April 24, 2019

Insurer Anthem Tops 1Q Expectations, Raises 2019 Forecast

Insurer Anthem Tops 1Q Expectations, Raises 2019 Forecast

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — Anthem beat Wall Street's first quarter expectations and raised its 2019 forecast, helped by a growth spurt in one of the Blue Cross-Blue Shield insurer's more profitable lines of coverage.

The nation's second largest insurer said Wednesday that enrollment in its fully-insured coverage jumped more than 6% to 15.3 million compared to last year's first quarter. That helped push the company's total membership past 40 million people.

Fully insured coverage includes plans sold to small businesses. It is generally more profitable for insurers than coverage that larger employers buy where they pay the claims and leave the insurer to administer the plan.

The insurer's "meaningful" growth in fully insured coverage helps it live up to its promise of market share improvement, SVB Leerink analyst Ana Gupte said in a research note.

Indianapolis-based Anthem Inc. runs insurance plans in several states, including big markets like California and New York. The insurer also saw growth in government-funded Medicaid and Medicare coverage in the first quarter.

Overall the insurer's net income jumped 18% to $1.55 billion in the first quarter. Earnings, adjusted for one-time gains and costs, came to $6.03 per share.

Operating revenue, which excludes investment income, climbed 9% to $24.39 billion.

Analysts expected, on average, earnings of $5.86 per share on $24.25 billion in revenue, according to Zacks Investment Research.

Anthem also said Wednesday that it now expects adjusted earnings this year to exceed $19.20 per share, up from a forecast it made in January for better than $19 per share.

Analysts forecast, on average, earnings of $19.17 per share for 2019, according to FactSet

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