Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Insurers stick to 2020 outlooks as COVID-19 pandemic spreads

- By Tom Murphy

Anthem and Humana became on Wednesday the latest health insurers to reaffirm their 2020 earnings forecasts, even as the COVID-19 pandemic has made outlooks in other sectors essentiall­y worthless.

The pandemic has shut down large portions of the economy and forced many companies to abandon their forecasts. But insurers so far have said they don’t know enough yet about COVID’s impact to take such a radical step.

They are still trying to understand the cost of treating patients, especially those who wind up spending days in the hospital. They also don’t know yet how many companies will cut employees with health coverage and dent their enrollment.

Then there are elective surgeries or procedures that aren’t emergencie­s.

Many have been postponed or cancelled. Most will be reschedule­d so those bills won’t go away. But they may arrive later this year or in 2021, depending on how jammed surgery center schedules become once people feel comfortabl­e enough to leave quarantine­s.

“The future may look markedly different from what anyone expects,” Anthem Chief Financial Officer John Gallina told analysts in a Wednesday morning conference call to discuss the first quarter.

The pandemic spread too late in the quarter in the United States to have much of an impact on health insurer income statements.

But insurers expect to see their enrollment shift as companies lay off workers who may then lose their employer-sponsored health insurance.

As many as 50% of Anthem customers who lose coverage could shift to the government-funded Medicaid program for people with low incomes, CEO Gail Boudreaux told analysts. Another 30% may wind up on the Affordable Care Act’s insurance marketplac­es.

That doesn’t necessaril­y amount to lost business, since Anthem manages Medicaid coverage in many states and sells individual plans on those marketplac­es.

The Blue Cross-Blue Shield insurer still expects adjusted earnings to be greater than $22.30 share this year.

Analysts forecast, on average, earnings of $22.01 per share, according to FactSet.

Indianapol­is-based Anthem Inc. is the nation’s second-largest insurer. It covers more than 42 million people in several states, including big markets like New York and California.

Medicare Advantage coverage provider Humana Inc. still expects adjusted earnings in the range of $18.25 to $18.75 this year.

Wall Street predicts $18.46 per share.

The nation’s largest health insurance provider, UnitedHeal­th Group Inc., and Medicaid specialist Centene Corp. also reaffirmed their forecasts earlier this month.

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 ?? ED REINKE, JESSICA HILL, MATT ROURKE, MICHAEL CONROY ?? This photo combo shows signage for health insurers Humana Inc., Aetna Inc., Cigna Corp., and Anthem Inc. Anthem and Humana are the latest health insurers to announce that they are sticking with their 2020earnin­gs forecasts, even as the COVID-19pandemic forces companies in many other sectors to abandon outlooks. The pandemic has shut down large portions of the economy and made those annual forecasts mostly worthless.
ED REINKE, JESSICA HILL, MATT ROURKE, MICHAEL CONROY This photo combo shows signage for health insurers Humana Inc., Aetna Inc., Cigna Corp., and Anthem Inc. Anthem and Humana are the latest health insurers to announce that they are sticking with their 2020earnin­gs forecasts, even as the COVID-19pandemic forces companies in many other sectors to abandon outlooks. The pandemic has shut down large portions of the economy and made those annual forecasts mostly worthless.

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