Q3 2024 CVS Health Corp Earnings Call

breaker: Good morning and thank you all for attending the CTS House, third quarter, 2024, Anne's own webcast. My name is Breaker and I will be your moderator for today.

breaker: All nine will be made to join the presentation portion of the school with a number of TNT for questions and answers at the end.

breaker: I would now like to pass the conference over to your host, Larry McGrath at CVS Health. Thank you, you may proceed, Larry. Good morning and welcome to the CVS Health third quarter 2020 for earnings call on Webcast. I'm Larry McGrath, Chief Strategy Officer. I'm joined this morning by David Joyner, President and Chief Executive Officer in Tom Cowhey. Chief Financial Officer.

breaker: Following our prepared remarks, we'll host a question and answer session that will include additional members of the leadership team.

breaker: Our press release and fly presentation have been posted to our website along with our forum. Thank you for all this morning with the SEC.

breaker: Today's call is also being broadcast on our website, where it'll be our guide for one year.

breaker: During this call we'll make certain forward-looking statements.

breaker: Our forward-looking statements are subject to significant risks and uncertainties. A could-called actual results to differ materially from currency projected results.

breaker: We strongly encourage you to review the reports we filed with the SEC regarding these risks and uncertainties.

breaker: In particular, those that are described in the cautionary statement concerning forward-looking statements and risk factors in our most recent annual report filed in Form 10-K.

breaker: Our quarterly report on Form 10-Q, filed this morning, and our recent filings on Form 8-K, including this morning's earnings press release.

breaker: During this call, we'll use non-GOP measures when talking about the company's financial performance and financial condition.

breaker: And you can find a reconciliation of these non-GOP measures in this morning's press release and in the reconciliation document posted to the investor relations portion of our website.

breaker: With that, I'd like to turn the call over to David. David?

David Joyner: Thank you, Larry, and good morning, everyone. Before I begin, I would like to thank Karen Lynch for her years of leadership, dedication, and strategic vision. Karen is a friend to me and many others across the CBS Health Organization, and we wish her all the best.

breaker: I am incredibly honored to lead CVS Health during this critical time.

breaker: My entire career is deeply connected with this enterprise.

breaker: When I returned to CVS Health in 2023, it was because of my strong belief in our purpose and strategy.

breaker: In the past few weeks, since I took on this role, I have seen firsthand the dedication, pride, and commitment of our employees to CVS Health, and our vision to deliver lower cost, better experiences, and better health outcomes for our members, clients, and patients.

breaker: I began my career at Aetna and have spent the last 37 years managing healthcare services teams.

breaker: with a focus on driving innovation, strong execution, and consistent financial performance.

breaker: Our career has been defined by navigating through change and evolving markets.

breaker: As the leader of Caremark, I engage with health plans, employers, pharmacies, and the broader health care delivery system in our country.

breaker: These experiences gave me a diverse set of perspectives on the challenges and opportunities inherent to our system.

breaker: I've mobilized teams who have helped reshape the pharmacy benefit landscape by lowering cost

breaker: Increasing transparency and driving greater accessibility. Many of those innovations have been made possible by integrating the assets across this enterprise.

breaker: At CVS Health, each of our businesses is formidable in its own right.

breaker: We have the leading PBM

breaker: the best-run pharmacy in this country, the storied franchise through Aetna, and industry-leading health care delivery assets.

breaker: Our collection of businesses and non-rechannel capabilities allow us to lead the industry forward with innovative and market-moving solutions.

breaker: We were pioneers in advancing the biosimilar adoption by establishing a co-manufacturing capacity through Cordobas.

breaker: making the necessary formulary changes with Caremark and executing through our CVS specialty operations.

breaker: Through our leadership and innovation, we were able to drive down commercial specialty trends for clients that used our integrated biosimilar approach to 1.3%, the lowest level in recent history.

breaker: We continue to expand our product offering and drive innovation for Aetna's self-insured customers.

breaker: Last month we introduced SimplePay, a differentiated offering for our commercial customers that provides greater price certainty before a visit or treatment.

breaker: Instead of bills and benefit details, members receive just one simple monthly statement that summarizes all of their medical and pharmacy claims.

breaker: This offering provides a simpler, end-to-end member experience and access to affordable, quality, innovative health care for members and plan sponsors.

breaker: In addition, this product has been shown to drive a 60% increase in the use of top quality providers and a 12% total cost of care savings for employers and members.

breaker: Last month, BMS released its 2025 Star Ratings.

breaker: CBS Health's integrated teams helped Aetna deliver an exceptional result. We built upon our strong momentum from last year, with 88% of our Medicare Advantage members in four-star plans or higher.

breaker: and more than two out of every three Aetna MA members in a plan rated four and a half stars.

breaker: Our commitment to outstanding service resulted in our highest ever member experience score since CMS launched the Quality Bonus to our program in 2012.

breaker: This was an impressive result, particularly as CMS continues to raise the bar on what it takes to achieve a four-star rating.

breaker: Our success in this crucial area was achieved by enhancing our cross-enterprise processes and driving focused and deliberate execution, strengthening our position for the future.

breaker: This framework and approach are critical elements as I look to lead this organization through the opportunities and challenges ahead.

breaker: It will also require the right leadership team. Today we announced two leadership appointments that will help us drive better performance across the enterprise and at Aetna specifically.

breaker: First, Prem Shah, who has been running our pharmacy and consumer wellness business.

breaker: is elevated to group president and will now also be responsible for the health services segment.

