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NHCNational HealthCare CorporationSell4.5·$202.81+1.64%
NHC · Concentration risk · 10-K extracted

National HealthCare (NHC) concentration risks

Updated

The most significant concentration National HealthCare discloses is Medicare at 31%, classified MEDIUM by disclosed size. Below: the full set from the latest 10-K — verbatim quotes, filing references, and a synthesis of what these exposures mean together.

Model-generated analysis — not investment advice. Not a registered investment advisor. Past performance does not guarantee future results.

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Methodology · Editorial policy & full disclaimer

Source: National HealthCare’s SEC Form 10-K filed view the filing on SEC EDGAR ↗

At a glance

Disclosed-size breakdown · 3 disclosed concentrations

HIGH0
MEDIUM3
LOW0
Disclosed concentrations

Each card carries a disclosed-size chip (HIGH / MEDIUM / LOW — how large the exposure is as a share of revenue, not how dangerous it is) and a nature tag: Built-in(the company’s own model, geography, or products) or Outside party (an external customer, supplier, or distributor it relies on).

MEDIUMBuilt-inCustomer
31%

Medicare

10-K Item 1: 'Medicare ... 31%'
SEC 10-K · filed Feb 2026
MEDIUMBuilt-inCustomer
30%

Medicaid

10-K Item 1: 'Medicaid ... 30%'
SEC 10-K · filed Feb 2026
MEDIUMOutside partyCounterparty

National Health Investors (NHI)

10-K Item 1A: 'A significant portion of our skilled nursing and independent living facilities are subject to a long-term Master Agreement to Lease with National Health Investors, Inc.'
SEC 10-K · filed Feb 2026
TrendMatrix Research · concentration synthesis

What these concentrations mean together

updated 2026-06-24

The company's concentration profile combines two government-payer revenue exposures and a facility-level lease dependency, each of moderate disclosed share. Medicare accounted for 31% of revenues, and Medicaid for 30% — together representing the two largest disclosed revenue sources and both carrying a structural character by disclosed size. The combined government-payer share reflects the nature of skilled nursing and post-acute care, where reimbursement from Medicare and Medicaid is structurally embedded in the business model rather than a function of any individual customer relationship. Changes to federal Medicare reimbursement rates, coverage policy, or state Medicaid funding allocations would affect both streams simultaneously and across the full portfolio of facilities. Layered on the payer concentration is a real estate dependency: a significant portion of skilled nursing and independent living facilities are subject to a long-term Master Agreement to Lease with National Health Investors, Inc. — a moderate-share dependency by disclosed size. This lease agreement ties a meaningful share of the company's operating footprint to a single landlord relationship; any renegotiation, financial stress, or disagreement in that Master Agreement could affect occupancy rights and the economics of the affiliated facilities. Together, the three exposures are interrelated: the company's ability to service the NHI Master Lease depends in part on sustaining adequate reimbursement from Medicare and Medicaid. A simultaneous adverse change in government payer rates and a lease renegotiation would compound the impact. All three disclosures are structural or dependency-character risks well-understood in the skilled nursing sector.

For the engine’s reasoning on NHC’s current verdict — including which dimensions drove the score — see the per-dimension breakdown.

Industry peers · Medical Care Facilities

Peer concentration profile

SymbolNameHIGHMEDIUMLOWTotal
CONConcentra Group Holdings Parent2002
BKDBrookdale Senior Living Inc.1203
ACHCAcadia Healthcare Company, Inc.1102
CHEChemed Corp1102
NHCNational HealthCare Corporation0303
ADUSAddus HomeCare Corporation0246

Concentration counts reflect items disclosed in each peer’s most recent 10-K; disclosed-size classification uses TrendMatrix’s internal 10-K extraction taxonomy.

Concentration disclosures are extracted verbatim from SEC 10-K filings; the disclosed-size classification and the synthesis above are engine-derived. Size reflects how large each exposure is against fixed share thresholds (HIGH >50%, MEDIUM 25–50%, LOW <25% or an explicit diversification statement), not a judgment of how dangerous it is, and is not a buy/sell rating, a price target, or a view on the stock. Not a complete list of risk factors — see the full filing.

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