Centene
is spending more than $15 billion on rival WellCare to dive deeper into
government-funded health coverage in the same week that President Donald
Trump’s administration renewed its attack on the Affordable Care Act.
The insurer said Wednesday that its cash-and-stock deal to buy
WellCare will create an insurer that manages Medicaid coverage for more than 12
million people and covers several million more in the federal government’s
Medicare program for people age 65 and older.
The deal comes after the administration attacked the ACA in
court Monday, saying that former President Barack Obama’s health care law
should be declared unconstitutional after Congress
repealed one part of it — unpopular fines on people who remain uninsured. The
2010 Affordable Care Act expanded coverage to millions of people by creating
individual insurance exchanges and increasing Medicaid enrollment in several
states.
Centene Corp., based in St. Louis, has built its business around
Medicaid, the state and federally funded program for people who are poor or
disabled, and also has expanded aggressively on the exchanges.
The Wellcare deal could help Centene improve its profitability
and protect against any risks that stem from threats to the ACA, SVB Leerink
analyst Ana Gupte said in a research note.
Several GOP-led states are challenging the ACA in a federal
court case that may head to the Supreme Court, and the Justice Department filed
a letter with a federal appeals court in New Orleans supporting their case.
A Centene tie up with WellCare Health Plans Inc., based in
Tampa, Florida, would create one of the biggest insurers in the country with 22
million customers and a dominating Medicaid presence in several states.
The transaction includes more than three shares of Centene stock
and $120 in cash for each share of WellCare stock, or $305.39 per WellCare
share. That’s about a 32 percent premium to WellCare’s Tuesday closing stock
price. The companies put the deal’s value at $17.3 billion.
Centene Corp. shareholders will own about 71 percent of the
business, with WellCare shareholders owning approximately 29 percent.
The board of the combined company will have 11 members, with
nine from Centene’s board and two from WellCare’s board. Centene Chairman and
CEO Michael Neidorff will serve in those roles after the combination.
The new company will be based in St. Louis. The deal is expected
to close in the first half of 2020, but it still needs approval from Centene
and WellCare shareholders, as well as regulators.
Shares of WellCare jumped nearly 13 percent in pre-market trading
Wednesday, while Centene fell almost 5 percent.
https://www.apnews.com/f9b111d19e634b1b8ebe7916fb672764?
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