Cross Country Healthcare faces sharply declining revenue, falling analyst estimates, a rich valuation relative to its earnings power, and a consistent pattern of earnings misses -- a confluence of factors that keeps quality below the engine's floor and supports the exit signal.
Thesis pillars
- Sharply Declining Revenue→Stable
- Falling Estimates Sentiment Deterioration→Stable
- Rich Valuation Vs Earnings Power→Stable
- +1 more pillar — see the Why tab for full reasoning
Cross Country Healthcare, Inc. (CCRN) Stock Analysis
Healthcare · Medical Care Facilities
Sell if holding. Engine safety override at $13.20: Quality below floor (2.2 < 4.0) triggers a hard block regardless of the otherwise-positive setup — overall score 3.3/10. Specifically: Below-average business quality; Rich valuation.
Cross Country Healthcare, Inc. is a healthcare workforce solutions company providing travel and per diem staffing for nurses, allied health professionals, physicians, and education specialists across two segments — Nursing and Allied Staffing and Physician Staffing — powered by... Read more
Sell if holding. Engine safety override at $13.20: Quality below floor (2.2 < 4.0) triggers a hard block regardless of the otherwise-positive setup — overall score 3.3/10. Specifically: Below-average business quality; Rich valuation. Chart setup: No clear chart pattern; technical signals are mixed. Score 3.3/10, high confidence.
Passes 7/9 gates (positive momentum, clean insider activity, no SEC red flags, news events none recent, earnings proximity 31d clear, semi cycle peak clear, materials cycle peak clear). Fails on favorable risk/reward ratio. Suitability: aggressive.
About Cross Country Healthcare, Inc.
About Cross Country Healthcare, Inc.
Cross Country Healthcare places travel and per diem nurses, allied health professionals, physicians, and education specialists through two segments — Nursing and Allied Staffing and Physician Staffing — across all 50 states, with the largest share of 2025 revenue concentrated in California, Florida, and New York. The company competes in an estimated $39.4 billion U.S. healthcare staffing market, and on December 4, 2025 its pending acquisition by Aya Healthcare terminated, yielding a $20.0 million termination fee.
Revenue comes primarily from staffing registered nurses and allied professionals on roughly 13-week travel contract assignments at hospitals and health systems, supplemented by managed service program (MSP) administrative fees, Physician Staffing placements lasting days to a year, and Cross Country Education's school-based staffing. Healthcare professionals are Cross Country employees paid hourly with benefits including housing and travel reimbursement, while Physician Staffing largely uses independent contractors; customer contracts are typically cancelable on 30 to 90 days' notice, and no single customer accounted for more than 10% of revenue in 2025, 2024, or 2023. The company runs significant back-office information-systems, finance, and accounting functions through its Cross Country Infotech subsidiary in India, concentrating those critical functions in a single country outside the U.S. In December 2025, CEO John Martins separated from the company and Chairman and co-founder Kevin Clark, CEO from 2019 to 2022, returned as President and CEO effective December 15, 2025.
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Cross Country's near-term execution risk centers on a compressed leadership reset rather than a single clinical or reimbursement lever: the Aya Healthcare acquisition — under a signed merger agreement since December 2024 — lapsed at its outside date in December 2025 rather than closing, and within the same two-week window the company also changed chief executives, naming board chairman and former CEO Kevin Clark to the role his predecessor had held. The 10-K itself flags that leadership transitions of this nature can disrupt strategic initiatives and organizational stability, layering management-continuity risk on top of a travel-nurse segment that the industry's own trade data show contracting for a third consecutive year before an expected slight recovery in 2026.
See also: Healthcare · Medical Care Facilities
From Cross Country Healthcare, Inc.'s most recent 10-K filing, extracted July 6, 2026.
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Model-generated analysis — not investment advice. Not a registered investment advisor. Past performance does not guarantee future results.
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Rating Breakdown
5 floor-breakers
Revenue shrinking — -17.8% YoY. Growth thesis broken unless recovery story develops.static
No near-term catalyst priced in. Thesis progression will come from fundamentals grinding, not event reaction.static
Unprofitable operations — net margin -9.8%. Quality floor flags this regardless of sector context.static
Negative sentiment — recent news tone and/or analyst downgrades drag the composite below neutral.static
Priced at a premium — multiples above sector norms. Needs delivery on growth + margins to justify.static
Price Targets
Position Sizing
Risk Alerts
Earnings
Verdict History
Frequently Asked Questions
Sell if holding. Engine safety override at $13.20: Quality below floor (2.2 < 4.0) triggers a hard block regardless of the otherwise-positive setup — overall score 3.3/10. Specifically: Below-average business quality; Rich valuation. Chart setup: No clear chart pattern; technical signals are mixed. Prior stop was $13.14. Score 3.3/10, high confidence.
Take-profit target: $12.97 (-1.7% upside). Prior stop was $13.14. Stop-loss: $13.14.
Target reached (-17.0% upside); Quality below floor (2.2 < 4.0).
Cross Country Healthcare, Inc. trades at a P/E of N/A (forward 47.1). TrendMatrix value score: 3.6/10. Verdict: Sell.
14 analysts cover CCRN with a consensus score of 2.6/5. Average price target: $13.
What does Cross Country Healthcare, Inc. do?Cross Country Healthcare, Inc. is a healthcare workforce solutions company providing travel and per diem staffing for...
Cross Country Healthcare, Inc. is a healthcare workforce solutions company providing travel and per diem staffing for nurses, allied health professionals, physicians, and education specialists across two segments — Nursing and Allied Staffing and Physician Staffing — powered by its Intellify vendor management platform. The company operates in all 50 states with the largest share of 2025 revenue concentrated in California, Florida, and New York, and in December 2025 it terminated a pending acquisition by Aya Healthcare (collecting a $20.0 million termination fee) while transitioning CEO John Ma