breaker: Second, we appointed Steve Nelson as president of Aetna.

breaker: Steve is an industry veteran who has successfully led diverse managed care companies and driven innovation and growth throughout his career.

breaker: Steve was a former CEO of UnitedHealthcare and held several leadership roles with a proven track record of delivering growth, profitability, improved employee engagement, and customer satisfaction.

breaker: I am confident both Prem and Steve will help us advance our strategy and enable us to realize opportunities across our businesses.

breaker: Shifting now to the results in the third quarter, we delivered adjusted earnings per share of $1.09, the total revenues for the company of more than $95 billion.

breaker: CVS Health has made up of three attractive operating segments which are all critical to the health care system.

breaker: Two of those segments continue to perform consistent with our expectations.

breaker: Our health services segment had another strong quarter, while delivering on our commitments to lower drug costs to our clients and members.

breaker: Our pharmacy and consumer wellness business continues to be the best-run national pharmacy in the country, increasing its share of Scripps filled and delivering important community health access across the nation.

breaker: Results in our healthcare benefits business remain challenged as a result of continued elevated levels of utilization.

breaker: While we are clearly underperforming at HCB today, this business has incredible earnings potential and is an essential element to our strategy.

breaker: We expect the elevated levels utilization will continue to pressure our 2024 performance and as a result we are not providing a formal outlook today.

breaker: Although Tom will provide some comments on what we may expect directionally.

breaker: I appreciate and understand your desire for us to provide guidance at this stage, establishing credibility and earning your trust.

breaker: is one of my top priorities as the new leader of CVS Health. I recognize that in order to achieve that, any guidance we provide should be achievable with clear opportunities for outperformance.

breaker: This must be a core principle.

breaker: And in order to deliver on that commitment to you, I want to spend more time understanding the complexities and challenges facing our Aetna business, and we'll provide an update when appropriate.

Speaker Change: There are clearly both macro and company-specific factors driving the challenges within our retina business.

breaker: The entire industry has seen pressure, including elevated utilization coming out of the COVID-19 pandemic and higher acuity as a result of the Medicaid redeterminations. However, I recognize that we have been more acutely impacted than others in the industry.

breaker: As a result of our disappointing star ratings for 2024, we began the year with a known and temporary reimbursement challenge.

breaker: In this rising trend environment, we offered rich benefits, which exacerbated our utilization pressures and grew membership rapidly.

breaker: Our individual exchange business, another area where we had a large increase in membership, has seen pockets of higher utilization.

breaker: and several disappointing risk adjustment updates. These miscalculations during the 2023 bid processes have significantly burdened Aetna's current results.

breaker: This performance is unacceptable. However, I am confident in the long-term prospects of Aetna.

breaker: We will make the hard choices and take the necessary actions to drive a multi-year earnings recovery at Aetna.

breaker: Our benefit design and price changes in Medicare Advantage and the individual exchange are down payments on this enduring commitment.

breaker: We are making marked progress to realign the Aetna organization and enhance management processes. We have taken meaningful steps to ensure the stability of the Aetna business and strengthen the leadership team.

breaker: In addition to the appointment of Steve Nelson, we also recently added Andriana Santangelo, a seasoned managed care CFO to the Aetna organization.

breaker: who has also been working closely with me, Tom, and our Chief Operating Officer, Katrina Gurez, to help drive operational enhancements, improve forecasting, and greater accountability.

breaker: Our risk management processes have been restructured to pull underwriting and pricing authority out of the business units and into the financial chain. This realignment will help improve transparency and accountability as we execute our margin recovery and drive profitable growth.

breaker: Of course, Tom and I will work closely with Steve, Katrina, and Andreana to scrutinize and support the underwriting and pricing decisions going forward.

breaker: We've also been making operational changes, identifying and prioritizing those gaps and inefficiencies that create the most significant impacts to performance.

breaker: Our teams have been addressing the challenge of strained clinical operations by improving staffing and training.

breaker: We are utilizing technology to automate and streamline processes. For example, through the power of AI, we have simplified clinical case preparation and meaningfully reduced the amount of time our care managers spend on case prep.

breaker: We are improving our services and claim operations, increasing our accuracy, and reducing abrasion for members and providers.

breaker: By utilizing technologies, we are driving greater insights across Aetna, including expanded integration with the Caremark team, to understand and manage pharmacy spend, and enhance data insights to improve our ability to rapidly identify emerging utilization trends.

breaker: The work in Aetna is underway, and we are confident we are taking the right steps to address the underlying issues and drive improved performance with Aetna. Turning to our pharmacy and consumer wellness business, we continue to effectively navigate a challenging and dynamic consumer backdrop.

breaker: Our performance reflects strong execution and the benefit of strategic investments in our workflows and our colleagues.

breaker: This quarter, we achieved another record-high retail pharmacy script share at 27.3%.

breaker: An impressive accomplishment as we continue to optimize our store footprint.

breaker: By the end of November, we will have completed our previously announced 3-year store optimization initiative targeting 900 stores and expect to close approximately 270 stores in 2025.

breaker: We recognize the importance of retail pharmacy in the communities we serve and will continue to be thoughtful and deliberate as we execute on our footprint optimization efforts.

breaker: We are progressing our transition to the CVS cost-benefit model and have reached agreements covering more than half of our total commercial scripts.

breaker: The ongoing discussions with our large PBM partners remain active and constructive as we move forward with the full commercial contract implementation on January of 2025.

