
Why it's a rough time to be a health insurer
Why it matters: Higher drug costs and increased demand for services including mental health care is squeezing health plans while the new law is expected to shrink the insured population, potentially leaving more sick people in the risk pool.
Driving the news: Molina Health — which draws the majority of its business from government programs like Medicaid and Affordable Care Act marketplaces — lowered its financial outlook this week, with CEO Joseph Zubretsky blaming "a temporary dislocation" between premiums collected and costs paid that he said had recently accelerated.
Centene the previous week withdrew its 2025 guidance, pointing to sicker-than-expected patients on its ACA marketplace plans.
Insurer share prices have been depressed all month, including bellwether UnitedHealthcare, CVS Health, Oscar and Molina.
Between the lines: UnitedHealth signaled tough times ahead back in April, when it revised its forecast and cited "heightened care activity" in its private Medicare plans. The company also saw its share price slide following CEO Andrew Witty's abrupt departure.
It's the continuation of a trend that's seen increased demand for care shrink companies' profit margins in recent years. The companies haven't been able to offset added costs through premium increases and scrutiny of pharmacy benefit managers, Moody's noted early this year, when it changed its outlook for the sector from stable to negative.
The insurers also facing higher costs associated with an aging population, as well as increases in the use of pricey specialty drugs and GLP-1s.
UnitedHealth is also facing increased scrutiny from federal investigators over its Medicare Advantage billing practices, the Wall Street Journal reported.
Zoom in: After years of leaning into their government business such as Medicaid and Medicare Advantage, insurers are seeing the downside with federal pullbacks.
That's expected to get worse with the GOP law that's projected to slash more than $1 trillion from Medicaid, put new restrictions on ACA enrollment and cause the loss of coverage for up to 12 million.
And Congress could deliver another blow, if lawmakers decide not to extend enhanced ACA tax credits by the end of the year.
What they're saying:"It's a crazy time for payers, and it's going to stay that way," said Sarah James, an analyst with Cantor Fitzgerald, to the Wall Street Journal.
The trade group AHIP has warned the combined effects of the new law could bring "the biggest rollback in health care coverage in the country's history" while destabilizing state Medicaid programs and creating an individual market that has less choice and higher premiums.
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14 minutes ago
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The Hill
33 minutes ago
- The Hill
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