and two additional pending U.S. patentapplications that relate to key domains of our R1 Access software suite: improving efficiency of client claims' reimbursement, follow-up, and measurement. Legal standards relatingto the validity, enforceability, and scope of protection of patents can be uncertain. We do not know whether any of our pending patent applications will result in the issuance ofpatents or whether the examination process will require us to narrow our claims. Our patent applications may not result in the grant of patents with the scope of the claims that weseek, if at all, or the scope of the granted claims may not be sufficiently broad to protect our products and technology. Our four granted patents or any patents that may be granted inthe future from pending or future applications may be opposed, contested, circumvented, designed around by a third party, or found to be invalid or unenforceable. Third parties maydevelop technologies that are similar or superior to our proprietary technologies, duplicate, or otherwise obtain and use our proprietary technologies or design around patents ownedor licensed by us. If our technology is found to infringe any patent or other intellectual property right held by a third party, we could be prevented from providing our serviceofferings and/or subjected to significant damage awards.We also rely, in some circumstances, on trade secrets to protect our technology. We control access to and the use of our application capabilities through a combination ofinternal and external controls, including contractual protections with employees, customers, contractors, and business partners. We license some of our software through agreementsthat impose specific restrictions on our customers’ ability to use the software, such as prohibiting reverse engineering and limiting the use of copies. We also require employees andcontractors to sign non-disclosure agreements and invention assignment agreements to give us ownership of intellectual property developed in the course of working for us.Consistent with common industry practices, we occasionally utilize open source software or third party software products to meet our clients' needs.Financial Information About Geographic Areas The majority of our customers are entities organized and located within the United States. See Note 7, Property, Equipment and Software, to our consolidated financial statementsfor information regarding the location of our long-lived assets.Human Capital ManagementIn 2020, our Chief Executive Officer signed the CEO Action for Diversity & Inclusion™ Pledge committing to act on supporting inclusive workplaces, and we continued ourInclusion & Diversity (“I&D”) Councils for both our U.S. and India offices. We held our first I&D Awareness Day and enhanced our bias awareness training and other offerings toaddress issues of culture competency and business ethics and integrity. We have also implemented a data-driven scorecard to advance our internal I&D efforts to systematicallypromote inclusion of diverse slates of candidates for Company hiring and promotion practices. We also set internal gender, racial, and ethnic diversity recruiting targets for incomingemployees.As of December 31, 2020, we had approximately 19,000 full-time employees, as well as approximately 1,200 part-time employees. Of these employees, approximately 9,500full-time and 1,200 part-time employees were located in the U.S., and approximately 9,500 full-time employees were located internationally. Our employees are not represented by alabor union, and we consider our current employee relations to be good.22R1 recognizes that attracting, motivating, and retaining talent at all levels is vital to continuing our success. By improving employee retention and engagement, we also seek toimprove our ability to support R1’s customers and protect the long-term interests of our stakeholders and stockholders. We invest in our employees through high-quality benefits andvarious health and wellness initiatives, and offer competitive compensation packages, which are also designed to ensure fairness in internal compensation practices. We adhere toour Code of Integrity, which emphasizes our four guiding compliance principles of integrity, accountability, collaboration, and vigilance.To further engage and incentivize our workforce, we provide a wide range of career development opportunities to support and motivate our employees to operate at their bestand succeed. We offer a variety of learning and development resources for our employees, including but not limited to a role-based R1 Certification Program for our hourly staff tosupport market leading capabilities and an R1 Executive Leadership Experience program in partnership with the Northwestern University Kellogg School of Management to buildthe leadership capability of our VP and SVP leaders. For professional recognition of our associates, our R1 Stars program provides leaders and fellow associates the opportunity torecognize one another for their contributions, and our Innovation Challenge rewards teams who submit ideas that solve high-value customer business problems.We gauge our employees’ level of engagement and satisfaction by conducting engagement surveys with the assistance of a third-party. We also solicit feedback fromemployees about their people leader’s effectiveness and ability to foster I&D, career and development opportunities, benefits, well-being, and comfort in reporting behavior that doesnot align to our Code of Integrity. In 2020, 87% of more than 20,000 R1 associates participated in the engagement survey, and we are utilizing their direct input to proactively buildongoing career development and employee growth initiatives.Employee health, well-being, and safety is one of our top priorities. The COVID-19 pandemic has underscored for us the importance of keeping our employees safe andhealthy. To prioritize employee health and safety, we took the following steps in 2020: restricted all non-essential domestic and international travel; repositioned more than 15,000global employees to a work-from-home operating environment; offered free COVID-19 testing and telemedicine visits; expanded paid time off for employees impacted by low workvolumes; provided appreciation bonuses to our front-line, patient-facing services employees; and provided virtual group coaching sessions for our people leaders to better enabletheir effectiveness in light of challenges created by the COVID-19 pandemic.At R1, we are committed to making a meaningful impact in our communities by focusing on community service and volunteerism related to health, education, and humanservices. Our Helping Hands program demonstrates our commitment to continue being a good corporate citizen everywhere we operate, serve, and live. We empower our employeesto look beyond themselves and reach out to identify and address social issues in their communities. As a part of that commitment, we provide all employees with 16 hours of paidtime off to participate in volunteer activities.In March, 2021 we plan to release our 2020 Environmental, Social, and Governance (“ESG”) Report, which will be available on our website. We encourage you to review thisreport for more detailed information regarding our Human Capital programs and initiatives. Nothing on our website, including our 2020 ESG Report or sections thereof, shall bedeemed incorporated by reference into this Annual Report.Corporate InformationWe were incorporated in Delaware in 2003 as Healthcare Services, Inc. and were named Healthcare Services, Inc. from July 2003 until August 2009 when we changed ourname to Accretive Health, Inc. We operated under the name Accretive Health until January 5, 2017, when we changed our name to R1 RCM Inc. Our principal executive offices arelocated at 401 North Michigan Avenue, Chicago, Illinois 60611, and our telephone number is (312) 324-7820.23Information AvailabilityOur Annual Reports on Form 10-K, Quarterly Reports on Form 10-Q, Current Reports on Form 8-K, proxy statements, and all amendments and exhibits to those reports areavailable free of charge on our website at www.r1rcm.com under the “Investor Relations” page as soon as reasonably practicable after such material is electronically filed with, orfurnished to, the Securities and Exchange Commission (the “SEC”). The content on any website referred to in this Annual Report on Form 10-K is not incorporated by reference intothis report, unless expressly noted otherwise. Our reports filed with the SEC are also made available on its website at www.sec.gov.24Item 1A.Risk FactorsRisks Relating to our Business and IndustryIf we are unable to retain our existing customers or acquire new customers, our financial condition will suffer.Our success depends in part upon the retention of our customers and our ability to acquire new customers. We derive our net services revenue primarily from managed servicesagreements pursuant to which we receive performance-based fees. Customers can elect not to renew their managed services agreements with us upon expiration. Our agreementswith certain customers permit such customers to terminate for convenience, subject to a notice period. If a managed services agreement is not renewed or is terminated early for anyreason, we would not derive the financial benefits that we would expect to derive by serving that customer. In addition, certain customer agreements contain clauses requiring us tooffer fees for comparable services at least as low as the fees we offer other customers. If we offer new customers a lower fee, it may impact our ability to continue to be profitablewhile serving existing customers.Some of our managed services agreements require us to adhere to extensive, complex data security, network access, and other institutional procedures and requirements of ourcustomers, and we cannot guarantee that some of our customers will not allege that we have not complied with all such procedures and requirements. If we breach a managedservices agreement or, for certain of our managed services agreements, fail to perform in accordance with contractual service levels, we may be liable to the customer for damages,and either we or the customer may generally terminate an agreement for a material uncured breach by the other. In addition, financial issues or other changes in customercircumstances, such as a customer change in control (including as a result of increasing consolidation within the healthcare provider industry), may cause us or the customer to seekto modify or terminate a managed services agreement.Increasing consolidation within the healthcare provider industry may also make it more difficult for us to acquire new customers, as consolidated healthcare systems may bemore likely to have incumbent revenue cycle management providers or significant internal revenue cycle capabilities. For example, certain of our smaller customers have beenacquired by larger healthcare systems and ceased to be customers.If we fail to manage our operations effectively, our business would be harmed.We have not always been fully successful in managing the expansion of our operations which has led, at times, to customer dissatisfaction and weaknesses in our operating,internal, and financial controls. To manage potential future growth, we will need to hire, integrate, and retain highly skilled and motivated employees, and will need to workeffectively with a growing number of customer employees engaged in revenue cycle operations. We will also need to continue to maintain or improve our operating, internal, andfinancial controls, reporting systems, and procedures. If we do not effectively manage our operations, we may not be able to execute on our business plan, respond to competitivepressures, take advantage of market opportunities, satisfy customer requirements, or maintain high-quality service offerings.The markets for our RCM service offering may develop more slowly than we expect.Our success depends, in part, on the willingness of healthcare organizations to implement integrated solutions for the areas in which we provide services. Some organizationsmay be reluctant or unwilling to implement our solutions for a number of reasons, including failure to perceive the need for improved revenue cycle operations, lack of knowledgeabout the potential benefits our solutions provide, or having made or be planning to make investments in internally developed solutions and choosing to continue to rely on their owninternal resources.25We may not be able to maintain profitability.Prior to 2019, we had incurred net losses in most of our recent fiscal years in accordance with United States generally accepted accounting principles (“GAAP”). We alsoincurred significant costs in most of our recent fiscal years including, among other things, costs related to acquisitions and other strategic initiatives, debt related fees and expenses,restructuring, and/or previously settled lawsuits filed against us and we may continue to incur additional costs in connection with certain of these matters. Further, we have incurredand expect to incur additional costs for investments in technology, facilities, and talent to support the anticipated growth of our business, including growth related to the expectedimplementation of our services under our operating partner relationships. We intend to continue to increase our operating expenses associated with sales and marketing in futureyears in an effort to expand our business. If our revenue does not increase to offset these increases in costs, our operating results would be adversely affected. You should notconsider our historical operating results as indicative of future operating results, and we cannot assure you that we will be able to maintain profitability in the future. Each of therisks described in this “Risk Factors” section, as well as other factors, may adversely affect our future operating results.We face a selling cycle of variable length to secure new RCM agreements, making it difficult to predict the timing of specific new customer relationships.We face a selling cycle of variable length, typically spanning six to 18 months or longer, to secure a new managed services agreement. Even if we succeed in developing arelationship with a potential new customer, we may not be successful in entering into a managed services agreement with that customer. In addition, we cannot accurately predict thetiming of entering into managed services agreements with new customers due to the complex procurement decision processes of most healthcare providers, which often involveshigh-level management or board committee approvals. Due to our variable selling cycle length, we have only a limited ability to predict the timing of specific new customerrelationships, which affects our ability to predict future cash flows. In periods which we add new customers, our operating costs are typically higher because we incur expenses toimplement our operating model at those customers.We operate in a highly competitive industry, and our current or future competitors may be able to compete more effectively than we do, which could have a materialadverse effect on our business, revenue, growth rates and market share.The market for our solutions is highly competitive and we expect competition to intensify in the future. The rapid changes in the U.S. healthcare market due to financialpressures to reduce the growth in healthcare costs and from regulatory and legislative initiatives are increasing the level of competition. We face competition from new entrants,internal RCM departments, and external participants. External participants that are our competitors include end-to-end RCM providers, software vendors and other technology-supported RCM business process outsourcing companies, traditional consultants, and information technology outsourcers. Our competitors may be able to respond more quickly andeffectively than we can to new or changing opportunities, technologies, standards, regulations, or customer requirements. We may not be able to compete successfully with thesecompanies, and these or other competitors may introduce technologies or services that render our technologies or services obsolete or less marketable. Even if our technologies andservices are more effective than the offerings of our competitors, current or potential customers might prefer competitive solutions to our solutions. Increased competition is likely toresult in pricing pressures, which could adversely affect our margins, growth rate, or market share. Even if we have a good relationship and strong performance history with thecustomer, open and competitive biding practices mean we may not be awarded the renewal business or may have to aggressively price our services to be successful.If our information technology security measures are breached or fail and unauthorized access is obtained to a customer’s data, our service may be perceived as not beingsecure, the attractiveness of our services to current or potential customers may be reduced, and we may incur significant liabilities.26Our services involve the storage and transmission of customers’ proprietary information and protected health, financial, payment, and other personal information of patients.We rely on proprietary and commercially available systems, software, tools, and monitoring, as well as other processes, to provide security for processing, transmission, and storageof such information. Due to the sensitivity of this information, the effectiveness of such security efforts is very important. If our security measures are breached or fail as a result ofthird-party action, employee error, malfeasance, or otherwise, someone may be able to obtain unauthorized access to customer or patient data. Improper activities by third parties,advances in computer and software capabilities and encryption technology, new tools and discoveries, and other events or developments may facilitate or result in a compromise orbreach of our computer systems. Techniques used to obtain unauthorized access or to sabotage systems change frequently and generally are not recognized until launched against atarget, and we may be unable to anticipate these techniques or to implement adequate preventive measures. Our security measures may not be effective in preventing these types ofactivities, and the information technology security measures of our third-party data centers and service providers may not be adequate.To date, cyber attacks have not had a material impact on our business, results of operations, or financial condition; however, we could suffer material losses in the future as aresult of cyber attacks, and we are not able to predict the severity of these attacks. Our risk and exposure to these matters remains heightened because of, among other things, theevolving nature of these threats, the ongoing shortage of qualified cyber security professionals, and the interconnectivity and interdependence of third parties to our systems. Theoccurrence of a cyber attack, breach, unauthorized access, misuse, computer virus or other malicious code, or other cyber security event could jeopardize or result in theunauthorized disclosure, gathering, monitoring, misuse, corruption, loss, or destruction of confidential information that belongs to us or our customers or PHI that is processed andstored in, and transmitted through, our computer systems and networks. The occurrence of such an event could also result in damage to our software, computers, or systems, orotherwise cause interruptions or malfunctions in our, our customers’, or third parties’ operations. If a breach of our information technology security occurs, we could face damagesfor contract breach, penalties for violation of applicable laws or regulations, possible lawsuits by individuals affected by the breach, and significant remediation costs and efforts toprevent future occurrences. Although we currently carry insurance coverage to protect ourselves against some of these risks, our inability to continue to obtain such insurancecoverage at reasonable costs could also have a material adverse effect on us. In addition, whether there is an actual or a perceived breach of our information technology security, themarket perception of the effectiveness of our security measures could be harmed and we could lose current or potential customers.Delayed or unsuccessful implementation of our technologies or services with our customers or implementation costs that exceed our expectations may harm our financialresults.To implement our solutions, we work with our customer’s existing vendors, management, and staff and layer our proprietary technology applications on top of the customer’sexisting patient accounting and clinical systems. Each customer’s situation is different, and unanticipated difficulties and delays may arise, such as delays in, or the inability to,obtain approvals or access rights from our customers' vendors. If the implementation process is not executed successfully or is delayed, our relationship with the customer may beadversely affected and our results of operations could suffer. Implementation of our solutions also requires us to integrate our own employees into the customer’s operations.Individual customer’s circumstances or a combination of customer’s circumstances may require us to devote a larger number of our employees than anticipated, which couldincrease our costs and harm our financial results.Disruptions in service or damage to our global business services centers and third-party operated data centers could adversely affect our business.Our global business services centers and third-party operated data centers are essential to our business. Our operations depend on our ability to operate our global businessservices centers and maintain and protect our applications, which are located in data centers that are operated for us by third parties. We cannot control or assure the continued oruninterrupted availability of these third-party data centers. In addition, our information technologies and systems, as well as our data centers and global business services centers, arevulnerable to damage or interruption from various causes, including (1) acts of God and other natural disasters, war, acts of terrorism, and27pandemics and other public health events, including the COVID-19 pandemic, and (2) power losses, computer systems failures, internet and telecommunications or data networkfailures, operator error, losses of and corruption of data, and similar events. We have a business continuity plan and maintain insurance against fires, floods, other natural disasters,and general business interruptions to mitigate the adverse effects of a disruption, relocation, or change in operating environment at one of our data centers or global business servicescenters, but the situations we plan for and the amount of insurance coverage we maintain may not be adequate in every particular case. In addition, the occurrence of any of theseevents could result in interruptions, delays, or cessations in service to our customers, or in interruptions, delays, or cessations in the direct connections we establish between ourcustomers and payers. Any of these events could impair or inhibit our ability to provide our services, reduce the attractiveness of our services to current or potential customers, andadversely affect our financial condition and results of operations.In addition, despite the implementation of security measures, our infrastructure, data centers, global business services centers, or systems that we interface with, including theinternet and related systems, may be vulnerable to physical break-ins, improper employee or contractor access, programming errors, cyber attacks, computer viruses, malicious code,phishing attacks, denial-of-service attacks, or other information security threats by third parties seeking to disrupt operations or misappropriate information or similar physical orelectronic breaches of security. Any of these can cause system failure, including network, software, or hardware failure, which can result in service disruptions. As a result, we maybe required to expend significant capital and other resources to protect against security breaches and hackers or to alleviate problems caused by such breaches.Our growing global business services operations expose us to risks that could have a material adverse effect on our costs of operations.Our reliance on an international workforce exposes us to disruptions in the business, political, and economic environment in those regions. Maintenance of a stable politicalenvironment is important to our operations, and terrorist attacks and acts of violence or war may directly affect our physical facilities and workforce or contribute to generalinstability. Our global business services operations require us to comply with local laws and regulatory requirements, which are complex and of which we may not always be aware,and expose us to foreign currency exchange rate risk. Our global business services operations may also subject us to trade restrictions, reduced or inadequate protection forintellectual property rights, security breaches, pandemics and other public health events, including the COVID-19 pandemic, and other factors that may adversely affect ourbusiness. Negative developments in any of these areas could increase our costs of operations or otherwise harm our business.The COVID-19 pandemic has negatively affected and will likely continue to negatively affect our business, operating results, and financial condition.On March 11, 2020, the COVID-19 outbreak was characterized as a pandemic by the World Health Organization. In response to the pandemic, governments around the worldhave implemented numerous measures to try to contain the virus, such as travel bans and restrictions, quarantines, shelter in place orders, and shutdowns. Restrictions on businessesand travel are occurring based on state and local guidelines and vary by locality and cannot be reasonably predicted. Even after re-openings, a resurgence of cases have led to andmay continue to lead to further shut-downs or restrictions after the initial re-opening. These measures have impacted and may further impact all or portions of our workforce andoperations and the operations of our customers. These impacts include decreases in patient volumes, the need for personal protective equipment and other protective measures forfront-line employees, and work-from-home arrangements. Restrictions on our employees’ ability to travel could affect our ability to sell or onboard certain services. Our business,along with the global economy, has been adversely affected by these measures, which have resulted in a significant reductions in spending, volatile economic conditions, andbusiness disruptions across markets globally.During the year ended December 31, 2020, the adverse impacts to our results of operations which resulted from certain revenue pressure due to declining volumes werepartially offset by our cost control initiatives which were implemented in 2020. However, due to the continued global spread of COVID-19, including throughout the U.S., weanticipate adverse effects on our results of operations throughout our business as our customers continue to28experience disruptions to their businesses. In response to governmental restrictions and/or concerns regarding the spread of the virus, many patients and/or providers have delayed orcancelled routine and non-essential medical procedures and physician visits. As a result, a number of our customers have a reduced need for our personnel on site to manage theirRCM activities. However, even with decreased patient volumes, we have continued to employ our full customer-facing workforce. We also have a large number of employees nowworking from home, and such arrangements may involve increased use of public Wi-Fi and use of office equipment off premises, which may make our business more vulnerable tocybersecurity breach attempts. This period of uncertainty could also lead to an increase in phishing and other scams, fraud, theft, or other criminal activity. In addition, we have asignificant number of personnel internationally, including in India, which has implemented strict travel restrictions across the country. Travel restrictions or other containmentmeasures or the sudden spread of COVID-19 in India or in any other country where we have a large number of personnel or critical operations could impair our ability to manageday-to-day service delivery for our customers, which could result in, among other things, losses of revenue or breaches of our customer contracts if a large number of personnel wereunable to work at the same time. Further, adverse impacts to our customers’ businesses as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic could cause delays in, or limit their ability to, maketimely payments to us, which could adversely affect our results of operations. The COVID-19 pandemic and the response to it have caused an economic slowdown. An economicslowdown, recession, or economic uncertainty as a result of the COVID-19 outbreak could negatively affect us by reducing patient or service volumes and payment ability. Theextent to which COVID-19 will ultimately impact our results will depend on future developments, which are highly uncertain, but could materially and adversely impact ourbusiness, results of operations, and liquidity in future periods. The COVID-19 pandemic has also significantly increased economic and demand uncertainty and has led to disruptionand volatility in the global capital markets, which can increase the cost of capital and adversely impact our ability to access capital.These and other impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic could have the effect of heightening many of the other risks described in this “Risk Factors” section. The extent to whichthe COVID-19 pandemic impacts our results will depend on future developments, which are highly uncertain and cannot be predicted, including new information which may emergeconcerning the severity of COVID-19, the duration of the pandemic, travel restrictions, business closures or business disruption, and the actions taken throughout the world,including in our markets, to contain COVID-19 or treat its impact. The severity, magnitude, and duration of the COVID-19 pandemic is uncertain, rapidly changing, and difficult topredict and depends on events beyond our knowledge or control. We might not be able to predict or respond to all impacts on a timely basis to prevent near- or long-term adverseimpacts to our results. As a result, we cannot at this time predict the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic, but it could have a material adverse effect on our business, results ofoperations, financial condition and cash flows.We have a substantial amount of indebtedness. The agreement that governs our indebtedness contains covenants that impose restrictions on our ability to operate.We have a substantial amount of indebtedness as a result of our strategic initiatives. The loan agreement for this indebtedness contains certain customary representations andwarranties, affirmative and negative financial covenants, indemnity obligations, and events of default. These covenants could have important consequences to us, including:•our ability to obtain additional financing, if necessary, for working capital, capital expenditures, acquisitions, or other purposes may be impaired or such financing maynot be available on favorable terms, or at all;•negative financial covenants contained in the debt agreement require us to meet financial tests that may affect our flexibility in planning for, and reacting to, changes inour business, including possible acquisition opportunities;•we will need a substantial portion of our cash flow to make principal and interest payments on our indebtedness, reducing the funds that would otherwise be availablefor operations and future business opportunities; and•our debt level will make us more vulnerable than our less leveraged competitors to competitive pressures or a downturn in our business or the economy generally.29Our ability to comply with the provisions of the debt agreement may be affected by events beyond our control. Failure to comply with these covenants could result in an eventof default, which, if not cured or waived, could accelerate our debt repayment obligations.If we lose key personnel or if we are unable to attract, hire, integrate, and retain our key personnel and other necessary employees, our business could be harmed.Our future success depends in part on our ability to attract, hire, integrate, and retain key personnel. Our future success also depends in part on the continued contributions ofour executive officers and other key personnel, each of whom may be difficult to replace. The loss of services of any of our executive officers or key personnel, or the inability tocontinue to attract qualified personnel, could have a material adverse effect on our business. Competition for the caliber and number of employees we require is intense. We mayface difficulty identifying and hiring qualified personnel at compensation levels consistent with our existing compensation and salary structure. In addition, we invest significanttime and expense in training each of our employees, which increases their value to competitors who may seek to recruit them. Under the terms of our operating partner modelagreements, we expect to transition a significant number of our customers’ revenue cycle management employees to our employment. We may experience difficulties in integratingand retaining these employees. We employ a significant number of personnel internationally and expect to continue to add personnel in India. Significant growth in the technologysector in India has increased competition to attract and retain skilled employees and has led to a commensurate increase in compensation expense. If we fail to retain our employees,we could incur significant expenses in hiring, integrating, and training their replacements, and the quality of our services and our ability to serve our customers could diminish,resulting in a material adverse effect on our business.We may be liable to our customers or third parties if we make errors in providing our services, and our anticipated net services revenue may be lower if we provide poorservice.The services we offer are complex, and we make errors from time to time. Errors can result from the interface of our proprietary technology applications and a customer’sexisting technologies or we may make human errors in any aspect of our service offerings. The costs incurred in correcting any material errors may be substantial and couldadversely affect our operating results. Our customers, or third parties such as our customers’ patients, may assert claims against us alleging that they suffered damages due to ourerrors, and such claims could subject us to significant legal defense costs in excess of our existing insurance coverage and adverse publicity regardless of the merits or eventualoutcome of such claims. In addition, if we provide poor service to a customer and the customer therefore fails to achieve agreed upon improvement in financial or operating metrics,the incentive fee payments to us from that customer will be lower than anticipated.Our business operations currently include the collection, on behalf of our customers, of medical co-pays and other payments that are due to our customers from theirpatients. This business practice has been perceived negatively by the public and this negative perception has adversely affected (and may continue to adversely affect) ourbusiness, results of operations, and financial condition.We currently collect, on behalf of our customers, medical co-pays and other non-defaulted payments that are due to our customers from their patients, pursuant to managedservices agreements with our customers. Collection of these payments from patients may become a more significant part of our RCM services as industry trends continue to increasepatient responsibility as a percentage of total compensation to healthcare providers. This business practice, which has received widespread, unfavorable publicity as a result oflawsuits previously initiated against us, has been negatively perceived by the public and has led us to change aspects of our business practices, made it more difficult to retainexisting customers and attract new customers, extended the time it takes to enter into service agreements with new customers, and resulted in a material adverse effect on ourbusiness, results of operations, and financial condition, and it may continue to do so.Negative public perception in the United States regarding offshore outsourcing and proposed legislation may increase the cost of delivering our services.30Offshore outsourcing is a politically sensitive topic in the United States. For example, various organizations and public figures in the United States have expressed concernabout a perceived association between offshore outsourcing providers and the loss of jobs in the United States. Current or prospective customers may elect to perform such servicesthemselves or may be discouraged from transferring these services from onshore to offshore providers to avoid negative perceptions that may be associated with using an offshoreprovider. Any slowdown or reversal of existing industry trends towards offshore outsourcing would increase the cost of delivering our services if we had to relocate aspects of ourservices from our global business services operations to the United States where operating costs are higher.Legislation in the United States may be enacted that is intended to discourage or restrict offshore outsourcing. In the United States, federal and state legislation has beenproposed, and in several states enacted, to restrict or discourage U.S. companies from outsourcing their services to companies outside the United States. Further, through rule makingor executive action, some states have imposed limitations on offshore outsourcing of administrative services for the Medicaid program. It is possible that additional legislation couldbe adopted or regulatory guidance issued that would restrict U.S. private sector companies that have federal or state government contracts, or that receive government funding orreimbursement, such as Medicare or Medicaid payments, from outsourcing their services to offshore service providers. Any changes to existing laws or the enactment of newlegislation restricting offshore outsourcing in the United States may adversely affect our ability to do business, particularly if these changes are widespread, and could have amaterial adverse effect on our business, results of operations, financial condition, and cash flows.Litigation has materially adversely affected our business, financial condition, operating results, and cash flows and caused unfavorable publicity and may continue to doso.We are subject to, and may in the future become subject to additional, lawsuits, claims, audits, and investigations related to our business. Current lawsuits, claims, audits, andinvestigations are described in “Part I – Item 3 – Legal Proceedings”. These, as well as any future lawsuits, claims, audits and investigations, have resulted in, and may lead toadditional, unfavorable publicity for us and may continue to materially adversely affect our business, financial condition, operating results, and cash flows in various ways, includingsubjecting us to significant liability, resulting in significant settlement payments, or having a disruptive effect upon the operation of our business and consuming the time andattention of our senior management. In addition, we have incurred substantial expenses in connection with these litigation matters, including substantial fees for attorneys. Althoughwe maintain insurance that may provide coverage for some or all of these expenses, and we have given notice to our insurers of the claims, our insurers have responded, in manyinstances, by reserving their rights under the policies, including the rights to deny coverage under various policy exclusions. There is risk that the insurers will rescind the policies,that some or all of the claims will not be covered by such policies, or that, even if covered, our ultimate liability will exceed the available insurance.We are unable to predict the outcome of pending legal actions. The ultimate resolutions of our pending litigation could have a material adverse effect on our financial results,financial condition or liquidity, and on the trading price of our common stock.The imposition of legal responsibility for obligations related to our customers’ employees could adversely affect our business and subject us to liability.Under our co-management model, we work with customers’ employees engaged in the activities included in the scope of our services. Our co-management model agreementsestablish the division of responsibilities between us and our customers for various personnel management matters, including compliance with and liability under various employmentlaws and regulations. We could, nevertheless, be found to have liability with our customers for actions against or by employees of our customers, including under variousemployment laws and regulations, such as those relating to discrimination, retaliation, wage and hour matters, occupational safety and health, family and medical leave, notice offacility closings and layoffs and labor relations, and any such liability could result in a material adverse effect on our business.31We offer our services in many jurisdictions and, therefore, may be subject to federal, state, local, and foreign taxes that could harm our business or that we may haveinadvertently failed to pay.We may lose sales or incur significant costs should various tax jurisdictions be successful in imposing taxes on a broader range of services. Imposition of such taxes on ourservices could result in substantial unplanned costs, which would effectively increase the cost of such services to our customers and may adversely affect our ability to retain existingcustomers or to gain new customers in the areas in which such taxes are imposed.Risks Related to Ascension and the TransactionHealthcare providers affiliated with Ascension currently account for a significant portion of our net services revenue. The early termination of our A&R MPSA withAscension, or any significant loss of business from our large customers, would have a material adverse effect on our business, results of operations and financial condition.Healthcare providers affiliated with Ascension have accounted for a significant portion of our net services revenue each year since our formation. In 2020, 2019, and 2018, netservices revenue from healthcare providers affiliated with Ascension represented 64%, 67%, and 69% of our total net services revenue, respectively. The early termination of theA&R MPSA, the loss of any of our other large customers or their failure to renew their managed services agreements with us upon expiration, or a reduction in the fees for ourservices for these customers, could have a material adverse effect on our business, results of operations and financial condition.Our agreement with Ascension requires us to offer to Ascension service fees that are at least as low as the fees we charge any other customer receiving comparableservices at comparable or lower volumes.Our A&R MPSA with Ascension requires us to offer to Ascension's affiliated healthcare providers fees for our services that are at least as low as the fees we charge any othercustomer receiving comparable services at lower volumes. If we were to charge lower service fees to