breaker: We have also been deliberate in enhancing the durability and strength of our store operations to ensure we consistently serve our role as a community health destination.

breaker: This was clear in the aftermath of the recent hurricanes.

breaker: Our colleagues were instrumental in ensuring our operations were back online quickly, with most stores open within 48 hours.

breaker: We utilized our dynamic approach to workload sharing capability used across most of our fleet, allowing us to rapidly recover impact to stores, ensure patient access to critical medications, and provide continuity of care for our customers.

breaker: In our pharmacy services business, we had another very strong quarter, delivering on our commitments to our clients and customers.

breaker: In spite of the intense scrutiny and rhetoric that Caremark and the PVM industry face, we continue to play a crucial role in managing drug costs in this country.

breaker: I've highlighted the progress we've made on the biosimilar space, and our customers continue to see the value that we're delivering with our capabilities.

breaker: We are once again positioned to close out a robust selling season achieving a retention rate in the high 90s.

breaker: We continue to offer our clients choice and innovation, and our true cost offering is resonating in the market.

breaker: For 2025, clients representing 70% of our commercialize have chosen to implement multiple elements of the true cost model and to their benefit design options.

breaker: And finally, our healthcare delivery business, we continue to progress our strategy of delivering superior care to the patients we serve.

breaker: Signify delivered another strong quarter.

breaker: and the members served by Signify have nearly doubled compared to last year, supported by our ability to utilize touchpoints across CVS Health.

breaker: Our enterprise connections also continue to accelerate patient growth at Oak Street. Our at-risk membership is up 32% from the same quarter last year, and the number of Aetna members enrolled at Oak Street has approximately quadrupled since the close of the acquisition.

breaker: Through thoughtful benefit design, we continue to introduce Aetna members to high quality providers like Oak Street Health, allowing us to improve member experiences and deliver better health outcomes.

breaker: As we look ahead to 2025 and beyond, there are reasons to be optimistic, and I'm excited about our path forward. We have implemented a disciplined approach to Medicare Advantage benefit design.

breaker: We continue to accelerate progress on our innovative pharmacy models and biosimilar strategy.

breaker: We've delivered wins in both Caremark and at the selling season, and we are rapidly advancing the integration of our healthcare delivery assets.

breaker: We are making the necessary changes to return our business to profitable growth in 2025.

breaker: We are committed to a disciplined financial policy and with improved profitability, expect to strengthen our balance sheet.

breaker: We have strong leadership across the country. We have a powerful collection of businesses operating in some of the most critical areas of health care, which provide us with a unique opportunity to deliver value for our customers, colleagues, and shareholders.

breaker: I also want to extend our appreciation to our over 300,000 colleagues. I'm grateful for your continued dedication.

breaker: for our collaboration to drive continuous improvement and for all that you do every single day for the millions of customers and members we serve.

Speaker Change: With that, I'll pass the call over to Tom. Tom?

Tom Cowhey: Thank you, David, and thanks to everyone for joining us this morning.

Tom Cowhey: I'll start with a few highlights on total company performance.

Tom Cowhey: Third quarter revenues were approximately $95.4 billion, an increase of approximately 6% over the prior year quarter, primarily reflecting growth in our healthcare benefits and pharmacy and consumer wellness segments.

Tom Cowhey: We delivered adjusted operating income of approximately 2.5 billion dollars and adjusted EPS of a dollar nine.

Tom Cowhey: Year-to-date cash flow from operations were approximately $7.2 billion, a lower result as compared to the same period last year, primarily due to the timing of CMS receipts and the impact of higher utilization on HCB earnings.

Tom Cowhey: Let's look at the performance in each of our segments.

Tom Cowhey: In our healthcare benefits segment, we grew revenues to approximately $33 billion, an increase of over 25% year-over-year, reflecting growth in all lines of business.

Tom Cowhey: Medical membership grew to approximately 27.1 million, an increase of 178,000 members sequentially, primarily reflecting growth in Medicare and individual exchange.

Tom Cowhey: During the quarter, the segment generated an adjusted operating loss of $924 million.

Tom Cowhey: This result includes the impact of premium deficiency reserves of approximately 1.1 billion dollars, recorded primarily in our Medicare and individual exchange businesses.

Tom Cowhey: As a reminder, PDRs generally measure variable losses in a product and do not contemplate fixed expenses.

Tom Cowhey: The aggregate of the PDRs was comprised of approximately $670 million of healthcare costs and $394 million of operating expenses.

Tom Cowhey: specifically related to the write-off of unamortized deferred acquisition costs.

Tom Cowhey: Substantially all of the charges were associated with the 2024 policy year.

Tom Cowhey: shifting the earnings cadence between the third and fourth quarters.

Tom Cowhey: Our medical benefit ratio of 95.2% increased 950 basis points from the prior year quarter, including a 220 basis point impact from the PDRs.

Tom Cowhey: During the third quarter, we also saw unfavorable development of 2024 medical costs, primarily related to second quarter dates of service, which has adversely impacted our trend outlook for the remainder of the year.

Tom Cowhey: Medical costs in our individual exchange business also accelerated during the quarter, with broad levels of higher utilization above our prior expectations.

Tom Cowhey: The pressure we've experienced thus far has been primarily driven by certain high-cost geographies where the combination of our growth and metal-tier mix have led to higher medical costs.

Tom Cowhey: During the third quarter, we also received updated risk adjustment data for our individual exchange business.

Tom Cowhey: As a result, we increased our risk adjustment accrual for the 2024 plan year by approximately $275 million in the quarter.

