Aetna, Humana face federal antitrust lawsuit
Fight comes as concern rises over consolidation deals
Lawyers for insurance giants Aetna and Humana will begin battling government antitrust lawyers Monday in a Washington, D. C., court, seeking to get legal clearance to complete their planned $ 37 billion merger.
Worried that the deal would raise prices and lower benefits for customers, the Department of Justice, eight states and the District of Columbia sued to block the deal. The outcome of the trial, to be presided by U. S. District Judge John Bates, could have significant ramifications on how seniors buy Medicare and the insurance options available to individuals who are not reliant on employer coverage. If the deal falls through, Humana could get a $ 1 billion breakup fee from Aetna.
The legal fight is unfolding at a time when federal regulators are showing greater concern for the consolidation in the health insurance market. The Justice Department also is in the midst of a trial to block Anthem’s deal to buy Cigna for $ 54 billion. Those two insurers cover about 17% of the U. S. population and regulators argue that consolidation of the market for private health insurance for employers and individuals would lessen competition, harming consumers, doctors and hospitals.
Eyeing the lucrative market for aging Baby Boomers, Aetna, based in Hartford, Conn., struck a deal in early July to buy Louisville- based Humana, the largest provider of the private- market option for Medicare, called Medicare Advantage. Aetna is the fourth- largest Medicare Advantage seller.
The post- merger company would create the largest seller of Medicare Advantage plans, covering 980,000 of the 1.6 million seniors covered under Medicare Advantage.
The combined company would be the Medicare Advantage monopoly in 70 counties, the Justice Department says. “The proposed merger likely would cause seniors to pay significantly higher premiums and receive significantly reduced benefits,” the Justice Department wrote in its pre- trial brief Nov. 23.
Aetna argues that the merger wouldn’t hurt competition because seniors who don’t want Medicare Advantage plans can continue to opt for traditional Medicare, which is administered by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. The Justice Department erred in excluding traditional Medicare in its competition analysis, Aetna says. “Original Medicare and Medicare Advantage are functional substitutes, and CMS treats— and regulates — both kinds of Medicare that way,” the company says.
To assuage regulators, Aetna- Humana agreed to sell their Medicare Advantage business in some markets to Long Beach- based Molina Healthcare. “Any divestitures to Molina would ensure that the merger will give rise to no anti- competitive effects,” the companies say.
But regulators doubt Molina has the wherewithal to be a viable competitor. Molina entered 63 counties since 2008 to market Medicare Advantage plans, but it has only 424 individuals enrolled in six counties. Molina is “a Medicaid specialist with junk- bond- rated debt,” the Justice Department says. “Molina’s previous attempts to market individual ( Medicare Advantage) plans have been utter failures.”
Also at issue is Aetna- Humana’s commitment to the Affordable Care Act — also known as Obamacare — which created the private- market health insurance exchanges in 2010. The merger, the Justice Department says, would lead to a loss of competition on the public exchanges in 17 counties in Florida, Georgia and Missouri. “The public exchanges also rely on vigorous competition among insurers,” it said.
Aetna CEO Mark Bertolini, anticipating the antitrust scrutiny, told the Justice Department on July 5 in a letter that blocking the deal “would have a negative financial impact on Aetna and would impair Aetna’s ability to continue its support” of Obamacare.