Chattanooga Times Free Press

Anthem prepping for fight with feds over Cigna deal

- BY TOM MURPHY

INDIANAPOL­IS — Anthem has no intention of backing away quietly from its plan to buy rival Cigna in the face of federal opposition, and the company looks ready to play hardball.

The health insurer told analysts Wednesday it is preparing to fight the government’s move to block its deal, and the company said its participat­ion in the government’s health insurance exchanges — a sore subject for the Obama administra­tion that is trying to stop the acquisitio­n — may be at stake.

The U.S. Department of Justice sued on July 21 to block both Anthem’s deal and another proposed insurer combinatio­n, Aetna’s $34-billion purchase of Humana. Federal regulators say the deals would reduce competitio­n and raise prices on the exchanges and in other market segments, like plans offered to large employers.

The two acquisitio­ns would reduce the nation’s five largest insurers to three. The biggest is UnitedHeal­th Group.

Companies like Electrolux and Halliburto­n have chosen to walk away from their proposed deals after facing recent Justice Department lawsuits. But both Anthem and Aetna are girding to fight.

Anthem CEO Joseph Swedish said Wednesday his company plans to “run out the litigation as long as it takes” and expects a trial to begin around October.

He also said the insurer’s $48-billion deal for Cigna would help stabilize pricing in the volatile public exchanges created by the Affordable Care Act. That, he said, would enable his company “to continue its commitment to the public exchanges” — a statement industry experts see as a sign Anthem could slash its exchange business if the government succeeds in scuttling the deal.

Anthem covers about 923,000 people through the state-based exchanges, which represents just a small slice of its overall business. It broke even last year on the still-new coverage, but company leaders said Wednesday they were preparing for a loss on that part of the business this year.

Insurers have faced a number of problems since the exchanges opened for enrollment in the fall of 2013. For example, they’ve been surprised by the size of the claims they have received as they’ve learned about the health of their new customers. And they say some of those patients have signed up for coverage, used their insurance, and then stopped paying premiums.

UnitedHeal­th has already cut its exchange participat­ion to a handful of markets due to steep losses, and others, like Aetna, have also said they are struggling to make money on the exchanges.

Aside from the exchange coverage, Swedish also said Wednesday that the Cigna deal will help Anthem reap savings it can then pass on to its customers in the market for coverage sold through large employers.

“To be clear, our board and executive leadership team at Anthem is fully committed to challengin­g the [Justice Department] decision in court,” Swedish told analysts in a call discussing the company’s second-quarter financial results.

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