Tom Cowhey: We will continue to evaluate our revenue accruals for potential additional pressure as we receive updated data on our risk force later this year and into early 2025.

Tom Cowhey: In our Medicaid business, consistent with others in the industry, we continue to experience higher acuity related to the impact of redeterminations.

Tom Cowhey: We believe the level of dislocation between acuity and rates stabilized towards the end of the third quarter.

Tom Cowhey: We continue to work closely with our state partners to align rates with changes in acuity.

Tom Cowhey: Although the engagement with our state partners has been constructive, and we have seen some rate updates in the second half of 2024, they remain inadequate to cover current levels of elevated acuity.

Tom Cowhey: In light of the utilization pressures we have seen across the healthcare benefits segment in 2024, we continue to closely watch our group commercial business.

Tom Cowhey: To date, pressures in this business have largely been manageable.

Tom Cowhey: as we have proactively pushed RATE to cover emerging medical cost trends.

Tom Cowhey: This will result in lower commercial risk membership in 2025, hindering our ability to grow earnings in this business.

Tom Cowhey: These claims payable at the end of the quarter was 44.6 days, up 1.5 days sequentially, primarily driven by the impact of the premium deficiency reserves.

Tom Cowhey: DCP was down 5.7 days from the prior year quarter, primarily driven by growth in our Medicare business and the impact of increased pharmacy trends.

Tom Cowhey: We remain confident in the adequacy of our reserves.

Tom Cowhey: Our health services segment delivered another strong quarter. We generated revenue of $44.1 billion during the quarter, a decrease of approximately 6% year over year, primarily driven by the previously announced loss of a large client in continued pharmacy client price improvements.

Tom Cowhey: These decreases were partially offset by pharmacy drug mix, increased contributions from our healthcare delivery assets, and growth in specialty pharmacy.

Tom Cowhey: Adjusted operating income of approximately $2.2 billion increased 17% from the prior year quarter, reflecting improved purchasing economics, partially upset by continued pharmacy client price improvements, and the previously announced loss of a large client.

Tom Cowhey: Total pharmacy claims processed in the quarter were approximately 484 million. And total pharmacy services membership as of the end of the quarter was approximately 90 million.

Tom Cowhey: We continue to be encouraged by the growth of our healthcare delivery assets.

Speaker Change: As David mentioned, Signify continued its strong performance in the quarter, generating revenue growth of approximately 37% over the prior year quarter.

Tom Cowhey: Oak Street revenue increased significantly in the quarter, growing approximately 36 percent, driven by strong membership growth.

Tom Cowhey: At-risk members increased by approximately 32% compared to the same quarter last year.

Tom Cowhey: supported by our ability to use touchpoints across CVS Health.

Tom Cowhey: We are encouraged by Oak Street's performance in this challenging environment.

Tom Cowhey: During the quarter, our pharmacy and consumer wellness segment generated revenue of approximately $32.4 billion, an increase of over 12% versus the prior year, and over 15% on a same store basis.

Tom Cowhey: Adjusted operating income of nearly $1.6 billion increased approximately 15% versus the prior year, driven by increased prescription volume, including increased contributions from vaccines and improved drug purchasing, partially offset by continued pharmacy reimbursement pressure, and lowers front store volumes.

Tom Cowhey: Same store pharmacy sales in the quarter increased by nearly 20% versus the prior year. And same store prescription volumes increased by approximately 9%.

Speaker Change: As David mentioned, we continue to grow our retail pharmacy script share position, achieving a share of approximately 27.3%.

Tom Cowhey: Same store front store sales were down approximately 1% versus the same quarter last year.

Tom Cowhey: One other item I would like to highlight for investors is that we took a restructuring charge of nearly $1.2 billion in the quarter.

Tom Cowhey: This amount reflects several components, including impairment charges for approximately 270 stores we expect to close in 2025, costs related to the discontinuation of non-core businesses, and costs associated with workforce optimization.

Tom Cowhey: Shifting now to cash flow in the balance sheet.

Tom Cowhey: For our third quarter, we generated year-to-date cash flow from operations of approximately $7.2 billion.

Tom Cowhey: During the quarter, we returned $837 million to shareholders through our quarterly dividend, and we ended the quarter with approximately $1.2 billion of cash of the parent and unrestricted subsidiaries.

Tom Cowhey: Our leverage ratio at the end of the quarter was approximately 4.6 times, which is above our long-term target.

Tom Cowhey: We remain committed to maintaining our current investment grade ratings and expect our leverage to return to more normalized levels as we execute on margin recovery in the Edmund business.

Tom Cowhey: As David mentioned, we are not providing a formal outlook for 2024 at this stage.

Tom Cowhey: However, we would like to provide some directional commentary to help you better understand how we see the moving parts.

Tom Cowhey: starting with our health services and pharmacy and consumer wellness segments.

Tom Cowhey: As we have previously highlighted, those businesses continue to deliver strong results.

Tom Cowhey: In PCW, while the immunization season got off to a stronger start than we expected, shifting demand into the third quarter, strong script growth continues to give us confidence in the previous outlook we shared with investors.

Tom Cowhey: In the health services segment, Caremark's earnings progression in 2024 started slow.

Tom Cowhey: but a steadily built momentum over the second and third quarters.

Tom Cowhey: While we maintain a cautious outlook on our healthcare delivery business, as we evaluate the potential for additional Medicare trend-related risk, we remain confident in our ability to deliver on the health services segment earnings outlook we shared with investors on our second quarter call.

