On November 15, 2021, a person walked through a CVS Pharmacy in Manhattan, New York.
Andrew Kelly | Reuters
CVS Health Third-quarter results released Wednesday were mixed higher medical costs squeezed its bottom line. Financial report is CEO david joiner’s first Takes charge of troubled retail pharmacy chain.
The company expects Increased medical costs As pressure continues to mount on its results for the year, a spokesperson told CNBC, “therefore we are not providing a formal outlook at this time.” The spokesperson said CVS will comment on its expectations on an earnings call on a “directional basis.”
“As the new leader of CVS Health, establishing credibility and earning the trust of investors is one of my top priorities,” Joiner said in a statement. “To achieve this goal, any guidance we provide should be That’s a core principle for me.”
Wall Street’s confidence in CVS has declined this year after three consecutive quarters of lowered full-year guidance, prompting pressure from investors. activist investor Turn around the business.
The company’s shares have fallen nearly 27% this year as rising medical costs at its health insurance unit Aetna eat into its profits, reflecting the return of seniors to the hospital for surgeries that were postponed during the Covid-19 pandemic.
“While utilization across the industry has increased as a result of the pandemic, we have been impacted more severely than other industries,” Joiner said. “Our top priority remains ensuring business stability.”
Also on Wednesday, CVS named a new president of Aetna, effective immediately: Steve Nelson, the former CEO of health care giant UnitedHealthcare, a division of Aetna. UnitedHealth Group. Joiner and Nielsen are tasked with convincing investors that CVS can get back on track and better manage higher-than-expected costs.
Meanwhile, longtime company executive Prem Shah will take on a new, expanded role overseeing the company’s retail pharmacy, pharmacy benefits and health care services businesses, CVS said.
CVS shares rose nearly 6% in premarket trading Wednesday.
What’s this CVS third quarter report Compared to Wall Street expectations, according to a survey of analysts by LSEG:
- Earnings per share: Adjusted $1.09, expected $1.51
- income: US$95.43 billion, expected US$92.75 billion
On October 18, CVS announced Joyner replaces former CEO Karen Lynchthe company also stated that it has Conducted strategic review These include layoffs, writedowns and the closure of an additional 271 retail stores. The actions are in addition to a plan announced in August to cut $2 billion in spending over the next few years, including the elimination of nearly 3,000 jobs, or less than 1% of the workforce.
CVS reported third-quarter sales of $95.43 billion, a year-over-year increase of 6.3%, driven by growth in its drug business and insurance divisions.
The company’s third-quarter net income was $71 million, or 7 cents per share. This compares with net income of $2.27 billion, or $1.75 per share, in the same period a year earlier.
Excluding certain items such as amortization of intangible assets, restructuring charges and capital losses, adjusted earnings per share for the quarter were $1.09. That’s consistent with estimates the company provided last month.
Adjusted and unadjusted earnings also included a charge of 63 cents per share, or $1.1 billion, from so-called “premium shortfall reserves” in its insurance business related to expected losses in the fourth quarter of 2024.
This refers to the liability that an insurance company may be liable for if future premiums are insufficient to cover anticipated claims and expenses. A spokesperson told CNBC that the lack of premium reserves “actually accelerated future losses and changed” the pace of earnings between the third and fourth quarters.
CVS expects a “significant release” of these premium shortfall reserves in the fourth quarter, which will benefit results in that period. CVS does not expect to reserve for booking premium shortfalls in 2025, the spokesman said.
CVS also recorded a restructuring charge of 93 cents per share, or $1.17 billion, in the third quarter. That includes $607 million for plans to close more stores in 2025 and $293 million related to layoffs.
Insurance unit pressure
CVS’s insurance business generated revenue of $33 billion in the quarter, an increase of more than 25% from the third quarter of 2023. The unit reported an adjusted operating loss of $924 million in the third quarter.
Insurance units’ health insurance loss ratio, which measures total medical expenses paid compared to premiums collected, rose to 95.2% from 85.7% a year ago. A lower ratio usually indicates that the company is collecting more premiums than paying out in benefits, leading to higher profitability.
CVS’s health services segment generated $44.13 billion in revenue during the quarter, down nearly 6% from the same quarter in 2023.
This segment includes Caremark, one of the largest pharmacy benefit managers in the United States. Caremark negotiates drug discounts with manufacturers on behalf of insurance plans and creates a list (or formulary) of drugs covered by insurance and reimburses pharmacies for prescription fees.
CVS’s health services unit processed 484.1 million drug claims during the quarter, down from 579.6 million a year earlier.
The company’s pharmaceuticals and consumer health division had third-quarter sales of $32.42 billion, a year-over-year increase of more than 12%. The division dispenses prescriptions at CVS’s more than 9,000 retail pharmacies and provides other pharmacy services such as vaccinations and diagnostic tests.
CVS said part of the increase was due to increased prescription volume. Pharmacy reimbursement pressures, the introduction of new generic drugs and lower front-store sales, including a reduction in the number of stores, weighed on sales in the segment.
Joyner said in a statement that CVS’s share of the retail pharmacy market is 27.3%, a record high.