Los Angeles Times

Anthem ending its offer to buy Cigna

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Anthem Inc. is finally ending its soured, $48-billion bid to buy rival Cigna Corp., but the nation’s second-largest health insurer isn’t giving up a fight over whether Cigna deserves a terminatio­n fee for the scrapped deal.

Anthem said Friday that Cigna sabotaged the merger agreement and caused “massive damages” for Anthem, which provides Blue Cross-Blue Shield coverage in several states. It said it plans to “vigorously pursue” its claims against Cigna.

Bloomfield, Conn.-based Cigna said in response that Anthem “willfully breached” its obligation to get regulatory approval. It plans to seek prompt payment of a $1.85-billion terminatio­n fee and more than $13 billion in damages from Anthem “for the harm that it caused Cigna and its shareholde­rs.”

Indianapol­is-based Anthem announced its decision a day after a Delaware judge refused its request to extend a ban blocking Cigna from pulling out of the deal.

The deal, announced in 2015, had already been rejected by a federal judge and an appeals court after antitrust regulators sued last summer to stop it. Anthem said last week that it would seek a Supreme Court review of the case.

Anthem had said a combinatio­n with Cigna would have helped the companies negotiate better prices with pharmaceut­ical companies, hospitals and doctor groups. But critics argued that it would have resulted in fewer choices for health insurance consumers.

Industry experts suggested any consumer effect from the deal would have taken years to materializ­e and might be hard to quantify. It could have led to savings in some areas but higher costs elsewhere.

Cigna has long been a reluctant deal partner. Anthem announced its plan to buy Cigna after talking with it for about a year and having several attempts rebuffed.

Anthem shares fell 0.4% to $181.95. Cigna dropped 1.1% to $162.03.

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