Tom Cowhey: Within healthcare benefits, we continue to grapple with both environmental and company-specific challenges, as you have seen with our third quarter results.

Tom Cowhey: Similar to others within the industry, Medicare Advantage utilization continues to be elevated.

Tom Cowhey: We have also grown membership very rapidly, with a very rich benefit offering, which has resulted in benefit-induced utilization.

Tom Cowhey: Medicaid continues to be pressured by the dislocation between acuity and rates.

Tom Cowhey: as well as seeing some pockets of higher utilization.

Tom Cowhey: We've also seen rapid growth in our individual exchange business.

Tom Cowhey: which has led to several disappointing updates on risk-adjusted revenue and, in some states, higher-than-expected utilization.

Tom Cowhey: To date, the combination of these factors has challenged our visibility and our 2024 outlook.

Tom Cowhey: While we are not providing formal guidance today, let me walk you through one potential scenario.

Tom Cowhey: If trends develop unfavorably and persist at the significant levels we have experienced in recent months, our fourth quarter reported NBR could increase by over 700 basis points as compared to the fourth quarter of 2023.

Tom Cowhey: Additionally, in this scenario, we would likely need to take a PDR on our group Medicare Advantage business related to 2025 dates of service, which would further pressure 2024 results.

Tom Cowhey: http://TheBusinessProfessor.com

Tom Cowhey: Despite challenges in 2024, we have taken deliberate actions that position us for growth in 2025 and beyond.

Tom Cowhey: While we will not give formal 2025 guidance until next year when we have better visibility on our 2024 medical cost baseline and our changing membership, I want to provide an update on some of the key headwinds and tailwinds.

Tom Cowhey: Starting first with the headwinds.

Tom Cowhey: In our PCW segment, we expect earnings to decline in line with our long-term guidance framework.

Tom Cowhey: As David mentioned, we are encouraged by the adoption of CVS Cost Vantage and the shift of commercial scripts to this model on January 1st. We expect 2025 to be a transition year that positions us for outperformance of our long-term growth target in future years.

Tom Cowhey: We also remain cautious in our outlook for front store sales.

Tom Cowhey: which have been pressured in recent quarters consistent with the broader macroeconomic backdrop.

Tom Cowhey: As we previously discussed, we expect the return of certain variable corporate expenses.

Tom Cowhey: We also expect higher interest as we annualize the expense from our May 2024 financing, a decline in net investment income, and modest dilution from the increase in our share count.

Tom Cowhey: Shifting now to the tailwinds.

Tom Cowhey: We expect improvement in contributions from our healthcare benefits segment.

Tom Cowhey: We believe our deliberate approach to our 2025 Medicare Advantage bids.

Tom Cowhey: and our focus changes to our footprint, which we expect to result in membership disenrollment of 5 to 10 percent.

Tom Cowhey: This is a significant first step on our journey back to target margins of 3 to 5%.

Tom Cowhey: However, we do not expect the dislocation to be fully resolved before the end of 2025.

Tom Cowhey: We expect improvement in our individual exchange business as a result of our pricing actions and deliberate product repositioning, which we project will decrease membership in this block of business in 2025.

Tom Cowhey: We will continue to refine our product offerings for long-term sustainability.

Tom Cowhey: We also expect underlying growth in our health services business.

Tom Cowhey: including growth in pharmacy services as we continue to drive value for our clients and incremental improvement in our healthcare delivery businesses.

Tom Cowhey: We expect our initial outlook for this segment will be below our long-term growth framework, but will prudently provide opportunities for upside over the course of the year.

Tom Cowhey: Finally, we have executed the first step of our multi-year cost savings initiative that we expect will generate over $500 million next year, helping to offset the return of variable expense in 2025.

Tom Cowhey: Taking a step back, 2024 has been a disappointing year for performance in our healthcare benefits segment.

Tom Cowhey: We could experience mid-single-digit percentage losses in our Medicare business.

Tom Cowhey: Our foray into the individual exchange business could result in negative margins that approach double digits.

Tom Cowhey: We are also projecting modest negative margins in our Medicaid business.

Tom Cowhey: It is possible that our healthcare benefits business could show operating losses in 2024 after generating over $5.5 billion of adjusted operating income in 2023.

Tom Cowhey: Conversely, this means that there are well over $3 of embedded adjusted EPS if we could return Aetna profitability to 2023 levels.

Tom Cowhey: Open enrollment for both Medicare Advantage and individual exchange has demonstrated that we took meaningful action in curtailing benefits, adjusting products, and where appropriate, raising prices.

Tom Cowhey: Well, we are confident we have taken the right initial actions. The road to recovery will take time.

Tom Cowhey: We look forward to providing more details on our 2025 Outlook and those first steps on our journey when we have more clarity on the moving parts in our health care benefits business next year.

Tom Cowhey: With that, we'll now open the call to your questions. Operator?

Speaker Change: Thank you. We will now begin the question and answer session.

Speaker Change: If you would like to ask a question please press star followed by one on your telephone keypad

Speaker Change: As a reminder, if you are using a speakerphone, please remember to take up your handset before asking a question. We'll pause here briefly whilst questions are registered.

Speaker Change: We have the first question on the phone lines from Lisa Gill with JP Morgan. You may proceed.

Speaker Change: and I'm the president of the National Cancer Association Reduction Act and changes around catastrophic coverage. Just curious, one, did you see that as well, specific to those changes, and is it benefiting perhaps some of the other sides of your business? I know you obviously have a really big specialty business, and you talked about the strength in the pharmacy business.

