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INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — Rising unemployment, swine flu and the threat of health care reform all ganged up on managed care companies in the third quarter and could hurt their performance heading into 2010. But most of the large publicly traded health insurers reported better-than-expected profit growth for the latest period, and analysts still see strong core businesses beneath the challenges facing the industry.
"I would say they're holding their own in a very, very bad situation," BMO Capital Markets analyst Dave Shove said.
On Thursday, Philadelphia-based Cigna Corp. reported a third-quarter profit that soared 92 percent, as improving equity markets helped turn around the performance of a discontinued business the insurer maintains but no longer markets.
Cigna joined Minnetonka, Minn.-based UnitedHealth Group Inc., Hartford, Conn.-based Aetna Inc. and Louisville, Ky.-based Humana Inc. in recording earnings growth that stretched into the double digits compared with the third quarter of 2008, when the economy was mired in a deep slump.
Cigna also reported a drop in commercial health insurance enrollment, another trend it shares with its competitors. All the major health insurers aside from Aetna reported declines in enrollment driven by employers cutting jobs and reducing the number of people covered by private health insurance plans.
Even Aetna said it expects to lose as many as 650,000 members this year due to group health insurance cuts.
"It's rather frustrating, but it's a fact of life," Aetna Chief Financial Officer Joe Zubretsky said last week. "You have an account that's enjoying your services, it's priced well, it's meeting all of its objectives. But if they shed 5-to-7 percent of their payroll, that's lost members and lost revenue and profit."
Those job cuts deliver a double-whammy by increasing the number of people who continue their employer-sponsored insurance coverage under the federal law known as COBRA.
Earlier this year, the government started offering temporary subsidies that pay 65 percent of the cost of COBRA coverage, which is normally too expensive for most people to afford when they lose a job.
UnitedHealth and Indianapolis-based WellPoint Inc. both said they've seen an increase in their COBRA enrollment, normally a money-draining customer base. WellPoint, for instance, said it spends between $1.50 and $2 on COBRA claims for every dollar it collects in premiums.
WellPoint officials also said they expect a spike in claims from their COBRA enrollment in the fourth quarter because subsidies will start to run out and customers will rush to use their health insurance while they still have it.
Swine flu cases helped boost flu-related costs for several insurers. UnitedHealth said it spent $60 million on swine flu-related costs in the third quarter, up from $50 million the quarter before. Company executives also said flu spending could be a "significant factor" in the fourth quarter.
Both UnitedHealth and WellPoint told analysts they do not expect growth in operating earnings next year. That measures profit without one-time items like investment gains. Several companies also expect enrollment declines to continue into 2010.


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What kind of parallel universe do we live in when a government (ours) will subsidize (be complicit in) the "premiums" (cute word for highway robbery) for COBRA (another cute word for more highway robbery) of laid-off workers so that CIGNA and other robber barons can continue to raise their profits of 95% (NINETY FIVE PERCENT????)? The government plans to use OUR money to perpetuate the fiction that the for-profit private "insurers" are performing a "service"? All they do is take, from us (the premiums), AND the government (our taxes), shuffle some papers, and screw everybody involved in the scam except for their golden-parachuted CEOs. The sicker we are the more they get paid! What about "general welfare"? What other countries do is take money from the population (public funding), pool the resources, and provide the needed health services to everyone, with NO INTERMEDIARY to shuffle papers and deny care. That's how they can pay HALF of what we do and cover everyone. We are getting closer and closer to implementing that model (single payer), and the trajectory of the situation is clear, and the U.S. "health insurance" companies know it, and are fighting "to the death" (literally) to avoid the inevitable.
I have lost respect for "AP" which dares to report this state of affairs without of whiff of outrage!
Honey, that was the wrong finger.
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