HOUSTON (Reuters) – CareMax, which operates 56 medical centers in Florida, Texas, Tennessee and New York catering largely to older patients, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in Texas on Sunday.
The Miami-based firm listed debts of $693 million and assets of $390 million, according to a filing with U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Northern District of Texas.
In August, CareMax posted a second-quarter loss of $170.6 million and issued a going-concern warning. This month it disclosed it would not be able to file its third-quarter report with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission due to a lack of funds.
The company said it plans to pursue a sale or other transactions for its management services organization and its core centers assets.
Directors have approved the hiring of Alvarez & Marsal as financial advisers and Piper Sandler as investment banker, the filing said.
The move follows bankruptcies by other healthcare groups this year including Massachusetts-based Steward Health Care. Steward filed for bankruptcy in May, seeking to sell all of its 31 hospitals and address $9 billion in debt.
CareMax in late 2022 had acquired the Medicare value-based business of Steward for $25 million in cash and 23.5 million shares of its stock. CareMax shares closed at $1.68 on Friday, down 89% year to date.
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