Speaker Change: Great. Let me start with your first question. So, we're early in the open enrollment season, but, you know, I did reiterate the guidance that we've been giving for a couple of months now. Our early indicators would suggest that we would be down that in that 5 to 10% range on the total book. We'll have more stability on the group book, so that's a higher percentage as you think about the individual and the dual eligible populations that we'll see declines on. But we feel, you know, reasonably good about how the membership is coming in and that it would be within that range that we've been guiding investors to.

Speaker Change: As you think about ability and confidence in the bids, the bids are clearly designed to improve results next year.

Speaker Change: and maybe there's a couple of things I can I can talk you through at a high level just to give you a framework to think about that. The first is improvement in stars.

Speaker Change: And so, because of the contracts that we have that are now going to be four stars or better for 2025 payment year, that's going to be about an $800 million headwind, no matter what the baseline is.

Speaker Change: Excuse me, Tailwind. I keep doing that. It used to be a headwind and now it's going to be a tailwind next year. On the individual blocks of business, we have made deliberate benefit design changes to supplemental benefits, which will fundamentally change how these benefits function in 2025, which will also improve margins.

Speaker Change: Finally, we've both exited underperforming counties and we've pulled underperforming products that will impact nearly half a million members.

Speaker Change: Those changes should also improve profitability in 25, as many of those members will choose newly designed products that will have an improved margin profile.

Speaker Change: You know, we expect that those changes are going to drive margin expansion, and when we have a better understanding of what that membership mix looks like for 2025, as well as our 24th baseline, we'll be able to better provide specifics on the level of anticipated improvement next year.

Speaker Change: Lisa, this is David. Maybe just one additional follow-on here. I think one is we are feeling very good about the improvements that we've made going into 25, so the recognizing obviously the challenge in 24 we had we believe we made the appropriate course correction.

Speaker Change: And then as it relates to pharmacy, which was your last question, I think this is the unique opportunity of this enterprise.

Speaker Change: We the goal here is not to be surprised especially as it relates to to pharmacy costs We think we've anticipated and contemplated The changes both at IRA as well as the broader macro trends that we see within pharmacy and the goal here

Speaker Change: especially now with the addition of both Steve and Prem, we're going to see further integration of not just the pharmacy benefit integration, but more importantly, the medical pharmacy, which is a piece that obviously I think is driving some of the increased costs in the back of the ear.

Speaker Change: Thank you. As a reminder, we do ask that you please limit yourself to one question and one follow-up, but if you have any further to please rejoin the queue. We have our next question from Justin Lake with Wolf Research. Your line is open.

Justin Lake: Thanks. Good morning. First, just wanted to clarify the 4Q commentary, Tom, that you said is potentially up 700 basis points, or I'm getting to about 95.5% MLR. Does that include the 3Q PDR and the potential Medicare Advantage PDR you mentioned?

Speaker Change: And then more importantly, how should we think about framing 2024 run rate earnings into 2025?

Speaker Change: Trying to understand, your MLR looks like it's obviously a lot higher in the third quarter and going to be a lot higher in the fourth quarter. Do we need to run rate that back into the first half, so let's just say 75 cents of earnings?

Speaker Change: kind of decline just trying to understand the the run rate versus you know you're going to report a number for 2024 but what's the real run rate that we jump off of into 2025? Is there a framework to think about that? Thanks.

Speaker Change: of ASU.

Speaker Change: But let me walk you through, give you a little bit more commentary and color on what we outlined here. First, I think it's important to just continue to reiterate, we feel very good about our ability to achieve the guidance we gave last quarter on both the PCW and the health services segment.

Speaker Change: So the open question here is health care benefits.

Speaker Change: for our larger lines of business.

Speaker Change: The second quarter trend appears to be the high point, but the third quarter dates of service are still immature. So, there are three components to the scenario that we laid out.

Speaker Change: First, across all of our major business lines, we assumed that third quarter trends would develop unfavorably, moving them to the highest levels we've seen over the last few months, and then assuming that they persisted at those levels throughout the fourth quarter.

Speaker Change: Second, we assume we saw further deterioration in our risk adjustment accruals on our individual exchange business in the fourth quarter. Call it an additional point on gross revenue.

Speaker Change: Third, we made a provision that there could be some modest induced utilization, particularly in Medicare, as individuals looked at their changing benefits in 2025 and seek to utilize benefits that will no longer be available next year.

Speaker Change: You know, and then finally we noted the group Medicare trend levels that if they persisted at that level I just referenced that could cause us to take an additional PDR in the fourth quarter, but that will really depend on you know How what we think the baseline is for 24 and how it is that that's going to persist into 25 So more to come on that

Speaker Change: I would note, finally, our reserve balances through October, they have been modestly positive, but we continue to see pressure in the more recent dates of service, for example, the third quarter.

Speaker Change: Thank you. We now have Stephen Baxter with Wells Fargo. Please go ahead when you're ready.

Stephen Baxter: Yeah, hi, thanks, just a couple of quick ones. You did mention that in response to that question, it's important to differentiate.

Speaker Change: the incremental trend that's coming out of benefits that have already been restructured for 2025 versus more potentially core areas of utilization. So maybe could you help us?

Speaker Change: understand better what you saw in the third quarter. And then just on the PDR commentary for 2025, you're saying you potentially need one for group MA, but you're not saying you need one for individual MA or potentially the exchanges. Just wondering why or why not that would be the case. Thank you.

