Valley News (West Lebanon, NH)
March
12, 2018
Under pressure to tame ever-increasing health-care costs,
the companies that help millions of Americans manage their medical care are
wagering that they can be stronger and simpler by joining forces.
Cigna’s proposed $54 billion acquisition of Express
Scripts Holding, announced Thursday, is the latest sign that the medical supply
chain — in which multiple companies are responsible for different aspects of
care — has become too cumbersome.
Health-care spending is inexorably rising, accounting for
an estimated 18 percent of the U.S. economy last year. Critics such as
billionaire Warren Buffett, who has called soaring health costs a “tapeworm”
sapping the country’s strength, view the complexity of the system and its large
number of middlemen as a culprit.
Insurers, drug-benefit managers, drug distributors,
pharmacies, and large medical groups currently all get a cut of the profits
from caring for patients. Bringing more of those businesses under one roof
might help streamline some of those costs and improve care, at least in theory.
“We saw this as the beyond-a-shadow-of-a-doubt best
strategic proposition,” said David Cordani, Chief Executive Officer of Cigna,
on a conference call discussing the deal. The companies are focused on lowering
costs and “removing complexity in the health-care system.”
Executives offered few details on how merging would help
their patients and clients while boosting their own profits. But the deal could
help Cigna compete with UnitedHealth Group Inc., which has clinics, drug
benefits, and insurance business, and CVS Health Corp., which agreed to buy
Aetna Inc. for about $68 billion, linking its pharmacies and drug-benefit plans
with the insurer’s coverage.
“This transaction is yet another proof of ongoing vertical
integration of health-care providers and payors,” said Brian Tanquilut, an
analyst with Jefferies Group.
Employers are increasingly restless over their high
health-care bills. Amazon.com Inc. plans to team with Buffett’s Berkshire
Hathaway Inc. and JPMorgan Chase & Co. on a new venture aimed at lowering
costs and improving care for their employees. And large employers from Walmart
Inc. to Blackstone Group LP are experimenting with ways to reduce their outlays
on employee health care.
While a combined Cigna-Express Scripts would have
substantial bargaining power over drug prices, it remains to be seen whether
that muscle would reduce costs for the employers and patients who ultimately
pay the bill.
The deal “doesn’t mean health-care costs are going to go
down,” said Michael Rea, of Rx Savings Solutions, which has an app that helps
patients find lower drug costs.
Pharmacy benefits managers have come under particular
pressure in recent weeks from critics of the health sector’s inefficiencies.
The harshest attacks have been aimed at a system of rebates that critics say
obscure a drug’s true cost and often don’t benefit patients.
President Donald Trump’s Council of Economic Advisers, in
a report last month, criticized the companies’ market power and the opacity of
their drug-price contracts. On Wednesday, Food and Drug Administration
Commissioner Scott Gottlieb called drug plans’ business a “rigged payment
scheme.”
“The days of the standalone PBM are numbered and have been
for some time,” policy analyst Spencer Perlman of Veda Partners LLC wrote. “The
entire notion of the rebate as a value proposition that justified PBM’s fees
has been exposed for what it is — a rent-seeking profit-enhancing gimmick that keeps
drug prices high.”
Express Scripts is the largest of the remaining
independent pharmacy-benefit managers. The company had previously touted the
benefits of staying independent, though the quickening pace of health deals in
recent weeks appears to have forced its hand.
On a conference call, executives said that the deal
provided a particular opportunity to help manage spending for costly medicines
for cancer and other complex diseases. Management of the use of those drugs has
often been split between insurers and PBMs, and the merger could make their use
more efficient.
In an interview, Cigna CEO Cordani denied that the deal
was designed to keep up with competitors such as Aetna who are merging with or
already own pharmacy-benefit managers, or to balance a potential threat from
Amazon and its partners.
“It is not a defensive move by any stretch of the
imagination,” said Cordani.
The talks started after Express Scripts chose Cigna to
provide benefits for many of its employees last fall, and Cordani and Express
Scripts CEO Tim Wentworth had a followup dinner in late October. That led to
talks of a merger, which accelerated rapidly this year, culminating in the
current deal.
The agreement comes as Express Scripts is set to lose its
biggest client. Last year, health insurer Anthem said it would set up its own
pharmacy-benefits management unit, after earlier accusing Express Scripts of
overcharging by billions of dollars. The loss of Anthem after 2019 has put
pressure on Express Scripts to fill the void.
Earlier in 2017, Anthem’s planned takeover of Cigna was
blocked on concerns it would undermine competition, ending an almost two-year
battle to combine two of the biggest health insurers in the U.S.
Cigna agreed to pay $48.75 in cash and 0.2434 shares of
stock of the combined company per Express Scripts share, the companies said in
a statement. The terms represent a roughly 31 percent premium to Express
Scripts’ closing price on Wednesday, according to the statement. Cigna will
assume approximately $15 billion in Express Scripts debt, which the companies
said will put the total value of the deal at $69.6 billion.
–With assistance from Zachary Tracer Cristin Flanagan
Jared S. Hopkins Peter Vercoe and Thomas Koeberling (Bloomberg Global Data).
https://insurancenewsnet.com/oarticle/cigna-bets-on-getting-bigger-as-costs-rise
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