any other customer receiving comparable services at lower volumes, we wouldbe obligated to charge such lower fees to the hospital systems affiliated with Ascension effective as of the date such lower charges were first implemented for such other customer. Ifwe offer customers lower rates as discussed above, it could have a material adverse effect on our results of operations and financial condition.The Investor, an affiliate of TowerBrook and Ascension, is a significant shareholder in us and may have conflicts of interest with us or other stockholders in the future.On January 15, 2021, the Investor converted all of its 294,266 shares (the “Current Shares”) of Preferred Stock into 117,706,400 shares of common stock of the Company intowhich the Current Shares were convertible pursuant to the Certificate of Designation of the Preferred Stock, and, in consideration therefor, the Company (i) issued 21,582,800additional shares of common stock, and (ii) paid the Investor $105.0 million in cash. The shares issued to the Investor represent 53% of the voting power of our stockholders as ofFebruary 11, 2021. The Investor also owns a warrant to acquire up to 60 million shares of our common stock which was issued pursuant to the Transaction. As a result of thisownership, so long as certain ownership thresholds are met, the Investor, among other things, has the right to nominate a majority of the members of our board of directors (“Board”)and has a consent right over certain corporate actions, including any amendment of the A&R MPSA, the incurrence of indebtedness in excess of $100.0 million, the acquisition ofany assets or properties in excess of $100.0 million or the making of any capital expenditures in excess of $25.0 million, the approval of our annual budget, and the hiring ortermination of our chief executive officer.The interests of the Investor and its affiliates may differ from our other stockholders in material respects. For example, the Investor may have an interest in pursuingacquisitions, divestitures, financings, or other transactions that, in their judgment, could enhance their equity investments, even though such transactions might involve risks to otherstockholders. Additionally, Ascension is an affiliate of the Investor and as our largest customer their interests may differ from other stockholders’ interests. The Investor or itsaffiliates or advisors are also in the business of making or advising on investments in companies, and may from time to time in the future, acquire interests in, or32provide advice to, businesses that directly or indirectly compete with certain portions of our business or are suppliers or customers of ours. They may pursue acquisitionopportunities that may be complementary to our business and, as a result, those acquisition opportunities may not be available to us. Other stockholders should consider that theinterests of the Investor and its affiliates may differ from theirs in material respects.Risks Related to AcquisitionsWe may fail to realize the success of strategic initiatives and other investments.The anticipated benefits of acquisitions, strategic initiatives, and other investments will depend on, among other things, our ability to realize anticipated synergies, cost savings,and operational benefits of corresponding activity, which benefits are subject to, among others, the following risks:•the incurrence of additional indebtedness in connection with the financing of the acquisition may have an adverse effect on our liquidity;•we may fail to retain key employees of the acquired company;•we may be unable to successfully integrate personnel from acquired companies, while at the same time attempting to provide consistent, high quality services;•we may fail to realize the anticipated synergies and cost savings we expect from the acquisition;•future developments may impair the value of our purchased goodwill or intangible assets;•we may face difficulties establishing, integrating, or combining operations and systems;•we may face challenges retaining the customers of the acquired businesses;•we may encounter unforeseen internal control, regulatory or compliance issues; and•we may face other additional risks relating to regulatory matters, legal proceedings, or tax laws or positions.If any of these risks occur, we may not be able to realize the anticipated benefits of the acquisition, or they may take longer to realize than expected. The integration processcould result in the distraction of our management, the disruption of our ongoing business, or inconsistencies in our services, standards, controls, procedures, and policies, any ofwhich could adversely affect our ability to maintain relationships with customers, vendors, and employees or to achieve the anticipated benefits of the acquisition, or could otherwiseadversely affect our business and operating results.Regulatory RisksThe healthcare industry is heavily regulated. Our failure to comply with regulatory requirements could create liability for us, result in adverse publicity, and adverselyaffect our business.The healthcare industry is heavily regulated and is subject to changing political, legislative, regulatory, and other influences. Many healthcare laws are complex, and theirapplication to specific services and relationships may not be clear. In particular, many existing healthcare laws and regulations, when enacted, did not anticipate the services weprovide. There can be no assurance that our operations will not be challenged or adversely affected by enforcement initiatives. Our failure to anticipate the application of these lawsand regulations to our business, or any other failure to comply with regulatory requirements, could create liability for us, result in adverse publicity, and adversely affect theattractiveness of our services to existing customers and our ability to market new services. We are unable to predict what changes to laws or regulations might be made in the futureor how those changes could affect our business or our operating costs.Developments in the healthcare industry, including national healthcare reform, could adversely affect our business.The healthcare industry has changed significantly in recent years and we expect this to continue. We are unable to predict each healthcare initiative that will be implemented atthe federal or state level, or what the ultimate33effect these initiatives may have on us. For example, changes to Medicare and Medicaid reimbursement are implemented periodically and may cause a reduction in the amountsreceived by our customers and may have an adverse indirect effect on our business.In addition, healthcare reform is causing some payors to transition from volume to value-based reimbursement models, which can include risk-sharing, bundled payment, andother innovative approaches. While these models may provide us with opportunities to provide new or additional services (e.g., our value based reimbursement capabilities withinour RCM service offering) and to participate in incentive-based payment arrangements, there can be no assurance that such new models and approaches will prove to be profitable toour customers or us. Further, new models and approaches may require investment by us to develop technology or expertise to offer necessary and appropriate services or support toour customers, and the amount of such investment and the timing for return of such investment are not fully known at this time. In addition, some of these new models are beingoffered as pilot programs and there is no assurance that they will continue or be renewed. Further, adoption of such new models and approaches may require compliance with a rangeof federal and state laws relating to fraud and abuse, insurance, reinsurance and managed care regulation, billing and collection, corporate practice of medicine restrictions, andlicensing, among others. Many states in which these new value-based structures are being developed lack regulatory guidance or a well-developed body of law for these new modelsand approaches, or may not have updated their laws or enacted legislation yet to reflect the new healthcare reform models. As a result, although we have structured, and will attemptto structure and conduct, our operations in accordance with our interpretation of current laws and regulations, new and existing laws, regulations, or guidance could have a materialadverse effect on our current and future operations and could subject us to the risk of restructuring or terminating our customer agreements and arrangements, as well as the risk ofregulatory enforcement, penalties, and sanctions, if state enforcement agencies disagree with our interpretation of state laws.If we violate HIPAA, the HITECH Act or state or foreign health information privacy laws, we may incur significant liabilities, and any such violations could make it moredifficult to retain existing customers or attract new customers, extend the time it takes to enter into service agreements with new customers, and result in a material adverseeffect on our business, results of operations, and financial condition.As described in Item 1 above, HIPAA contains substantial restrictions and requirements with respect to the use and disclosure of individuals’ PHI. Since the passage of theHITECH Act in 2009, enforcement of HIPAA violations has increased, as indicated by the announcement of a number of significant settlement agreements and/or sanctions byfederal authorities, the pursuit of HIPAA violations by state attorneys general, and the roll-out of a new federal audit program for covered entities and business associates. HHS mayresolve HIPAA violations through informal means, such as allowing a covered entity to implement a corrective action plan, but HHS has the discretion to move directly to imposemonetary penalties and is required to impose penalties for violations resulting from willful neglect. In addition to enforcement by HHS, state attorneys general may bring civilactions in response to violations of HIPAA privacy and security regulations and/or state privacy and security laws that threaten the privacy of state residents.We and our customers also are subject to any federal or state privacy-related laws that are more restrictive than the privacy regulations issued under HIPAA. These laws varyand could impose additional penalties and subject us to additional privacy and security restrictions. Legislation has also been proposed or implemented at various times at both thefederal and the state levels that would limit, forbid or regulate the use or transmission of medical information pertaining to U.S. patients outside of the United States. In addition,various states recently have enacted, and other states are considering, new laws and regulations concerning the privacy and security of consumer and other personal information. Tothe extent we are subject to such requirements, these laws and regulations often have far-reaching effects, may require us to modify our data processing practices and policies, mayrequire us to incur substantial costs and expenses to comply, and may render our international operations impracticable or make them substantially more expensive. These laws andregulations often provide for civil penalties for violations, as well as a private right of action for data breaches, which may increase the likelihood or impact of data breach litigation.34Along with state and federal laws, GDPR imposes obligations on us as a data controller and data processor, as well as on many of our customers. New privacy laws also maymandate steps needed to continue to store, transfer, and process personal data. For example, there are some legal challenges in Europe to the mechanisms allowing companies totransfer personal data from the European Economic Area to the United States. This may mean that data transfer agreements will need to be updated. Additionally, certain countrieshave passed or are considering passing laws requiring local data residency.We have implemented and maintain physical, technical and administrative safeguards intended to protect all personal data and have processes in place to assist us in complyingwith applicable laws and regulations regarding the protection of this data and properly responding to any security incidents or breaches. We have received and maintainedcertification from the Health Information Trust (HITRUST) Alliance since January 2013. The HITRUST Common Security Framework (CSF), the most widely adopted frameworkin the healthcare industry, provides a comprehensive set of baseline security controls that leverage nationally and internationally accepted standards, including ISO, NIST, PCI,HIPAA and COBIT. Our HITRUST certification validates our continued commitment to compliance with the Security and Privacy Rules under HIPAA and to state-specific securityand privacy laws regarding the creation, access, storage or exchange of PHI and financial information. Nonetheless, a knowing breach of HIPAA’s requirements could expose us tocriminal liability. A breach of our safeguards and processes that is not due to reasonable cause or involves willful neglect could expose us to significant civil penalties and thepossibility of civil litigation under HIPAA and applicable state law.In addition, given the omnipresent threat of potential cybersecurity incidents or security breaches, we, or our customers, could be required to report such breaches to affectedconsumers or regulatory authorities, leading to disclosures that could damage our reputation or harm our business, financial position, and operating results. We have been the victimof theft of company property containing patient data in the past, and we may face similar incidents in the future. During the current COVID-19 pandemic, we have shifted manyemployees to work from home environments, which introduces additional risk surrounding theft of company property and access to PHI. Cybersecurity incidents or allegations ofdeficiencies regarding our data security practices could require us to change aspects of our business practices, make it more difficult to retain existing customers or attract newcustomers, extend the time it takes to enter into service agreements with new customers, and result in a material adverse effect on our business, results of operations and financialcondition.If we fail to comply with federal and state laws governing submission of false or fraudulent claims to government healthcare programs and financial relationships amonghealthcare providers, we may be subject to civil and criminal penalties or loss of eligibility to participate in government healthcare programs.Healthcare is one of the largest industries in the country and one of the costliest lines in the federal budget. As a result, the health care industry continues to attract attentionfrom legislators and regulators. As described in Item 1 above, a number of health care fraud and abuse laws, including but not limited to the AKS, FCA, Stark Law, and EMTALA,and their state counterparts, apply to hospitals, physicians, and others who furnish health care services to patients and submit claims for reimbursement to government programsand/or commercial insurers, and refer patients to one another, continues to attract attention from legislators and regulators. Federal and state regulatory and law enforcementauthorities continue to focus on enforcement activities with respect to Medicare and Medicaid fraud and abuse regulations and other healthcare reimbursement laws and rules in aneffort to reduce overall healthcare spending.These laws are complex, may change rapidly, and their application to our specific services and relationships may not be clear and may be applied to our business in ways wedo not anticipate. New payment structures, for example, such as accountable care organizations and other arrangements involving combinations of healthcare providers who sharesavings, potentially implicate anti-kickback and other fraud and abuse laws. In addition, errors created by our proprietary applications or services that relate to entry, formatting,preparation, or transmission of claims, reporting of quality or other data pursuant to value-based purchasing initiatives, or cost report information may be alleged or determined tocause the submission of false claims or otherwise be in violation of these laws. Further, the continued growth of our coding and billing services provided from a global businessservices35environment necessitates comprehensive monitoring and oversight of these services to ensure a constant vigilance to quality control and regulatory compliance.While we seek to structure our business relationships and activities to avoid any activity that could be construed to implicate federal and state fraud and abuse laws, we cannotassure you that our arrangements and activities will be deemed outside the scope of these laws or that increased enforcement activities will not directly or indirectly have a materialadverse effect on our business, financial condition, or results of operations. Any determination that we have violated any of these laws could, for example (i) subject us to civil orcriminal penalties (ii) require us to change or terminate some portions of our operations or business (iii) disqualify us from providing services to healthcare providers doing businesswith government programs, (iv) give our customers the right to terminate our managed services agreements with them, and/or (v) require us to refund portions of our base feerevenues and incentive payment revenues, any of which could have a material adverse effect on our business and results of operations. Moreover, any violations by, and resultingpenalties or exclusions imposed upon, our customers could adversely affect their financial condition and, in turn, have a material adverse effect on our business and results ofoperations. Finally, even absent an alleged violation of the law by us, participants in the healthcare industry receive inquiries or subpoenas to produce documents in connection withgovernment investigations. We could be required to expend significant time and resources to comply with these requests, and the attention of our management team could bediverted by these efforts.We cannot be certain that governmental officials responsible for enforcing EMTALA, or other parties, will not assert that our customers are in violation of EMTALA, anddefending and settling allegations of EMTALA violations could have a material adverse effect on our business even if we are ultimately not found to have contributed to suchviolations.Although EMTALA is not directly applicable to us because we are not a Medicare participating hospital, we cannot be certain that governmental officials responsible forenforcing EMTALA, or other parties, will not assert that our customers are in violation of EMTALA. If our customers are found to have violated EMTALA, they may assert claimsthat our management practices contributed to the violation. Defending and settling allegations of EMTALA violations could have a material adverse effect on our business even ifwe are ultimately not found guilty of a violation.Our failure to comply with debt collection and other consumer protection laws and regulations could subject us to fines and other liabilities, which could harm ourreputation and business, and could make it more difficult to retain existing customers or attract new customers, extend the time it takes to enter into service agreements withnew customers, and result in a material adverse effect on our business, results of operations, and financial condition.Our business practices involve collecting or assisting our customers in collecting, non-defaulted amounts owed by patients for current and prior services activities, which maysubject us to the FDCPA. The FDCPA and the TCPA restrict the methods that we may use to contact and seek payment from consumer debtors regarding past due accounts. Manystates impose additional requirements on debt collection practices, and some of those requirements may be more stringent than the federal requirements. Moreover, regulationsgoverning debt collection are subject to changing interpretations that may be inconsistent among different jurisdictions. We could incur costs or could be subject to fines or otherpenalties under the TCPA, the FDCPA and the FTC Act if we are determined to have violated the provisions of those regulations during the course of conducting our operations.Any perceived breach of the FDCPA could result in us being required to change aspects of our business practices, make it more difficult to retain existing customers or attract newcustomers, extend the time it takes to enter into service agreements with new customers, and result in a material adverse effect on our business, results of operations, and financialcondition.Risks Related to Intellectual PropertyWe may be unable to adequately protect our intellectual property.36Our success depends, in part, upon our ability to establish, protect and enforce our intellectual property and other proprietary rights. If we fail to establish or protect ourintellectual property rights, we may lose an important advantage in the market in which we compete. We rely upon a combination of patent, trademark, copyright and trade secretlaw and contractual terms and conditions to protect our intellectual property rights, all of which provide only limited protection. We cannot assure you that our intellectual propertyrights are sufficient to protect our competitive advantages. We cannot assure you that any patents issued or that will be issued from current or future applications will provide us withthe protection that we seek or that any current or future patents issued to us will not be challenged, invalidated or circumvented. Legal standards relating to the validity,enforceability and scope of protection of patents are uncertain. Also, we cannot assure you that any trademark registrations will be issued for pending or future applications or thatany of our trademarks will be enforceable or provide adequate protection of our proprietary rights.We also rely in some circumstances on trade secrets to protect our technology. Trade secrets may lose their value if not properly protected. We endeavor to enter into non-disclosure agreements with our employees, customers, contractors, and business partners to limit access to and disclosure of our proprietary information. The steps we have taken,however, may not prevent unauthorized use of our technology, and adequate remedies may not be available in the event of unauthorized use or disclosure of our trade secrets andproprietary technology. Moreover, others may reverse engineer or independently develop technologies that are competitive to ours or infringe our intellectual property.Accordingly, despite our efforts, we may be unable to prevent third parties from infringing or misappropriating our intellectual property and using our technology for theircompetitive advantage. Any such infringement or misappropriation could have a material adverse effect on our business, results of operations, and financial condition. Monitoringinfringement of our intellectual property rights can be difficult and costly, and enforcement of our intellectual property rights may require us to bring legal actions against infringers.Infringement actions are inherently uncertain and therefore may not be successful, even when our rights have been infringed, and even if successful, may require a substantialamount of resources and divert our management’s attention.Claims by others that we infringe their intellectual property could force us to incur significant costs or revise the way we conduct our business.Our competitors protect their intellectual property rights by means such as patents, trade secrets, copyrights, and trademarks. We have not conducted an independent review ofpatents issued to third parties. Additionally, because patent applications in the United States and many other jurisdictions are kept confidential for 18 months before they arepublished, we may be unaware of pending patent applications that relate to our proprietary technology. Any party asserting that we infringe its proprietary rights would force us todefend ourselves, and possibly our customers, against the alleged infringement. These claims and any resulting lawsuit, if successful, could: subject us to significant liability fordamages and invalidation of our proprietary rights; cause interruption or cessation of our operations; require us to enter into royalty or licensing agreements with third parties; andconsume time which would otherwise be spent on our core business. Even if we prevail, the cost of such litigation could deplete our financial resources. Furthermore, during thecourse of litigation, confidential information may be disclosed in the form of documents or testimony in connection with discovery requests, depositions, or trial testimony. Thesoftware and technology industries are characterized by the existence of a large number of patents, copyrights, trademarks and trade secrets and by frequent litigation based onallegations of infringement or other violations of intellectual property rights. Moreover, the risk of such a lawsuit will likely increase as our size and scope of our services andtechnology platforms increase, as our geographic presence and market share expand and as the number of competitors in our market increases. Any of the foregoing could disruptour business and have a material adverse effect on our operating results and financial condition.Risks Related to the Ownership of Shares of Our Common StockThe trading price of our common stock has been volatile and may continue to be volatile.37Since December 31, 2010, our common stock has traded at a price per share as high as $32.82 and as low as $1.47. The trading price of our common stock is likely to continueto be highly volatile and could be subject to wide fluctuations in response to various factors. In addition to the risks described in this section, factors that may cause the market priceof our common stock to fluctuate include:•fluctuations in our quarterly financial results or the quarterly financial results of companies perceived to be similar to us;•changes in estimates of our financial results;•failure to meet expectations of securities analysts;•the loss of service agreements with customers;•lawsuits filed against us by governmental authorities or stockholders;•unfavorable publicity concerning our operations or business practices;•investors’ general perception of us; and•changes in general economic, industry, regulatory, and market conditions.In addition, if the stock market in general experiences a loss of investor confidence, the trading price of our common stock could decline for reasons unrelated to our business,financial condition, or results of operations.Anti-takeover provisions in our charter documents and Delaware law could discourage, delay, or prevent a change in control of our company and may affect the tradingprice of our common stock.We are a Delaware corporation and the anti-takeover provisions of the Delaware General Corporation Law may discourage, delay, or prevent a change in control by prohibitingus from engaging in a business combination with an interested stockholder for a period of three years after the person becomes an interested stockholder, even if a change in controlwould be beneficial to our existing stockholders. In addition, our restated certificate of incorporation and amended and restated bylaws may discourage, delay or prevent a change inour management or control over us that stockholders may consider favorable. Our restated certificate of incorporation and amended and restated bylaws:•authorize the issuance of “blank check” preferred stock that could be issued by our Board to thwart a takeover attempt;•require that directors only be removed from office upon a supermajority stockholder vote;•provide that vacancies on our Board, including newly created directorships, may be filled only by a majority vote of directors then in office;•limit who may call special meetings of stockholders;•prohibit stockholder action by written consent, requiring all actions to be taken at a meeting of the stockholders; and•require supermajority stockholder voting to effect certain amendments to our restated certificate of incorporation and amended and restated bylaws.We may not pay any cash dividends on our capital stock in the foreseeable future.Although we paid cash dividends on our capital stock prior to our May 2010 initial public offering (“IPO”) there is no assurance that we will pay cash dividends on ourcommon stock in the foreseeable future. Any future dividend payments will be within the discretion of our Board and will depend on, among other things, our financial condition,results of operations, capital requirements, capital expenditure requirements, contractual restrictions, provisions of applicable law, and other factors that our Board may deemrelevant. We may not generate sufficient cash from operations in the future to pay dividends on our common stock.38Item 1B.Unresolved Staff CommentsNone.Item 2.PropertiesWe primarily lease our existing facilities, and own one facility in Mansfield, Texas.Our principal executive office is in Chicago, Illinois. We occupy leased office space of approximately 510,000 square feet throughout 17 offices domestically, andapproximately 450,000 square feet throughout 7 offices internationally. Pursuant to our managed services agreements with customers, we occupy space on-site at healthcareproviders where we provide our RCM services. We generally do not pay customers for our use of space provided by them for our use in the provision of RCM services to thatcustomer.We believe that our facilities are sufficient for our current needs. We intend to add new facilities or expand existing facilities as we add employees or expand or change ourgeographic markets and office locations, and we believe that suitable additional or substitute space will be available as needed to accommodate any such expansion of ouroperations. Item 3.Legal ProceedingsOther than the litigation described in Note 20, Commitments and Contingencies, to our consolidated financial statements, we are presently not a party to any material litigationor regulatory proceeding and are not aware of any pending or threatened litigation or regulatory proceeding against us which, individually or in the aggregate, could have a materialadverse effect on our business, operating results, financial condition, or cash flows.Item 4.Mine Safety DisclosuresNot applicable.39PART IIItem 5.Market for Registrant’s Common Equity, Related Stockholder Matters and Issuer Purchases of Equity Securities Our common stock is listed on the NASDAQ Stock Market under the symbol “RCM.”Holders of RecordAs of February 4, 2021, there were approximately 20 stockholders of record of our common stock and approximately 15,000 beneficial holders.DividendsWe did not pay any dividends on our common stock during the years ended December 31, 2020 and 2019. We currently intend to retain earnings, if any, to finance the growthand development of our business, and we do not expect to pay any cash dividends on our common stock in the foreseeable future. Payment of future dividends, if any, will be at thediscretion of our Board and will depend on, among other things, our financial condition, results of operations, capital expenditure requirements, contractual restrictions, provisions ofapplicable law, and other factors that the Board deems relevant. The credit agreement governing our senior secured credit facilities also restricts our ability to pay dividends on ourcommon stock.Issuer Purchases of Equity SecuritiesThe following table provides information about our repurchases of common stock during the periods indicated (in thousands, except share and per share data):PeriodNumber of Shares Purchased (1) Average PricePaid per ShareTotal Number of Shares Purchased as Part of Publicly Announced Plans or Programs (2) Maximum Dollar Value of Shares that May Yet be Purchased Under Publicly Announced Plans or Programs (in millions) (2)October 1, 2020 through October 31, 2020 7,053 $17.55 — $49.0 November 1, 2020 through November 30, 2020— $— — $49.0 December 1, 2020 through December 31, 20202,741,529 $23.43 — $49.0 (1)Repurchases of our stock related to employees’ tax withholding upon vesting of restricted stock. See Note 15, Share-Based Compensation, to our consolidatedfinancial statements included in this Annual Report on Form 10-K.(2)On November 13, 2013, the Board authorized, subject to the completion of the restatement of our financial statements, the repurchase of up to $50.0 million ofour common stock from time to time in the open market or in privately negotiated transactions (the “2013 Repurchase Program”). The timing and amount ofany shares repurchased under the 2013 Repurchase Program will be determined by our management based on its evaluation of market conditions and otherfactors. The 2013 Repurchase Program may be suspended or discontinued at any time. See Note 14, Stockholders' Equity (Deficit), to our consolidated financialstatements included in this Annual Report on Form 10-K.40Stock Price Performance GraphThe following graph compares the change in the cumulative total return (including the reinvestment of dividends) on our common stock to the change in the cumulative totalreturn on the stocks included in the NYSE Composite Index and NASDAQ Health Care Index over the period from December 31, 2015 through December 31, 2020. The graphassumes an investment of $100 made in our common stock on December 31, 2015. We did not pay any dividends during the period reflected in the graph.COMPARISON OF CUMULATIVE TOTAL RETURN12/31/201512/31/201612/31/201712/31/201812/31/201912/31/2020R1 RCM Inc.$10070.31137.81248.44405.63750.63NYSE Composite Index$100109.01126.28112.14137.16143.19NASDAQ Health Care Index$10083.09100.7996.59121.54158.04The comparisons shown in the graph above are based on historical data and we caution that the stock price performance shown in the graph above is not indicative of, and isnot intended to forecast, the potential future performance of our common stock. The information in this “Stock Price Performance Graph” section shall not be deemed to be“soliciting material” or to be “filed” with the SEC, nor shall such information be incorporated by reference into any future filing under the Securities Act of 1933, or the SecuritiesAct, or the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, or the Exchange Act, except to the extent that we specifically incorporate it by reference into such filing.Item 6.Selected Financial Data[Reserved]41Item 7.Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of OperationsManagement’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations (“MD&A”) should be read in conjunction with our consolidated financialstatements and the related notes and other financial information included elsewhere in this Annual Report on Form 10-K. Some of the information contained in this discussion andanalysis or set forth elsewhere in this Annual Report on Form 10-K, including information with respect to our plans and strategy for our business and related financing, includesforward-looking statements that involve risks and uncertainties. Please review “Risk Factors” of this Annual Report on Form 10-K for a discussion of important factors that couldcause actual results to differ materially from the results described in or implied by the forward-looking statements contained in the following discussion and analysis.OverviewWe are a leading provider of technology-driven solutions that transform the patient experience and financial performance of healthcare providers. We help healthcare providersgenerate sustainable improvements in their operating margins and cash flows while also enhancing patient, physician, and staff satisfaction for our customers.While we cannot control the changes in the regulatory environment imposed on our customers, we believe that our role becomes increasingly more important to our customersas macroeconomic, regulatory, and healthcare industry conditions continue to impose financial pressure on healthcare providers to manage their operations effectively andefficiently.Our primary service offering consists of end-to-end RCM, which we deploy through an operating partner relationship or a co-managed relationship. Under an operating partnerrelationship, we provide comprehensive revenue cycle infrastructure to providers, including all revenue cycle personnel, technology, and process workflow. Under a co-managedrelationship, we leverage our customers’ existing RCM staff and processes, and supplement them with our infused management, subject matter specialists, proprietary technology,and other resources. For the year ended December 31, 2020, substantially all of our net operating and incentive fees from end-to-end RCM were generated under the operatingpartner model. We also offer modular services, allowing customers to engage us for only specific components of our end-to-end RCM service offering, such as PAS, PM, and RIS. Our PASoffering assists healthcare organizations in complying with payer requirements regarding whether to classify a hospital visit as an in-patient or an out-patient observation case forbilling purposes. Our PM services offer administrative and operational support to allow healthcare providers to focus on delivering high quality patient care and outsource non-corefunctions to us. Our RIS offering includes charge capture, CDM maintenance, and pricing services that help providers ensure they are capturing the maximum net compliant revenuefor services delivered.We operate our business as a single segment configured with our significant operations and offerings organized around the business of providing end-to-end RCM services tohealthcare providers.Summary of OperationsIn 2020, we achieved notable progress against our strategic initiatives, and delivered significant improvements on our key performance metrics. Our key accomplishments in2020 include:•We navigated the complex environment presented by the COVID-19 pandemic by prioritizing the safety of our workforce and providing uninterrupted service to ourcustomers, while balancing near-term dynamics with our long-term growth needs. Our financial results were below the goals we established at the start of 2020, but strongoperational execution by the entire team mitigated the impact of the pandemic on our results and we delivered revenue growth of 7.1% and adjusted EBITDA growth of42.9% compared to 2019.42•We added $5.0 billion in net patient revenue under management on an end-to-end basis, exceeding our $3 billion target. Penn State Health and LifePoint Health were twonotable new customers, extending our presence in the academic and for-profit health system markets.•We acquired SCI, a leading provider of digital patient engagement solutions. By integrating SCI’s capabilities into R1’s PX platform, we can deliver enhanced value for ourcustomers by enabling them to create digital front door strategies for their patients, improve operating efficiency, and increase capacity utilization.•We acquired RevWorks and announced a partnership with Cerner Corporation. The acquisition of RevWorks expands our customer footprint in the physician and hospitalspace. The ongoing partnership improves technology integration and presents a commercial channel as we grow the business.•We divested the EMS business, which was non-core to our portfolio. The divestiture allows us to maximize investments to drive innovation and growth of our core revenuecycle management platform.•We made significant progress with our digitization effort. We deployed the automation routines we started developing in 2019 and are on track to automate approximately30 million manual tasks annually, Our PX platform is now deployed at over 200 locations, from approximately 100 locations at the start of 2020. Despite lower volumesresulting from the pandemic, our digitization effort delivered results at the high end of the $15-20 million expectation entering 2020.Net Services RevenueOur primary source of revenue is our end-to-end RCM services fees. We also generate revenue through modular RCM services, where customers will engage us for onlyspecific components of our end-to-end RCM service offering on a fixed-fee or transactional basis.Cost of ServicesOur cost of services includes:•Personnel costs and technology expenses. We incur costs related to our management and staff employees who are devoted to customer operations. These expenses consistprimarily of the wages, bonuses, benefits, share-based compensation, travel and other costs associated with our employees who are assigned to specific customer sitesrelated to our customers’ revenue cycle operations. The employees assigned to customer sites typically have significant experience in revenue cycle operations, carecoordination, technology, quality control, or other management disciplines. Included in these expenses is an allocation of the costs associated with maintaining, improving,and deploying our integrated proprietary technology suite.•Global business services center costs. We incur expenses related to salaries and benefits of employees in our global business services centers, as well as non-payroll costsassociated with operating our global business services centers.