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During the company’s recent
conference call to discuss fourth-quarter and full-year 2022 financial
results, UnitedHealth Group executives touched on subjects ranging from the
historically bad flu season to the future of the company’s data analytics
division. All in all, equities analysts declared the health care giant to be
on strong footing as 2023 gets underway — a positive sign, they say, for a
managed care sector that tends to follow where UnitedHealth leads.
CEO: Flu impact ‘almost
not noticeable’
- During
UnitedHealth’s Jan. 13 earnings call, one repeated topic of discussion
was the effect of respiratory illnesses like influenza, which hit
communities in the U.S. harder and earlier than usual.
- Brian Thompson,
CEO of the company’s UnitedHealthcare insurance division, acknowledged that “we
certainly saw that spike” in respiratory illnesses, but added that “we
have now seen that start to wane for...five consecutive weeks.” All
told, there was “not a meaningful impact” for UnitedHealthcare
associated with the increased illness levels, he said.
- Later, when an
analyst asked how much of the elevated costs tied to respiratory
illnesses “was related to the hospital inpatient setting,” UnitedHealth
CEO Andrew Witty further downplayed their impact. Their effects were
“immaterial…in the grand scheme of the health care costs of the U.S. —
almost not noticeable,” he said.
- UnitedHealth’s
MLR for the quarter, 82.8%, was just slightly above (i.e. worse) the
Wall Street consensus estimate of 82.7%. But the firm ended the year
with an 82.0% MLR, which was consistent with projections made during its
annual Investor Day.
How will Change transform
OptumInsight?
- In their notes
to investors after UnitedHealth’s call, equities analysts also
highlighted the company’s discussion of the future of its OptumInsight
division, which is currently integrating the Change Healthcare business
after closing a $13 billion acquisition.
- Witty said
during his prepared remarks that “2023 will see the emergence of an
enhanced OptumInsight, bringing to life the opportunities that the
legacy organizations from Optum and Change create, an acceleration of
how technology can be used to health care providers and ultimately
patients within the overall health system.”
- SVB Securities
analysts observed that “integration costs associated with the recent
Change acquisition appear to be a bit larger than
expected.”
- “Assuming
OptumInsight continued to experience core growth of 11% [year over
year], which is where it has trended in 2022, we estimate UNH has
incurred $160m in integration costs associated with the transaction,”
they wrote.
- Jefferies
analysts, meanwhile, wrote that “having a business that counterbalances
Health Benefits sounds good until headwinds to the business (i.e. lower
inpatient volumes and large drags for growth implementations) become
structural. [Change Healthcare] needs to...add a growth [opportunity]
not tied to volumes.”
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