
CVS Health's CFO is leaving as pharmacy chain faces activist investor
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CVS's shares rose as much as 12 percent after the market opened in New York on Tuesday, helped by a surprise boost in government payments for Medicare Advantage plans announced Monday evening.
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CVS has faced financial challenges in recent years, particularly in its Aetna insurance unit, which attracted the attention of activist investor Glenview Capital Management. In October, CVS chose as CEO Joyner, a longtime company veteran who quickly appointed new leadership in the insurance business. The company's fourth-quarter earnings last year impressed investors, sending the stock up the most in more than 25 years.
The health-care conglomerate, which reaffirmed on Tuesday its previously issued full-year guidance for 2025, also runs a large retail pharmacy and a pharmacy benefits manager. CVS has been beset by rising medical costs industrywide in addition to facing company-specific challenges.
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The insurance business suffered after underestimating medical costs and the government cut quality ratings for some plans, depressing payments, challenges CVS has been fixing. The company's pharmacy division, along with the rest of the industry, has also faced increasing financial pressure from falling payments for drugs and competition for front-of-store products from online sellers and big box retailers.
Cowhey has been CFO since January 2024, and held the position on an interim basis starting in October 2023, when the previous CFO, Shawn Guertin, took a leave of absence for family health reasons.
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San Francisco Chronicle
5 hours ago
- San Francisco Chronicle
Best way to nurture kids' pro sports dreams? New study challenges a popular belief
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'The drawbacks of sport specialization for young athletes include a variety of issues: overuse injuries, emotional burnout, minimizing one's social circle and 'potentially' preventing the development of diversified motor/processing skills,' Phillips wrote in a text message. Phillips relates specialization at younger ages to a combination of factors. The current landscape of youth sports is intentionally designed for year-round competition — a departure from the days of playing one sport, and switching to another in the offseason. The youth sports industry has grown into an extremely profitable business, drawing in more than $40 billion annually, according to the Aspen Institute. Club sports play a heavy hand, serving as one of the most focused and intensive avenues for young athletes to train at the highest levels. 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For the Freeman family and by way of the kids' desire, soccer was year-round. But that's the case for most young athletes looking to go pro. There is no offseason — it's some combination of specialized training, high school, training camps and competitive clubs. And for many, the experience is exactly what it sounds like: ultra-competitive. 'Club is, again, not my club, but it gets super serious. You're playing in front of scouts like all the time. And it's hard to be friends with your teammates sometimes because there's so much competition between you guys, and like, it's so easy to burn out,' Alex Freeman said. 'For a lot of people who have been playing competitive for their whole lives, they kind of don't know who they are without it, and that's really scary.' When asked what advice they would give to parents motivated to help their children achieve their sports goals, Pandya, Phillips and Freeman's father all shared that the end goal should center around a child's happiness. 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19 hours ago
- Yahoo
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