•Other expenses. We incur expenses related to our employees who manage PAS and other services. These expenses consist primarily of wages, bonuses, benefits, share-based compensation, and other costs.43Estimates of Cost of Customers’ Revenue Cycle OperationsCost of customers’ revenue cycle operations consist of invoiced costs from customers and estimated costs not yet invoiced. These costs consist of payroll and third-party non-payroll costs. Customers’ payroll costs are reasonably estimable; however, we are at times dependent upon information generated from our customers’ records to determine theamount of third-party non-payroll costs. We estimate the amount of non-payroll costs incurred but not invoiced in order to properly calculate net operating fees at the end of eachreporting period. Such estimated costs are based on contractually allowable expenses, historical reimbursed costs, and estimated lag in the timing of receipt of information for third-party non-payroll costs. The timing difference includes the lag between the services rendered by third-party vendors and their billings to our customers. The liabilities for such costsare included in accrued service costs and are part of the customer liabilities balance in the consolidated balance sheet. These estimates are based on the best available informationand are subject to future adjustments based on additional information received from our customers.Selling, General and Administrative ExpensesSelling, general and administrative expenses consist primarily of expenses for executives, sales, corporate IT, legal, regulatory compliance, finance, and human resourcespersonnel, professional service fees related to external legal, tax, audit and advisory services, insurance premiums, facility charges, and other corporate expenses.Other ExpensesOther expenses include expenses related to evaluating and pursuing acquisition opportunities and integrating completed acquisitions as part of our inorganic growth strategy,reorganization-related expenses, and expenses incurred related to the COVID-19 pandemic. Reorganization expenses consist primarily of severance payments and employeebenefits. As part of the transition of certain customers’ personnel to us, we have agreed to reimburse those customers for severance and retention expenses related to certainemployees who will not be transitioned to us. Additionally, in 2020 as a part of our evaluation of our footprint, we’ve transitioned certain employees to a work from homeenvironment and continue to evaluate our future state workplace environment. In conjunction with this evaluation, we exited numerous leased facilities which generated facility exitcosts including costs of writing off assets related to those leases.Interest ExpenseInterest expense reflects interest on debt arrangements, and the amortization of certain debt discounts and costs.Income TaxesIncome tax provision (benefit) consists of federal and state income taxes in the United States and other foreign jurisdictions.Application of Critical Accounting Policies and Use of EstimatesOur consolidated financial statements reflect the assets, liabilities and results of operations of R1 RCM Inc. and our wholly-owned subsidiaries. All material intercompanytransactions and balances have been eliminated in consolidation. Our consolidated financial statements have been prepared in accordance with GAAP.44The preparation of financial statements in conformity with GAAP requires us to make estimates and judgments that affect the amounts reported in our consolidated financialstatements and the accompanying notes. We regularly evaluate the accounting policies and estimates we use. In general, we base estimates on historical experience and onassumptions that we believe to be reasonable given our operating environment. Estimates are based on our best knowledge of current events and the actions we may undertake in thefuture. Although we believe all adjustments considered necessary for fair presentation have been included, our actual results may differ materially from our estimates.We believe that the accounting policies described below involve our more significant judgments, assumptions, and estimates, and therefore, could have the greatest potentialimpact on our consolidated financial statements. In addition, we believe that a discussion of these policies is necessary to understand and evaluate the consolidated financialstatements contained in this Annual Report on Form 10-K. For further information on our critical and other significant accounting policies, see Note 2, Summary of SignificantAccounting Policies, to the consolidated financial statements included in this Annual Report on Form 10-K.Revenue RecognitionThe Company's primary source of revenue is its end-to-end RCM services fees. The Company also generates revenue through modular RCM services, where customers willengage the Company for only specific components of its end-to-end RCM service offering on a fixed-fee or transactional basis.Revenue Cycle ManagementRCM services fees are primarily variable and performance related, and are generally viewed as the consideration earned in satisfaction of a single performance obligationwhich is considered a series. Variable consideration for end-to-end RCM services are allocated to and recognized over the related time period as the amounts reflect theconsideration the Company is entitled to and relate specifically to the Company’s efforts to satisfy its performance obligation. Fees for physician group RCM services includevariable consideration contingent on customer collections, and inputs to the Company’s revenue estimates typically include historical service fees and historical customer collectionamounts. RCM services fees consist of net operating fees, incentive fees, and other fees.Net Operating FeesThe Company’s net operating fees consist of:i) gross base fees invoiced to customers; less ii) corresponding costs of customers’ revenue cycle operations which the Company pays pursuant to its RCM agreements, including salaries and benefits for thecustomers' RCM personnel, and related third-party vendor costs; plusiii) fees accrued for physician group RCM services. The Company recognizes revenue related to net operating fees ratably as the performance obligation for the RCM services is satisfied. Base fees are typically billed inadvance of the quarter and paid in three monthly payments as the entity performs and the customer simultaneously receives and consumes the benefits of the servicesprovided. The costs of customers’ revenue cycle operations, which the Company pays pursuant to its RCM agreements, are accrued based on the service period. Netoperating fees for physician groups are invoiced on a monthly basis and payment terms are typically 30 days.45Incentive Fees Incentive fees are structured to reflect quarterly or annual performance and are evaluated on a contract-by-contract basis. The Company estimates incentive fee revenuebased on contractually agreed-upon financial or operating metrics. The Company recognizes revenue related to incentive fees ratably as the performance obligation forRCM services is satisfied, to the extent that it is probable that a significant reversal of cumulative revenue will not occur once the uncertainty is resolved. Incentive fees aretypically billed and paid on a quarterly basis.Other The Company recognizes revenue related to other fees as RCM services are provided. These services consist of an obligation to provide a specific component of its end-to-end RCM service offering. Fees are typically variable in nature with the entire amount being included in revenue in the month of service. The customer simultaneouslyreceives and consumes the benefits provided by the services and the fees are typically billed on a monthly basis and payment terms are typically 30 days. To the extent thatcertain service fees are fixed and not subject to refund, adjustment, or concession, these fees are generally recognized into revenue ratably as the performance obligation issatisfied. The Company recognizes revenue from PAS in the period in which the service is performed. The Company’s PAS arrangements typically consist of an obligation toprovide specific services to customers on an if and when needed basis. These services are provided under a fixed price per unit arrangement. Fees for the Company's PASarrangements are typically billed on a monthly basis with 30 to 60 day payment terms. PM services arrangements include a single performance obligation, constituting a series, to manage and administer various non-clinical aspects of a customer's physicianpractice, which may be comprised of numerous physical office locations. Consideration for PM services is typically variable in nature and allocated to and recognized overthe related time period as the amounts reflect the consideration the Company is entitled to and relate specifically to the Company’s effort to satisfy its performanceobligation. PM services fees are invoiced on a monthly basis and payment terms are typically 30 days.Bundled ServicesModular RCM services may be sold separately or bundled in a contract. End-to-end RCM services are typically sold separately but may be bundled with PAS. PAS arecommonly sold separately. The typical length of an end-to-end RCM contract is two to ten years (subject to the parties' respective termination rights) but varies from customer tocustomer. Modular RCM agreements generally vary in length between one and three years.For bundled arrangements, the Company accounts for individual services as a separate performance obligation if a service is separately identifiable from other items in thebundled arrangement and if a customer can benefit from it on its own or with other resources that are readily available to the customer. The transaction price is allocated betweenseparate services in a bundle based on their relative standalone selling prices. The standalone selling prices are determined based on the prices at which the Company separately sellsits modular services. PAS are provided at a customer’s election but do not represent material rights as the services are priced at standalone selling price throughout the life of theagreement.46Cost of ServicesCosts associated with generating the Company’s net services revenue, including the cost of operating its global business services centers, are expensed as incurred. Cost ofservices consist of (i) on-site personnel and technology costs, (ii) global business services costs, and (iii) other costs. On-site personnel and technology costs consist primarily ofwages, bonuses, benefits, share-based compensation, travel, and other costs associated with our employees who are assigned to specific customer sites related to our customers'revenue cycle operations. The other significant portion of such expenses is an allocation of the costs associated with maintaining, improving, and deploying our integratedproprietary technology suite. Global business services costs relate to the Company’s global services centers in the U.S. and internationally that perform patient scheduling and pre-registration, medical transcription, cash posting, reconciliation of payments to billing records, patient follow-up, and Medicaid eligibility determination for our customers. TheCompany incurs expenses related to salaries and benefits for employees in its global business services centers and non-payroll costs associated with operating its global businessservices centers. Other expenses consist of costs related to managing other services. These expenses consist primarily of wages, bonuses, benefits, share-based compensation, andfacilities costs.Income TaxesWe account for income taxes under the asset and liability method. We record deferred tax assets and liabilities for future income tax consequences that are attributable todifferences between the carrying amount of assets and liabilities for financial statement purposes and the income tax bases of such assets and liabilities. We base the measurement ofdeferred tax assets and liabilities on enacted tax rates that we expect will apply to taxable income in the year we expect to settle or recover those temporary differences. Werecognize the effect on deferred income tax assets and liabilities of any change in income tax rates in the period that includes the enactment date.The carrying values of deferred income tax assets and liabilities reflect the application of our income tax accounting policies, and are based on management’s assumptions andestimates about future operating results and levels of taxable income, and judgments regarding the interpretation of the provisions of current accounting principles. We provide avaluation allowance for deferred tax assets if, based upon the weight of all available evidence, both positive and negative, it is more likely than not that some or all of the deferredtax assets will not be realized. We have established a valuation allowance with respect to certain state income net operating loss carryforwards and on certain tax credits acquiredfrom the SCI Acquisition.The estimated effective tax rate for the year is applied to our quarterly operating results. In the event that there is a significant unusual or discrete item recognized, or expectedto be recognized, in our quarterly operating results, the tax attributable to that item is calculated separately and recorded at the same time as the unusual or discrete item, such as theresolution of prior-year tax matters.We recognize the tax benefit from an uncertain tax position only if it is more likely than not that the position will be sustained on examination by taxing authorities, based onthe technical merits of the position. The tax benefits recognized in the consolidated financial statements from such a position are measured based on the largest benefit that has agreater than 50% likelihood of being realized upon ultimate settlement.Interest and penalties related to income taxes are recognized in our tax provision in the consolidated statement of operations and comprehensive income (loss).See Note 17, Income Taxes, to our consolidated financial statements included in this Annual Report on Form 10-K for additional information on income taxes.47Share-Based Compensation ExpenseWe determine the expense for all employee share-based compensation awards by estimating their fair value and recognizing that value as an expense, on a ratable basis, in ourconsolidated financial statements over the requisite service period in which our employees earn the awards. Significant judgment is required in estimating the probability ofachievement of performance conditions for our performance-based restricted stock unit awards. Changes in estimates to the completion of performance factors are applied utilizingthe cumulative catch-up methodology. These awards typically have both cumulative adjusted EBITDA and end-to-end RCM agreement growth metrics. To assess currentperformance, we review our historical performance to date, along with any adjustments which have been approved to the reported performance, and add on our current futureprojections to determine the probable outcome of the award. The current estimates are then compared to the scoring metrics and any necessary adjustments are reflected in thecurrent period to update share-based compensation expense to the current performance expectations.We recognize compensation expense using a straight-line method over the applicable vesting period. During each quarter, the share-based compensation expense is adjusted toreflect forfeitures during the period; however, compensation expense already recognized is not adjusted if market conditions are not met.Business CombinationsWe account for business combinations using the acquisition method of accounting, which requires that assets acquired and liabilities assumed be recorded at fair value, withlimited exceptions. Any excess of the purchase price over the fair value of specifically identified assets is recorded as goodwill.Significant judgment is required in estimating the fair value of intangible assets and in assigning their respective useful lives. Our typical intangible assets acquired includedeveloped technology and customer relationships. There are several methods that can be used to determine the fair value of intangible assets. We typically use an income approachto value the specifically identifiable intangible assets which is based on forecasts of expected future cash flows. Under the income approach, we utilize a multi-period excessearnings methodology to value the primary intangible asset of a business combination. Fair value estimates are based on available historical information and on future expectationsand assumptions deemed reasonable by management but are inherently uncertain. We typically consult with an independent advisor to assist in the valuation of intangible assets.Significant estimates and assumptions inherent in valuations include discount rates, revenue and cost growth rates, and technology obsolescence curves. We consider marketplaceparticipant assumptions in determining the amount and timing of future cash flows along with technology life cycles, barriers to entry, and risks associated with cash flows inconcluding upon our discount rates. While we use our best estimates and assumptions to accurately value assets acquired and liabilities assumed at the acquisition dates, ourestimates are inherently uncertain and subject to refinement. As a result, during the measurement period, we may record adjustments to the purchase accounting. In addition,unanticipated market or macroeconomic events and circumstances may occur that could affect the accuracy or validity of the estimates and assumptions.Determining the useful life of an intangible asset also requires judgment, as different types of intangible assets will have different useful lives and certain assets may even beconsidered to have indefinite useful lives. Our assessment of useful lives acquired is based on numerous factors including underlying product life cycles, operating plans, brandhistory, and the competitive environment. Definite-lived intangible assets are amortized to expense over their estimated useful life.New Accounting StandardsFor additional information regarding new accounting guidance, see Note 3, Recent Accounting Pronouncements, to our consolidated financial statements included in thisAnnual Report on Form 10-K, which provides a summary of recently adopted accounting standards and disclosures.48Results of OperationsThe following table provides consolidated operating results and other operating data for the periods indicated: Year Ended December 31,2020 vs. 2019 Change2019 vs. 2018 Change 202020192018Amount%Amount% (In millions)Consolidatedstatement ofoperations Data:Net operatingfees$1,093.8 $1,037.4 $760.2 $56.4 5.4 %$277.2 36.5 %Incentive fees70.6 56.2 38.3 14.4 25.6 %17.9 46.7 %Other106.4 92.5 70.0 13.9 15.0 %22.5 32.1 %Total netservices revenue1,270.8 1,186.1 868.5 84.7 7.1 %317.6 36.6 %Operatingexpenses:Cost ofservices1,021.1 987.8 770.6 33.3 3.4 %217.2 28.2 %Selling,general andadministrative102.4 104.4 97.9 (2.0)(1.9)%6.5 6.6 %Other67.3 36.2 30.4 31.1 85.9 %5.8 19.1 %Totaloperating expenses1,190.8 1,128.4 898.9 62.4 5.5 %229.5 25.5 %Income (loss)from operations80.0 57.7 (30.4)22.3 38.6 %88.1 289.8 %Gain onbusinessdisposition55.7 — — 55.7 100.0 %— — %Loss ondebtextinguishment— (18.8)— 18.8 (100.0)%(18.8)100.0 %Netinterest expense(17.3)(29.1)(26.3)11.8 (40.5)%(2.8)10.6 %Net income(loss) before incometax provision(benefit)118.4 9.8 (56.7)108.6 1,108.2 %66.5 117.3 %Incometax provision(benefit)1.3 (2.2)(11.4)3.5 159.1 %9.2 80.7 %Net income(loss)$117.1 $12.0 $(45.3)$105.1 875.8 %$57.3 126.5 %AdjustedEBITDA (1)$240.0 $168.0 $57.0 $72.0 42.9 %$111.0 194.7 %(1) Refer to the Non-GAAP Financial Measures section below for a reconciliation of our financial results reported in accordance with GAAP to non-GAAP financial results.Year Ended December 31, 2020 Compared to Year Ended December 31, 2019Net Services RevenueNet services revenue increased by $84.7 million, or 7.1%, from $1,186.1 million for the year ended December 31, 2019 to $1,270.8 million for the year ended December 31,2020. The increase was primarily driven by a $56.6 million increase in net operating fees largely as a result of new customers onboarded since the beginning of 2019, a $14.4 millionincrease in incentive fees driven by better operational execution, and an $11.1 million increase driven by the acquisitions of SCI and RevWorks, partially offset by the EMSDisposition in the third quarter of 2020.Cost of ServicesCost of services increased by $33.3 million, or 3.4%, from $987.8 million for the year ended December 31, 2019, to $1,021.1 million for the year ended December 31, 2020.The increase was primarily driven by an increase in costs associated with new customers onboarded in the last twelve months and the acquisitions of SCI and RevWorks, partiallyoffset by cost management, lower compensation costs, and healthcare claims experience.49Selling, General and Administrative ExpensesSelling, general and administrative expenses decreased by $2.0 million, or 1.9%, from $104.4 million for the year ended December 31, 2019 to $102.4 million for the yearended December 31, 2020. The decrease was primarily driven by lower travel and marketing expenses due to COVID-19, and corporate cost control actions.Other ExpensesOther expenses increased by $31.1 million, or 85.9%, from $36.2 million for the year ended December 31, 2019, to $67.3 million for the year ended December 31, 2020. Theincrease was primarily driven by expenses related to COVID-19, the SCI and RevWorks acquisitions, facility-exit charges, and legal and professional fees related to thesimplification of our capital structure via the conversion of preferred shares to common shares.Income Tax Provision (Benefit)Income tax provision increased by $3.5 million to a $1.3 million provision for the year ended December 31, 2020 from a $2.2 million benefit for the year ended December 31,2019. This was primarily due to higher pre-tax income for the year ended December 31, 2020, offset by higher tax benefit for share-based compensation and non-recognition of thegain from the sale of the EMS business.Year Ended December 31, 2019 Compared to Year Ended December 31, 2018Net Services RevenueNet services revenue increased by $317.6 million, or 36.6%, from $868.5 million for the year ended December 31, 2018 to $1,186.1 million for the year ended December 31,2019. The increase was primarily driven by a $185.6 million increase in net operating fees as a result of new customers onboarded to an operating partner model contract since thebeginning of 2018. In addition, we realized year-over-year growth of $63.9 million as a result of the Intermedix Holdings, Inc. acquisition.Cost of ServicesCost of services increased by $217.2 million, or 28.2%, from $770.6 million for the year ended December 31, 2018, to $987.8 million for the year ended December 31, 2019.The increase was primarily driven by a $151.4 million increase in costs associated with new customers onboarded since the beginning of 2018. The Intermedix Holdings, Inc.acquisition resulted in an increase in costs of services of $52.3 million. In addition, we increased investments in information technology infrastructure, automation technology, andcentral operations support and incurred additional employee benefits costs.Selling, General and Administrative ExpensesSelling, general and administrative expenses increased by $6.5 million, or 6.6%, from $97.9 million for the year ended December 31, 2018 to $104.4 million for the yearended December 31, 2019. The increase was primarily due to increased investments in sales and marketing expenses, as we have increased our efforts to pursue new businessopportunities, and also increased investments in human resources spend to support scaling business operations.Other ExpensesOther expenses increased by $5.8 million, or 19.1%, from $30.4 million for the year ended December 31, 2018, to $36.2 million for the year ended December 31, 2019. Theincrease was primarily attributable to an additional $5.0 million of costs associated with the DTO initiative.50Income Tax Provision (Benefit)Income tax benefit decreased by $9.2 million to $2.2 million for the year ended December 31, 2019 from $11.4 million for the year ended December 31, 2018. This wasprimarily due to higher pre-tax income, offset by higher tax benefit from share-based compensation.Non-GAAP Financial MeasuresIn order to provide a more comprehensive understanding of the information used by our management team in financial and operational decision-making, we supplement ourconsolidated financial statements that have been prepared in accordance with GAAP with the non-GAAP financial measure of adjusted EBITDA. Adjusted EBITDA is utilized byour Board and management team as (i) one of the primary methods for planning and forecasting overall expectations and for evaluating actual results against such expectations; and(ii) as a performance evaluation metric in determining achievement of certain executive incentive compensation programs, as well as for incentive compensation plans foremployees.Selected Non-GAAP MeasureAdjusted EBITDAWe define adjusted EBITDA as net income before net interest income/expense, income tax provision/benefit, depreciation and amortization expense, share-basedcompensation expense, expense arising from debt extinguishment, strategic initiatives costs, transitioned employee restructuring expense, and other items which are detailed in thetable below.We understand that, although non-GAAP measures are frequently used by investors, securities analysts, and others in their evaluation of companies, these measures havelimitations as analytical tools, and you should not consider them in isolation or as a substitute for analysis of our results of operations as reported under GAAP. Some of theselimitations are:•Adjusted EBITDA does not reflect:◦Changes in, or cash requirements for, our working capital needs;◦Share-based compensation expense;◦Income tax expenses or cash requirements to pay taxes;◦Interest expenses or cash required to pay interest;◦Certain other expenses which may require cash payments;•Although depreciation and amortization charges are non-cash charges, the assets being depreciated and amortized will often have to be replaced in the future, and adjustedEBITDA does not reflect cash requirements for such replacements or other purchase commitments, including lease commitments; and•Other companies in our industry may calculate adjusted EBITDA differently than we do, limiting its usefulness as a comparative measure.Reconciliation of GAAP and Non-GAAP MeasuresThe following table presents a reconciliation of adjusted EBITDA to net income (loss) for each of the periods indicated:51 Year End December 31, 202020192018 (In millions)Net income (loss) (GAAP)$117.1 $12.0 $(45.3)Net interest expense17.3 29.1 26.3 Income tax provision (benefit)1.3 (2.2)(11.4)Depreciation and amortization expense68.7 55.7 38.8 Share-based compensation expense (1)24.0 18.4 18.2 Gain on business disposition (2)(55.7)— — Loss on debt extinguishment (3)— 18.8 — Other (4)67.3 36.2 30.4 Adjusted EBITDA (Non-GAAP)$240.0 $168.0 $57.0 (1)Share-based compensation expense represents the expense associated with stock options, restricted stock units, performance-based restricted stock units, and restricted stock awardsgranted, as reflected in our Consolidated Statements of Operations and Comprehensive Income (Loss). See Note 15, Share-Based Compensation, to the Consolidated Financial Statementsincluded in this Annual Report on Form 10-K for the detail of the amounts of share-based compensation expense.(2)Gain on business disposition represents the gain associated with the EMS Disposition. See Note 1, Description of Business, to the Consolidated Financial Statements included in thisAnnual Report on form 10-K for further details on the disposal.(3)Loss on debt extinguishment represents the loss associated with the repayment of the credit agreement and subordinated notes in June 2019, as reflected in our Consolidated Statements ofOperations and Comprehensive Income (Loss). See Note 13, Debt, to the Consolidated Financial Statements included in this Annual Report on Form 10-K for further details on theextinguishment.(4)Other expenses consist of the following (in millions):Year Ended December 31, 202020192018Severance and related employee benefits$6.4 $3.6 $2.3 Strategic initiatives (1)29.3 19.8 19.7 Transitioned employees restructuring expense (2)(0.2)3.0 4.3 Digital Transformation Office (3)— 8.6 3.6 Facility-exit charges (4)17.5 (0.2)0.1 Other (5)14.3 1.4 0.4 Total other expenses$67.3 $36.2 $30.4 (1) Costs related to evaluating, pursuing, and integrating acquisitions, performing portfolio and capital structure analyses, and other inorganic business projects as part of the Company’sgrowth strategy. Costs include vendor spend, employee time and expenses spent on activities, severance and retention amounts associated with integration activities, and changes tocontingent consideration related to acquisitions. For the year ended December 31, 2020, $4.7 million of contingent consideration changes were included.(2) As part of the transition of personnel to the Company under certain operating partner model contracts, the Company has agreed to reimburse, or directly pay the affected employees, forcertain severance and retention costs related to certain employees who will not be transitioned to the Company, or whose jobs will be relocated after the employee transitions to the Company.(3) Project costs related to the Company's initial efforts to automate its transactional environment.(4) As part of evaluating our footprint, we have exited certain leased facilities during the year ended December 31, 2020. Costs include asset impairment charges and other costs related toexited leased facilities.(5) For the year ended December 31, 2020, includes $10.9 million of expenses related to the COVID-19 pandemic, inclusive of appreciation bonuses for the Company’s front-line employees,pandemic response mobilization efforts, telemedicine and testing costs for employees, and other costs.52Liquidity and Capital ResourcesOur primary sources of liquidity include our cash and cash equivalents, cash flows from operations, and borrowings under our Credit Agreement. See Note 2, Summary ofSignificant Accounting Policies, to our consolidated financial statements included in this Annual Report on Form 10-K for additional information. As of December 31, 2020 and2019, we had cash and cash equivalents of $173.8 million and $92.0 million, respectively. The primary driver for the increased cash position at December 31, 2020 was the proceedsfrom the EMS Disposition.Our Credit Agreement includes a senior secured revolving credit facility (the “Senior Revolver”) with a total capacity of $100.0 million. As of December 31, 2020 and 2019,we had drawn $70.0 million and had $30.0 million remaining, and drawn $40.0 million and had $60.0 million remaining, respectively. See Note 13, Debt, to our consolidatedfinancial statements included in this Annual Report on Form 10-K for additional information on our Credit Agreement. As of December 31, 2020 we had total available liquidity of$203.8 million reflecting our cash and cash equivalents as well as remaining availability under our revolver. On January 15, 2021, we paid $105.0 million in cash to the Investor inconnection with the conversion of the preferred stock held by the investor.Our liquidity is influenced by many factors, including timing of revenue and corresponding cash collections, the amount and timing of investments in strategic initiatives, ourinvestments in property, equipment and software, and the use of cash to pay tax withholding obligations upon surrender of shares upon vesting of equity awards. We continue toinvest capital in order to achieve our strategic initiatives. In addition, we plan to enhance customer service by continuing our investment in technology to enable our systems to moreeffectively integrate with our customers' existing technologies in connection with our strategic initiatives.We plan to continue to deploy resources to strengthen our information technology infrastructure, including automation, in order to drive additional value for our customers. Wealso expect to continue to invest in our global business services infrastructure and capabilities, and selectively pursue acquisitions and/or strategic relationships that will enable us tobroaden or further enhance our offerings. New business development remains a priority as we plan to continue to boost our sales and marketing efforts. Additionally, we expect toincur costs associated with implementation and transition costs to onboard new customers.We expect cash and cash equivalents, cash flows from operations, and our availability under the Senior Revolver to continue to be sufficient to fund our operating activitiesand cash commitments for investing and financing activities, including debt maturities and material capital expenditures, for at least the next 12 months. The extent to whichCOVID-19 will ultimately impact our results will depend on future developments, but could materially adversely impact our business, results of operations, and liquidity in futureperiods.Cash flows from operating, investing and financing activities, as reflected in our Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows, are summarized in the following table: Year Ended December 31, 202020192018 (In millions)Net cash provided by operating activities$61.8 $113.9 $18.3 Net cash used in investing activities(117.0)(61.0)(496.3)Net cash provided by (used in) financing activities137.9 (25.3)377.4 Effect of exchange rate changes in cash(0.4)(0.2)(0.7)Net increase (decrease) in cash, cash equivalents, and restricted cash82.3 27.4 (101.3)53Cash Flows from Operating ActivitiesCash provided by operating activities fell by $52.1 million, from $113.9 million for the year ended December 31, 2019, to $61.8 million for the year ended December 31, 2020.Cash provided by operating activities fell due to timing of working capital changes, including increased accounts receivable balances and decreased accrued compensation andbenefits balances in 2020. Accounts receivable increases from our acquisitions totaled approximately $28 million. Additionally, incentive fee and physicians accounts receivablesincreased approximately $14 million and $13 million, respectively. Accrued compensation and benefits liabilities fell in 2020 due to timing of payroll payments and bonus accruals.The decrease due to timing effects of working capital balances was partially offset by increased net income from operations of $22.3 million and deferred payments related to ourpayroll tax obligations as permitted under the CARES act.Cash provided by operating activities improved by $95.6 million, from cash provided of $18.3 million for the year ended December 31, 2018, to cash provided of $113.9million for the year ended December 31, 2019. Cash provided by operating activities improved primarily due to improved operating results after adjusting for non-cash items,including adjustments for depreciation expense and loss on debt extinguishment, offset by changes in operating assets and liabilities.Cash Used in Investing ActivitiesCash used in investing activities primarily includes our investments in property, equipment and software and our inorganic growth initiatives. Outflows for significantacquisitions are typically offset by cash inflows from financing activities related to obtaining new debt. In 2020, cash used in investing activities included the acquisitions of SCI andRevWorks, which was partially offset by cash inflows related to the EMS Disposition. These inorganic activities are the primary drivers of the changes in cash flows from investingactivities when comparing year-over-year.Cash used in investing activities increased by $56.0 million from $61.0 million for the year ended December 31, 2019, to $117.0 million for the year ended December 31,2020. Cash outflows of $196.0 million related to acquisitions was offset by inflows of $128.3 million related to the EMS Disposition.Cash used in investing activities decreased by $435.3 million from $496.3 million for the year ended December 31, 2018, to $61.0 million for the year ended December 31,2019. Cash used in investing activities included the acquisition of Intermedix Holdings, Inc. in 2018. The decrease was slightly offset by an increase in purchases of property,equipment and software in 2019.Cash Flows from Financing ActivitiesCash flows from financing activities primarily relate to borrowings and repayments of debt. In 2018, we obtained financing to fund the acquisition of Intermedix. In 2019, werefinanced from a term loan, revolver and subordinated notes with our current senior secured credit facility, including a term loan and a revolver. In conjunction with the acquisitionof SCI in 2020, we amended our Credit Agreement to draw additional funds to finance the acquisition. We utilize our revolver to ensure we have sufficient cash on hand to supportthe needs of the business at any given point in time. Cash flows from financing activities also include cash received from exercises of stock options and the use of cash to pay taxwithholding obligations upon surrender of shares upon vesting of equity awards.Cash provided by financing activities increased by $163.2 million, from cash used of $25.3 million for the year ended December 31, 2019, to cash provided of $137.9 millionfor the year ended December 31, 2020. This change was primarily due to the term loan drawn of $191.1 million in conjunction with the acquisition of SCI and additional borrowingsmade under our revolver, offset by the use of cash to pay tax withholding obligations upon surrender of shares upon vesting of equity awards.54Cash provided by financing activities fell by $402.7 million from $377.4 million for the year ended December 31, 2018 to cash used of $25.3 million for the year endedDecember 31, 2019. This change was primarily due to obtaining new debt in 2018, whereas the new debt in 2019 was offset by the extinguishment of old debt.Debt and Financing ArrangementsOn June 26, 2019, we entered into a new senior credit agreement (the “Credit Agreement”) with Bank of America, N.A., as administrative agent, and the lenders namedtherein, for the senior secured credit facilities (the “Senior Secured Credit Facilities”), consisting of a $325.0 million senior secured term loan facility (the “Senior Term Loan”)issued at 99.66% of par and a $100.0 million senior secured revolving credit facility (the “Senior Revolver”). On April 1, 2020, we drew an additional $191.1 million inconjunction with Amendment No. 1 to the Credit Agreement (the “Amendment”) on the same terms as its existing Senior Term Loan provided under the Credit Agreement. Asof December 31, 2020, we had $484.6 million outstanding on our term loan facilities and had drawn $70.0 million on our Senior Revolver, with $30.0 million remaining. Theterm loans require quarterly payments, and we bear interest at a floating rate, which was 2.40% at December 31, 2020.The Credit Agreement contains a number of financial and non-financial covenants. We are required to maintain minimum consolidated total net leverage andconsolidated interest coverage ratios. The Company was in compliance with all of the covenants in the Credit Agreement as of December 31, 2020.See Note 13, Debt, to our consolidated financial statements included in this Annual Report on Form 10-K for additional information.Contractual ObligationsThe following table presents a summary of our contractual obligations as of December 31, 2020 (in millions): 20212022202320242025ThereafterTotalOperatingleases (1)$18.7 $16.1 $15.3 $15.0 $14.8 $34.0 $113.9 Purchase andfinance leaseobligations (2)$12.2 $10.1 $9.0 $5.0 $1.8 $— $38.1 Debtobligations$32.3 $38.7 $45.2 $438.4 $— $— $554.6 Interest ondebt$14.6 $13.2 $11.4 $5.1 $— $— $44.3 Total$77.8 $78.1 $80.9 $463.5 $16.6 $34.0 $750.9 (1) Obligations and commitments to make future minimum rental payments under non-cancelable operating leases having remaining terms in excess of one year.(2) Includes obligations associated with IT software and service costs.Off-Balance Sheet ArrangementsOther than the contractual obligations noted above, there were no off-balance sheet transactions, arrangements or other relationships with other persons in 2020, 2019 or 2018that would have affected or are likely to affect our liquidity or the availability of, or requirements for, capital resources.55Item 7A.Qualitative and Quantitative Disclosures about Market RiskInterest Rate Sensitivity. Our results of operations and cash flows are subject to fluctuations due to changes in interest rates due to our debt and banking arrangements, whichcan result in fluctuations in our interest income and expense. As of December 31, 2020, we have hedged $100.0 million of our $554.6 million outstanding floating rate debt to afixed rate of 1.4% plus the applicable spread defined in the Credit Agreement. An additional $100.0 million of our outstanding floating rate debt is hedged to a fixed rate of 1.1065%plus the applicable spread defined in the Credit Agreement. The remaining $354.6 million is subject to an average variable rate of 2.40% as of December 31, 2020. Assuming thecurrent level of borrowings, a one percentage point increase or decrease in interest rates would increase or decrease our annual interest expense by approximately $3.5 million.Our interest income is primarily generated from variable rate interest earned on operating cash accounts.Foreign Currency Exchange Risk. Our results of operations and cash flows are subject to fluctuations due to changes in the Indian rupee and the Euro because a portion of ouroperating expenses are incurred by our subsidiaries in India and Lithuania, and are denominated in Indian rupees and Euros, respectively. We do not generate significant revenuesoutside of the United States. For the years ended December 31, 2020, 2019 and 2018, 9%, 8%, and 7% of our expenses were denominated in foreign currencies, respectively. Asof December 31, 2020 and 2019, we had net assets of $62.3 million and $41.5 million in foreign entities, respectively.The reduction in earnings from a 10% change in foreign currency spot rates would be $11.6 million and $9.7 million at December 31, 2020 and 2019, respectively. We havehedge positions that are designated cash flow hedges of certain intercompany charges which have maturities not exceeding December 31, 2021 and are intended to partially offsetthe impact of foreign currency movements on future costs relating to our global delivery resources. For additional information, see Note 24, Derivative Financial Instruments to ourConsolidated Financial Statements under Item 8, Consolidated Financial Statements and Supplementary Data. These instruments are subject to fluctuations in foreign currencyexchange rates and credit risk. Credit risk is managed through careful selection and ongoing evaluation of the financial institutions utilized as counterparties.For designated cash flow hedges, gains and losses currently recorded in accumulated other comprehensive loss will be reclassified into earnings at the time when certainanticipated intercompany charges are accrued as cost of services. As of December 31, 2020, it was anticipated that approximately $0.3 million of gains, net of tax, currently recordedin accumulated other comprehensive loss will be reclassified into cost of services within the next 12 months. As of December 31, 2020, the notional value of the outstandingderivative contracts totaled 4.20 billion Indian rupees.We use sensitivity analysis to determine the effects that market foreign currency exchange rate fluctuations may have on the fair value of our hedge portfolio. The sensitivity ofthe hedge portfolio is computed based on the market value of future cash flows as affected by changes in exchange rates. This sensitivity analysis represents the hypothetical changesin value of the hedge position and does not reflect the offsetting gain or loss on the underlying exposure. A 10% change in the levels of foreign currency exchange rates against theU.S. dollar (or other base currency of the hedge if not a U.S. dollar hedge) with all other variables held constant would have resulted in a change in the fair value of our hedgeinstruments of approximately $5.1 million as of December 31, 2020.We continually monitor our exposure to foreign currency fluctuations and may use additional derivative financial instruments and hedging transactions in the future if, in ourjudgment, circumstances warrant. There can be no guarantee that the impact of foreign currency fluctuations in the future will not be significant and will not have a material impacton our financial position or results of operations.Item 8.Consolidated Financial Statements and Supplementary DataThe financial statements required by this Item are located beginning on page F-1 of this report.56Item 9.Changes in and Disagreements with Accountants on Accounting and Financial DisclosureNone.Item 9A.Controls and ProceduresThis Item 9A includes information concerning the controls and controls evaluation referred to in the certifications of our Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officerrequired by Rule 13a-14 of the Exchange Act included in this Annual Report as Exhibits 31.1 and 31.2.Management’s Report on Internal Control Over Financial ReportingManagement has responsibility for establishing and maintaining adequate internal control over financial reporting. Internal control over financial reporting is a processdesigned to provide reasonable assurance regarding the reliability of financial reporting and the preparation of financial statements for external reporting purposes in accordance withaccounting principles generally accepted in the United States. Because of its inherent limitations, internal control over financial reporting may not prevent or detect misstatements.On April 1, 2020 and August 3, 2020, we completed the acquisitions of SCI and RevWorks, respectively. We are now integrating processes, employees, technologies, systems,and operations of SCI and RevWorks into the Company. As permitted by the rules and regulations of the SEC, we have excluded SCI and RevWorks from our assessment of ourinternal control over financial reporting as of December 31, 2020. Management will continue to evaluate internal controls as we complete the integration of the acquisitions. SCI andRevWorks represent 3% of the Company's total assets as of December 31, 2020 (exclusive of intangible assets and goodwill valued through purchase accounting that were includedin our assessment of our internal control over financial reporting) and 4% of the Company's total net services revenue for the year ended December 31, 2020.Management has assessed the effectiveness of the Company’s internal control over financial reporting as of December 31, 2020. In making its assessment, management hasutilized the criteria set forth by the COSO of the Treadway Commission in Internal Control-Integrated Framework (2013). Management concluded that based on its assessment, ourinternal control over financial reporting was effective as of December 31, 2020. The Company’s internal control over financial reporting as of December 31, 2020 has been auditedby Ernst & Young LLP as stated in their report which appears herein.Evaluation of Disclosure Controls and ProceduresDisclosure controls and procedures (as defined in Rules 13a-15(e) and 15d-15(e) of the Exchange Act) are designed to ensure that information required to be disclosed by us inreports filed or submitted under the Exchange Act is recorded, processed, summarized, and reported within the time periods specified in SEC rules and forms and that suchinformation is accumulated and communicated to management including its principal executive officer and principal financial officer to allow timely decisions regarding requireddisclosures.In connection with the preparation of this report, our management, under the supervision and with the participation of the Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer,evaluated the effectiveness of our disclosure controls and procedures as of December 31, 2020. Our Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer concluded that, as ofDecember 31, 2020, our disclosure controls and procedures were effective.Changes in Internal Control Over Financial ReportingThere have been no changes in our internal control over financial reporting during the quarter ended December 31, 2020 that have materially affected, or are reasonably likelyto materially affect, our internal control over financial reporting.57Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting FirmThe Stockholders and Board of Directors of R1 RCM Inc.Opinion on Internal Control over Financial ReportingWe have audited R1 RCM Inc.’s internal control over financial reporting as of December 31, 2020, based on criteria established in Internal Control - Integrated Framework issuedby the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission (2013 framework) (the COSO criteria). In our opinion, R1 RCM Inc. (the Company) maintained, in allmaterial respects, effective internal control over financial reporting as of December 31, 2020, based on the COSO criteria.As indicated in the accompanying Management’s Report on Internal Control Over Financial Reporting, management’s assessment of and conclusion on the effectiveness of internalcontrol over financial reporting did not include the internal controls of SCI Solutions, Inc. (“SCI”) and the RevWorks services business (“RevWorks”), (collectively, “SCI andRevWorks”) which are included in the 2020 consolidated financial statements of the Company. SCI and RevWorks, in aggregate, constituted approximately 3% of total assets as ofDecember 31, 2020 (excluding acquired intangible assets and goodwill valued in purchase accounting that were included in management’s assessment of and conclusion on theeffectiveness of internal control over financial reporting) and approximately 4% of total net services revenue for the year ended December 31, 2020. Our audit of internal controlover financial reporting of the Company also did not include an evaluation of the internal control over financial reporting of SCI and RevWorks.We also have audited, in accordance with the standards of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States) (PCAOB), the consolidated balance sheets of theCompany as of December 31, 2020 and 2019, the related consolidated statements of operations and comprehensive income (loss), stockholders’ equity (deficit), and cash flows foreach of the three years in the period ended December 31, 2020, and the related notes and our report dated February 18, 2021 expressed an unqualified opinion thereon.Basis for OpinionThe Company’s management is responsible for maintaining effective internal control over financial reporting and for its assessment of the effectiveness of internal control overfinancial reporting included in the accompanying Management’s Report on Internal Control Over Financial Reporting. Our responsibility is to express an opinion on the Company’sinternal control over financial reporting based on our audit. We are a public accounting firm registered with the PCAOB and are required to be independent with respect to theCompany in accordance with the U.S. federal securities laws and the applicable rules and regulations of the Securities and Exchange Commission and the PCAOB.We conducted our audit in accordance with the standards of the PCAOB. Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whethereffective internal control over financial reporting was maintained in all material respects.Our audit included obtaining an understanding of internal control over financial reporting, assessing the risk that a material weakness exists, testing and evaluating the design andoperating effectiveness of internal control based on the assessed risk, and performing such other procedures as we considered necessary in the circumstances. We believe that ouraudit provides a reasonable basis for our opinion.58Definition and Limitations of Internal Control Over Financial ReportingA company’s internal control over financial reporting is a process designed to provide reasonable assurance regarding the reliability of financial reporting and the preparation offinancial statements for external purposes in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles. A company’s internal control over financial reporting includes those policiesand procedures that (1) pertain to the maintenance of records that, in reasonable detail, accurately and fairly reflect the transactions and dispositions of the assets of the company; (2)provide reasonable assurance that transactions are recorded as necessary to permit preparation of financial statements in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles,and that receipts and expenditures of the company are being made only in accordance with authorizations of management and directors of the company; and (3) provide reasonableassurance regarding prevention or timely detection of unauthorized acquisition, use, or disposition of the company’s assets that could have a material effect on the financialstatements.Because of its inherent limitations, internal control over financial reporting may not prevent or detect misstatements. Also, projections of any evaluation of effectiveness to futureperiods are subject to the risk that controls may become inadequate because of changes in conditions, or that the degree of compliance with the policies or procedures maydeteriorate./s/ Ernst & Young LLPChicago, IllinoisFebruary 18, 202159Item 9B.Other InformationNone60PART IIIItem 10.Directors, Executive Officers, and Corporate GovernanceThe information required by this item with respect to our directors and executive officers will be contained in our 2021 Proxy Statement under the caption “Information AboutOur Directors, Officers and 5% Stockholders” and is incorporated in this report by reference.The information required by this item with respect to corporate governance matters will be contained in our 2021 Proxy Statement under the caption “Corporate Governance”and is incorporated in this report by reference.Code of IntegrityWe have adopted a global code of integrity that applies to all employees, including our directors and officers (our principal executive officer, principal financial officer,principal accounting officer or controller, or persons performing similar functions). Copies of our Code of Integrity: Living Our Values are available without charge upon writtenrequest directed to Corporate Secretary, R1 RCM Inc., 401 N. Michigan Avenue, Chicago, Illinois, 60611. Additionally, copies are available without charge online athttp://s22.q4cdn.com/852369931/files/doc_downloads/governance_documents/2019/R1-Code-of-Integrity.pdf.Item 11.Executive CompensationInformation required to be furnished by Item 402 of Regulation S-K and paragraphs (e)(4) and (e)(5) of Item 407 of Regulation S-K regarding executive compensation will beincluded in our 2021 Proxy Statement under the caption “Executive Compensation” and is herein incorporated by reference.Item 12.Security Ownership of Certain Beneficial Owners and Management and Related Stockholder MattersWe maintain an Amended and Restated Stock Option Plan (“2006 Plan”), and a Second Amended and Restated 2010 Stock Incentive Plan (the “2010 Amended Plan”), andtogether with the 2006 Plan (the “Plans”). Under the 2010 Amended Plan we may issue up to a maximum of 46,374,756 shares, including any shares that remained available forissuance under the 2006 Plan as of the date of the IPO and any shares subject to awards that were outstanding under the 2006 Plan as of the date of the IPO that expire, terminate orare otherwise surrendered, canceled, forfeited, or repurchased by us without the issuance of shares thereunder. We will not make any further grants under the 2006 Plan. The 2010Amended Plan provides for the grant of incentive stock options, non-statutory stock options, stock appreciation rights, restricted stock, restricted stock units, and and other share-based awards. As of December 31, 2020, 5,028,242 shares were available for future grants of awards under the 2010 Amended Plan. However, to the extent that previously grantedawards under the 2006 Plan or 2010 Amended Plan expire, terminate or are otherwise surrendered, canceled or forfeited, the number of shares available for future awards under the2010 Amended Plan will increase.The following table summarizes information about the securities authorized for issuance under our equity compensation plans as of December 31, 2020:61(a)(b)(c)Plan CategoryNumber of Securities to be Issued Upon Exercise of Outstanding Optionsand Restricted Stock UnitsWeighted- Average Exercise Price of Outstanding OptionsNumber of Securities RemainingAvailable for Future Issuance Under Equity Compensation Plans (Excluding Securities reflected in Column(a))Equity compensation plans approved by stockholders (1)13,192,826 $3.17 5,028,242 Equity compensation plans not approved by stockholders (2)500,000 $9.56 — Total13,692,826 5,028,242 (1) Includes 5,720,971 outstanding stock options, 2,108,447 restricted stock units, and 5,363,408 performance-based restricted stock units (“PBRSUs”) awarded under the Plans. Thenumber of shares included for PBRSUs represents the maximum shares that could vest. Since the restricted stock units and PBRSUs have no exercise price, they are not included in theweighted-average exercise price calculation in column b.(2) Represents stock option inducement grants made pursuant to the NYSE inducement grant rules.The information required by this item with regard to security ownership of certain beneficial owners and management will be contained in our 2021 Proxy Statement under thecaption “Information About Our Directors, Officers and 5% Stockholders - Security Ownership of Certain Beneficial Owners and Management” and is incorporated in this report byreference.Item 13.Certain Relationships and Related Transactions, and Director IndependenceThe information required by this item will be contained in our 2021 Proxy Statement under the captions “Related Person Transactions” and “Corporate Governance” and isincorporated in this report by reference.Item 14.Principal Accountant Fees and ServicesThe information required by this item will be contained in our 2021 Proxy Statement under the caption “Ratification of the Selection of Independent Registered PublicAccounting Firm” and is incorporated in this report by reference.62PART IVItem 15.Exhibits and Financial Statement Schedulesa) The following documents are filed as a part of this report:(1) Financial Statements: The financial statements and notes thereto annexed to this report beginning on page F-1.(2) Financial Statement Schedules: Schedule II- Valuation and Qualifying Accounts Disclosure schedules have been omitted because they are not required or because therequired information is in the Consolidated Financial Statements and notes thereto.(3) Exhibits: The list of Exhibits filed as part of this Annual Report on Form 10-K is set forth on the Exhibit Index immediately preceding such Exhibits and is incorporatedherein by this reference.Item 16.Form 10-K SummaryNone.63SIGNATURESPursuant to the requirements of Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by theundersigned, thereunto duly authorized. R1 RCM INC.By:/s/ Joseph FlanaganJoseph FlanaganPresident and Chief Executive OfficerBy:/s/ Rachel WilsonRachel WilsonChief Financial Officer and TreasurerDate: February 18, 2021Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, this report has been signed by the following persons on behalf of the registrant in the capacities and onthe dates indicated.Signature Title Date/s/ Joseph Flanagan Joseph Flanagan President, Chief Executive Officer, and Director (Principal Executive Officer) February 18, 2021/s/ Rachel Wilson Rachel Wilson Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer (Principal Financial Officer) February 18, 2021/s/ Richard B. Evans, Jr. Richard B. Evans, Jr.Principal Accounting OfficerFebruary 18, 2021/s/ Michael C. FeinerMichael C. FeinerDirectorFebruary 18, 2021/s/ John B. Henneman III John B. Henneman III Director February 18, 2021/s/ Alex J. Mandl Alex J. MandlLead DirectorFebruary 18, 2021/s/ Neal Moszkowski Neal Moszkowski Director February 18, 2021/s/ Ian Sacks Ian Sacks Director February 18, 2021/s/ Jill SmithJill SmithDirectorFebruary 18, 2021/s/ Anthony J. SperanzoAnthony J. Speranzo Director February 18, 2021/s/ Anthony R. TersigniAnthony R. TersigniDirectorFebruary 18, 2021/s/ Albert R. ZimmerliAlbert R. Zimmerli Director February 18, 2021 64R1 RCM Inc.Index to Consolidated Financial Statements PageAudited Consolidated Financial Statements Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm F-2Consolidated Balance Sheets F-5Consolidated Statements of Operations and Comprehensive Income (Loss) F-6Consolidated Statements of Stockholders’ Equity (Deficit) F-7Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows F-8Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements F-9F-1Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting FirmThe Stockholders and Board of Directors of R1 RCM Inc.Opinion on the Financial StatementsWe have audited the accompanying consolidated balance sheets of R1 RCM Inc. (the Company) as of December 31, 2020 and 2019, the related consolidated statements ofoperations and comprehensive income (loss), stockholders’ equity (deficit), and cash flows for each of the three years in the period ended December 31, 2020, and the related notes(collectively referred to as the “consolidated financial statements”). In our opinion, the consolidated financial statements present fairly, in all material respects, the financial positionof the Company at December 31, 2020 and 2019, and the results of its operations and its cash flows for each of the three years in the period ended December 31, 2020, in conformitywith U.S. generally accepted accounting principles.We also have audited, in accordance with the standards of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States) (PCAOB), the Company's internal control over financialreporting as of December 31, 2020, based on criteria established in Internal Control-Integrated Framework issued by the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the TreadwayCommission (2013 framework) and our report dated February 18, 2021 expressed an unqualified opinion thereon.Basis for OpinionThese financial statements are the responsibility of the Company's management. Our responsibility is to express an opinion on the Company‘s financial statements based on ouraudits. We are a public accounting firm registered with the PCAOB and are required to be independent with respect to the Company in accordance with the U.S. federal securitieslaws and the applicable rules and regulations of the Securities and Exchange Commission and the PCAOB.We conducted our audits in accordance with the standards of the PCAOB. Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whetherthe financial statements are free of material misstatement, whether due to error or fraud. Our audits included performing procedures to assess the risks of material misstatement ofthe financial statements, whether due to error or fraud, and performing procedures that respond to those risks. Such procedures include examining, on a test basis, evidence regardingthe amounts and disclosures in the financial statements. Our audits also included evaluating the accounting principles used and significant estimates made by management, as well asevaluating the overall presentation of the financial statements. We believe that our audits provide a reasonable basis for our opinion.Critical Audit MattersThe critical audit matters communicated below are matters arising from the current period audit of the financial statements that were communicated or required to be communicatedto the audit committee and that: (1) relates to accounts or disclosures that are material to the financial statements and (2) involved our especially challenging, subjective or complexjudgments. The communication of critical audit matters does not alter in any way our opinion on the consolidated financial statements, taken as a whole, and we are not, bycommunicating the critical audit matters below, providing separate opinions on the critical audit matters or on the accounts or disclosures to which they relate.F-2Revenue recognition - Incentive fee arrangementsDescription of the MatterAs described in Note 2 of the consolidated financial statements, the Company recognizes revenue related to financial performance-basedincentive fees ratably as the performance obligation for revenue cycle management services is satisfied. Incentive fees are structured to reflectquarterly or annual performance and are evaluated on a contract-by-contract basis.Auditing the Company’s recognition and measurement of variable incentive fees revenues is subjective due to the estimation uncertainty inthe calculations for amounts not yet agreed upon and which remain unbilled at year end. In these situations, the Company performs anassessment of the estimated total incentive fees expected and the related revenues to be recognized. Further, the nature and terms of eachindividual customer agreement for end-to-end revenue cycle management services varies, and each contract requires separate analysis toensure that incentive fee revenue recognition is appropriate.How We Addressed the Matterin Our AuditWe obtained an understanding, evaluated the design and tested the operating effectiveness of controls over the review of customer agreementsand related amendments and incentive fee calculations, including management’s internal controls over the assessment of the estimatedconstraint applied to the incentive fee revenues.To test the appropriateness of the timing of recognition and measurement of incentive fee revenues, our audit procedures included, amongothers, obtaining and reviewing the customer contracts and any related amendments, recalculating the estimated revenues usingmanagement’s methodology, and independently confirming with external customers key operational measures that are included in thecustomer contract and utilized as inputs to the calculation. In addition, we compared historical estimated incentive fees to actual results toassess the accuracy of management’s estimation process.Acquisition - SCI business combinationDescription of the MatterAs described in Note 5 to the consolidated financial statements, the Company completed its acquisition of SCI Solutions, Inc. (SCI) forconsideration of $196.7 million in 2020. The transaction was accounted for as a business combination. Auditing the Company’s accounting for its acquisition of SCI was complex due to the significant estimation required by management todetermine the fair value of the acquired identified intangible assets of $86.1 million, which principally consisted of developed technology.The significant estimation uncertainty was primarily due to the sensitivity of the respective fair values to the key assumptions included in thevaluation. The Company used a discounted cash flow (excess earnings) model to measure the developed technology intangible assets. Thesignificant assumptions used to estimate the value of the intangible assets included discount rates and certain assumptions that form the basisof the forecasted results (e.g., revenue and cost growth rates and technology obsolescence curves). These significant assumptions are forwardlooking and could be affected by future economic and market conditions.How We Addressed the Matterin Our AuditWe obtained an understanding, evaluated the design and tested the operating effectiveness of the Company’s controls addressing the risks ofmaterial misstatement over its accounting for the SCI acquisition including, among others, management's process to establish the significantassumptions and measure the acquired intangible assets. This included testing controls over management's review of the significantassumptions and other inputs used in the determination of fair value. The testing was inclusive of key management review controls to evaluatethe acquired technology and estimated future sales, and controls to ensure that the data used to evaluate and support the significantassumptions was complete, accurate and, where applicable, verified to appropriate data sources.To test the Company’s accounting for the SCI acquisition, our audit procedures included, among others, inspecting the terms of the executedagreement, evaluating the Company's selection of the valuation methodology, evaluating the methods and significant assumptions used by theCompany's valuation specialist, and evaluating the completeness and accuracy of the underlying data supporting the significant assumptionsand estimates. We involved our valuation specialists to assist with the evaluation of methodologies used by the Company and the significantassumptions included in the fair value estimates. We also evaluated the Company’s disclosures in the consolidated financial statements.F-3/s/ Ernst & Young LLPWe have served as the Company's auditor since 2004.Chicago, IllinoisFebruary 18, 2021F-4R1 RCM Inc.Consolidated Balance Sheets(In millions, except per share data) December 31, 20202019AssetsCurrent assets:Cash and cash equivalents$173.8 $92.0 Accounts receivable, net of $3.7 million and $2.8 million allowance91.3 52.3 Accounts receivable, net of $0.1 million and $0.0 million allowance - related party30.9 30.8 Prepaid expenses and other current assets59.4 41.6 Total current assets355.4 216.7 Property, equipment and software, net93.7 116.9 Operating lease right-of-use assets57.8 77.9 Intangible assets, net171.1 164.7 Goodwill375.3 253.2 Non-current deferred tax assets73.7 64.2 Non-current portion of restricted cash equivalents1.0 0.5 Other assets61.0 35.0 Total assets$1,189.0 $929.1 LiabilitiesCurrent liabilities:Accounts payable$18.2 $20.2 Current portion of customer liabilities16.7 14.0 Current portion of customer liabilities - related party15.3 34.1 Accrued compensation and benefits51.9 95.1 Current portion of operating lease liabilities12.2 12.8 Current portion of long-term debt32.3 16.3 Accrued expenses and other current liabilities59.7 40.0 Total current liabilities206.3 232.5 Non-current portion of customer liabilities - related party16.3 18.6 Non-current portion of operating lease liabilities71.0 82.7 Long-term debt519.7 337.7 Other non-current liabilities36.3 10.4 Total liabilities849.6 681.9 8.00% Series A convertible preferred stock, par value $0.01, 370,000 shares authorized, 288,497 shares issuedand outstanding as of December 31, 2020 (aggregate liquidation value of $294.3); 370,000 shares authorized, 266,529shares issued and outstanding as of December 31, 2019 (aggregate liquidation value of $271.9)251.5 229.1 Stockholders’ equity:Common stock, $0.01 par value, 500,000,000 shares authorized, 137,812,559 shares issued and121,144,038 shares outstanding at December 31, 2020; 127,807,546 shares issued and 114,021,280 sharesoutstanding at December 31, 20191.4 1.3 Additional paid-in capital393.7 372.7 Accumulated deficit(161.5)(277.8)Accumulated other comprehensive loss(6.5)(4.5)Treasury stock, at cost, 16,668,521 shares as of December 31, 2020; 13,786,266 shares as of December31, 2019(139.2)(73.6)Total stockholders’ equity87.9 18.1 Total liabilities and stockholders’ equity$1,189.0 $929.1 See accompanying notes to consolidated financial statements.F-5R1 RCM Inc.Consolidated Statements of Operations and Comprehensive Income (Loss)(In millions, except per share data) Year Ended December 31, 202020192018Net services revenue ($809.5 million, $790.4 million and $600.1 million from relatedparty for the year ended December 31, 2020, 2019 and 2018, respectively)$1,270.8 $1,186.1 $868.5 Operating expenses:Cost of services1,021.1 987.8 770.6 Selling, general and administrative102.4 104.4 97.9 Other67.3 36.2 30.4 Total operating expenses1,190.8 1,128.4 898.9 Income (loss) from operations80.0 57.7 (30.4)Gain on business disposition55.7 — — Loss on debt extinguishment— (18.8)— Net interest expense(17.3)(29.1)(26.3)Income (loss) before income tax provision (benefit)118.4 9.8 (56.7)Income tax provision (benefit)1.3 (2.2)(11.4)Net income (loss)$117.1 $12.0 $(45.3)Net income (loss) per common share:Basic$0.41 $(0.08)$(0.60)Diluted$0.33 $(0.08)$(0.60)Weighted average shares used in calculating net income (loss) per common share:Basic115,729,645 111,505,993 108,175,159 Diluted174,573,270 111,505,993 108,175,159 Consolidated statements of comprehensive income (loss)Net income (loss)117.1 12.0 (45.3)Other comprehensive loss:Net change on derivatives designated as cash flow hedges, net of tax(1.7)(0.2)0.5 Foreign currency translation adjustments(0.3)(0.8)(2.4)Comprehensive income (loss)$115.1 $11.0 $(47.2)Basic:Net income (loss)$117.1 $12.0 $(45.3)Less dividends on preferred shares(22.4)(20.7)(19.1)Less income allocated to preferred shareholders(47.3)— — Net income (loss) available/allocated to common shareholders - basic$47.4 $(8.7)$(64.4)Diluted:Net income (loss)$117.1 $12.0 $(45.3)Less dividends on preferred shares(22.4)(20.7)(19.1)Less income allocated to preferred shareholders(37.7)— — Net income (loss) available/allocated to common shareholders - diluted$57.0 $(8.7)$(64.4)See accompanying notes to consolidated financial statements.F-6R1 RCM Inc.Consolidated Statements of Stockholders’ Equity (Deficit)(In millions, except per share data) Common StockTreasury StockAdditional Paid-In CapitalAccumulated DeficitAccumulated other comprehensive (loss)Total SharesAmountSharesAmountBalance at December 31, 2017116,650,388 $1.2 (12,240,427)$(59.6)$337.9 $(244.5)$(1.6)$33.4 Share-based compensation expense— — — — 17.4 — — 17.4 Reclassification of equity award— — — — 1.3 — — 1.3 Issuance of common stock related to share-basedcompensation plans323,964 — — — — — — — Issuance of common stock and stock warrants4,665,594 — — — 19.2 — — 19.2 Exercise of vested stock options1,713,710 — — — 4.3 — — 4.3 Dividends paid/accrued on preferred stock— — — — (19.1)— — (19.1)Acquisition of treasury stock related to equity awardplans— — (499,069)(3.0)— — — (3.0)Forfeitures— — (72,259)— — — — — Net change on derivatives designated as cash flowhedges, net of tax of $0.2— — — — — — 0.5 0.5 Foreign currency translation adjustments— — — — — — (2.4)(2.4)Net (loss) income— — — — — (45.3)— (45.3)Balance at December 31, 2018123,353,656 $1.2 (12,811,755)$(62.6)$361.0 $(289.8)$(3.5)$6.3 Share-based compensation expense— — — — 18.8 — — 18.8 Issuance of common stock related to share-basedcompensation plans1,812,993 — — — — — — — Exercise of vested stock options2,640,897 0.1 — — 13.6 — — 13.7 Dividends paid/accrued on preferred stock— — — — (20.7)— — (20.7)Acquisition of treasury stock related to equity awardplans— — (973,303)(11.0)— — — (11.0)Forfeitures— — (1,208)— — — — — Net change on derivatives designated as cash flowhedges, net of tax of $0.1— — — — — — (0.2)(0.2)Foreign currency translation adjustment— — — — — — (0.8)(0.8)Net (loss) income— — — — — 12.0 — 12.0 Balance at December 31, 2019127,807,546 $1.3 (13,786,266)$(73.6)$372.7 $(277.8)$(4.5)$18.1 Impact of credit-loss standard adoption, net of tax of$0.3— — — — — (0.8)— (0.8)Adjusted balance at January 1, 2020127,807,546 1.3 (13,786,266)(73.6)372.7 (278.6)(4.5)17.3 Share-based compensation expense— — — — 24.2 — — 24.2 Issuance of common stock related to share-basedcompensation plans6,848,859 0.1 — — (0.1)— — — Exercise of vested stock options3,156,154 — — — 19.3 — — 19.3 Dividends paid/accrued on preferred stock— — — — (22.4)— — (22.4)Acquisition of treasury stock related to equity awardplans— — (2,882,255)(65.6)— — — (65.6)Net change on derivatives designated as cash flowhedges, net of tax of $0.6— — — — — — (1.7)(1.7)Foreign currency translation adjustment— — — — — — (0.3)(0.3)Net (loss) income— — — — — 117.1 — 117.1 Balance at December 31, 2020137,812,559 $1.4 (16,668,521)$(139.2)$393.7 $(161.5)$(6.5)$87.9 See accompanying notes to consolidated financial statements.F-7R1 RCM Inc.Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows(In millions) Year Ended December 31, 202020192018Operating activitiesNet income (loss)$117.1 $12.0 $(45.3)Adjustments to reconcile net income (loss) to net cash provided by operations:Depreciation and amortization68.7 55.7 38.8 Amortization of debt issuance costs1.0 1.6 1.5 Share-based compensation24.1 18.6 18.4 Gain on sale of Emergency Medical Services business(55.7)— — Loss on disposal and right-of-use asset write-downs17.0 0.1 0.4 Loss on debt extinguishment— 18.8 — Provision for credit losses0.6 2.9 0.8 Deferred income taxes(1.2)(5.1)(14.0)Non-cash lease expense7.3 11.4 — Change in value of contingent consideration4.7 — — Changes in operating assets and liabilities:Accounts receivable and related party accounts receivable(56.5)11.5 (39.1)Prepaid expenses and other assets(12.9)(17.9)(17.0)Accounts payable(3.4)9.9 (3.0)Accrued compensation and benefits(40.3)18.2 31.9 Lease liabilities(13.6)(11.8)— Other liabilities25.3 4.8 9.8 Customer liabilities and customer liabilities - related party(20.4)(16.8)35.1 Net cash provided by operating activities61.8 113.9 18.3 Investing activitiesPurchases of property, equipment, and software(49.3)(61.0)(33.5)Acquisition of SCI, net of cash acquired and earn-out provision(191.0)— — Acquisition of RevWorks, net of contingent consideration(5.0)— — Acquisition of Intermedix Holdings, Inc., net of cash acquired— — (462.8)Proceeds from sale of Emergency Medical Services business, net of cash disposed128.3 — — Net cash used in investing activities(117.0)(61.0)(496.3)Financing activitiesIssuance of senior secured debt, net of discount and issuance costs190.6 321.8 253.1 Issuance of subordinated notes, net of discount and issuance costs— — 105.5 Borrowings on revolver50.0 60.0 — Payment of debt issuance costs related to the Senior Revolver— — (0.4)Repayment of senior secured debt(23.4)(276.8)(1.3)Repayment of subordinated notes and prepayment penalty— (112.2)— Repayments on revolver(20.0)(20.0)— Issuance of common stock and stock warrants, net of issuance costs— — 19.2 Exercise of vested stock options18.4 13.7 4.3 Shares withheld for taxes(71.9)(11.0)(3.0)Finance lease payments(0.8)(0.8)— Other(5.0)— — Net cash provided by (used in) financing activities137.9 (25.3)377.4 Effect of exchange rate changes in cash(0.4)(0.2)(0.7)Net increase (decrease) in cash, cash equivalents, and restricted cash82.3 27.4 (101.3)Cash, cash equivalents, and restricted cash at beginning of period92.5 65.1 166.4 Cash, cash equivalents, and restricted cash at end of period$174.8 $92.5 $65.1 Supplemental disclosures of cash flow informationAccrued dividends payable to Preferred Stockholders$5.8 $5.3 $4.9 Accrued and other liabilities related to purchases of property, equipment and software$8.1 $20.6 $19.6 Accounts payable related to purchases of property, equipment and software$2.9 $1.2 $0.9 Interest paid$15.8 $26.5 $23.4 Income taxes paid$4.2 $4.0 $3.3 Income taxes refunded$0.4 $0.2 $0.5 See accompanying notes to consolidated financial statements.F-8R1 RCM Inc.Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements1. Description of BusinessR1 RCM Inc. (the “Company”) is a leading provider of technology-driven solutions that transform the patient experience and financial performance of healthcare providers.The Company helps healthcare providers generate sustainable improvements in their operating margins and cash flows while also enhancing patient, physician, and staff satisfactionfor its customers.The Company achieves these results for its customers by managing healthcare providers’ revenue cycle operations, which encompass processes including patient registration,insurance and benefit verification, medical treatment documentation and coding, bill preparation, and collections from patients and payers. The Company does so by deploying aunique operating model that leverages its extensive healthcare site experience, innovative technology, and process excellence. The Company assists its Revenue Cycle Management(“RCM”) customers in managing their revenue cycle operating costs while simultaneously increasing the portion of the maximum potential services revenue they receive. Together,these benefits can generate significant and sustainable improvements in operating margins and cash flows for the Company's customers.The Company's primary service offering consists of end-to-end RCM services for health systems, hospitals, and physician groups, which the Company deploys through anoperating partner relationship or a co-managed relationship. Under an operating partner relationship, the Company provides comprehensive revenue cycle infrastructure to providers,including all revenue cycle personnel, technology solutions, and process workflow. Under a co-managed relationship, the Company leverages its customers’ existing RCM staff andprocesses, and supplement them with the Company's infused management, subject matter specialists, proprietary technology solutions, and other resources. Under the operatingpartner model, the Company records higher revenue and expenses due to the fact that almost all of the revenue cycle personnel are employees of the Company and more third-partyvendor contracts are controlled by the Company. Under the co-managed model, the majority of the revenue cycle personnel and more third-party vendor contracts remain with thecustomer and those costs are netted against the Company's co-managed revenue. For the years ended December 31, 2020, 2019, and 2018, substantially all of the Company's netoperating and incentive fees from end-to-end RCM services were generated under the operating partner model. The Company also offers modular services, allowing customers to engage the Company for only specific components of its end-to-end RCM service offering, such asphysician advisory services (“PAS”), practice management (“PM”), revenue integrity services (“RIS”), patient experience (“PX”), coding management, and business office. TheCompany's PAS offering assists healthcare organizations in complying with payer requirements regarding whether to classify a hospital visit as an in-patient or an out-patientobservation case for billing purposes. The Company's PM services offer administrative and operational support to allow healthcare providers to focus on delivering high qualitypatient care and outsource non-core functions to the Company. The Company's RIS offering includes charge capture, charge description master (“CDM”) maintenance, and pricingservices that help providers ensure they are capturing the maximum net compliant revenue for services delivered. The Company's PX offering helps patients manage their data in oneeasy-to-use environment, enabling eligibility validation and insurance plan attribution, demographic accuracy, meeting authorization and referral requirements, medical necessityvalidation, and patient out-of-pocket cost estimation. The Company's coding management offering drives performance, quality, and consistent results via business intelligence andanalysis, human capital management, an accountability framework, and a quality management program. The Company's business office service can help providers with the entirebilling function or to specifically recoup revenue that may otherwise be lost by focusing skilled resources in lower priority areas with significant revenue potential.Once implemented, the Company's technology solutions, processes and services are deeply embedded in its customers’ day-to-day revenue cycle operations. The Companybelieves its service offerings are adaptable to meet an evolving healthcare regulatory environment, technology standards and market trends.F-9R1 RCM Inc.Notes to Consolidated Financial StatementsAscensionOn February 16, 2016, the Company entered into a long-term strategic partnership with Ascension Health Alliance, the parent of the Company's largest customer and thenation’s largest Catholic and non-profit health system, and TowerBrook Capital Partners (“TowerBrook”), an investment management firm (the “Transaction”). As part of theTransaction, the Company amended and restated its Master Professional Services Agreement (“A&R MPSA”) with Ascension Health (“Ascension”) effective February 16, 2016with a term of ten years. Pursuant to the A&R MPSA and with certain limited exceptions, the Company is the exclusive provider of RCM services and PAS with respect to acutecare services provided by the hospitals affiliated with Ascension that execute supplement agreements with the Company.SCI Solutions, Inc. AcquisitionOn April 1, 2020, the Company completed the acquisition of scheduling.com, Inc. d/b/a SCI Solutions, Inc. (“SCI”) pursuant to a stock purchase agreement dated as of January9, 2020 (the “Stock Purchase Agreement”), by and among the Company, Clearsight Intermediate Holdings, Inc. (“Clearsight Holdings”) and Clearsight Group Holdings, LLC (the“Seller”) (the “SCI Acquisition”). At the closing of the transaction, the Company purchased from the Seller all of the issued and outstanding equity interests of Clearsight Holdings,which owns all of the issued and outstanding equity interests of SCI. SCI is a leading provider of software-as-a-service (“SaaS”)-based scheduling and patient access solutions. SCI’splatform streamlines the patient and provider experience, creating efficient care networks where health systems’ capacity is digitally and conveniently accessible to all marketconstituents. The combination of R1 and SCI is expected to deliver enhanced value for healthcare providers by enabling them to expand digital front door strategies for their patients,improve operating efficiency, and increase capacity utilization, among other benefits. Refer to Note 5, Acquisitions for additional details.RevWorks AcquisitionOn August 3, 2020, the Company completed the acquisition of the RevWorks services business pursuant to an asset purchase agreement dated as of June 2, 2020 (the“RevWorks Purchase Agreement”) by and among the Company and Cerner Corporation (the “RevWorks Acquisition”). At the closing of the transaction, the Company purchasedcertain assets relating to the RevWorks services business, as specified in the RevWorks Purchase Agreement. The combination of R1 and RevWorks is expected to provide enhancedrevenue cycle capabilities and expertise to RevWorks clients, helping drive sustainable financial improvements for providers while improving their patients’ overall experience.Refer to Note 5, Acquisitions for additional details.EMS DispositionAs part of our portfolio analysis and strategic initiatives, the Company disposed the emergency medical services (“EMS”) business on October 30, 2020 for $140 million,inclusive of a $5 million hold-back amount subject to the completion of certain transition services, to be paid approximately one year from the date of the disposition. The total saleprice net of costs to sell was $132.7 million, and is subject to finalization of customary adjustments for working capital, indebtedness, cash, and transaction expenses. R1 allocatedgoodwill to the disposed business based on the relative fair value methodology. The total goodwill allocated to the EMS Disposition was $7.1 million. The gain recognized on theEMS Disposition was $55.7 million.F-10R1 RCM Inc.Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements2. Summary of Significant Accounting PoliciesBasis of PresentationThe consolidated financial statements include the assets, liabilities and results of operations of the Company and its wholly owned subsidiaries. All material intercompanytransactions and balances have been eliminated in consolidation. The preparation of financial statements in conformity with the United States generally accepted accountingprinciples (“GAAP”) requires management to make estimates and assumptions that affect the amounts reported in these consolidated financial statements and accompanying notes.Actual results can differ from those estimates.SegmentsReporting segments are identified as components of an enterprise about which separate discrete financial information is available and is evaluated by the chief operatingdecision maker, or decision-making group, relating to resource allocation and performance assessments. All of the Company’s significant operations are organized around the singlebusiness of providing revenue cycle operations for healthcare providers. The Company views its operations and manages its business as one operating and reportable segment.Revenue RecognitionThe Company's primary source of revenue is its end-to-end RCM services fees. The Company also generates revenue through modular RCM services, where customers willengage the Company for only specific components of its end-to-end RCM service offering on a fixed-fee or transactional basis.Revenue Cycle ManagementRCM services fees are primarily variable and performance related, and are generally viewed as the consideration earned in satisfaction of a single performance obligationwhich is considered a series. Variable consideration for end-to-end RCM services are allocated to and recognized over the related time period as the amounts reflect theconsideration the Company is entitled to and relate specifically to the Company’s efforts to satisfy its performance obligation. Fees for physician group RCM services includevariable consideration contingent on customer collections, and inputs to the Company’s revenue estimates typically include historical service fees and historical customer collectionamounts. RCM services fees consist of net operating fees, incentive fees, and other fees.Net Operating FeesThe Company’s net operating fees consist of:i) gross base fees invoiced to customers; less ii) corresponding costs of customers’ revenue cycle operations which the Company pays pursuant to its RCM agreements, including salaries and benefits for thecustomers' RCM personnel, and related third-party vendor costs; plusiii) fees accrued for physician group RCM services. The Company recognizes revenue related to net operating fees ratably as the performance obligation for the RCM services is satisfied. Base fees are typically billed inadvance of the quarter and paid in three monthly payments as the entity performs and the customer simultaneously receives and consumes the benefits of the servicesprovided. The costs of customers’ revenue cycle operations, which the Company pays pursuant to its RCM agreements, are accrued based on the service period. Netoperating fees for physician groups are invoiced on a monthly basis and payment terms are typically 30 days.F-11R1 RCM Inc.Notes to Consolidated Financial StatementsIncentive Fees Incentive fees are structured to reflect quarterly or annual performance and are evaluated on a contract-by-contract basis. The Company estimates incentive fee revenuebased on contractually agreed-upon financial or operating metrics. The Company recognizes revenue related to incentive fees ratably as the performance obligation forRCM services is satisfied, to the extent that it is probable that a significant reversal of cumulative revenue will not occur once the uncertainty is resolved. Incentive fees aretypically billed and paid on a quarterly basis.Other The Company recognizes revenue related to other RCM fees as RCM services are provided. These services consist of an obligation to provide a specific component of itsend-to-end RCM service offering. Fees are typically variable in nature with the entire amount being included in revenue in the month of service. The customersimultaneously receives and consumes the benefits provided by the services and the fees are typically billed on a monthly basis and payment terms are typically 30 days. Tothe extent that certain service fees are fixed and not subject to refund, adjustment, or concession, these fees are generally recognized into revenue ratably as theperformance obligation is satisfied. The Company recognizes revenue from PAS in the period in which the service is performed. The Company’s PAS arrangements typically consist of an obligation toprovide specific services to customers on an if and when needed basis. These services are provided under a fixed price per unit arrangement. Fees for the Company's PASarrangements are typically billed on a monthly basis with 30 to 60 day payment terms. PM services arrangements include a single performance obligation, constituting a series, to manage and administer various non-clinical aspects of a customer's physicianpractice, which may be comprised of numerous physical office locations. Consideration for PM services is typically variable in nature and allocated to and recognized overthe related time period as the amounts reflect the consideration the Company is entitled to and relate specifically to the Company’s effort to satisfy its performanceobligation. PM services fees are invoiced on a monthly basis and payment terms are typically 30 days.Bundled ServicesModular RCM services may be sold separately or bundled in a contract. End-to-end RCM services are typically sold separately but may be bundled with PAS. PAS arecommonly sold separately. The typical length of an end-to-end RCM contract is two to ten years (subject to the parties' respective termination rights) but varies from customer tocustomer. Modular RCM agreements generally vary in length between one and three years.For bundled arrangements, the Company accounts for individual services as a separate performance obligation if a service is separately identifiable from other items in thebundled arrangement and if a customer can benefit from it on its own or with other resources that are readily available to the customer. The transaction price is allocated betweenseparate services in a bundle based on their relative standalone selling prices. The standalone selling prices are determined based on the prices at which the Company separately sellsits modular services. PAS are provided at a customer’s election but do not represent material rights as the services are priced at standalone selling price throughout the life of theagreement.F-12R1 RCM Inc.Notes to Consolidated Financial StatementsCost of ServicesCosts associated with generating the Company’s net services revenue, including the cost of operating its global business services centers, are expensed as incurred, with theexception of deferred contract costs, which are discussed further in Note 22. Cost of services consist of (i) on-site personnel and technology costs, (ii) global business services costs,and (iii) other costs. On-site personnel and technology costs consist primarily of wages, bonuses, benefits, share-based compensation, travel, and other costs associated withemployees who are assigned to customer sites to help manage the Company’s customers’ revenue cycle operations. The other significant portion of such expenses is an allocation ofthe costs associated with maintaining, improving, and deploying our integrated proprietary technology suite. Global business services costs relate to the Company’s global businessservices centers in the U.S. and internationally that perform patient scheduling and pre-registration, medical transcription, cash posting, reconciliation of payments to billing records,patient follow-up, and Medicaid eligibility determination for our customers. The Company incurs expenses related to salaries and benefits for employees in its global businessservices centers and non-payroll costs associated with operating its global business services centers. Other expenses consist of costs related to managing other services. Theseexpenses consist primarily of wages, bonuses, benefits, share-based compensation, and facilities costs.Comprehensive Income (Loss)Comprehensive income (loss) is the net income (loss) of the Company combined with other changes in stockholders’ equity (deficit) not involving ownership interest changes.For the Company, such changes are foreign currency translation adjustments and changes in derivatives designated as cash flow hedges.Cash and Cash EquivalentsThe Company considers all highly liquid investments with a maturity of three months or less when purchased to be cash equivalents.Restricted Cash EquivalentsIn 2020 and 2019, restricted cash equivalents represent the amount of cash or certificate of deposits (“CDs”) that the Company is unable to access for operational purposes as itcollateralizes certain Company expenses or derivatives.Accounts Receivable and Allowance for Credit LossesAccounts receivable is comprised of unpaid balances pertaining to modular services and end-to-end RCM services, net receivable balances for end-to-end RCM customersafter considering cost reimbursements owed to such customers, including related accrued balances, and amounts due from physician RCM and practice management customers. TheCompany evaluates its accounts receivable for expected credit losses quarterly. The Company maintains an estimated allowance for credit losses to reduce its accounts receivable tothe amount that it believes will be collected. This allowance is based on the Company’s historical experience, its assessment of each customer’s ability to pay, the length of time abalance has been outstanding, input from key Company resources assigned to each customer, the status of any ongoing operations with each applicable customer, and environmentalfactors such as significant shifts in the healthcare environment which the Company believes may have impacted or will impact its customers’ financial health and ability to pay.Property, Equipment and SoftwareProperty, equipment and software are stated at cost, and related depreciation and amortization are calculated on the straight-line method over the estimated useful lives of theassets.F-13R1 RCM Inc.Notes to Consolidated Financial StatementsThe Company capitalizes qualifying internal and third-party costs and hardware and software costs related to the Company’s software development activities in accordancewith ASC 350-40. The Company amortizes the capitalized software development costs over their estimated life on a straight-line basis.The major classifications of property, equipment and software and their expected useful lives are as follows: Buildings and land30 to 42 years and indefiniteComputers and other equipment 3 to 5 yearsLeasehold improvements Shorter of 10 years or lease termOffice furniture 5 yearsSoftware 3 to 5 yearsGoodwillGoodwill represents the difference between the purchase price of acquired companies and the related fair value of the net assets acquired, which is accounted for by theacquisition method of accounting. The Company annually tests goodwill for impairment on the first day of its fiscal fourth quarter, or more frequently if an event occurs orcircumstances change that would more likely than not reduce the fair value below its carrying value. The goodwill impairment test consists of a qualitative assessment of impairmentindicators, followed by, if necessary, a quantitative assessment comparing the carrying amount to the reporting unit's fair value. To the extent that the carrying value exceeds the fairvalue, and impairment charge would be recorded. The Company has determined there to be one reporting unit, consistent with its single operating and reportable segment. As part ofits annual impairment analysis, the Company performed a qualitative assessment and determined there was no impairment of goodwill for the year ended December 31, 2020.Impairment of Long-Lived AssetsProperty, equipment, software, right-of-use (“ROU”) assets, deferred contract costs, and other acquired intangible assets are reviewed for impairment whenever events orchanges in circumstances indicate that the carrying amount of the asset may not be recoverable. If circumstances require a long-lived asset or asset group be reviewed for possibleimpairment, the Company first compares undiscounted cash flows expected to be generated by each asset or asset group to its carrying value. If the carrying value of the long-livedasset or asset group is not recoverable on an undiscounted cash flow basis, an impairment charge is recognized to the extent that the carrying value exceeds the fair value. There wasno material impairment of property, equipment, software, deferred contract costs, or other acquired intangible assets for the years ended December 31, 2020, 2019, and 2018. For theyear ended December 31, 2020, we impaired ROU assets related to leased facilities which we exited. See Note 16. Other for more information. For the year ended December 31,2019, there was no material impairment of ROU assets.Accrued Compensation and BenefitsAccrued compensation and benefits consists of accrued payroll, bonus, paid time off, health benefits, severance, and compensation and benefits related taxes. Deferred FICAtaxes are split between accrued compensation and benefits and other non-current liabilities based on their due date.F-14R1 RCM Inc.Notes to Consolidated Financial StatementsIncome TaxesIncome taxes are accounted for under the asset and liability method. Deferred tax assets and liabilities are recognized for the future tax consequences attributable to differencesbetween the financial statement carrying amounts of existing assets and liabilities and their respective tax basis and operating loss and tax credit carry forwards. Deferred tax assetsand liabilities are measured using current tax laws and enacted tax rates in effect for the years in which those temporary differences are expected to be recovered or settled. Theeffect on deferred tax assets and liabilities of a change in tax rates is recognized in income in the period that includes the enactment date. The Company records a valuationallowance for deferred tax assets if, based upon the weight of all available evidence, both positive and negative, it is more likely than not that some or all of the deferred tax assetswill not be realized.The Company recognizes the tax benefit from an uncertain tax position only if it is more likely than not that the tax position will be sustained upon examination by the relevanttax authorities, based on the technical merits of the position. The tax benefits recognized in the consolidated financial statements from such a position are measured based on thelargest amount of benefit that has a greater than 50% percent likelihood of being realized upon ultimate settlement. Interest and penalties relating to income taxes are recognized inour income tax provision in the consolidated statements of operations and comprehensive income (loss).Legal and Other ContingenciesIn the normal course of business, the Company is subject to regulatory investigations or legal proceedings, as well as demands, claims and threatened litigation. The Companyrecords an estimated loss for any claim, lawsuit, investigation or proceeding when it is probable that a liability has been incurred and the amount of the loss can be reasonablyestimated. Significant judgment is required in both the determination of the probability and whether the loss can be reasonably estimated. Actual expenses could differ from suchestimates.Foreign Currency Translation and Transaction Gains (Losses)Assets and liabilities of non-U.S. subsidiaries that operate in a local currency environment, where such local currency is the functional currency, are translated to U.S. dollars atexchange rates in effect at the balance sheet date. Income and expense accounts are translated at average exchange rates during the year which approximates the rates in effect at thetransaction dates. The resulting translation adjustments are recorded as a separate component of accumulated other comprehensive income (loss).Share-Based Compensation ExpenseThe Company determines the expense for all employee share-based compensation awards by estimating their fair value and recognizing such value as an expense, on a ratablebasis, in the consolidated financial statements over the requisite service period in which the employees earn the awards. Performance based stock awards are recognized in expensewhen the performance metrics are probable to be achieved. Changes in the estimate of achievement of the performance metrics are recognized in the period of the change through acumulative catch-up. The Company assesses the performance metrics in its awards on a quarterly basis to determine if a cumulative catch-up is necessary. The fair value of stockoptions is calculated using the Black-Scholes option pricing model and, for market condition stock awards, the fair value is estimated using Monte Carlo simulations.F-15R1 RCM Inc.Notes to Consolidated Financial StatementsTo determine the fair value of a share-based award using the Black-Scholes option pricing model, the Company makes assumptions regarding the risk-free interest rate,expected future volatility and expected life of the award. These inputs are subjective and generally require significant analysis and judgment to develop. The Company aggregates allemployees into one pool based on the grant date for valuation purposes. The risk-free rate is based on the U.S. treasury yield curve in effect at the time of grant. The Companyestimates the expected volatility of the share price by reviewing the historical volatility levels of its common stock in conjunction with that of public companies that operate insimilar industries or are similar in terms of stage of development or size and then projecting this information toward its future expected volatility. The Company exercises judgmentin selecting these companies, as well as in evaluating the available historical and implied volatility for these companies. The Company calculates the expected term in years for eachstock option using a simplified method based on the average of each option’s vesting term and original contractual term. The simplified method was used due to the lack of sufficienthistorical data available to provide a reasonable basis upon which to estimate the expected term of each stock option.To determine the fair value of a share-based award using Monte Carlo simulations, the Company makes assumptions regarding the risk-free interest rate, expected futurevolatility, expected dividend yield and performance period. The risk-free rate is based on the U.S. treasury yield curve in effect at the time of grant. The Company estimates theexpected volatility of the share price by reviewing the historical volatility levels of its common stock in conjunction with that of public companies that operate in similar industriesor are similar in terms of stage of development or size and then projecting this information toward its future expected volatility. Dividend yield is determined based on theCompany’s future plans to pay dividends. The Company had no plans to pay dividends at December 31, 2020. The Company calculates the performance period based on the specificmarket condition to be achieved and derived from historical data and estimates of future performance.The Company recognizes compensation expense using a straight-line method over the applicable service or performance period. During each quarter, the share-basedcompensation expense is adjusted to reflect forfeitures during the period; however, compensation expense already recognized is not adjusted if market conditions are not met.Derivative Financial InstrumentsThe Company is actively managing the risk of changes in foreign currency exchange rates and change in interest rates through foreign currency forward contracts and interestrate swap contracts traded in over-the-counter markets governed by International Swaps and Derivatives Association, Inc. (ISDA) agreements. Derivative transactions are governedby a uniform set of policies and procedures covering areas such as authorization, counterparty exposure and hedging practices. Positions are monitored using techniques such asmarket value and sensitivity analyses. The Company does not enter into derivative transactions for trading purposes. In order for a derivative to qualify for hedge accounting, the derivative must be formally designated as a cash flow hedge by documenting the relationship between thederivative and the hedged item. The documentation includes a description of the hedging instrument, the hedged item, the risk being hedged, the Company’s risk managementobjective and strategy for undertaking the hedge, and the method for assessing the effectiveness of the hedge. Additionally, the hedge relationship must be expected to be highlyeffective at offsetting changes in the cash flows of the hedged item at both inception of the hedge and on an ongoing basis. Prospective and retrospective hedge effectiveness will beassessed by a comparison of the critical terms of the hedging instrument and the hedged transaction. In the event that the Company’s ongoing assessment demonstrates that thecritical terms of the hedging instrument or the hedged transaction have changed and no longer match, hedge effectiveness is assessed by use of a Hypothetical Derivative Method,which assesses hedge effectiveness based on a comparison of the change in fair value of the actual derivative designated as the hedging instrument and the change in fair value of aperfectly effective hypothetical derivative. The perfectly effective hypothetical derivative would have terms that identically match the critical terms of the hedged item.F-16R1 RCM Inc.Notes to Consolidated Financial StatementsThe Company’s derivative financial instruments consist of non-deliverable foreign currency forward contracts and interest rate swaps. Fair values for derivative financialinstruments are based on prices computed using third-party valuation models and are classified as Level 2 in accordance with the three-level hierarchy of fair valuemeasurements. The change in fair value of a hedging instrument is recorded in accumulated other comprehensive loss as a separate component of stockholders’ equity and isreclassified into either cost of services or interest expense in the consolidated statement of operations and comprehensive income (loss) during the period in which the hedgedtransaction impacts earnings. Treasury StockThe Company records treasury stock at the cost to acquire such shares, including commissions paid to brokers. Treasury stock is included as a component of stockholders’equity.Earnings (Loss) Per ShareBasic net income per share is computed by dividing net income, less any dividends, accretion or decretion, redemption or induced conversion on the Preferred Stock, by theweighted average number of common shares outstanding during the period. As the Preferred Stock (as defined in Note 14) participates in dividends alongside the Company’scommon stock (per their participating dividends), the Preferred Stock would constitute participating securities under ASC 260-10 and are applied to earnings per share using thetwo-class method. Under this method, all earnings (distributed and undistributed) are allocated to common shares and participating securities based on their respective rights toreceive dividends.Diluted net income per share is calculated using the more dilutive of the if-converted or the two-class method. For the year ended December 31, 2020 and 2019, the two-classmethod was more dilutive and was computed by adjusting the denominator used in the basic net income per share computation by potentially dilutive securities outstanding duringthe period plus, when their effect is dilutive, incremental shares consisting of shares subject to stock options, shares issuable upon vesting of restricted stock awards (“RSAs”),restricted stock units (“RSUs”), performance-based restricted stock units (“PBRSUs”), and shares issuable upon conversion of preferred stock.3. Recent Accounting PronouncementsRecently Issued Accounting Standards and DisclosuresIn June 2016, the FASB issued ASU 2016-13, Financial Instruments - Credit Losses (Topic 326): Measurement of Credit Losses on Financial Instruments (“ASU 2016-13”).ASU 2016-13 replaces the existing incurred loss impairment model with an expected loss model which requires the use of forward-looking information to calculate credit lossestimates. The change will result in earlier recognition of credit losses. The Company adopted ASU 2016-13 effective January 1, 2020 utilizing a modified retrospective transitionmethod. Adoption of the new standard resulted in the recording of additional allowance for credit losses of $1.1 million and a corresponding impact to retained earnings and deferredtax assets.4. Fair Value of Financial InstrumentsThe Company records its financial assets and liabilities at fair value. The accounting standard for fair value (i) defines fair value as the price that would be received to sell anasset or paid to transfer a liability (an exit price) in an orderly transaction between market participants at the measurement date, (ii) establishes a framework for measuring fair value,(iii) establishes a hierarchy of fair value measurements based upon the ability to observe inputs used to value assets and liabilities, (iv) requires consideration of nonperformance riskand (v) expands disclosures about the methods used to measure fair value. The accounting standard establishes a three-level hierarchy of measurements based upon the reliability ofobservable and unobservable inputs used to arrive at fair value. Observable inputs are independent market data, while unobservable inputs reflect the Company’s assumptions aboutvaluation. The three levels of the hierarchy are defined as follows:F-17R1 RCM Inc.Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements•Level 1: Observable inputs such as quoted prices in active markets for identical assets and liabilities;•Level 2: Inputs other than quoted prices that are observable for the asset or liability, either directly or indirectly. These include quoted prices for similar assets or liabilitiesin active markets and quoted prices for identical or similar assets or liabilities in markets that are not active, and model-derived valuations in which all significant inputsand significant value drivers are observable in active markets; and•Level 3: Valuations derived from valuation techniques in which one or more significant inputs or significant value drivers are unobservable.The carrying amounts of the Company’s financial instruments, which include financial assets such as cash and cash equivalents, restricted cash equivalents, accountsreceivable, net, and certain other current assets, as well as financial liabilities such as accounts payable, accrued service costs, accrued compensation and benefits and certain otheraccrued expenses, approximate their fair values, due to the short-term nature of these instruments. See Note 24, Derivative Financial Instruments, for a discussion of the fair value ofthe Company's forward currency derivative contracts and interest rate swaps.The Company believes the carrying value of the senior revolver and term loan (see Note 13, Debt) approximates fair value as they are variable rate bank debt.Other than the items discussed above, the Company does not have any financial assets or liabilities that are required to be measured at fair value on a recurring basis. 5. AcquisitionsSCIOn April 1, 2020, the Company completed the acquisition of SCI. The SCI Acquisition has been accounted for under ASC 805, Business Combinations. Accordingly, theaccounts of the acquired company, after adjustments to reflect fair values assigned to assets and liabilities, have been included in the Company’s consolidated financial statementssince the date of the SCI Acquisition.The purchase price for the SCI Acquisition was $190.0 million, subject to customary adjustments for cash, transaction expenses, earn-out consideration, and normalizedworking capital. The Company funded the purchase price for the SCI Acquisition and the Company’s associated transaction expenses with a combination of cash on hand and theincurrence of additional indebtedness (see Note 13, Debt). The purchase price has been provisionally allocated, on a preliminary basis, to assets acquired and liabilities assumedbased on their established fair values as of the acquisition date. The fair value estimate of assets acquired and liabilities assumed is pending the finalization of deferred tax assets andliabilities. Accordingly, there could be adjustments to the consolidated financial statements, including changes to goodwill although these are not currently expected to be material.The fair value of assets acquired and liabilities assumed is (in millions):F-18R1 RCM Inc.Notes to Consolidated Financial StatementsPurchase Price AllocationTotal purchase consideration$196.7 Allocation of consideration to assets acquired and liabilities assumed:Cash and cash equivalents$2.9 Accounts receivable2.8 Prepaid expenses and other current assets1.1 Property, equipment and software0.3 Operating lease right-of-use assets1.2 Intangible assets86.1 Goodwill125.6 Accounts payable(0.2)Current portion of customer liabilities(4.0)Accrued compensation and benefits(1.6)Current portion of operating lease liabilities(0.5)Other accrued expenses(0.4)Non-current portion of operating lease liabilities(0.7)Other non-current liabilities(5.0)Deferred income tax liabilities(10.9)Net assets acquired$196.7 Other non-current liabilities contained a note payable for $5 million. The Company repaid this note in the second quarter of 2020.The goodwill recognized is primarily attributable to synergies that are expected to be achieved from the integration of SCI. None of the goodwill is expected to be deductiblefor income tax purposes.The purchase price includes an earn-out provision, which is dependent on achieving certain revenue and operational targets in the year following the acquisition. Based onprojections at the time of acquisition, the earn-out was valued at $4.8 million. However, because the contractual obligation is binary, the actual payment will be either $10 million or$0. Adjustments to the earn-out based on information obtained subsequent to the acquisition are recorded through the income statement. As of December 31, 2020, the Companyupdated the earn-out value to $9.5 million, with the change being recorded as a component of other expenses.Included in the Consolidated Statements of Operations and Comprehensive Income (Loss) for the year ended December 31, 2020 are net sales of $20.7 million and net lossbefore income taxes of $6.9 million related to the operations of SCI since the acquisition date of April 1, 2020.RevWorksOn August 3, 2020, the Company completed the acquisition of RevWorks. The RevWorks Acquisition has been accounted for under ASC 805, Business Combinations.Accordingly, the accounts of the acquired company, after adjustments to reflect estimated fair values assigned to assets and liabilities, have been included in the Company’sconsolidated financial statements since the date of the RevWorks Acquisition.F-19R1 RCM Inc.Notes to Consolidated Financial StatementsThe $30.0 million purchase consideration for the RevWorks Acquisition (inclusive of working capital) consisted of a $5.0 million payment at closing and two deferredpayments, each of $12.5 million and totaling $25.0 million, which are due and payable on the first and second anniversary of the closing date. The two deferred payments arecontractual obligations of the Company; however, they are potentially effectively refundable to the Company contingent on the achievement of certain pre-existing customer revenuetargets for the RevWorks business that were agreed in the purchase agreement. If such targets are not achieved, this will result in Cerner Corporation (“Cerner”) returning to theCompany up to $25.0 million. At the time of the acquisition, the Company recorded a present value liability for the contractual deferred payments of $24.3 million, and recorded anasset for the contingently returnable consideration of $22.3 million, including $11.5 million in prepaid expenses and other current assets and $10.8 million in other assets on theConsolidated Balance Sheets, which is measured at fair value. The Company reviewed the balances at December 31, 2020 and determined the fair value remained the same.The assets acquired in the RevWorks Acquisition consist primarily of customer relationships of approximately $2.8 million and fixed assets. There were no significant pre-closing liabilities of the RevWorks business included in the RevWorks Acquisition. The fair value estimate of assets acquired and liabilities assumed are pending completion ofmultiple elements, including gathering further information about the identification and completeness of all assets and liabilities acquired.The goodwill recognized of approximately $3.6 million is primarily attributable to synergies that are expected to be achieved from the integration of RevWorks.Included in the Consolidated Statements of Operations and Comprehensive Income (Loss) for the year ended December 31, 2020 are net sales of $26.8 million and net incomebefore income taxes of $0.5 million related to the operations of RevWorks since the acquisition date of August 3, 2020.Pro Forma Results (Unaudited)The following table summarizes, on a pro forma basis, the combined results of the Company as though the SCI and RevWorks acquisitions had occurred as of January 1, 2019.These pro forma results are not necessarily indicative of either the actual consolidated results had the acquisitions occurred as of January 1, 2019 or of the future consolidatedoperating results. Pro forma results are (in millions):Year Ended December 31,20202019Net services revenue$1,320.9 $1,297.7 Net income (loss)$115.7 $(1.6)Supplemental pro-forma earnings were adjusted to exclude $6.0 million of acquisition-related costs incurred by the Company in 2020 and include those costs in 2019.Adjustments were also made to earnings to adjust depreciation and amortization to reflect fair value of identified assets acquired, to record the effects of extinguishing the debt ofSCI and replacing it with the debt of the Company, and to record the income tax effect of these adjustments.6. Accounts Receivable and Allowance for Credit LossesAccounts receivable is comprised of unpaid balances pertaining to modular services and end-to-end RCM services, net receivable balances for end-to-end RCM services afterconsidering cost reimbursements owed to customers, including related accrued balances, and amounts due from physician RCM and PM customers.F-20R1 RCM Inc.Notes to Consolidated Financial StatementsOn January 1, 2020 (the “adoption date”), the Company replaced its previous incurred loss impairment model for estimating credit losses on accounts receivables with anexpected loss model prepared in accordance with ASC 326. While the incurred loss impairment model had the Company recognize credit losses when it was probable that a loss hadbeen incurred, ASC 326 requires the Company to estimate future expected credit losses on such instruments before an impairment may occur. On the adoption date, the Companyrecorded an initial increase of $1.1 million to the Company's allowance for credit losses, with an offset recorded as an opening adjustment to accumulated deficit and deferred taxassets.The full effects of COVID-19 on the Company’s customers are uncertain and cannot be predicted. As a result, the Company’s future collection experience may differ fromhistorical collection trends.The Company has presented the rollforward below on a consolidated basis as the currently expected credit losses for its large integrated healthcare system customers are notanticipated to be material.Movements in the allowance for credit losses are as follows (in millions): Year Ended December 31, 20202019Beginning balance$2.8 $1.1 Cumulative effect of ASC 326 adoption1.1 — Provision (recoveries)0.6 3.1 EMS Disposition(0.6)— Write-offs(0.1)(1.4)Ending balance$3.8 $2.8 7. Property, Equipment and SoftwareProperty, equipment and software consist of the following (in millions): December 31, 2020December 31, 2019Buildings and land$4.6 $4.6 Computer and other equipment55.0 50.7 Leasehold improvements23.2 31.1 Software135.7 123.0 Office furniture6.4 9.4 Property, equipment and software, gross224.9 218.8 Less accumulated depreciation and amortization(131.2)(101.9)Property, equipment and software, net$93.7 $116.9 Property, equipment and software, net, located internationally was $17.1 million and $14.8 million as of December 31, 2020 and 2019, respectively. The remaining property,equipment and software was located in the U.S.The following table summarizes the allocation of depreciation and amortization expense between cost of services and selling, general and administrative expenses (inmillions):F-21R1 RCM Inc.Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements Year Ended December 31, 202020192018Cost of services$46.6 $37.8 $23.9 Selling, general and administrative4.0 4.0 4.3 Total depreciation and amortization$50.6 $41.8 $28.2 8. LeasesThe Company determines if an arrangement is a lease at inception. Operating leases are included in operating lease ROU assets, current portion of operating lease liabilities,and non-current portion of operating lease liabilities on the consolidated balance sheets. Finance lease ROU assets are included in property, equipment and software, net, and thecurrent and non-current portion of financing lease liabilities are included in other accrued expenses and other non-current liabilities, respectively, on the consolidated balance sheets.ROU assets represent the Company's right to control the use of the underlying assets for the lease term and lease liabilities represent the Company's obligations to make leasepayments arising from the Company's portfolio of leases. Operating and finance lease ROU assets and liabilities are recognized at the lease commencement date based on the presentvalue of lease payments over the lease term. As the Company's leases do not provide an implicit rate, the incremental borrowing rate, determined based on the information availableat the lease commencement date, is used in calculating the present value of lease payments. ROU assets also include any lease prepayments made and excludes any lease incentives.The Company's leases may include options to extend the lease term and the Company's determination of the likely lease term incorporates these options when it is reasonably certainthat they will be exercised.The Company elected to not separate lease and non-lease components for building and equipment leases. The Company will account for the lease and non-lease components,such as fixed service charges, as a single lease component. Leases with an initial term of 12 months or less are not recorded on the balance sheet; lease expense is recognized forthese short-term leases on a straight-line basis over the lease term.The Company has operating and finance leases for corporate offices, operational facilities, global business services centers, and certain equipment. Leases have remaininglease terms of up to 13 years, some of which include options to extend the leases for up to 10 years. In circumstances where there are significant foreign tax incentives, the Companyhas determined it to be reasonably certain to exercise the renewal options. The Company subleases certain office spaces to third parties.The components of lease costs are as follows (in millions):Year Ended December 31,20202019Operating lease cost$18.2 $19.1 Finance lease cost:Amortization of ROU assets0.4 0.8 Interest on lease liabilities0.1 0.1 Sublease income(2.2)(2.2)Total lease cost$16.5 $17.8 Supplemental cash flow information related to leases are as follows (in millions):F-22R1 RCM Inc.Notes to Consolidated Financial StatementsYear Ended December 31,20202019Cash paid for amounts included in the measurement of lease liabilities:Operating cash flows for operating leases$20.7 $18.7 Operating cash flows for finance leases0.1 0.1 Financing cash flows for finance leases0.8 0.8 ROU assets obtained in exchange for lease obligations:Operating leases3.3 17.3 Finance leases— 0.7 The Company presents all non-cash transactions related to adjustments to the lease liability or ROU asset as non-cash transactions. This includes all non-cash charges related toany modification or reassessment events triggering remeasurement.Supplemental balance sheet information related to leases are as follows:December 31, 2020December 31, 2019Weighted average remaining lease term:Operating leases7 years8 yearsFinance leases2 years2 yearsWeighted average incremental borrowing rate:Operating leases8.94 %8.84 %Finance leases6.62 %6.45 %Maturities of lease liabilities as of December 31, 2020 are as follows (in millions):Operating LeasesFinance Leases2021$18.7 $0.5 202216.1 0.1 202315.3 — 202415.0 — 202514.8 — Thereafter34.0 — Total113.9 0.6 Less:Imputed interest30.7 — Present value of lease liabilities$83.2 $0.6 9. Intangible AssetsThe following table provides the gross carrying value and accumulated amortization for each major class of intangible asset at December 31, 2020 and December 31, 2019 (inmillions):F-23R1 RCM Inc.Notes to Consolidated Financial StatementsDecember 31, 2020December 31, 2019Gross CarryingValueAccumulatedAmortizationNet Book ValueGross CarryingValueAccumulatedAmortizationNet Book ValueCustomer relationships$97.7 $(14.7)$83.0 $160.9 $(15.6)$145.3 Technology101.7 (13.6)88.1 26.8 (7.4)19.4 Total intangible assets$199.4 $(28.3)$171.1 $187.7 $(23.0)$164.7 The Company acquired the following intangible assets in 2020 (in millions, except weighted average useful life):Weighted Average Useful LifeGross Carrying ValueCustomer relationships10 years$5.6 Technology10 years$85.3 The fair value of the identifiable intangible assets was derived utilizing an income approach to derive the present value of future cash flows from developed technology andcustomer relationships.Intangible asset amortization expense was $18.1 million and $13.9 million for the year ended December 31, 2020 and 2019, respectively.Estimated annual amortization expense related to intangible assets with definite lives as of December 31, 2020 is as follows (in millions):2021$17.3 202217.3 202317.3 202415.5 202514.5 Thereafter89.2 Total$171.1 10. GoodwillChanges in the carrying amount of goodwill for the year ended December 31, 2020 were (in millions):GoodwillBalance as of December 31, 2019$253.2 Acquisitions129.2 EMS Disposition(7.1)Balance as of December 31, 2020$375.3 There was no impairment of goodwill in 2020 and 2019.F-24R1 RCM Inc.Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements11. Revenue RecognitionDisaggregation of RevenueIn the following table, revenue is disaggregated by source of revenue (in millions):Year Ended December 31,202020192018Net operating fees$1,093.8 $1,037.4 $760.2 Incentive fees70.6 56.2 38.3 Other106.4 92.5 70.0 Net services revenue$1,270.8 $1,186.1 $868.5 Contract BalancesThe following table provides information about receivables, contracts assets, and contract liabilities from contracts with customers (in millions):December 31, 2020December 31, 2019Receivables (1)$122.2 $83.1 Contract assets (2)— 2.0 Contract liabilities (2)28.6 25.3 (1) Receivables are included in accounts receivable, net. The balance includes accounts receivable, net - related party.