San Diego Union-Tribune

UNITEDHEAL­TH CAUTIOUSLY RAISES OUTLOOK FOR 2021

- BY TOM MURPHY Murphy writes for The Associated Press.

UnitedHeal­th Group beat thirdquart­er earnings expectatio­ns and finally hiked its 2020 forecast after holding off while trying to gauge COVID-19’s impact.

But the nation’s largest health insurance provider also is thinking conservati­vely about its 2021 growth prospects as the coronaviru­s continues to spread widely.

Health insurers have approached 2020 forecasts cautiously, even though many reaped huge profits in the first half as the pandemic kept people home and out of the health care system.

Analysts and insurers have said they expected medical costs to rise in the second half of the year, as communitie­s that had shut down opened back up and people felt more comfortabl­e seeking elective surgeries.

UnitedHeal­th said Wednesday that both care patterns and prescripti­on volumes approached normal levels in its recently completed quarter. The company now expects 2020 adjusted net earnings to range between $16.50 to $16.75 per share. That compares to a forecast it first laid out late last year for earnings of between $16.25 and $16.55 per share. UnitedHeal­th usually raises its forecast a couple of times during the year.

The new range mostly exceeds the average forecast on Wall Street for earnings of $16.57 per share, according to FactSet.

But the range’s middle point is only about 1 percent higher than the same spot in the previous forecast, and it implies fourth-quarter earnings that could fall short of expectatio­ns, SVB Leerink analyst Stephen V. Tanal said in a research note.

UnitedHeal­th Group runs a health insurance business that covers about 48 million people, mostly in the United States.

Overall, the company’s net income dropped 10 percent to $3.17 billion in the quarter, due partially to costs tied to the pandemic.

The company booked medical costs from COVID-19 care and testing. It also gave some customers premium breaks and temporaril­y waived fees like co-payments for doctor visits.

UnitedHeal­th’s adjusted earnings totaled $3.51 per share in the third quarter. Revenue rose about 8 percent to $65.11 billion.

CEO David Wichmann told analysts Wednesday that the company still has confidence in its long-term goal of 13 percent to 16 percent earnings growth.

But he also noted that the pandemic’s impact remains a big potential challenge. They still don’t know how it will affect the economy or a return to more normal levels of health care use. He told analysts to expect UnitedHeal­th to begin with a conservati­ve starting point for next year.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States