UnitedHealth Group (UNH) earnings Q2 2023

0
38
UnitedHealth Group (UNH) earnings Q2 2023

Representatives speak with customers at a UnitedHealthcare store in Queens, New York.

Michael Nagel | Bloomberg | Getty Images

UnitedHealth GroupShares of the healthcare group rose on Friday after the healthcare group reported earnings Second Quarter Revenue and Adjusted Earnings That beat Wall Street expectations despite rising medical costs.

The results eased investor concerns after the Minnesota-based company spooked markets last month when it said demand for non-emergency surgeries and outpatient services had surged.

Related investment news

3 healthcare stocks making headlines.How this news affects our investments

CNBC Investment Club

UnitedHealth Group is the largest healthcare company in the United States by market capitalization and revenue, bigger even than the largest U.S. bank. Given its size, UnitedHealth Group is considered a leader in the broader health insurance space. Its market capitalization was about $447 billion as of Friday afternoon.

Here’s what UnitedHealth Group has to offer report Compared with Wall Street expectations, according to a Refinitiv survey of analysts:

  • EPS: Adjusted $6.14 vs. $5.99 expected
  • income: $92.9 billion vs. $91.01 billion expected

UnitedHealth reported net income of $5.47 billion, or $5.82 a share, for the quarter.This is the same as $5.07 billion, or $5.34 per share a year earlier. Excluding certain items, the company earned an adjusted $6.14 per share for the period.

The company reported total revenue of $92.9 billion for the quarter, up 16% from a year earlier. That doesn’t include $33.6 billion in “offsets,” payments from the company’s UnitedHealthcare business to its other unit, Optum. UnitedHealth Group cannot record these transactions as revenue because it pays for itself.

UnitedHealthcare, which provides insurance and benefits services to more than 50 million people, posted a 13% year-over-year increase in second-quarter revenue to $70.2 billion.

Revenue from the company’s other platform, Optum, rose nearly 25% from a year ago to $56.3 billion, helped in part by UnitedHealth Group’s roughly $8 billion acquisition of health-care technology company Change Healthcare.

Optum provides medical services and runs one of the largest pharmacy benefit managers, the middlemen that negotiate drug discounts with drugmakers on behalf of health insurers and large employers.

UnitedHealth Group raised the lower end of its full-year adjusted profit forecast to a range of $24.70 to $25.00 a share, from a previous range of $24.50 to $25.00.

The company’s medical cost ratio (claims payout as a percentage of premiums) is 83.2%. Analysts expect it to be 83.3% this quarter, according to FactSet.

Medical expenses rose nearly 2% from a year earlier. UnitedHealth said this was driven by the previously mentioned increase in elective surgery and outpatient care activity, primarily among older adults.

Last month, UnitedHealth Group Chief Financial Officer John Rex told the Goldman Sachs Healthcare Conference that the company recorded “robust ambulatory care activity” throughout April, May and early June.

Most of the care comes from Medicare enrollees, who receive heart surgery and hip and knee replacements on an outpatient basis, Rex said.

Insurers have benefited from delays in non-emergency surgeries in recent years as hospital staffing shortages and the coronavirus pandemic overwhelmed hospitals with COVID-19 patients. It was widely believed that elective surgery was too risky in hospitals at the time.

But UnitedHealth executives say that trend may be reversing.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here