(2) Contract assets and contract liabilities are included in other current assets and customer liabilities, respectively. The contract liabilities balance contains relatedparty amounts, including $5.6 million and $4.2 million of current customer liabilities and $16.3 million and $18.6 million of non-current customer liabilities for theyear ended December 31, 2020 and 2019, respectively. A receivable is recognized in the period the Company provides services when the Company’s right to consideration is unconditional. Payment terms on invoiced amounts aretypically 30-60 days.The Company recognized revenue of $91.6 million and $69.7 million during the year ended December 31, 2020 and 2019, which amounts were included in contract liabilitiesat the beginning of the respective periods. These revenue amounts include $85.0 million and $66.7 million for the year ended December 31, 2020 and 2019, respectively, related toadvanced billings which become accounts receivable and contract liabilities on the first day of the respective service period.Transaction Price Allocated to the Remaining Performance ObligationThe following table includes estimated revenue expected to be recognized in the future related to performance obligations that are unsatisfied (or partially unsatisfied) at theend of the reporting period (in millions). The estimated revenue does not include amounts of variable consideration that are constrained.F-25R1 RCM Inc.Notes to Consolidated Financial StatementsNet operating feesIncentive feesOther2021$112.6 $4.1 $3.7 202262.3 17.6 5.7 202348.0 — 5.7 202427.5 — 5.7 202518.3 — 2.9 Thereafter12.7 — — Total$281.4 $21.7 $23.7 The amounts presented in the table above include variable fee estimates for the non-cancellable term of the Company's physician groups RCM services contracts, fixed feeswhich are typically recognized ratably as the performance obligation is satisfied, and incentive fees which are measured cumulatively over the contractually defined performanceperiod.Estimates of revenue expected to be recognized in future periods also exclude unexercised customer options to purchase services within the Company's PAS contracts that donot represent material rights to the customer. Customer options that do not represent a material right are only accounted for in accordance with Topic 606 when the customerexercises its option to purchase additional goods or services.The Company does not disclose information about remaining performance obligations with an original expected duration of one year or less. The Company has elected certainof the optional exemptions from the disclosure requirement for remaining performance obligations for specific situations in which an entity need not estimate variable considerationto recognize revenue. Accordingly, the Company applies a practical expedient to its modular RCM services and does not disclose information about variable consideration fromremaining performance obligations when the Company has a right to consideration from a customer in an amount that corresponds directly with the value to the customer of theentity's performance completed to date. PAS performance obligations are typically short in duration (often less than 1 day) with any uncertainty related to the associated variableconsideration resolved as each increment of service (completion of a level of care review or an appeal) is completed which reflects the value the customer receives from theCompany’s fulfillment of the performance obligation. Modular RCM services performance obligations for variable consideration are of short duration with fees corresponding to thevalue the customer has realized, for example, patient accounts collected on behalf of the customer or medical record lines transcribed.For end-to-end RCM contracts, the Company does not disclose information about remaining, wholly unsatisfied performance obligations for variable consideration that theCompany is able to allocate to one or more, but not all, of the performance obligations in its contracts. The Company’s end-to-end RCM services performance obligations aresatisfied over time and are substantially the same from period to period under either a co-managed or operating partner model. Fees are variable and consist of net operating fees andincentive fees, with the uncertainty related to net operating fees and certain incentive fees being resolved quarterly, and with the uncertainty of other incentive fees being resolvedannually. The information presented in the table above includes estimates for incentive fees where the uncertainty related to the final fee is resolved on longer than a quarterly basisand to the extent the Company does not believe the associated consideration is constrained.12. Customer LiabilitiesCustomer liabilities include (i) accrued service costs (amounts due and accrued for cost reimbursements), (ii) collections payable to clients (consisting primarily of amountscollected on behalf of the Company’s physician group customers to be remitted within twelve months), (iii) refund liabilities (amounts potentially due as a refund to the Company'scustomers on incentive fees), (iv) customer deposits (consisting of amounts due as a refund to the Company's customers on incentive fees) and (v) deferred revenue (contractliabilities) (fixed or variable fees amortized to revenue over the service period).F-26R1 RCM Inc.Notes to Consolidated Financial StatementsCustomer liabilities consist of the following (in millions): December 31, 2020December 31, 2019Accrued service costs, current$12.2 $33.3 Collections payable to clients, current4.6 5.4 Customer deposits, current— 1.7 Refund liabilities, current2.9 1.0 Deferred revenue (contract liabilities), current12.3 6.7 Current portion of customer liabilities (1)32.0 48.1 Deferred revenue (contract liabilities), non-current16.3 18.6 Non-current portion of customer liabilities (1)16.3 18.6 Total customer liabilities$48.3 $66.7 (1) Current and non-current portion of customer liabilities include amounts for a related party. See Note 21, Related Party Transactions, for further discussion.13. DebtThe carrying amounts of debt consist of the following (in millions):December 31, 2020December 31, 2019Senior Revolver$70.0 $40.0 Senior Term Loan484.6 316.9 Unamortized discount and issuance costs(2.6)(2.9)Total debt552.0 354.0 Less: Current maturities(32.3)(16.3)Total long-term debt$519.7 $337.7 Senior Secured Credit FacilitiesOn June 26, 2019, the Company and certain of its subsidiaries entered into a new senior credit agreement (the “Credit Agreement”) with Bank of America, N.A., asadministrative agent, and the lenders named therein, for the new senior secured credit facilities (the “Senior Secured Credit Facilities”), consisting of a $325.0 million seniorsecured term loan facility (the “Senior Term Loan”) issued at 99.66% of par and a $100.0 million senior secured revolving credit facility (the “Senior Revolver”). Inconjunction with entering into the Credit Agreement, the Company repaid in full the credit agreement dated May 8, 2018, the subordinated notes issued under the SubordinatedNote Purchase Agreement dated May 8, 2018, and terminated all commitments and discharged all guarantees related to those agreements. The Company evaluated separatelythe previous credit agreement, subordinated notes, and revolver for debt modification and extinguishment guidance as indicated in ASC 470. The Company deemed therefinancing to be an extinguishment of the old debt, leading to a write-off of the prior issuance costs and recognition of new issuance costs, with the exception of a portion ofthe revolver which remained with the same lender. The Company recognized a loss on debt extinguishment of $18.8 million in the second quarter of 2019.On March 20, 2020, the Company entered into Amendment No. 1 to the Credit Agreement (the “Amendment”), pursuant to which the lenders named in the Amendmentagreed to provide an additional $191.1 million incremental delayed-draw term loan facility (the “Incremental Term Loan”) on the same terms as its existing Senior Term Loanprovided under the Credit Agreement.F-27R1 RCM Inc.Notes to Consolidated Financial StatementsThe Incremental Term Loan was drawn substantially concurrently with the closing of the SCI Acquisition on April 1, 2020. The proceeds of the Incremental Term Loanwere used to fund the purchase price for the SCI Acquisition and related expenses. For further details on the closing, refer to Note 5, Acquisitions. The Incremental Term Loanhas terms consistent with those of the Senior Term Loan, including with respect to interest, maturity, amortization, and prepayments and has the same affirmative and negativecovenants and events of default as those applicable to the Senior Term Loan under the Credit Agreement. The drawing of the Incremental Term Loan increased the balance ofthe obligation due under the Senior Term Loan, and therefore is shown as one consolidated obligation.In accordance with ASC 470-50, the Amendment was treated as a loan modification in the financial statements.On January 13, 2021, the Company entered into Amendment No. 2 and Waiver to Credit Agreement (the “Second Amendment”), pursuant to which the lenders agreed (i)to waive the Company’s obligation to use the $135.0 million of net proceeds from the EMS Disposition for purposes of reinvestments in useful assets of the Company, or toprepay the loans under the Credit Agreement, as otherwise required by the terms of the Credit Agreement, (ii) to amend the restricted payments covenant to permit theCompany to make additional cash payments to the Investor in an amount not to exceed $105.0 million in connection with the preferred stock conversion (refer to Note 18.8.00% Series A Convertible Preferred Stock) and reduce the “Available Amount” from which the Company can make certain investments, debt prepayments, or restrictedpayments by $105.0 million and (iii) that the excess cash flow sweep will begin with fiscal year ended December 31, 2021 instead of fiscal year ended December 31, 2020.The Senior Term Loan and Senior Revolver both have a five-year maturity. The Credit Agreement provides that the Company may make one or more offers to thelenders, and consummate transactions with individual lenders that accept the terms contained in such offers, to extend the maturity date of the lender’s term loans and/orrevolving commitments, subject to certain conditions, and any extended term loans or revolving commitments will constitute a separate class of term loans or revolvingcommitments.All of the Company’s obligations under the Senior Secured Credit Facilities are guaranteed by the subsidiary guarantors named therein (the “Subsidiary Guarantors”).Pursuant to (1) the Security Agreement, dated as of June 26, 2019 (the “Security Agreement”), among the Company, the Subsidiary Guarantors and Bank of America, N.A., asadministrative agent, and (2) the Guaranty, dated as of June 26, 2019 (the “Guaranty”), among the Company, the Subsidiary Guarantors and Bank of America, N.A., asadministrative agent, subject to certain exceptions, the obligations under the Senior Secured Credit Facilities are secured by a pledge of 100% of the capital stock of certaindomestic subsidiaries owned by the Company and a security interest in substantially all of the Company’s tangible and intangible assets and the tangible and intangible assets ofeach Subsidiary Guarantor.The Senior Revolver includes borrowing capacity available for letters of credit and for borrowings on same-day notice, referred to as the “swing loans.” Any issuance ofletters of credit or making of a swing loan will reduce the amount available under the revolving credit facility. As of December 31, 2020, the Company had $70.0 million inborrowings, no letters of credit outstanding, and $30.0 million of availability under the Senior Revolver.F-28R1 RCM Inc.Notes to Consolidated Financial StatementsBorrowings under the Senior Secured Credit Facilities bear interest, at the Company’s option, at: (i) an Alternate Base Rate (“ABR”) equal to the greater of (a) the primerate of Bank of America, N.A., (b) the federal funds rate plus 0.50% per annum, and (c) the Eurodollar rate for an interest period of one-month beginning on such day plus 100basis points, plus between 0.75% and 1.75% dependent on the Company's Net Leverage Ratio (as defined below) (provided that the Eurodollar rate applicable to the SeniorTerm Loan shall not be less than 0.00% per annum); or (ii) the Eurodollar rate (provided that the Eurodollar rate applicable to the Senior Term Loan shall not be less than 0.00%per annum), plus between 1.75% and 2.75%, dependent on the Company's Net Leverage Ratio. The interest rate as of December 31, 2020 was 2.40%. The Company is alsorequired to pay an unused commitment fee to the lenders under the Senior Revolver at a rate between 0.30% and 0.50% of the average daily unutilized commitments thereunderdependent on the Company's net leverage ratio.The Credit Agreement requires the Company to make mandatory prepayments, subject to certain exceptions, with: (i) beginning with fiscal year ended December 31, 2021,50% (which percentage will be reduced upon the Company’s achievement of certain total net leverage ratios) of the Company’s annual excess cash flow; (ii) 100% of net cashproceeds of all non-ordinary course assets sales or other dispositions of property or casualty events, subject to certain exceptions and thresholds; and (iii) 100% of the net cashproceeds of any debt incurrence, other than debt permitted under the Credit Agreement. The Company is required to repay the Senior Term Loan portion of the Senior SecuredCredit Facilities in quarterly principal installments of $6.5 million through June 30, 2021, $9.7 million through June 30, 2023, and $12.9 million through March 31, 2024, with thebalance payable at maturity.The Credit Agreement contains a number of covenants that, among other things, restrict, subject to certain exceptions, the Company’s ability and the ability of its subsidiariesto: (i) incur additional indebtedness; (ii) create liens on assets; (iii) engage in mergers or consolidations; (iv) sell assets; (v) pay dividends and distributions or repurchase theCompany’s capital stock; (vi) make investments, loans or advances; (vii) repay certain junior indebtedness; (viii) engage in certain transactions with affiliates; (ix) enter into sale andleaseback transactions; (x) amend material agreements governing certain of the Company’s junior indebtedness; (xi) change the Company’s lines of business; (xii) make certainacquisitions; and (xiii) limitations on the letter of credit cash collateral account. The Credit Agreement contains customary affirmative covenants and events of default. In addition,the Company is required to maintain minimum consolidated total net leverage and consolidated interest coverage ratios. The Company was in compliance with all of the covenantsin the Credit Agreement as of December 31, 2020.Debt MaturitiesScheduled maturities of the Company's long-term debt for each of the five years succeeding December 31, 2020 and thereafter are summarized as follows (in millions):Scheduled Maturities2021$32.3 202238.7 202345.2 2024438.4 Total$554.6 F-29R1 RCM Inc.Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements14. Stockholders’ Equity (Deficit)Preferred Stock and WarrantsAs of December 31, 2020 and December 31, 2019, the Company had 5,000,000 shares of authorized preferred stock, each with a par value of $0.01. The preferred stock maybe issued from time to time in one or more series. The board of directors of the Company (“Board”) is authorized to determine the rights, preferences, privileges, and restrictions ofthe Company’s authorized but unissued shares of preferred stock. On February 16, 2016, at the close of the Transaction, the Company issued to TCP-ASC ACHI Series LLLP, alimited liability limited partnership jointly owned by Ascension Health Alliance and investment funds affiliated with TowerBrook (the “Investor”): (i) 200,000 shares of its 8.00%Series A Convertible Preferred Stock, par value $0.01 per share (the “Series A Preferred Stock” or “Preferred Stock”), for an aggregate price of $200 million and (ii) an exercisablewarrant to acquire up to 60 million shares of its common stock with an exercise price of $3.50 per common share and a term of ten years. The Series A Preferred Stock isimmediately convertible into shares of common stock. As of December 31, 2020 and December 31, 2019, the Company had 288,497 and 266,529 shares of Series A Preferred Stockoutstanding, respectively. The Series A Preferred Stock was converted to common stock on January 15, 2021. See Note 18, 8.00% Series A Convertible Preferred Stock, foradditional information.On January 23, 2018, the Company issued an exercisable warrant to acquire up to 1.5 million shares of its common stock with an exercise price of $6.00 per common share toIHC Health Services, Inc (“Intermountain”).As of December 31, 2020 and December 31, 2019, all of the Investor’s and Intermountain’s warrants were outstanding.Common StockEach outstanding share of the Company's common stock, par value $0.01 per share (“common stock”), is entitled to one vote per share on all matters submitted to a vote byshareholders. Subject to the rights of any preferred stock which may from time to time be outstanding, the holders of outstanding shares of common stock are entitled to receivedividends and, upon liquidation or dissolution, are entitled to receive pro rata all assets legally available for distribution to stockholders. No dividends were declared or paid on thecommon stock during 2020 or 2019.Treasury StockOn November 13, 2013, the Board authorized a repurchase of up to $50.0 million of the Company’s common stock in the open market or in privately negotiated transactions.The timing and amount of any shares repurchased will be determined by the Company based on its evaluation of market conditions and other factors. The repurchase program maybe suspended or discontinued at any time at the sole discretion of the Board. Any repurchased shares will be available for use in connection with the Company’s stock plans and forother corporate purposes. The Company funds the repurchases from cash on hand. During the years ended December 31, 2020 and December 31, 2019, no shares were repurchased.No shares have been retired. As of December 31, 2020 and 2019, the Company held in treasury 5,321,393 shares of repurchased stock. Treasury stock also includes repurchases of Company stock related to employees’ tax withholding upon vesting of restricted shares. For the years ended December 31, 2020and 2019, the Company repurchased 2,882,255 and 973,303 shares related to employees’ tax withholding upon vesting of restricted shares, respectively. See Note 15, Share-BasedCompensation, for additional information.F-30R1 RCM Inc.Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements15. Share-Based CompensationThe Company maintains two stock incentive plans: the Amended and Restated Stock Option Plan (the “2006 Plan”) and the Second Amended and Restated Stock 2010Incentive Plan (the “2010 Amended Plan”, together with the 2006 Plan, the “Plans”). In December 2016, the Company's stockholders approved the Second Amended and Restated2010 Stock Incentive Plan, which authorized the issuance of an additional 17 million shares of the Company's common stock pursuant to awards.Under the Plans, the Company is authorized to issue up to a maximum of 46,374,756 shares of common stock. This number includes any shares that remained available forissuance under the 2006 Plan as of the date of the IPO and any shares subject to awards that were outstanding under the 2006 Plan as of the date of the IPO that expire, terminate orare otherwise surrendered, canceled, forfeited or repurchased by the Company without the issuance of shares thereunder. The Company will not make any further grants under the2006 Plan. The 2010 Amended Plan provides for the grant of incentive stock options, non-statutory stock options, stock appreciation rights, RSAs, RSUs, and other share-basedawards. As of December 31, 2020, 5,028,242 shares were available for future grants of awards under the 2010 Amended Plan. To the extent that previously granted awards under the2006 Plan or 2010 Amended Plan expire, terminate or are otherwise surrendered, canceled or forfeited, the number of shares available for future awards under the 2010 AmendedPlan will increase.Under the terms of the Plans, all stock options will expire if they are not exercised within ten years of their grant date. Generally all employee options, RSAs and RSUs vestratably between one and four years.For the years ended December 31, 2020, 2019, and 2018, the Company recognized $37.3 million, $8.2 million, and $2.4 million, respectively, of income tax benefit fromwindfalls associated with vesting and exercises of equity awardsThe Company uses the Black-Scholes option pricing model to estimate the fair value of its service-based options as of its grant date. The Company uses the Monte Carlosimulations to estimate the fair value of its market-based PBRSUs. The market-based PBRSUs vest upon satisfaction of both time-based requirements and market targets based onshare price. Expected life is based on the market condition to which the vesting is tied. The Company assesses current performance on performance-based PBRSU’s by reviewinghistorical performance to date, along with any adjustments which have been approved to the reported performance, and add on future projections to determine the probable outcomeof the awards. The current estimates are then compared to the scoring metrics and any necessary adjustments are reflected in the current period to update share-based compensationexpense to the current performance expectations.The following table sets forth the significant assumptions used in the Black-Scholes option pricing model and the Monte Carlo simulations and the calculation of share-basedcompensation expense during 2020, 2019, and 2018: Year Ended December 31, 202020192018Expected dividend yield—%—%—%Risk-free interest rate0.3% to 1.7%1.5% to 2.5%2.3% to 3.0%Expected volatility43%40% to 45%40% to 45%Expected term (in years)5.52.0 to 5.52.6 to 6.3Total share-based compensation costs that have been included in the Company’s consolidated statements of operations were as follows (in millions):F-31R1 RCM Inc.Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements Year Ended December 31, 202020192018Share-Based Compensation Expense Allocation Details:Cost of services$9.9 $6.1 $5.8 Selling, general and administrative14.1 12.3 12.4 Other0.1 0.2 0.2 Total share-based compensation expense (1)$24.1 $18.6 $18.4 (1) In addition to the share-based compensation expense recorded above, $0.1 million, $0.2 million, and $0.3 million of share-based compensation expense was capitalized to deferredcontract costs for the year ended December 31, 2020, 2019, and 2018, respectively. See Note 22, Deferred Contract Costs, for further discussion.Stock optionsThe following table sets forth a summary of all option activity under all plans for the years ended December 31, 2020, 2019, and 2018:SharesWeighted- Average Exercise PriceWeighted- Average Remaining Contractual Term (in years)Aggregate Intrinsic Value (in millions)Outstanding at January 1, 201817,742,966 $4.70 7.9$23.7 Granted274,162 6.51 Exercised(1,713,710)2.54 Canceled/forfeited(2,418,948)2.60 Outstanding at December 31, 201813,884,470 $5.36 6.6$49.2 Granted52,986 10.06 Exercised(2,640,897)5.20 Canceled/forfeited(612,299)2.55 Expired(3,920)12.98 Outstanding at December 31, 201910,680,340 $5.59 5.5$81.1 Granted80,425 11.18 Exercised(3,156,154)6.13 Canceled/forfeited(169,420)3.32 Expired(1,214,220)14.62 Outstanding at December 31, 20206,220,971 $3.68 5.7$126.5 Outstanding, vested and exercisable at December 31, 20187,712,264 $7.37 5.4$17.7 Outstanding, vested and exercisable at December 31, 20197,868,280 $6.57 4.9$52.5 Outstanding, vested and exercisable at December 31, 20205,230,690 $3.73 5.5$106.2 The weighted-average grant date fair value of options granted during the years ended December 31, 2020, 2019, and 2018 was $4.41, $4.25, and $3.01 per share, respectively.The total intrinsic value of the options exercised in the years ended December 31, 2020, 2019, and 2018 was $30.5 million, $16.4 million, and $9.6 million, respectively. The totalfair value of options vested during the years ended December 31, 2020, 2019, and 2018 was $2.2 million, $3.4 million, and $4.2 million, respectively.F-32R1 RCM Inc.Notes to Consolidated Financial StatementsRestricted stock awardsAs of December 31, 2019, all RSAs had fully vested. No new RSAs were granted in 2020. The following table sets forth a summary of the activity during the years endedDecember 31, 2019 and 2018:SharesWeighted- Average Grant Date Fair ValueOutstanding and unvested at January 1, 20182,352,490 $3.03 Vested(1,184,687)3.07 Forfeited(72,259)3.24 Outstanding and unvested at December 31, 20181,095,544 $3.02 Vested(1,094,336)3.02 Forfeited(1,208)5.38 Outstanding and unvested at December 31, 2019— $— The total fair value of RSAs vested during the years ended December 31, 2019, and 2018 was $3.3 million and $3.6 million, respectively. The Company’s RSA agreementsallowed employees to deliver to the Company shares of stock upon vesting of their RSAs in lieu of their payment of the required personal employment-related taxes. The Companydoes not withhold taxes in excess of maximum required statutory requirements. During the years ended December 31, 2019, and 2018, employees delivered to the Company 380,564and 404,466 shares of stock, respectively, which the Company recorded at a cost of approximately $3.8 million and $2.3 million, respectively.Forfeited and canceled RSAs are added to treasury stock. For the years ended December 31, 2019, and 2018, 1,208, and 72,259 shares were added to treasury stock due tocanceled RSAs, respectively.Restricted stock unitsThe following table sets forth a summary of all RSU activity during the years ended December 31, 2020, 2019, and 2018:SharesWeighted- Average Grant Date Fair ValueOutstanding and unvested at January 1, 20181,183,500 $2.50 Granted441,849 7.99 Vested(323,964)2.48 Forfeited(174,704)3.49 Outstanding and unvested at December 31, 20181,126,681 $4.50 Granted830,668 10.60 Vested(422,770)4.07 Forfeited(161,223)7.00 Outstanding and unvested at December 31, 20191,373,356 $8.03 Granted1,588,120 10.29 Vested(504,708)6.74 Forfeited(348,321)9.09 Outstanding and unvested at December 31, 20202,108,447 $9.87 F-33R1 RCM Inc.Notes to Consolidated Financial StatementsThe Company's RSU agreements allow employees to surrender to the Company shares of common stock upon vesting of their RSUs in lieu of their payment of the requiredpersonal employment-related taxes. During the years ended December 31, 2020, 2019, and 2018, employees delivered to the Company 141,331, 109,112, and 94,603 shares ofstock, respectively, which the Company recorded at a cost of approximately $1.4 million, $1.1 million, and $0.7 million, respectively. Shares surrendered for payment of personalemployment-related taxes are held in treasury.Performance-based restricted stock unitsOutstanding PBRSUs issued prior to April 2019 vest upon satisfaction of both time-based requirements and market targets based on share price with certain awards vestingbetween December 31, 2021 and December 31, 2022. Depending on the percentage level at which the market-based condition is satisfied, the number of shares vesting could bebetween 0% and 150% of the number of PBRSUs originally granted. PBRSUs issued subsequent to April 2019 vest either in December 2021 or December 2022 upon satisfaction ofboth time-based and performance-based conditions. Depending on the award, performance condition targets may include cumulative adjusted EBITDA, end-to-end RCM agreementgrowth, scored revenue growth, or other specific performance factors. Depending on the percentage level at which the performance-based conditions are satisfied, the number ofshares vesting could be between 0% and 200% of the number of PBRSUs originally granted. Based on the established targets, the maximum number of shares that could vest for alloutstanding PBRSUs is 5,363,408.A summary of the PBRSU activity during the years ended December 31, 2020, 2019, and 2018 is shown below:SharesWeighted- Average Grant Date Fair ValueOutstanding and unvested at January 1, 20184,785,900 $3.37 Granted1,472,677 6.12 Vested— — Forfeited(1,648,129)3.34 Outstanding and unvested at December 31, 20184,610,448 $4.26 Granted1,282,797 9.99 Performance factor adjustment463,408 2.06 Vested(1,390,223)2.06 Forfeited(846,994)5.08 Outstanding and unvested at December 31, 20194,119,436 $6.37 Granted1,637,581 13.25 Performance factor adjustment3,879,186 14.72 Vested(6,344,151)13.11 Forfeited(374,981)6.66 Outstanding and unvested at December 31, 20202,917,071 $11.35 The Company’s PBRSU agreements allow employees to surrender to the Company shares of common stock upon vesting of their PBRSUs in lieu of their payment of therequired personal employment-related taxes. During the years ended December 31, 2020 and 2019, employees delivered to the Company 2,740,924 and 483,627 shares of stock,respectively, which the Company recorded at a cost of approximately $64.2 million and $6.1 million, respectively. Shares surrendered for payment of personal employment-relatedtaxes are held in treasury.F-34R1 RCM Inc.Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements16. Other expensesFor the year ended December 31, 2020, 2019, and 2018, other expenses consist of the following (in millions):Year Ended December 31, 202020192018Severance and related employee benefits$6.4 $3.6 $2.3 Strategic initiatives (1)29.3 19.8 19.7 Transitioned employees restructuring expense (2)(0.2)3.0 4.3 Digital Transformation Office (3)— 8.6 3.6 Facility-exit charges (4)17.5 (0.2)0.1 Other (5)14.3 1.4 0.4 Total other expenses$67.3 $36.2 $30.4 (1) Costs related to evaluating, pursuing, and integrating acquisitions, performing portfolio and capital structure analyses, and other inorganic business projects as part of theCompany’s growth strategy. Costs include vendor spend, employee time and expenses spent on activities, severance and retention amounts associated with integrationactivities, and changes to contingent consideration related to acquisitions. For the year ended December 31, 2020, $4.7 million of contingent consideration changes wereincluded.(2) As part of the transition of personnel to the Company under certain operating partner model contracts, the Company has agreed to reimburse, or directly pay the affectedemployees, for certain severance and retention costs related to certain employees who will not be transitioned to the Company, or whose jobs will be relocated after theemployee transitions to the Company.(3) Project costs related to the Company's initial efforts to automate its transactional environment.(4) As part of evaluating our footprint, we have exited certain leased facilities during the year ended December 31, 2020. Costs include asset impairment charges and othercosts related to exited leased facilities.(5) For the year ended December 31, 2020, includes $10.9 million of expenses related to the COVID-19 pandemic, inclusive of appreciation bonuses for the Company’s front-line employees, pandemic response mobilization efforts, telemedicine and testing costs for employees, and other costs.17. Income TaxesThe domestic and foreign components of income (loss) before income taxes consist of the following (in millions): Year Ended December 31,202020192018Domestic$99.4 $5.0 $(65.5)Foreign19.0 4.8 8.8 Total income (loss) before income taxes$118.4 $9.8 $(56.7)For the years ended December 31, 2020, 2019, and 2018, the Company’s current and deferred income tax expense (benefit) attributable to income (loss) from operations are asfollows (in millions):F-35R1 RCM Inc.Notes to Consolidated Financial StatementsCurrentDeferredTotalYear Ended December 31, 2018U.S. Federal$— $(10.3)$(10.3)State & Local0.9 (2.6)(1.7)Foreign1.9 (1.3)0.6 $2.8 $(14.2)$(11.4)Year Ended December 31, 2019U.S. Federal$(0.3)$(2.2)$(2.5)State & Local0.7 (0.9)(0.2)Foreign2.5 (2.0)0.5 $2.9 $(5.1)$(2.2)Year Ended December 31, 2020U.S. Federal$0.2 $(0.3)$(0.1)State & Local— 1.0 1.0 Foreign2.4 (2.0)0.4 $2.6 $(1.3)$1.3 Reconciliation of the difference between the effective tax rate and the statutory U.S. federal income tax rate is as follows: Year Ended December 31, 202020192018Federal statutory tax rate21 %21 %21 %Increase in income tax rate resulting from:State and local income taxes, net of federal tax benefits1 %(2)%2 %Additional tax on foreign source income3 %18 %(3)%Share-based compensation(24)%(71)%3 %Non-deductible expense13 %24 %(3)%Gain on sale(11)%— %— %Other(2)%(12)%— %Effective tax rate1 %(22)%20 %The following table sets forth the Company’s net deferred tax assets as of December 31, 2020 and 2019 (in millions):F-36R1 RCM Inc.Notes to Consolidated Financial StatementsAs of December 31, 20202019Deferred tax assets and liabilities:Net operating loss carryforwards$81.6 $64.1 Share-based compensation8.6 12.4 Accrued bonus1.4 8.3 Advanced billing revenue6.4 5.9 Alternative minimum tax5.2 4.0 Interest expense limitation5.6 10.2 Deferred rent liabilities21.3 25.6 Deferred FICA liability6.0 — Other10.0 4.5 Total gross deferred tax assets146.1 135.0 Intangible assets(41.7)(37.0)Fixed assets(3.1)(4.4)Contract implementation costs(7.0)(6.2)Deferred rent assets(14.8)(21.3)Less valuation allowances(5.8)(1.9)Net deferred tax assets$73.7 $64.2 At December 31, 2020, the Company had cumulative U.S. federal and state net operating loss (“NOL”) carryforwards of approximately $320.6 million and $282.0 million,respectively, which are available to offset U.S. federal and state taxable income in future periods. These amounts include net operating losses acquired through acquisitions whichare subject to Section 382 of the Internal Revenue Code. The general limitation rules allow the Company to utilize the net operating losses subject to an annual limitation that isdetermined by multiplying the federal long-term tax-exempt rate by the Company’s value immediately before the ownership change. The federal net operating losses will start toexpire in 2022.2017 Tax Reform subjects a U.S. shareholder to tax on Global Intangible Low-Taxed Income (“GILTI”) earned by certain foreign subsidiaries. An entity can make anaccounting policy election to either recognize deferred taxes for temporary basis differences expected to reverse as GILTI in future years or to provide for the tax expense related toGILTI in the year the tax is incurred. The Company has elected to recognize the tax on GILTI as a period expense in the period the tax is incurred.A valuation allowance is required to be established when, based on currently available information, it is more likely than not that all or a portion of a deferred tax asset will notbe realized. The guidance on accounting for income taxes provides important factors in determining whether a deferred tax asset will be realized, including whether there has beensufficient taxable income in recent years and whether sufficient income can reasonably be expected in future years in order to utilize the deferred tax asset. Consideration is given tothe weight of all available evidence, both positive and negative. The Company estimates its already contracted business growth will be profitable and allow the Company to utilizeits NOL carryforwards and other deferred tax assets. Accordingly, the Company believes that it is more likely than not that the remaining deferred tax assets will be realized. Shouldthe Company not operationally execute as expected, and the growth in business not be as profitable as expected, such realizability assessment may change.F-37R1 RCM Inc.Notes to Consolidated Financial StatementsThe Company has recorded valuation allowances at December 31, 2020 and 2019 of $5.8 million and $1.9 million, respectively, based on its assessment that it is more likelythan not that a portion of the Company’s separate state income tax net operating loss will not be realized because the Company no longer has business activities in that state, orwhere the activity level has decreased to such a level where the Company believes the NOL will not be realized. In addition, the December 31, 2020 valuation allowance includes$3.7 million attributable to research and development credits, acquired from the Company’s acquisition of SCI on April 1, 2020.The 2020, 2019, and 2018 foreign current tax provision includes $2.4 million, $1.9 million, and $1.5 million, respectively, for income taxes arising from the pre-tax income ofthe Company’s India subsidiaries. The tax provisions are net of the impact of a tax holiday in India. The Company’s benefits from this tax holiday were $4.3 million, $2.2 million,and $1.6 million for the year ended December 31, 2020, 2019, and 2018, respectively. The tax holidays are set to expire between March 31, 2021 and March 31, 2027.The Company recognizes the tax benefit from an uncertain tax position only if it is more likely than not that the tax position will be sustained upon examination by taxingauthorities, based on the technical merits of the position. The tax benefits recognized in the financial statements are measured based on the largest benefit that has a greater than fiftypercent likelihood of being realized upon ultimate settlement. The Company’s unrecognized tax benefits as of December 31, 2020, 2019, and 2018 were not material.In connection with tax return examinations, contingencies can arise that generally result from different interpretations of tax laws and regulations as they pertain to the amount,timing or inclusion of revenues and expenses in taxable income, or the ability to utilize tax credits to reduce income taxes payable. While it is probable, based on the potentialoutcome of the Company’s federal and state tax examinations or the expiration of the statute of limitations for specific jurisdictions, that the liability for unrecognized tax benefitsmay increase or decrease within the next 12 months, the Company does not expect any such change would have a material effect on its financial condition, results of operations orcash flow.The Company and its subsidiaries are subject to U.S. federal income tax as well as income tax of multiple state and foreign jurisdictions. U.S. federal income tax returns for2017 and all subsequent years are currently open for examination. State jurisdictions vary for open tax years. The statute of limitations for most states ranges from three to six years.Certain income tax returns since fiscal year 2009 for the Company’s India subsidiaries are currently open for final determination.18. 8.00% Series A Convertible Preferred StockAt the close of the Transaction on February 16, 2016 (as described in Note 1), the Company issued to the Investor: (i) 200,000 shares of Preferred Stock, for an aggregate priceof $200 million, and (ii) a warrant with a term of ten years to acquire up to 60 million shares of common stock at an exercise price of $3.50 per share, on the terms and subject to theconditions set forth in the Warrant Agreement (“Warrant”).On January 15, 2021 the Investor converted all of its 294,266 shares (the “Current Shares”) of Preferred Stock into 117,706,400 shares of common stock of the Company intowhich the Current Shares were convertible pursuant to the Certificate of Designation of the Preferred Stock, and, in consideration therefor, the Company (i) issued 21,582,800additional shares of common stock to the Investor, and (ii) paid the Investor $105.0 million in cash. On January 19, 2021, the Company filed a Certificate of Elimination of 8.00%Series A Convertible Preferred Stock with the Secretary of State of the State of Delaware to eliminate the Certificate of Designations of the 8.00% Series A Convertible PreferredStock.F-38R1 RCM Inc.Notes to Consolidated Financial StatementsDividend RightsThe holders of the Preferred Stock were entitled to receive cumulative dividends January 1, April 1, July 1, and October 1 of each year (dividend payment dates), whichcommenced on April 1, 2016, at a rate equal to 8% per annum (preferred dividend) multiplied by the liquidation preference per share, initially $1,000 per share adjusted for anyunpaid cumulative preferred dividends. As of December 31, 2020 and 2019, the Company had accrued dividends of $5.8 million and $5.3 million associated with the PreferredStock, respectively, of which $5.8 million and $5.3 million was paid in additional shares and $940 and $580 was paid in cash in January of the following year, respectively. For theyear ended December 31, 2020 and 2019, the dividends paid, or accrued, in additional shares of Preferred Stock totaled $22.4 million and $20.7 million, respectively.The following summarizes the Preferred Stock activity for the year ended December 31, 2020 and 2019 (in millions, except per share data):Preferred StockShares Issued and OutstandingCarrying ValueBalance at January 1, 2018227,483 $189.3 Dividends paid/accrued dividends18,750 19.1 Balance at December 31, 2018246,233 $208.4 Dividends paid/accrued dividends20,296 20.7 Balance at December 31, 2019266,529 $229.1 Dividends paid/accrued dividends21,968 22.4 Balance at December 31, 2020288,497 $251.5 19. Earnings (Loss) Per ShareBasic net income per share is computed by dividing net income, less any dividends, accretion or decretion, redemption or induced conversion on the Preferred Stock, by theweighted average number of common shares outstanding during the period. As the Preferred Stock participates in dividends alongside the Company’s common stock (per theirparticipating dividends), the Preferred Stock would constitute participating securities under ASC 260-10 and are applied to earnings per share using the two-class method. Under thismethod, all earnings (distributed and undistributed) are allocated to common shares and participating securities based on their respective rights to receive dividends.Diluted net income per share is calculated using the more dilutive of the if-converted or the two-class method. For the years ended December 31, 2020, 2019, and 2018, thetwo-class method was more dilutive and was computed by adjusting the denominator used in the basic net income per share computation by potentially dilutive securitiesoutstanding during the period plus, when their effect is dilutive, incremental shares consisting of shares subject to stock options, shares issuable upon vesting of RSAs, RSUs,PBRSUs and shares issuable upon conversion of preferred stock.Basic and diluted net income (loss) per common share are calculated as follows (in millions, except share and per share data):F-39R1 RCM Inc.Notes to Consolidated Financial StatementsYear Ended December 31, 202020192018Basic EPS:Net income (loss)$117.1 $12.0 $(45.3)Less dividends on preferred shares(22.4)(20.7)(19.1)Less income allocated to preferred shareholders(47.3)— — Net income (loss) available/(allocated) to common shareholders - basic$47.4 $(8.7)$(64.4)Diluted EPS:Net income (loss)$117.1 $12.0 $(45.3)Less dividends on preferred shares(22.4)(20.7)(19.1)Less income allocated to preferred shareholders(37.7)— — Net income (loss) available/(allocated) to common shareholders - diluted$57.0 $(8.7)$(64.4)Basic weighted-average common shares115,729,645 111,505,993 108,175,159 Add: Effect of dilutive equity awards12,731,424 — — Add: Effect of dilutive warrants46,112,201 — — Diluted weighted average common shares174,573,270 111,505,993 108,175,159 Net income (loss) per common share (basic)$0.41 $(0.08)$(0.60)Net income (loss) per common share (diluted)$0.33 $(0.08)$(0.60)Because of their anti-dilutive effect, 97,244, 21,262,959, 25,725,761 common share equivalents comprised of stock options, RSAs, PBRSUs, and RSUs have been excludedfrom the diluted earnings per share calculation for the years ended December 31, 2020, 2019, and 2018, respectively. Additionally, for the years ended December 31, 2019 and 2018,warrants to acquire up to 61.5 million shares of the Company's common stock has been excluded from the diluted earnings per share calculation because they are anti-dilutive.20. Commitments and ContingenciesLegal ProceedingsOther than as described below, the Company is not presently a party to any material litigation or regulatory proceeding and is not aware of any pending or threatened litigationor regulatory proceeding against the Company which, individually or in the aggregate, could have a material adverse effect on its business, operating results, financial condition orcash flows.In May 2016, the Company was served with a False Claims Act case brought by a former emergency department service associate who worked at a hospital of one of theCompany’s customers, MedStar Inc.’s Washington Hospital Center (“WHC”), along with WHC and three other hospitals that were PAS clients and a place holder, John Doehospital, representing all PAS clients (U.S. ex rel. Graziosi vs. Accretive Health, Inc. et. al.), and seeking money damages, False Claims Act penalties, and plaintiff’s attorneys’fees. The Third Amended Complaint alleges that the Company’s PAS business violates the federal False Claims Act. The case was originally filed under seal in 2013 in the federaldistrict court in Chicago, was presented to the U.S. Attorney in Chicago, and the U.S. Attorney declined to intervene. The Company believes that it has meritorious defenses to allclaims in the case and intends to vigorously defend itself against these claims. Both the Company’s and plaintiff’s motions for summary judgment were denied in December 2020,and the parties are presently conducting damages and expert discovery. Discovery and dispositive motions are expected to extend through January 2022, with trial, if necessary, inmid-to-late 2022.F-40R1 RCM Inc.Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements21. Related Party TransactionsAs a result of the closing of the Transaction with Ascension Health Alliance on February 16, 2016 and Ascension Health Alliance's ownership interest in the Investor,Ascension became a related party to the Company. This note, encompasses transactions between Ascension and its affiliates, including AMITA Health, and the Company pursuant tothe A&R MPSA, including all supplements, amendments and other documents entered into in connection therewith. See Note 1, Business Description and Basis of Presentation andNote 18, 8.00% Series A Convertible Preferred Stock for further discussion about the agreements with Ascension.Net services revenue from services provided to Ascension included in the Company’s consolidated statements of operations were (in millions):Year Ended December 31,202020192018$809.5 $790.4 $600.1 Amounts included in the Company's consolidated balance sheets for Ascension, excluding debt, are (in millions): December 31, 2020December 31, 2019Accounts receivable, net of $0.1 million and $0.0 millionallowance - related party$30.9 $30.8 Accrued service costs, current$9.1 $28.9 Refund liabilities, current0.6 1.0 Deferred revenue (contract liabilities), current5.6 4.2 Current portion of customer liabilities15.3 34.1 Deferred revenue (contract liabilities), non-current16.3 18.6 Non-current portion of customer liabilities16.3 18.6 Total customer liabilities$31.6 $52.7 Since Ascension is the Company's largest customer, a significant percentage of the Company's cost of services is associated with providing services to Ascension. However,due to the nature of the Company's global business services and information technology operations, it is impractical to assign the dollar amount associated with services provided toAscension.Related party subordinated notes, along with a $2.2 million prepayment penalty, were repaid upon execution of the Credit Agreement on June 26, 2019. For the years endedDecember 31, 2019 and 2018, $7.2 million and $9.5 million, respectively, of interest expense was attributable to related parties.22. Deferred Contract Costs Certain costs associated with the initial phases of customer contracts and the related transition of customer hospitals and physician groups are deferred. These fulfillment costsrelate directly to the Company’s responsibilities under the corresponding customer contracts, generate or enhance resources of the Company that will be used in satisfying itsperformance obligations in the future, and are expected to be recovered through the margins realized. The following table summarizes the breakout of deferred contract costs (inmillions):F-41R1 RCM Inc.Notes to Consolidated Financial StatementsDecember 31, 2020December 31, 2019Prepaid expenses and other current assets$4.5 $4.0 Other assets19.6 20.8 Total deferred contract costs$24.1 $24.8 The associated assets are amortized as services are transferred to the customer over the remaining life of the contracts. For the year ended December 31, 2020 and 2019, totalamortization was $4.8 million and $3.3 million, respectively, and there were no associated impairment losses.23. Segments and Customer ConcentrationsThe Company has determined that it has a single operating segment in accordance with how its business activities are managed and evaluated. All of the Company’s significantoperations are organized around the single business of providing end-to-end management services of revenue cycle operations for U.S.-based healthcare providers. Accordingly, forpurposes of segment disclosures, the Company has only one reportable segment.Healthcare providers affiliated with Ascension have accounted for a significant portion of the Company’s net services revenue each year since the Company’s formation. Forthe year ended December 31, 2020, 2019, and 2018, net services revenue from healthcare organizations affiliated with Ascension accounted for 64%, 67%, and 69% of theCompany's total net services revenue, respectively. The loss of customers within the Ascension health system would have a material adverse impact on the Company’s operations.For the year ended December 31, 2020, 2019, and 2018, Intermountain Healthcare accounted for 14%, 15%, and 14% of the Company's total net services revenue, respectively.As of December 31, 2020 and 2019, the Company had a concentration of credit risk of customers affiliated with Ascension accounting for 25% and 37% of accountsreceivable, respectively.24. Derivative Financial InstrumentsThe Company utilizes cash flow hedges to mitigate its currency risk arising from its global delivery resources and to reduce variability in interest cash flows from itsoutstanding debt. As of December 31, 2020, the Company has recorded $0.4 million of existing gains and $2.3 million of existing losses in accumulated other comprehensiveincome for the foreign currency hedges and interest rate swaps, respectively. The Company estimates that $0.4 million of gains and $1.4 million of losses reported in accumulatedother comprehensive income are expected to be reclassified into earnings within the next 12 months for the foreign currency hedges and interest rate swaps, respectively. Theamounts related to foreign currency hedges that were reclassified into cost of services were a net loss of $0.8 million and a net gain of $1.3 million for the years ended December 31,2020 and 2019, respectively. The amounts related to the interest rate swaps that was reclassified into interest expense were a net loss of $1.4 million and a net gain of $0.2 millionfor the years ended December 31, 2020 and 2019.The Company classifies cash flows from its derivative programs as cash flows from operating activities in the consolidated statements of cash flows. As of December 31, 2020,the Company’s currency forward contracts have maturities extending no later than December 31, 2021 and the Company's interest rate swaps extend no later than August of 2022.As of December 31, 2020, the notional amounts of the Company's open foreign currency forward contracts and interest rate swaps were approximately $55.9 million and$200.0 million, respectively. As of December 31, 2019, the notional amounts of the Company's open foreign currency forward contracts and interest rate swaps wereapproximately $52.6 million and $100.0 million, respectively. As of December 31, 2020, the Company held no derivatives, or non-derivative hedging instruments, that weredesignated in fair value or net investment hedges.F-42R1 RCM Inc.Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements25. Retirement Plan The Company maintains a 401(k) retirement plan (the “401(k) plan”) that is intended to be a tax-qualified defined contribution plan under Section 401(k) of the InternalRevenue Code. In general, all employees are eligible to participate. In conjunction with the acquisition of Intermedix Holdings, Inc., the company continued to maintain the pre-existing Intermedix 401(k) retirement plan (“Intermedix 401(k) plan”). Both 401(k) plans include a salary deferral arrangement pursuant to which participants may elect to reducetheir current compensation by up to the statutorily prescribed limit, equal to $19,500 in 2020, $19,000 in 2019, and $18,500 in 2018, and have the amount of the reductioncontributed to the 401(k) plan.The Company currently matches employee contributions up to 50% of the first 6% of base compensation that a participant contributes to the 401(k) plan, including director-level and above employees. For the years ended December 31, 2020, 2019, and 2018, total Company contributions to the 401(k) plan were $2.9 million, $6.6 million, and $5.2million, respectively.The Company matches 100% of employee contributions on the first 1% of deferrals and 50% of the next 5% that a participant contributes to the Intermedix 401(k) plan. Forthe years ended December 31, 2020 and 2019, total Company contributions to the Intermedix 401(k) plan were $0.7 million and $1.7 million, respectively. From the acquisition date,total Company contributions to the Intermedix 401(k) plan were $1.1 million for the year ended December 31, 2018. In response to the COVID-19 pandemic, the Company announced several temporary cost reduction actions, including the suspension of matching contributions to the 401(k)plans effective May 29, 2020 for exempt associates and June 5, 2020 for hourly associates. However, participants were able to continue making salary deferral contributions to the401(k) plans. The 401(k) match was reinstated for both plans effective January 1, 2021 on a prospective basis.26. Prepaid Expenses and Other Current AssetsPrepaid expenses and other current assets is comprised of the following (in millions): Year Ended December 31, 20202019Acquisition and disposition contingent assets$19.5 $— Prepaid expenses18.2 16.7 Deferred contract costs4.5 4.0 Base fee discounts3.8 2.6 Lease-related receivables— 4.3 Other current assets13.4 14.0 Ending balance$59.4 $41.6 27. Other AssetsOther assets is comprised of the following (in millions):F-43 Year Ended December 31, 20202019Deferred contract costs$19.6 $20.8 Base fee discounts18.1 8.2 Acquisition and disposition contingent assets10.8 — Prepaid expenses5.9 4.2 Other assets6.6 1.8 Ending balance$61.0 $35.0 28. Accrued Expenses and Other Current LiabilitiesOther accrued expenses is comprised of the following (in millions): Year Ended December 31, 20202019Accrued expenses$33.2 $30.0 Acquisition deferred payments22.0 — Notes payable1.9 8.0 Other current liabilities2.6 2.0 Ending balance$59.7 $40.0 29. Subsequent EventOn January 15, 2021, the Investor converted its 8% Series A Convertible Preferred Stock. See Note 18. 8% Series A Convertible Preferred Stock for more information.F-44EXHIBIT INDEX Exhibit NumberDescription2.1Agreement and Plan of Merger by and among Intermedix Holdings, Inc., the Registrant, Project Links Parent, Inc., Project Links Merger Sub, Inc. and solely inits capacity as Securityholder Representative, Thomas H. Lee Equity Fund VI, L.P. dated as of February 23, 2018 (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 2.1 tothe Current Report on Form 8-K (file No. 001-34746) filed on February 26, 2018) (Exhibits and schedules were omitted pursuant to Item 601(b)(2) ofRegulation S-K and will be furnished to the Securities and Exchange Commission upon request)2.2Stock Purchase Agreement, dated as of January 9, 2020, by and among the Registrant, Clearsight Intermediate Holdings, Inc. and Clearsight Group Holdings,LLC (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 2.1 to the Current Report on Form 8-K (file No. 001-34746) filed on January 13, 2020) (Exhibits and schedules wereomitted pursuant to Item 601(b)(2) of Regulation S-K and will be furnished to the Securities and Exchange Commission upon request)3.1Restated Certificate of Incorporation of the Registrant, as amended (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 3.2 to Amendment No. 4 to the Registration Statementon Form S-1 (File No. 333-162186) filed on April 26, 2010)3.2Amended and Restated Bylaws of the Registrant (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 3.4 to Amendment No. 4 to the Registration Statement on Form S-1(File No. 333-162186) filed on April 26, 2010)3.3Certificate of Amendment to Restated Certificate of Incorporation of the Registrant (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 3.1 to the Current Report on Form 8-K (File No. 001-34746) filed on August 20, 2015)3.4Amendment No.1 to the Amended and Restated Bylaws of the Registrant (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 3.2 to the Current Report on Form 8-K (FileNo. 001-34746) filed on August 20, 2015)3.5Certificate of Designations of the Registrant's 8.00% Series A Convertible Preferred Stock (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 3.5 to Annual Report on Form10-K for the year ended December 31, 2015 (File No. 001-34746) filed on March 10, 2016)3.6Certificate of Amendment to Restated Certificate of Incorporation of the Company (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 3.1 to the Current Report on Form 8-K(file No. 001-34746) filed on January 5, 2017)3.7Certificate of Amendment to Certificate of Designation of 8.00% Series A Convertible Preferred Stock, Par Value $0.01 per Share, of the Registrant(incorporated by reference to Exhibit 3.2 to the Current Report on Form 8-K (file No. 001-34746) filed on January 5, 2017)3.8Amendment No. 2 to the Amended and Restated Bylaws of the Registrant (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 3.3 to the Current Report on Form 8-K (fileNo. 001-34746) filed on January 5, 2017)3.9Certificate of Elimination of 8.00% Series A Convertible Preferred Stock of the Registrant (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 3.1 to the Current Report onForm 8-k (file No. 001-34746) filed on January 20, 2021)4.1Specimen Certificate evidencing shares of Common Stock (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 4.1 to Amendment No. 4 to the Registration Statement onForm S-1 (File No. 333-162186) filed on April 26, 2010)4.2Description of Common Stock10.1*Amended and Restated Stock Option Plan, as amended (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.1 to Amendment No. 4 to the Registration Statement onForm S-1 (File No. 333-162186) filed on April 26, 2010)10.2*Form of Acknowledgment of Grant, used to evidence option grants under the Amended and Restated Stock Option Plan (incorporated by reference toExhibit 10.2 to the Registration Statement on Form S-1 (File No. 333-162186) filed on September 29, 2009)10.3*Restricted Stock Plan, as amended (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.3 to Amendment No. 4 to the Registration Statement on Form S-1 (File No. 333-162186) filed on April 26, 2010)10.4*Form of Restricted Stock Award Agreement under the Restricted Stock Plan, as amended (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.4 to the RegistrationStatement on Form S-1 (File No. 333-162186) filed on September 29, 2009)10.5*Form of Indemnification Agreement, entered into between the Registrant and each director and executive officer (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.1 toCurrent Report on Form 8-K (File No. 001-34746) filed on February 16, 2016)10.6*Form of Incentive Stock Option Agreement under the 2010 Stock Incentive Plan (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.24 to Amendment No. 4 to theRegistration Statement on Form S-1 (File No. 333-162186) filed on April 26, 2010)10.7*Form of Restricted Stock Unit Grant Agreement under the Amended and Restated 2010 Stock Incentive Plan (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.2 toQuarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended September 30, 2016 (File No. 001-34746) filed on November 2, 2016)10.8*Form of Performance Based Restricted Stock Unit Grant Agreement under the Amended and Restated 2010 Stock Incentive Plan (incorporated by reference toExhibit 10.3 to Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended September 30, 2016 (File No. 001-34746) filed on November 2, 2016)10.9*Form of Nonstatutory Stock Option Agreement under the Amended and Restated 2010 Stock Incentive Plan (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.4 toQuarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended September 30, 2016 (File No. 001-34746) filed on November 2, 2016)10.10* Accretive Health, Inc. Second Amended and Restated 2010 Stock Incentive Plan (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.1 to the Current Report on Form 8-K(file No. 001-34746) filed on December 12, 2016)10.11*Form of Grant of Performance Based Restricted Stock Unit Awards pursuant to the Second Amended and Restated 2010 Stock Incentive Plan (to be used forawards to a senior vice president or executive vice president) (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.2 to the Quarterly Report on 10-Q (file No. 001-34746)filed on October 31, 2017)10.12*Form of Grant of Performance Based Restricted Stock Unit Awards pursuant to the Second Amended and Restated 2010 Stock Incentive Plan (to be used forawards to a vice president or director-level employee) (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.3 to the Quarterly Report on 10-Q (file No. 001-34746) filed onOctober 31, 2017)10.13*Form of Letter Agreement (to be used for executive vice presidents) (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.4 to the Quarterly Report on 10-Q (file No. 001-34746) filed on October 31, 2017)10.14Third Amended and Restated Stockholders’ Agreement, dated as of February 22, 2009, among the Registrant and the parties named therein, as amended(incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.5 to the Registration Statement on Form S-1 (File No. 333-172707) filed on March 9, 2011)10.15Form of Share Exchange Agreement, entered into in February 2009, with each of Etienne H. Deffarges, Steven N. Kaplan, Gregory N. Kazarian, The Shultz1989 Family Trust, Spiegel Family LLC and John T. Staton Declaration of Trust (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.6 to the Registration Statement onForm S-1 (File No. 333-162186) filed on September 29, 2009)10.16*Form of Nonstatutory Stock Option Agreement under the 2010 Stock Incentive Plan (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.25 to Amendment No. 4 to theRegistration Statement on Form S-1 (File No. 333-162186) filed on April 26, 2010)10.17+Amended and Restated Master Professional Services Agreement by and between Ascension Health and the Registrant effective as of February 16, 2016(incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.4 to Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended March 31, 2016 (File No. 001-34746) filed on May 10, 2016)10.18+Amendment No. 1 to the Amended and Restated Master Professional Services Agreement by and between the Company and Ascension Health, dated May 4,2017 (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.1 to Quarterly Report on 10-Q for the quarter ended June 30, 2017 (File No. 001-34746) filed on August 2, 2017)10.19*Employment Agreement, dated April 2, 2013, between Registrant and Stephen F. Schuckenbrock (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.16 to Annual Reporton Form 10-K filed for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2013 (File No. 001-34746) filed on December 30, 2014)10.20*Stock Option Agreement, dated April 3, 2013, between Registrant and Stephen F. Schuckenbrock (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.17 to Annual Reporton Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2013 (File No. 001-34746) filed on December 30, 2014)10.21*Offer Letter, dated April 27, 2013, between Registrant and Joseph Flanagan (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.18 to Annual Report on Form 10-K for thefiscal year ended December 31, 2013 (File No. 001-34746) filed on December 30, 2014)10.22*Restricted Stock Award, dated June 3, 2013, between Registrant and Joseph Flanagan (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.19 to Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2013 (File No. 001-34746) filed on December 30, 2014)10.23*Nonstatutory Stock Option Award Agreement, dated June 3, 2013, between Registrant and Joseph Flanagan (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.20 toAnnual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2013 (File No. 001-34746) filed on December 30, 2014)10.24*Amendment to Offer Letter, dated April 29, 2014, between Registrant and Joseph Flanagan (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.25 to Annual Report onForm 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2013 (File No. 001-34746) filed on December 30, 2014)10.25*Nonstatutory Stock Option Award Agreement, dated April 29, 2014, between Registrant and Joseph Flanagan (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.26 toAnnual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2013 (File No. 001-34746) filed on December 30, 2014)10.26*Restricted Stock Award Agreement, dated April 29, 2014, between Registrant and Joseph Flanagan (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.27 to AnnualReport on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2013 (File No. 001-34746) filed on December 30, 2014)10.27*Offer Letter, dated January 9, 2015, between Registrant and Richard Evans (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.37 to Annual Report on Form 10-K for thefiscal year ended December 31, 2014 (File No. 001-34746) filed on June 23, 2015)10.28*Form of Restricted Stock Award Agreement under the Amended and Restated 2010 Stock Incentive Plan (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.43 to AnnualReport on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2015 (File No. 001-34746) filed on March 10, 2016.10.29*Letter Agreement, dated December 7, 2015, between Registrant and Joseph Flanagan (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.46 to Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2015 (File No. 001-34746) filed on March 10, 2016)10.30*Restricted Stock Award Agreement, dated December 31, 2015, between Registrant and Joseph Flanagan (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.48 to AnnualReport on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2015 (File No. 001-34746) filed on March 10, 2016)10.31Securities Purchase Agreement, dated as of December 7, 2015, by and among Accretive Health, Inc., TCP-ASC ACHI Series LLLP, and, solely for the purposesset forth therein, Ascension Health Alliance d/b/a Ascension (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.1 to Current Report on 8-K (File No. 001-34746) filedDecember 8, 2015).10.32Investor Rights Agreement, dated as of February 16, 2016, by and among the Registrant, TCP-ASC ACHI Series LLLP, and the other parties thereto(incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.1 to Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended March 31, 2016 (File No. 001-34746) filed on May 10, 2016)10.33Registration Rights Agreement, dated as of February 16, 2016, by and between the Registrant and TCP-ASC ACHI Series LLLP (incorporated by reference toExhibit 10.2 to Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended March 31, 2016 (File No. 001-34746) filed on May 10, 2016)10.34Warrant, dated as of February 16, 2016, by and between the Registrant and TCP-ASC ACHI Series LLLP (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.3 toQuarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended March 31, 2016 (File No. 001-34746) filed on May 10, 2016)10.35Agreement by and between TCP-ASC ACHI Series LLLP and the Registrant dated September 9, 2016 (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.1 to the CurrentReport on Form 8-K (file No. 001-34746) filed on September 9, 2016)10.36*Non-Statutory Stock Option Award Grant Agreement, dated as of October 3, 2016, by and between Christopher Ricaurte and the Registrant (incorporated byreference to Exhibit 10.1 to the Current Report on Form 8-K (file No. 001-34746) filed on October 5, 2016)10.37*Non-Statutory Stock Option Award Grant Agreement, dated as of October 3, 2016, by and between Christopher Ricaurte and the Registrant (incorporated byreference to Exhibit 10.2 to the Current Report on Form 8-K (file No. 001-34746) filed on October 5, 2016)10.38*Non-Statutory Stock Option Award Grant Agreement, dated as of October 3, 2016, by and between Joseph G. Flanagan and the Registrant (incorporated byreference to Exhibit 10.3 to the Current Report on Form 8-K (file No. 001-34746) filed on October 5, 2016)10.39*Non-Statutory Stock Option Award Grant Agreement, dated as of October 3, 2016, by and between Joseph G. Flanagan and the Registrant (incorporated byreference to Exhibit 10.4 to the Current Report on Form 8-K (file No. 001-34746) filed on October 5, 2016)10.40*Employment Offer Letter Agreement by and between the Registrant and Thomas A. Lesica (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.1 to the Quarterly Report on10-Q (file No. 001-34746) filed on October 31, 2017)10.41*Employment Offer Letter Agreement, dated June 19, 2017, by and between the Registrant and Gary Long (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.55 to AnnualReport on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2017 (file No. 001-34746) filed on March 9, 2018)10.42*Amended and Restated Grant of Performance Based Awards pursuant to the R1 RCM Inc. Second Amended and Restated 2010 Stock Incentive Plan to JosephFlanagan (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.1 to the Current Report on 8-K/A (file No. 001-34746) filed on January 18, 2018)10.43*Amended and Restated Grant of Performance Based Awards pursuant to the R1 RCM Inc. Second Amended and Restated 2010 Stock Incentive Plan toChristopher Ricaurte (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.2 to the Current Report on 8-K/A (file No. 001-34746) filed on January 18, 2018)10.44Amended and Restated Registration Rights Agreement among the Registrant, IHC Health Services, Inc. and TCP-ASC ACHI Series LLLP dated as of January23, 2018 (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 4.1 to the Current Report on Form 8-K (file No. 001-34746) filed on January 24, 2018)10.45Securities Purchase Agreement between the Company and IHC Health Services, Inc. dated as of January 23, 2018 (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.1 tothe Current Report on Form 8-K (file No. 001-34746) filed on January 24, 2018)10.46Warrant between the Company and IHC Health Services, Inc. dated as of January 23, 2018 (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.2 to the Current Report onForm 8-K (file No. 001-34746) filed on January 24, 2018)10.47Credit Agreement, dated as of May 8, 2018, by and among the Registrant, the other parties party thereto as Credit Parties (as defined therein), Bank of America,N.A., as administrative agent and the financial institutions party thereto as lenders (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.1 to the Current Report on Form 8-K(file No. 001-34746) filed on May 8, 2018)10.48+Amended and Restated Services Agreement between the Registrant and IHC Health Services, Inc. dated as of January 23, 2018 (incorporated by reference toExhibit 10.7 to the Quarterly Report on 10-Q (file No. 001-34746) filed on May 10, 2018)10.49+Exhibits to the Amended and Restated Services Agreement between the Registrant and IHC Health Services, Inc. dated as of January 23, 2018 (incorporated byreference to Exhibit 10.8 to the Quarterly Report on 10-Q (file No. 001-34746) filed on May 10, 2018)10.50+Addendum No. 1 to Amended and Restated Services Agreement between the Registrant and IHC Health Services, Inc. dated as of April 30, 2018 (incorporatedby reference to Exhibit 10.9 to the Quarterly Report on 10-Q (file No. 001-34746) filed on May 10, 2018)10.51*Form of Grant of Performance Based Restricted Stock Unit Awards - 2018 Form pursuant to the Second Amended and Restated 2010 Stock Incentive Plan(incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.1 to the Current Report on 8-K (file No. 001-34746) filed on May 31, 2018)10.52+Addendum No. 2 to Amended and Restated Services Agreement between the Registrant and IHC Health Services, Inc. dated as of June 18, 2018 (incorporatedby reference to Exhibit 10.4 to the Quarterly Report on 10-Q (file No. 001-34746) filed on August 9, 2018)10.53+Supplement 26 to Amended and Restated Master Professional Services Agreement between the Registrant and Ascension Health dated as of June 24, 2018(incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.5 to the Quarterly Report on 10-Q (file No. 001-34746) filed on August 9, 2018)10.54+Amendment No. 2 to Amended and Restated Master Professional Services Agreement between the Registrant and Ascension Health dated as of June 24, 2018(incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.6 to the Quarterly Report on 10-Q (file No. 001-34746) filed on August 9, 2018)10.55+Amendment No. 3 to Amended and Restated Master Professional Services Agreement between the Registrant and Ascension Health dated as of July 5, 2018(incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.1 to the Quarterly Report on 10-Q (file No. 001-34746) filed on November 7, 2018)10.56+Addendum No. 3 to Amended and Restated Services Agreement between the Registrant and IHC Health Services, Inc. dated as of October 1, 2018 (incorporatedby reference to Exhibit 10.72 to Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2018 (file No. 001-34746) filed on February 22, 2019)10.57*Form of Grant of Performance-Based Restricted Stock Unit Awards Agreement pursuant to the Second Amended and Restated 2010 Stock IncentivePlan (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.1 to the Current Report on Form 8-K (file No. 001-34746) filed on April 10, 2019)10.58*Amendment No. 2 to Offer Letter, dated March 6, 2019, between the Registrant and Joseph Flanagan (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.1 to the QuarterlyReport on Form 10-Q (file No. 001-34746) filed on May 9, 2019)10.59Credit Agreement, dated as of June 26, 2019, by and among the Registrant, the other parties party thereto as Credit Parties (as defined therein), Bank of America,N.A., as administrative agent and the financial institutions party thereto as lenders (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.1 to the Current Report on Form 8-K(file No.001-34746) filed on June 26, 2019)10.60+Addendum No. 4 to the Amended and Restated Services Agreement between the Registrant and IHC Health Services, Inc. dated as of April 30, 2010(incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.1 to the Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q (file No. 001-34746) filed on August 6, 2019)10.61+Amendment No. 4 to Amended and Restated Master Professional Services Agreement between the Registrant and Ascension Health dated as of December 20,2019 (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.61 to the Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2019 (file No. 001-34746) filed onFebruary 20, 2020)10.62+Addendum No. 5 to Amended and Restated Services Agreement between the Registrant and IHC Health Services, Inc. dated as of December 31, 2019(incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.62 to the Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2019 (file No. 001-34746) filed onFebruary 20, 2020)10.63+Amendment No. 1 to Credit Agreement, dated as of March 20, 2020, by and among the Registrant, the other parties party thereto as Credit Parties (as definedtherein), Bank of America, N.A., as administrative agent and the financial institutions party thereto as lenders (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.1 to theCurrent Report on Form 8-K (file No. 001-34746) filed on March 23, 2020)10.64*Form of Grant of Performance-Based Restricted Stock Unit Awards Agreement (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.1 to the Current Report on Form 8-K (fileNo. 001-34746) filed on July 15, 2020)10.65*Offer Letter Agreement between the Registrant and Rachel Wilson dated April 29, 2020 (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.1 to the Quarterly Report onForm 10-Q (file No. 001-34746) filed on August 5, 2020)10.66+Addendum No. 7 to Amended and Restated Services Agreement between the Registrant and IHC Health Services, Inc. dated as of April 30, 2020 (incorporated byreference to Exhibit 10.2 to the Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q (file No. 001-34746) filed on August 5, 2020)10.67Form of Amendment to Investor Rights Agreement between the Registrant and TCP-ASC ACHI Series LLLP (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 4.1 to theCurrent Report on Form 8-K (file No. 001-34746) filed on January 6, 2021)10.68Preferred Stock Agreement, dated as of January 5, 2021, between R1 RCM Inc. and TCP-ASC ACHI Series LLLP (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.1 tothe Current Report on Form 8-K (file No. 001-34746) filed on January 6, 2021)10.69Amendment No. 2 and Waiver, dated as of January 13, 2021, to Credit Agreement, by and among the Registrant, the other parties party thereto as Credit Parties(as defined therein), Bank of America N.A., as administrative agent and the financial institutions party thereto as lenders (incorporated by reference to Exhibit10.1 to the Current Report on Form 8-K (file No. 001-34746) filed on January 15, 2021)10.70Joinder and Amendment to the Amended and Restated Registration Rights Agreement, dated as of January 23, 2018, by and among the Registrant, TCP-ASCACHI Series LLLP, and Shared Business Services, LLC10.71*Form of Restricted Stock Unit Award Agreement under the Registrant’s Second Amended and Restated 2010 Stock Incentive Plan21.1Subsidiaries of the Registrant23.1Consent of Ernst & Young LLP31.1Certification of Chief Executive Officer pursuant to Rules 13a-14(a) and 15d-14(a), as adopted pursuant to Section 302 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 200231.2Certification of Chief Financial Officer pursuant to Rules 13a-14(a) and 15d-14(a), as adopted pursuant to Section 302 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 200232.1Certification of Chief Executive Officer pursuant to 18 U.S.C. Section 1350, as adopted pursuant to Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 200232.2Certification of Chief Financial Officer pursuant to 18 U.S.C. Section 1350, as adopted pursuant to Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002101.INSXBRL Instance Document - the instance document does not appear in the Interactive Data File because its XBRL tags are embedded within the Inline XBRLdocument101.SCHXBRL Taxonomy Extension Schema Document101.CALXBRL Taxonomy Extension Calculation Linkbase Document101.LABXBRL Taxonomy Extension Label Linkbase Document101.DEFXBRL Taxonomy Extension Definition Linkbase Document101.PREXBRL Taxonomy Extension Presentation Linkbase Document104Cover Page Interactive Data File (formatted as Inline XBRL and contained in Exhibit 101)*Management contract or compensatory plan or arrangement required to be filed pursuant to Item 15(b) of Form 10-K.+Portions of this exhibit (indicated therein by asterisks) have been omitted for confidential treatment.Exhibit 4.2Description of Registrant’s Common StockGeneralUnder the Restated Certificate of Incorporation, as amended (the “Charter”), of R1 RCM Inc. (the “Company” or “R1”), R1 is authorized to issue 500 million shares ofcommon stock, par value $0.01 per share (the “Common Stock”), and 5 million shares of preferred stock, par value $0.01 per share.Common StockVoting RightsThe holders of Common Stock are entitled to one vote for each share held on all matters submitted to a vote of the stockholders and do not have any cumulative voting rights.Dividend RightsSubject to the rights of holders of any then outstanding preferred stock, holders of Common Stock are entitled to receive dividends when, as and if declared by the Company’sboard of directors out of funds legally available for this purpose.The Company does not currently pay quarterly cash dividends on shares of Common Stock. The payment of dividends in the future, if any, will be at the discretion of theCompany’s board of directors and will depend upon general business conditions, legal and contractual restrictions on the payment of dividends and other factors that the Company’sboard of directors may deem to be relevant.Liquidation RightsSubject to the rights of any then outstanding preferred stock which ranks senior to the Common Stock, in the event of a liquidation, dissolution or winding up of R1, theholders of Common Stock will be entitled to receive, after payment or provision for payment of all of its debts and liabilities, all of the assets of the Company legally available fordistribution to stockholders.Other RightsThere are no conversion rights or redemption, purchase, retirement or sinking fund provisions with respect to Common Stock.Anti-Takeover Effects of Delaware Law and the Company’s Charter and BylawsDelaware law, the Charter and the Company’s Amended and Restated Bylaws contain provisions that could have the effect of delaying, deferring or discouraging anotherparty from acquiring control of the Company. These provisions, which are summarized below, are expected to discourage coercive takeover practices and inadequate takeover bids.These provisions are also designed to encourage persons seeking to acquire control of the Company to first negotiate with the Company’s board of directors.Board of Directors; Removal of DirectorsThe Charter and Amended and Restated Bylaws provide that a director may be removed with or without cause and only by the affirmative vote of the holders of at least two-thirds of the votes that all the stockholders would be entitled to cast in an election of directors. Any vacancy on the Company’s board of directors, including a vacancy resulting froman enlargement of the board of directors, may be filled only by vote of a majority of the directors then in office, although less than a quorum. At each annual meeting, the entireboard will stand for election for a one-year term. The limitations on the removal of directors and filling of vacancies could make it more difficult for a third party to acquire, ordiscourage a third party from seeking to acquire, control of the Company.Stockholder Action by Written Consent; Special MeetingsThe Charter provides that any action required or permitted to be taken by the Company’s stockholders must be effected at a duly called annual or special meeting of suchholders and may not be effected by any consent in writing by such holders. The Charter and Amended and Restated Bylaws also provide that, except as otherwise required by law,special meetings of the Company’s stockholders can only be called by the Company’s chairman of the board, chief executive officer or board of directors.Advance Notice Requirements for Stockholder ProposalsThe Amended and Restated Bylaws establish an advance notice procedure for stockholder proposals to be brought before an annual meeting of stockholders, includingproposed nominations of persons for election to the board of directors. Stockholders at an annual meeting may only consider proposals or nominations specified in the notice ofmeeting or brought before the meeting by or at the direction of the board of directors or by a stockholder of record on the record date for the meeting, who is entitled to vote at themeeting and who has delivered timely written notice in proper form to the Company’s secretary of the stockholder’s intention to bring such business before the meeting. This writtennotice must contain certain information specified in the Amended and Restated Bylaws. These provisions could have the effect of delaying until the next stockholder meetingstockholder actions that are favored by the holders of a majority of the Company’s outstanding voting securities.2Delaware Business Combination StatuteThe Company is subject to Section 203 of the Delaware General Corporation Law. Subject to certain exceptions, Section 203 prevents a publicly-held Delaware corporationfrom engaging in a “business combination” with any “interested stockholder” for three years following the date that the person became an interested stockholder, unless theinterested stockholder attained such status with the approval of the Company’s board of directors or unless the business combination is approved in a prescribed manner. A “businesscombination” includes, among other things, a merger or consolidation involving the Company and the “interested stockholder” and the sale of more than 10% of the Company’sassets. In general, an “interested stockholder” is any entity or person beneficially owning 15% or more of the Company’s outstanding voting stock and any entity or person affiliatedwith or controlling or controlled by such entity or person.Amendment of Certificate of Incorporation and BylawsThe Delaware General Corporation Law provides generally that the affirmative vote of a majority of the shares entitled to vote on any matter is required to amend acorporation’s certificate of incorporation or bylaws, unless a corporation’s certificate of incorporation or bylaws, as the case may be, requires a greater percentage. The Amendedand Restated Bylaws may be amended or repealed by a majority vote of the Company’s board of directors or by the affirmative vote of the holders of at least two-thirds of the voteswhich all the Company’s stockholders would be entitled to cast in any election of directors. In addition, the affirmative vote of the holders of at least two-thirds of the votes which allthe Company’s stockholders would be entitled to cast in any election of directors is required to amend or repeal or to adopt any provisions inconsistent with any of the provisions ofthe Charter described above under “—Board of Directors; Removal of Directors” and “— Stockholder Action by Written Consent; Special Meetings”.Transfer Agent and RegistrarThe transfer agent and registrar for the Common Stock is American Stock Transfer and Trust Company, LLC.Exchange ListingThe Common Stock is listed on the NASDAQ Stock Market under the symbol “RCM.”3Exhibit 10.70Execution VersionJOINDER AND AMENDMENT TO AMENDED AND RESTATEDREGISTRATION RIGHTS AGREEMENTJanuary 22, 2021The undersigned is executing and delivering this Joinder and Amendment pursuant to (i) the Amended and Restated Registration RightsAgreement, dated as of January 23, 2018 (as the same may be amended from time to time, the “Registration Agreement”), by and among R1 RCMInc., a Delaware corporation (the “Company”), TCP-ASC ACHI Series LLLP, a Delaware limited liability limited partnership ("TCP-ASC"), andIHC Health Services, Inc., a Utah non-profit corporation, and (ii) the Securities Purchase Agreement, dated as of the date hereof (the “PurchaseAgreement”), by and among the Company and the undersigned. Capitalized terms used but not defined herein shall have their respective meaningsset forth in the Registration Agreement.The undersigned, the Company and TCP-ASC hereby agree that (i) the undersigned shall become a party to, be bound by and be required tocomply with the provisions of the Registration Agreement as an “Investor” and a holder of Registrable Securities, provided that the undersignedshall not have any rights under Section 2 of the Registration Agreement and shall not be bound by or required to comply with Section 9 of theRegistration Agreement if the undersigned chooses not to participate in the applicable registered public sale of securities by the Company, (ii) theshares of Common Stock issued by the Company to the undersigned pursuant to the Purchase Agreement shall be deemed Registrable Securities,subject to the exclusions set forth in the definition of Registrable Securities in the Registration Agreement and (iii) any notice required as permittedby the Registration Agreement shall be given to the undersigned at the address below:LifePoint Health, Inc.330 Seven Springs WayBrentwood, TennesseeAttention: General CounselEmail: Jennifer.Peters@lpnt.netSidley Austin LLP787 Seventh AvenueNew York, New YorkAttention: Tony D. Feuerstein Daniel L. SerotaEmail: tfeuerstein@sidley.com;dserota@sidley.comThe parties agree that except to the extent of the changes described herein, the Registration Agreement shall remain in full force and effectin accordance with its terms.