The company,
eHealth, gets much less for medical enrollees than for Medicare enrollees.
One of the pioneers in efforts to sell health
insurance through the web, eHealth Inc., has given investors a peek at the
commissions it receives for the products it sells.
One obvious conclusion: eHealth now makes a
lot more from selling Medicare plans than from selling major medical coverage.
The Mountain View, California-based company
posted estimates of the “constrained lifetime value” of the commissions it
expects to receive, per enrollee, for a number of products:
·
Medicare supplement
insurance: of $1,029.
·
Medicare Advantage:
$880.
·
Individual major
medical (Affordable Care Act public exchange): $134,
·
Individual major
medical (off-exchange): $140.
·
Dental: $74.
·
Short-term health
insurance: $60.
·
Vision: $51.
Dave Francis, the company’s chief operating
officer, said Thursday, during a conference call with securities analysts, that
getting insurers to pay commissions on sales of ACA exchange plans is
difficult.
“We are working with the carriers with whom we
work in the non-ACA space to get us as strong a commission trend as possible,”
Francis said.
The company expects commission levels on
short-term health insurance products to rise later in the year, if the Trump
administration goes ahead with plans to lift the current 90-day cap on the
duration of short-term health insurance, executives said.
The company is getting ready to focus more on
selling short-term health insurance, executives said.
EHealth held the conference call to go over
first-quarter earnings with securities analysts.
The company is reporting a $4.8 million net
loss for the quarter on $43 million in revenue, compared with $1.1 million in
net income on $42 million in revenue for the first quarter of 2017.
The company has been trying to shift more
toward sales of Medicare plans, and away from turmoil-plagued major medical
plans.
Here’s how application flow changed:
·
Medicare Advantage
applications increased 14%,, to about 25,000.
·
Medicare supplement
applications increased 41%, to 6,388.
·
The number of people
on applications for individual and family major coverage fell 70%, to 6,570.
The number of applicants for individual and
family coverage fell so sharply partly because the open enrollment period for
2018 major medical coverage ended Dec. 15, 2017, in most of the country.
For 2017, the open enrollment period ended
Jan. 31, 2017, in most of the country.
The drop in major medical sales may have
contributed to a sharp drop in eHealth sales of dental and vision coverage.
The number of dental policies sold fell 44%,
to 12,993.
The number of vision policies sold fell 43%,
to 5,584.
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