Speaker Change: Let me answer the second part first. So the way the PDRs are calculated is partially based on how those products are sold and so our individual Medicare products are.

Speaker Change: differently grouped than how our group Medicare products.

Speaker Change: are and as you can imagine the nature of the contracts in the group business tends to be multi-year and so there's less ability to make improvement year over year and so that business has a different profile going into 25 than the individual business in Medicare does or the individual exchange business does.

Speaker Change: You know, we haven't really talked a lot about the exchange business, but...

Speaker Change: You know, that's a $10 billion block of revenue in 2024 with over 1.9 million members. You know, as David noted, we unfortunately grew that business too fast.

Speaker Change: We're suffering significant losses in 24, mostly led by our SEP members. This pressure was compounded by unfavorable metal product mix, which skewed to certain geographies.

Speaker Change: You know, we have taken, as I believe we previously discussed, double-digit rate increases across this book for next year, and as a deliberate consequence of that rate action, we expect we could shrink that book by as much as 20 to 25 percent next year.

Speaker Change: So, those actions combined with some of the operational improvements that the teams are making on the ground should also help to improve performance next year, which is part of the reason that at this point we don't anticipate that we would need a PDR in that individual business.

Speaker Change: As it relates to trend, we have continued to see

Speaker Change: supplemental benefit trends be elevated throughout all of 2024 and that persisted.

Speaker Change: into the third quarter.

Speaker Change: where we've also seen trend pressure, as I noted in the prepared remarks, has been in all the usual suspects this year.

Speaker Change: It's been inpatient. It's been in outpatient. Although the types of procedures that we've seen have shifted somewhat, we continue to see pressure on things like medical pharmacy, particularly on some of the oncology drugs.

Speaker Change: And so, it's a lot of the same things that we have been talking about throughout the whole year. The piece that I was mentioning in terms of the bridge is there is a, you know,

Speaker Change: a large portion of that trend increase that is a function of some of the supplemental benefits that we have offered. And those have been fundamentally restructured next year for individual, you know, Medicare products. And we'll give you better insight as to what that was worth when we have a better sense as to how the mixes come out and what the baseline is for 24.

Speaker Change: And Stephen, this is David. Maybe just a quick follow on here. This is the third question on the Q4 jump off, and I think it's important to recognize that we know what the problems are.

Speaker Change: Clearly, we've stated them in the prepared remarks. We understand kind of the broader issues that are challenging the 24 performance. The good news is we're proactively addressing those, as you've seen, in terms of how we structure the product design and the benefits. You've seen changes in how we've structured our leadership teams.

Speaker Change: Seen changes in terms of how we structured our risk management and pricing controls. So we believe that we're on the path of actually getting to an improved performance. And so quickly we can move past 24 and into 25. I think the better we'll continue to be for the collective group.

Speaker Change: Thank you. We now have Michael Churney with Learink Partners. Please go ahead.

Speaker Change: Thank you. Bye. Bye.

Michael Churney: Good morning and thanks for all the color. Yeah, maybe I'll try and take this a different direction and talk about pharmacy services

Michael Churney: You talked about Tom next year being a bit below long-term plan. Can you break that down within the health services segment between emergency services versus the health delivery assets?

Michael Churney: specifically tied to pharmacy services, how are you thinking about both special utilization as well as the continued contribution of Cordavis as you sit here today thinking through where the jump-off point for Fiscal 25 again for the health services segment?

Michael Churney: Kingo.

Speaker Change: Thanks, Mike. As you think about the health services segment, we got a little bit of a slow start in 2024. But that business, you know, that team has done an exceptional job of really driving momentum, and we've seen that momentum accelerate into the second and into the third quarters, which has really given us a lot of confidence in the outlook as we think about this year. As we think about next year, I'd say, given that slow start, we don't want to get ahead of ourselves. And so, you know, while we're not providing formal guidance today, we want to make sure that we appropriately set expectations, given how that was a little bit choppy out of the gate last year.

Speaker Change: Thank you for your time. Thank you.

Speaker Change: If you look at the 25 year, we're actually heading into a really strong selling season. Tremendous amount of momentum as it relates to the success we've had on the biosimilar launch.

Michael Churney: I'm changing and disrupting the market as it relates to pricing models. The client satisfaction and member NPS scores are as high as they've been, so I believe just collectively this business is running really well and I still feel very strong about its continued performance into 2025.

Speaker Change: Thank you.

Michael Churney: Thanks for tuning in.

Michael Churney: We now have

Speaker Change: Josh Raskin with Neurofin Research. Your line is open.

Laurence McGrath: and the New York Times. I'm Laurence McGrath. We'll see you next time. Bye.

Josh Raskin: Hi, thanks. Good morning. Just a clarification on the PDR, Tom. So I want to make sure I understood what you said, that no PDR has been contemplated for 2025. So MA and HICS,

Laurence McGrath: lost money in totality in 24 and will be positive in 2025. I just want to make sure we got that right. And then more importantly, can you speak to your updated Medicare, both MA and PDP distribution strategy? And I'm specifically interested in your commission strategy with external brokers and feedback you guys are getting on that.

Speaker Change: Thanks, Josh. On the PDR, the PDR is a pretty esoteric accounting rule, and so it looks at...

Laurence McGrath: the business and looks at it on a variable cost basis.