* * * * * * * *Accordingly, the undersigned has executed and delivered this Joinder and Amendment as of the date first set forth above.SHARED BUSINESS SERVICES, LLCBy: /s/ Jason RossName: Jason RossTitle: PresidentAgreed and Acknowledged:R1 RCM INC.By: /s/ M. Sean RadcliffeName: M. Sean RadcliffeTitle: EVP, General CounselTCP-ASC ACHI SERIES LLLPBy: TCP-ASC GP, LLC, its General PartnerBy: /s/ Glenn F. MillerName: Glenn F. MillerTitle: Vice PresidentSignature Page to Joinder and Amendment to Amended and Restated Registration Rights AgreementExhibit 10.71GRANT OF RESTRICTED STOCK UNITSPURSUANT TO THER1 RCM INC.SECOND AMENDED AND RESTATED 2010 STOCK INCENTIVE PLAN* * * * *Participant: [ ]Grant Date: [ ]Number of Restricted Stock Units Granted: [ ]* * * * *THIS RESTRICTED STOCK UNIT AWARD AGREEMENT (this “Agreement”), dated as of the Grant Date specified above, isentered into by and between R1 RCM Inc., a corporation organized in the State of Delaware (the “Company”), and the Participant specified above,pursuant to the R1 RCM Inc. Second Amended and Restated 2010 Stock Incentive Plan, as in effect and as amended from time to time (the“Plan”), which is administered by the Board; andWHEREAS, it has been determined under the Plan that it would be in the best interests of the Company to grant the Restricted Stock Units(“RSUs”) provided herein to the Participant.NOW, THEREFORE, in consideration of the mutual covenants and promises hereinafter set forth and for other good and valuableconsideration, receipt of which is acknowledged, the parties hereto hereby mutually covenant and agree as follows:1. Grant of Restricted Stock Units. In consideration of services rendered and to be rendered to the Company by the Participant,the Company has granted to the Participant, subject to the terms and conditions set forth in this Agreement and in the Plan, as of the Grant Datespecified above, an Award consisting of the number of RSUs specified above. Except as otherwise provided by the Plan, the Participant agrees andunderstands that nothing contained in this Agreement provides, or is intended to provide, the Participant with any protection against potentialfuture dilution of the Participant’s interest in the Company for any reason, and no adjustments shall be made for dividends in cash or otherproperty, distributions or other rights in respect of the shares of common stock underlying the RSUs, except as otherwise specifically provided forin the Plan or this Agreement.2. Vesting.(a) Vesting. Subject to the provisions of Sections 2(b), 2(c) and 2(d) below, the RSUs subject to this Award shall become vestedas follows, provided that the Participant has not ceased to perform services to the Company for any reason or no reason, with or without cause,prior to each such Vesting Date:Vesting DatePercentage of RSUs[ ][ ][ ][ ][ ][ ][ ][ ]Except as provided in Section 2(d) below, there shall be no proportionate or partial vesting in the periods prior to each Vesting Date and all vestingshall occur only on the appropriate Vesting Date, subject to the Participant’s continued performance of services to the Company through eachapplicable Vesting Date.(b) Board Discretion to Accelerate Vesting. In addition to the foregoing, the Board may, in its sole discretion, accelerate vestingof the RSUs at any time and for any reason.(c) Forfeiture. Except as provided in Section 2(d) below, in the event that the Participant ceases to perform services to theCompany for any reason or no reason, with or without cause, all of the RSUs that are unvested as of the time of such cessation shall be forfeitedimmediately and automatically to the Company, without the payment of any consideration to the Participant, effective as of such cessation. TheParticipant shall have no further rights with respect to any RSUs that are so forfeited. If the Participant provides services to a subsidiary of theCompany, any references in this Agreement to provision of services to the Company shall instead be deemed to refer to service with suchsubsidiary.(d) Good Leaver Treatment. If the Participant incurs a Good Leaver Termination (as defined below) [for long-term grants only:on or after the first anniversary of the Grant Date but] prior to the final Vesting Date, provided that the Participant has continuously providedservices to the Company between the Grant Date and the effective date of the Good Leaver Termination, then the vesting condition shall bedeemed satisfied with respect to [for long-term grants only: the next tranche of RSUs vesting on the immediately following Vesting Date for a pro-rata number of the RSUs (the “Pro-Rata Shares”), with such amount to be determined by multiplying the RSUs that would vest on the next VestingDate absent termination by a fraction, the numerator of which is the number of days from the last Vesting Date through and including the effectivedate of termination, and the denominator of which is 365. The Pro Rata Shares shall vest on the effective date of such termination][for short-termgrants only: 100% of the RSUs]. For purposes of this Section 2(d), the following terms shall have the meanings set forth opposite such termsbelow:2i. “Cause,” with respect to the Participant, shall be defined as that term is defined in the Participant’s offer letter, employmentagreement, change in control agreement, or other similar agreement; or if there is no such definition, “Cause” means anyof: (A) the Participant’s conviction for, or plea of guilty or nolo contendere to, a felony; (B) the Participant engaging inconduct that constitutes gross neglect or willful misconduct and that, in either case, results in material economic orreputational harm to the Company; (C) the Participant’s willful breach of any provision of this Agreement or anyapplicable non-disclosure, non-competition, non- solicitation or other similar restrictive covenant obligation owed to theCompany; (D) the Participant’s repeated refusal, or failure to undertake good faith efforts, to perform his or her materialemployment duties and responsibilities for the Company; or (E) the Participant engaging in willful misconduct resultingin or intended to result in direct personal gain to him or her at the Company’s expense.ii. “Disability,” with respect to the Participant, means the Participant has been unable, with or without reasonableaccommodation and due to physical or mental incapacity, to substantially and satisfactorily perform his or her duties andresponsibilities hereunder for a period of one hundred eighty days out of any consecutive three hundred sixty-five days,as determined by the Committee in its reasonable discretion.iii. “Good Leaver Termination,” with respect to the Participant, means any termination of the Participant’s services to theCompany that is: (A) due to the Participant’s death, (B) due to the Participant’s Disability, or (C) due to a termination ofservices by the Company (x) because the Company determines in its sole discretion to eliminate or otherwise restructurethe Participant’s position, unless the Participant is offered another position within the Company, or (y) due to the sale ofa facility, division, or subsidiary, unless the Participant is offered another position by the purchaser, but only if, in thecase of each of the foregoing clauses (A) through (C), circumstances constituting Cause do not exist at the time oftermination.3. Delivery of Shares.(a) General. Subject to the provisions of Section 3(b) hereof, within thirty (30) days following each Vesting Date, the Participantshall receive the number of shares of common stock that correspond to the number of RSUs that have become vested on the applicable VestingDate, less any shares withheld by the Company pursuant to Section 8 hereof.3(b) Blackout Periods. If the Participant is subject to any Company “blackout” policy or other trading restriction imposed by theCompany on the date such distribution would otherwise be made pursuant to Section 3(a) hereof, such distribution shall be instead made on theearlier of (i) the date that the Participant is not subject to any such policy or restriction and (ii) the later of (A) the end of the calendar year in whichsuch distribution would otherwise have been made and (B) a date that is immediately prior to the expiration of two and one-half months followingthe date such distribution would otherwise have been made hereunder.4. Restrictions on Transfer. No portion of the RSUs may be sold, assigned, transferred, encumbered, hypothecated or pledgedby the Participant, other than to the Company as a result of forfeiture of the RSUs as provided herein, except that the Participant may transfer suchunvested RSUs: (a) to or for the benefit of any spouse, children, parents, uncles, aunts, siblings, grandchildren and any other relatives approved bythe Compensation Committee (collectively, “Approved Relatives”) or to a trust established solely for the benefit of the Participant and/orApproved Relatives, provided that such RSUs shall remain subject to this Agreement (including without limitation the vesting and forfeitureprovisions set forth in Section 2 and the restrictions on transfer set forth in this Section 4) and such permitted transferee shall, as a condition to suchtransfer, deliver to the Company a written instrument confirming that such transferee shall be bound by all of the terms and conditions of thisAgreement; or (b) as part of the sale of all or substantially all of the shares of capital stock of the Company (including pursuant to a merger orconsolidation). The Company shall not be required (i) to transfer on its books any of the RSUs which have been transferred in violation of any ofthe provisions of this Agreement or (ii) to treat as owner of the RSUs or to pay dividends to any transferee to whom such RSUs have beentransferred in violation of any of the provisions of this Agreement.5. Restrictive Legends. The Company may at any time place legends referencing any applicable federal, state or foreignsecurities law restrictions on all certificates, if any, representing shares of common stock issued pursuant to this Agreement. The Participant shall,at the request of the Company, promptly present to the Company any and all certificates, if any, representing shares of common stock acquiredpursuant to this Agreement in the possession of the Participant in order to carry out the provisions of this Section 5.6. Rights as Stockholder. Except as otherwise provided herein, the Participant shall have no rights as a stockholder with respectto any shares of common stock covered by any RSU unless and until the Participant has become the holder of record of such shares. Cashdividends on the number of shares of common stock issuable hereunder shall be credited to a dividend book entry account on behalf of theParticipant with respect to each RSU granted to the Participant, provided that such cash dividends shall not be deemed to be reinvested in shares ofcommon stock and shall be held uninvested and without interest and paid in cash at the same time that the shares of common stock underlying theRSUs are delivered to the Participant in accordance with the provisions hereof. Stock dividends on shares of common stock shall be credited to adividend book entry account on behalf of the Participant with respect to each RSU granted to the Participant, provided that such stock dividendsshall be paid in shares of common stock at the same time that the shares of common stock underlying the RSUs are delivered to the Participant inaccordance with the provisions hereof.47. Provisions of the Plan. This Agreement is subject to the provisions of the Plan (including, without limitation, anyamendments thereto adopted at any time and from time to time unless such amendments are expressly intended not to apply to the RSUs awardedhereunder), a copy of which is furnished to the Participant with this Agreement. Except as provided otherwise herein, any capitalized term notdefined in this Agreement shall have the same meaning as is ascribed thereto in the Plan. The Participant hereby acknowledges receipt of a truecopy of the Plan and that the Participant has read the Plan carefully and fully understands its content. In the event of any conflict between the termsof this Agreement and the terms of the Plan, the terms of the Plan shall control.8. Withholding. The Participant acknowledges and agrees that the Company has the right to deduct from payments of any kindotherwise due to the Participant any federal, state, local or other taxes of any kind required by law to be withheld with respect to the vesting of theRSUs. On each date on which the RSUs vest, the Company shall deliver written notice to the Participant of the amount of withholding taxes duewith respect to the vesting of the RSUs that vest on such date. The Participant shall satisfy such tax withholding obligations by transferring to theCompany, on each date on which RSUs vest under this Agreement, such number of shares that are issuable on such date as have a fair market value(calculated using the last reported sale price of the common stock of the Company on the New York Stock Exchange or the NASDAQ, asapplicable (or, if the Company’s common stock is not then traded on the New York Stock Exchange or the NASDAQ, then on any other UnitedStates stock exchange upon which the Company’s common stock is then listed, or otherwise as reported through the facilities of the OTC MarketsGroup, Inc.) on the trading date immediately prior to such Vesting Date) equal to the amount of the Company’s tax withholding obligation inconnection with the vesting of such RSUs (such withholding method, a “Surrender”), unless, prior to any Vesting Date, the CompensationCommittee determines that a Surrender shall not be available to the Participant, in which case, the Participant shall be required to satisfy theParticipant’s tax obligations hereunder in a manner permitted by the Plan upon the Vesting Date.9. Restrictive Covenants.(a) General. This award represents a substantial economic benefit to the Participant. The Participant, by virtue of suchParticipant’s role with the Company, has access to, and is involved in the formulation of, certain confidential and secret information of theCompany regarding its operations and each Participant could materially harm the business of the Company by competing with the Company orsoliciting employees or customers of the Company(b) Non-Solicitation. During the time in which Participant performs services for the Company and for a period of eighteen (18)months after the Participant ceases to perform services for the Company, regardless of the reason, Participant shall not, directly or indirectly, eitheralone or in conjunction with any person, firm, association, company or corporation:(i) Hire, recruit, solicit or otherwise attempt to employ or retain or enter into any business relationship with, any personwho is or was an employee of the Company within the twelve (12) month period immediately preceding the cessation of Participant’sservice with the Company; or5(ii) Solicit the sale of any products or services that are similar to or competitive with products or services offered by,manufactured by, designed by, or distributed by Company, to any person, company or entity which was or is a customer or potentialcustomer of Company for such products or services.(c) Non-Disclosure.(i) Participant will not, without the Company’s prior written permission, directly or indirectly, utilize for any purposeother than for a legitimate business purpose solely on behalf of the Company, or directly or indirectly, disclose to anyone outside of theCompany, either during or after Participant’s relationship with the Company ends, the Company’s Confidential Information, as long as suchmatters remain Confidential Information.(ii) This Agreement shall not prohibit Participant from (A) revealing evidence of criminal wrongdoing to lawenforcement, (B) disclosing or discussing concerns regarding regulatory or legal compliance with any governmental agency or entity to theextent that such disclosures or discussions are protected under any whistleblower protection provisions of Federal or state laws orregulations or (C) divulging the Company’s Confidential Information by order of court or agency of competent jurisdiction. However,Participant shall promptly inform the Company of any such situations and shall take such reasonable steps to prevent disclosure of theCompany’s Confidential Information until the Company has been informed of such requested disclosure and the Company has had anopportunity to respond to the court or agency.(d) Return of Company Property. Participant agrees that, in the event that Participant’s service to the Company is terminated forany reason, Participant shall immediately return all of the Company’s property, including without limitation, (i) tools, pagers, computers, printers,key cards, documents or other tangible property of the Company, and (ii) the Company’s Confidential Information in any media, including paper orelectronic form, and Participant shall not retain in Participant’s possession any copies of such information.6(e) Ownership of Software and Inventions. All discoveries, designs, improvements, ideas, inventions, software, whetherpatentable or copyrightable or not, shall be works-made-for-hire and Company shall be deemed the sole owner throughout the universe of any andall rights of whatsoever nature therein, with the rights to use the same in perpetuity in any manner the Company determines in its sole discretionwithout any further payment to Participant whatsoever. If, for any reason, any of such results and proceeds which relate to the business shall notlegally be a work-for-hire and/or there are any rights which do not accrue to the Company under the preceding sentence, then Participant herebyirrevocably assigns and agrees to quitclaim any and all of Participant’s right, title and interest thereto including, without limitation, any and allcopyrights, patents, trade secrets, trademarks and/or other rights of whatsoever nature therein, whether or not now or hereafter known, existing,contemplated, recognized or developed to the Company, and the Company shall have the right to use the same in perpetuity throughout theuniverse in any manner the Company determines without any further payment to Participant whatsoever. Participant shall, from time to time, asmay be reasonably requested by the Company, at the Company’s expense, do any and all things which the Company may deem useful or desirableto establish or document the Company’s exclusive ownership of any and all rights in any such results and proceeds, including, without limitation,the execution of appropriate copyright and/or patent applications or assignments. To the extent Participant has any rights in the results andproceeds of Participant’s services that cannot be assigned in the manner described above, Participant unconditionally and irrevocably waives theenforcement of such rights. Notwithstanding anything to the contrary set forth herein, works developed by the Participant (i) which are developedindependently from the work developed for the Company regardless of whether such work was developed before or after the Participant performedservices for the Company; or (ii) applications independently developed which are unrelated to the business and which Participant develops duringnon-business hours using non- business property shall not be deemed work for hire and shall not be the exclusive property of the Company.(f) Non-Competition.(i) During the time in which Participant performs services for the Company and for a period of twelve (12) months afterthe cessation of Participant’s service to the Company, regardless of the reason, Participant shall not, directly or indirectly, either alone or inconjunction with any person, firm, association, company or corporation, within the Restricted Area, own, manage, operate, or participate inthe ownership, management, operation, or control of, or be employed by or provide services to, any entity which is in competition with theCompany.(ii) Notwithstanding anything to the contrary, nothing in this Paragraph (f) prohibits Participant from being a passiveowner of not more than one percent (1%) of the outstanding stock of any class of a corporation which is publicly traded, so long asParticipant has no active participation in the business of such corporation.7(g) Acknowledgments. Participant acknowledges and agrees that the restrictions contained in this Agreement with respect totime, geographical area and scope of activity are reasonable and do not impose a greater restraint than is necessary to protect the goodwill and otherlegitimate business interests of the Company and that the Participant has had the opportunity to review the provisions of this Agreement with hislegal counsel. In particular, the Participant agrees and acknowledges (i) that the Company is currently engaging in business and actively marketingits services and products throughout the United States, (ii) that Participant’s duties and responsibilities for the Company are co-extensive with theentire scope of the Company’s business, (iii) that the Company has spent significant time and effort developing and protecting the confidentialityof its methods of doing business, technology, customer lists, long term customer relationships and trade secrets, and (iv) that such methods,technology, customer lists, customer relationships and trade secrets have significant value.(h) Enforcement. The Participant agrees that the restrictions contained in this Agreement are necessary for the protection of thebusiness, the Confidential Information, customer relationships and goodwill of the Company and are considered by the Participant to be reasonablefor that purpose and that the scope of restricted activities, the geographic scope and the duration of the restrictions set forth in this Agreement areconsidered by the Participant to be reasonable. The Participant further agrees that any breach of any of the restrictive covenants in this Agreementwould cause the Company substantial, continuing and irrevocable harm for which money damages would be inadequate and therefore, in the eventof any such breach or any threatened breach, in addition to such other remedies as may be available, the Company shall be entitled to specificperformance and injunctive relief. This Agreement shall not in any way limit the remedies in law or equity otherwise available to the Company orits Affiliates. The Participant further agrees that to the extent any provision or portion of the restrictive covenants of this Agreement shall be held,found or deemed to be unreasonable, unlawful or unenforceable by a court of competent jurisdiction, then any such provision or portion thereofshall be deemed to be modified to the extent necessary in order that any such provision or portion thereof shall be legally enforceable to the fullestextent permitted by applicable law. Without limitation to any other remedies available hereunder or at law in the event of any breach of any of therestrictive covenants in this Agreement by Participant, the Participant agrees that (i) any shares of Restricted Stock issued by the Company to theParticipant pursuant to this Agreement shall be forfeited for no consideration and (ii) in the event that the Participant sold the shares of RestrictedStock issued to the Participant pursuant to this Agreement, then the Participant shall be required to pay to the Company in cash, within thirty (30)days of a request by the Company for such payment, the price at which the Participant sold the shares.(i) Severability; Modification. It is expressly agreed by Participant that:8(i) Modification. If, at the time of enforcement of this Agreement, a court holds that the duration, geographical area orscope of activity restrictions stated herein are unreasonable under circumstances then existing or impose a greater restraint than is necessaryto protect the goodwill and other business interests of the Company, Participant agrees that the maximum duration, scope or area reasonableunder such circumstances will be substituted for the stated duration, scope or area and that the court will be allowed to revise therestrictions contained herein to cover the maximum duration, scope and area permitted by law, in all cases giving effect to the intent of theparties that the restrictions contained herein be given effect to the broadest extent possible; and(ii) Severability. Whenever possible, each provision of this Agreement will be interpreted in such manner as to beeffective and valid under applicable law, but if any provision of this Agreement is held to be invalid, illegal or unenforceable in any respectunder applicable law, such invalidity, illegality or unenforceability will not affect any other provision, but this Agreement will be reformed,construed and enforced as if such invalid, illegal or unenforceable provision had never been contained herein.(j) Non-Disparagement. Participant understands and agrees that Participant will not disparage the Company, its officers, directors,administrators, representatives, employees, contractors, consultants or customers and will not engage in any communications or other conductwhich might interfere with the relationship between the Company and its current, former, or prospective employees, contractors, consultants,customers, suppliers, regulatory entities, and/or any other persons or entities.(k) Definitions.9(i) Confidential Information. “Confidential Information” as used in this Agreement shall include the Company’s tradesecrets as defined under Illinois law, as well as any other information or material which is not generally known to the public, and which (A)is generated, collected by or utilized in the operations of the Company’s business and relates to the actual or anticipated business, researchor development of the Company; or (B) is suggested by or results from any task assigned to Participant by the Company or work performedby Participant for or on behalf of the Company. Confidential Information shall not be considered generally known to the public ifParticipant or others improperly reveal such information to the public without the Company’s express written consent and/or in violation ofan obligation of confidentiality to the Company. Examples of Confidential Information include, but are not limited to, all customer, client,supplier and vendor lists, budget information, contents of any database, contracts, product designs, technical know-how, engineering data,pricing and cost information, research and development work, software, business plans, proprietary data, projections, market research,perceptual studies, strategic plans, marketing information, financial information (including financial statements), sales information, trainingmanuals, employee lists and compensation of employees, and all other competitively sensitive information with respect to the Company,whether or not it is in tangible form, and including without limitation any of the foregoing contained or described on paper or in computersoftware or other storage devices, as the same may exist from time to time.(ii) Restricted Area. For purposes of this Agreement, the term “Restricted Area” shall mean the United States of America.10. Miscellaneous.(a) Compliance with Laws. The grant of RSUs and the issuance of shares of common stock hereunder shall be subject to, andshall comply with, any applicable requirements of any foreign and U.S. federal and state securities laws, rules and regulations (including, withoutlimitation, the provisions of the Securities Act, the Exchange Act and in each case any respective rules and regulations promulgated thereunder)and any other law, rule regulation or exchange requirement applicable thereto. The Company shall not be obligated to issue the RSUs or any sharesof common stock pursuant to this Agreement if any such issuance would violate any such requirements. As a condition to the settlement of theRSUs, the Company may require the Participant to satisfy any qualifications that may be necessary or appropriate to evidence compliance with anyapplicable law or regulation.(b) Authority of Compensation Committee. In making any decisions or taking any actions with respect to the matters covered bythis Agreement, the Compensation Committee shall have all of the authority and discretion, and shall be subject to all of the protections, providedfor in the Plan. All decisions and actions by the Compensation Committee with respect to this Agreement shall be made in the CompensationCommittee’s discretion and shall be final and binding on the Participant.10(c) No Right to Continued Service. The Participant acknowledges and agrees that this Agreement does not constitute an expressor implied promise of continued service relationship with the Participant or confer upon the Participant any rights with respect to a continuedservice relationship with the Company.(d) Acquired Rights. The Participant acknowledges and agrees that: (a) the Company may terminate or amend the Plan at anytime; (b) the award of RSUs made under this Agreement is completely independent of any other award or grant and is made at the sole discretionof the Company; (c) no past grants or awards (including, without limitation, the RSUs awarded hereunder) give the Participant any right to anygrants or awards in the future whatsoever; and (d) any benefits granted under this Agreement are not part of the Participant’s ordinary salary, andshall not be considered as part of such salary in the event of severance, redundancy or resignation.(e) Governing Law. This Agreement shall be construed, interpreted and enforced in accordance with the internal laws of the Stateof Delaware without regard to any applicable conflicts of laws provisions.(f) Exclusive Jurisdiction/Venue. All disputes that arise from or relate to this Agreement shall be decided exclusively by bindingarbitration in Cook County, Illinois under the Commercial Arbitration Rules of the American Arbitration Association. The parties agree that thearbitrator’s award shall be final, and may be filed with and enforced as a final judgment by any court of competent jurisdiction. Notwithstandingthe foregoing, any disputes related to the enforcement of the restrictive covenants contained in Section 9 of this Agreement shall be subject to anddetermined under Delaware law and adjudicated in Illinois courts.(g) Notices. Any notice hereunder by the Participant shall be given to the Company in writing and such notice shall be deemedduly given only upon receipt thereof by the General Counsel of the Company. Any notice hereunder by the Company shall be given to theParticipant in writing and such notice shall be deemed duly given only upon receipt thereof at such address as the Participant may have on file withthe Company.(h) Headings. The titles and headings of the various sections of this Agreement have been inserted for convenience of referenceonly and shall not be deemed to be a part of this Agreement.(i) Counterparts. This Agreement may be executed in one or more counterparts, each of which shall be deemed to be an original,but all of which shall constitute one and the same instrument.(j) Severability. The invalidity or unenforceability of any provisions of this Agreement in any jurisdiction shall not affect thevalidity, legality or enforceability of the remainder of this Agreement in such jurisdiction or the validity, legality or enforceability of any provisionof this Agreement in any other jurisdiction, it being intended that all rights and obligations of the parties hereunder shall be enforceable to thefullest extent permitted by law.11(k) Binding Agreement; Assignment. This Agreement shall inure to the benefit of, be binding upon, and be enforceable by theCompany and its successors and assigns. The Participant shall not assign any part of this Agreement without the prior express written consent ofthe Company.(l) Entire Agreement; Amendment. This Agreement, together with the Plan, contains the entire agreement between the partieshereto with respect to the subject matter contained herein, and supersedes all prior agreements or prior understandings, whether written or oral,between the parties relating to such subject matter. The Committee shall have the right, in its sole discretion, to modify or amend this Agreementfrom time to time in accordance with and as provided in the Plan. This Agreement may also be modified or amended by a writing signed by boththe Company and the Participant. The Company shall give written notice to the Participant of any such modification or amendment of thisAgreement as soon as practicable after the adoption thereof.(m) Further Assurances. Each party hereto shall do and perform (or shall cause to be done and performed) all such further actsand shall execute and deliver all such other agreements, certificates, instruments and documents as either party hereto reasonably may request inorder to carry out the intent and accomplish the purposes of this Agreement and the Plan and the consummation of the transactions contemplatedthereunder.[Remainder of Page Intentionally Left Blank]12IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the parties hereto have executed this Agreement as of the date first written above.R1 RCM INC.By: Name: Title: I hereby acknowledge that I have read this Agreement, have received and read the Plan, and understand and agree to comply with the terms andconditions of this Agreement and the Plan.PARTICIPANT ACCEPTANCE [Name of Participant]Exhibit 21.1Subsidiaries of R1 RCM Inc.SubsidiaryJurisdiction of OrganizationAccretive Health Mauritius, Inc.MauritiuscGate Health, Inc.DelawareClearsight Intermediate Holdings, Inc.DelawareIntermedix ARM, LLCDelawareIntermedix CorporationDelawareIntermedix Holdings, Inc.DelawareIntermedix Lietuva, UABLithuaniaIntermedix Midco, Inc.DelawareIntermedix Office Based, LLCDelawareIntermedix Staffing, Inc.DelawareMedical Consultants, Inc.OklahomaOptima (NZ) LimitedNew ZealandOptima (US) LTDDelawarePractice Support Resources, LLCTexasProject Links Parent, Inc.DelawareR1 RCM Global Private LimitedIndiaR1 RCM India Private LimitedIndiaRover16, Inc.DelawareSCHEDULING.COM, INC.DelawareThe Optima Corporation (International) LTDUnited KingdomThe Optima Corporation LimitedNew ZealandThe Optima Corporation PTY LTDAustraliaExhibit 23.1Consent of Independent Registered Public Accounting FirmWe consent to the incorporation by reference in the following Registration Statements:1.Registration Statement (Form S-8 No. 333-170718) pertaining to the Amended and Restated Stock Option Plan, as amended and the 2010 Stock Incentive Plan of R1 RCMInc.;2.Registration Statement (Form S-8 No. 333-206482) pertaining to the Amended and Restated 2010 Stock Incentive Plan and the Inducement Stock Option Awards of R1RCM Inc.; and3.Registration Statement (Form S-8 No. 333-215094) pertaining to the Second Amended and Restated 2010 Stock Incentive Plan of R1 RCM Inc.of our reports dated February 18, 2021, with respect to the consolidated financial statements of R1 RCM Inc., and the effectiveness of internal control over financial reporting ofR1 RCM Inc., included in this Annual Report (Form 10-K) of R1 RCM Inc. for the year ended December 31, 2020./s/ Ernst & Young LLPChicago, IllinoisFebruary 18, 2021Exhibit 31.1Certification of Chief Executive Officer pursuant to Rules 13a-14(a) and 15d-14(a), as adoptedpursuant to Section 302 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 I, Joseph Flanagan, certify that:1. I have reviewed this Annual Report on Form 10-K of R1 RCM Inc.;2. Based on my knowledge, this report does not contain any untrue statement of a material fact or omit to state a material fact necessary to make the statements made, in light of thecircumstances under which such statements were made, not misleading with respect to the period covered by this report;3. Based on my knowledge, the financial statements, and other financial information included in this report, fairly present in all material respects the financial condition, results ofoperations and cash flows of the registrant as of, and for, the periods presented in this report;4. The registrant's other certifying officer and I are responsible for establishing and maintaining disclosure controls and procedures (as defined in Exchange Act Rules 13a-15(e) and15d-15(e)) and internal control over financial reporting (as defined in Exchange Act Rules 13a-15(f) and 15d-15(f)) for the registrant and have:(a) Designed such disclosure controls and procedures, or caused such disclosure controls and procedures to be designed under our supervision, to ensure that materialinformation relating to the registrant, including its consolidated subsidiaries, is made known to us by others within those entities, particularly during the period in which thisreport is being prepared;(b) Designed such internal control over financial reporting, or caused such internal control over financial reporting to be designed under our supervision, to providereasonable assurance regarding the reliability of financial reporting and the preparation of financial statements for external purposes in accordance with generally acceptedaccounting principles;(c) Evaluated the effectiveness of the registrant's disclosure controls and procedures and presented in this report our conclusions about the effectiveness of the disclosurecontrols and procedures, as of the end of the period covered by this report based on such evaluation; and(d) Disclosed in this report any change in the registrant's internal control over financial reporting that occurred during the registrant's most recent fiscal quarter (theregistrant's fourth fiscal quarter in the case of an annual report) that has materially affected, or is reasonably likely to materially affect, the registrant's internal control overfinancial reporting; and5. The registrant's other certifying officer(s) and I have disclosed, based on our most recent evaluation of internal control over financial reporting, to the registrant's auditors and theaudit committee of the registrant's board of directors (or persons performing the equivalent functions):(a) All significant deficiencies and material weaknesses in the design or operation of internal control over financial reporting which are reasonably likely to adversely affectthe registrant's ability to record, process, summarize and report financial information; and(b) Any fraud, whether or not material, that involves management or other employees who have a significant role in the registrant's internal control over financial reporting.Date: February 18, 2021/s/ Joseph Flanagan Joseph FlanaganPresident and Chief Executive Officer(Principal Executive Officer)Exhibit 31.2Certification of Chief Financial Officer pursuant to Rules 13a-14(a) and 15d-14(a), as adoptedpursuant to Section 302 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002I, Rachel Wilson, certify that:1. I have reviewed this Annual Report on Form 10-K of R1 RCM Inc.;2. Based on my knowledge, this report does not contain any untrue statement of a material fact or omit to state a material fact necessary to make the statements made, in light of thecircumstances under which such statements were made, not misleading with respect to the period covered by this report;3. Based on my knowledge, the financial statements, and other financial information included in this report, fairly present in all material respects the financial condition, results ofoperations and cash flows of the registrant as of, and for, the periods presented in this report;4. The registrant's other certifying officer and I are responsible for establishing and maintaining disclosure controls and procedures (as defined in Exchange Act Rules 13a-15(e) and15d-15(e)) and internal control over financial reporting (as defined in Exchange Act Rules 13a-15(f) and 15d-15(f)) for the registrant and have:(a) Designed such disclosure controls and procedures, or caused such disclosure controls and procedures to be designed under our supervision, to ensure that materialinformation relating to the registrant, including its consolidated subsidiaries, is made known to us by others within those entities, particularly during the period in which thisreport is being prepared;(b) Designed such internal control over financial reporting, or caused such internal control over financial reporting to be designed under our supervision, to providereasonable assurance regarding the reliability of financial reporting and the preparation of financial statements for external purposes in accordance with generally acceptedaccounting principles;(c) Evaluated the effectiveness of the registrant's disclosure controls and procedures and presented in this report our conclusions about the effectiveness of the disclosurecontrols and procedures, as of the end of the period covered by this report based on such evaluation; and(d) Disclosed in this report any change in the registrant's internal control over financial reporting that occurred during the registrant's most recent fiscal quarter (theregistrant's fourth fiscal quarter in the case of an annual report) that has materially affected, or is reasonably likely to materially affect, the registrant's internal control overfinancial reporting; and5. The registrant's other certifying officer(s) and I have disclosed, based on our most recent evaluation of internal control over financial reporting, to the registrant's auditors and theaudit committee of the registrant's board of directors (or persons performing the equivalent functions):(a) All significant deficiencies and material weaknesses in the design or operation of internal control over financial reporting which are reasonably likely to adversely affectthe registrant's ability to record, process, summarize and report financial information; and(b) Any fraud, whether or not material, that involves management or other employees who have a significant role in the registrant's internal control over financial reporting.Date: February 18, 2021/s/ Rachel Wilson Rachel WilsonChief Financial Officer and Treasurer(Principal Financial Officer)Exhibit 32.1Certification of Chief Executive Officer pursuant to 18 U.S.C. Section 1350, as adoptedpursuant to Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002In connection with the Annual Report on Form 10-K of R1 RCM Inc. (the “Company”) for the period ended December 31, 2020 as filed with the Securities and ExchangeCommission on or about the date hereof (the “Report”), the undersigned, Joseph Flanagan, President and Chief Executive Officer of the Company, hereby certifies, pursuant to 18U.S.C. Section 1350, that:1.the Report fully complies with the requirements of Section 13(a) or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934; and2.the information contained in the Report fairly presents, in all material respects, the financial condition and results of operations of the Company.Date: February 18, 2021/s/ Joseph Flanagan Joseph FlanaganPresident and Chief Executive Officer(Principal Executive Officer)Exhibit 32.2Certification of Chief Financial Officer pursuant to 18 U.S.C. Section 1350, as adoptedpursuant to Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002In connection with the Annual Report on Form 10-K of R1 RCM Inc. (the “Company”) for the period ended December 31, 2020 as filed with the Securities and ExchangeCommission on or about the date hereof (the “Report”), the undersigned, Rachel Wilson, Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer of the Company, hereby certifies, pursuant to 18U.S.C. Section 1350, that:1.the Report fully complies with the requirements of Section 13(a) or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934; and2.the information contained in the Report fairly presents, in all material respects, the financial condition and results of operations of the Company.Date: February 18, 2021/s/ Rachel Wilson Rachel WilsonChief Financial Officer and Treasurer(Principal Financial Officer)
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