Laurence McGrath: And as we look at and think about our projections for next year, with the improvements that we are expecting across those books, the only one that we think might be close to the line is the group Medicare business, which is why we highlighted that for investors. But I wouldn't take that to mean that we are necessarily going to be profitable, because you have to allocate out those fixed costs, which are fairly substantial as you think about the fixed costs associated with those two large businesses.

Speaker Change: As you think about our strategy for both MA and PDP, we are going to shrink membership in PDP.

Laurence McGrath: We do use a lot of broker channels. Only about 15% of what we do is actually from internal channels. The rest of it is from external channels where we have large, long, and, you know, established relationships.

Speaker Change: You know, we're generally very pleased with where it is that our early sales are coming out. We're obviously, throughout this process of open enrollment, we make tweaks.

Laurence McGrath: to that as we look at where geographies are coming in and think about where we want to grow and where we might not want to grow as quickly. But overall, where AEP is coming out as of the end of last week is very consistent with where we had mapped it, maybe a little bit of mixed difference, but generally in line with, in the aggregate, with where we had thought about it. And so we were pretty pleased with the performance to date.

Laurence McGrath: , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Laurence McGrath: We now have

Speaker Change: Elizabeth Anderson with Evercore ISI

Elizabeth Anderson: Hi guys, thanks so much for the question this morning. Maybe just one question about the PDR OPEX mechanics that you guys talked about in the third quarter, for the third quarter PDR. Does that, from an OPEX perspective, does that flip and become a positive to your numbers in the fourth quarter? That'd be my first question. And then secondarily, can you just maybe dig in a little bit more on the PCW strength? How do we expect sort of that cadence to change as we think about the pull forward from COVID and then any kind of seasonality you guys are thinking about for the fourth quarter? Thank you.

Speaker Change: Maybe I'll take the PDR mechanic and then Prem you can talk a little bit about the PCW strength.

Speaker Change: On the PDR mechanic, the way that this works is that you look at what the potential losses might be on a variable basis. You record the PDR, and really how you record it is that one of the first places you have to look

Speaker Change: is you have to look at any deferred acquisition costs that you have hung up on the balance sheet. And so you recruit for that, you take those down first. That means that while you're not really reversing a reserve, you don't have expense that you otherwise would have anticipated having in the fourth quarter. So it is an expense benefit and an MLR benefit. So the vast majority of that $1.1 billion will come back in the fourth quarter.

Speaker Change: And on the PCW strength, I'd say a few things. First and foremost, we had a really strong quarter.

Speaker Change: Part of that was driven by immunization season.

Elizabeth Anderson: coming sooner than we expected. It started in mid-August versus later in that month or early September, and we had a first market mover there. We were ready for that. Our teams were prepared. We've been preparing for that season for the most part of the year.

Speaker Change: The second piece, I would say, is around our core service levels continue to remain.

Laurence McGrath: very strong. We've continued to improve our MPS levels.

Laurence McGrath: are up, you know, hundreds of basis points year over year.

Laurence McGrath: And that's turning into what I would say a strong script growth as it relates to our pharmacy business now around 27.3% up

Laurence McGrath: you know, 70 plus basis points year over year. So another great example of the strong service driving script growth in our pharmacy segment of that business.

Speaker Change: And on the front story, as Tom alluded to, there was...

Laurence McGrath: you know, some front store pressure, but our front store business continues to improve, you know, in a difficult market, in a difficult market environment. And we continue to do the right things around focusing on gaining customers and increasing foot traffic on that business as we go into it and really kind of mitigating some of the challenges we had early in the year. So the PCW segment, really proud of.

Laurence McGrath: are results really proud of the leadership team and all the results that we've driven in that area and you know It's continued to be a strength of our business

Speaker Change: And this is David, maybe just to reinforce Prem's point here, obviously the retail sector has pressured lots of headwinds in this market, and if you look at

Laurence McGrath: What Prem and the team have been able to deliver and execute is really incredibly impressive. Share growth while you're contracting a footprint.

Laurence McGrath: service levels are up, and this is all despite, obviously, pressures around this sector. So I'm incredibly excited about Prem's expansion of his role and responsibility to take that same focus on execution and operational excellence into the broader business.

Speaker Change: Thank you. We now have Andrew Mock with Barclays.

Speaker Change: Please go ahead.

Andrew Mock: Hi, good morning. Wanted to follow up on Medicare Advantage margins with the lower margin level that you're seeing today. I was hoping you can give us an update on how you're thinking around the pace of MA margin improvement over the next.

Andrew Mock: Thank you.

Speaker Change: Let me answer that second part first, because the answer to that question is really primarily mathematical.

Speaker Change: Alright, so as you think about the IRA changes to the Part D program, significant dollars that were previously recorded as reinsurance.

Speaker Change: are now going to get recorded as premium, which increases the denominator of the calculation. So at constant dollars of margin, that change alone is significant to drive a 4% margin down into the threes.

Speaker Change: As you think about the longer term, it's a challenging question to answer.

Speaker Change: to be able to drive improvement in margin next year.

Speaker Change: We anticipate that we'll be able to continue to do that into 2026.

Speaker Change: and our star scores will help there, right? We had great stars performance. Two thirds of our members will be in four and a half star plans that will provide a little bit of additional tailwind as well.

Speaker Change: But we really need to understand what the rate environment looks like to be able to answer that question. But our goal would be to increase margins again in 2026 in that business.

Speaker Change: Just as it relates to the focus, obviously my near-term focus is driving and accelerating the performance of that business. So as Tom mentioned, the star tailwind will be very positive for both 25 and into 26.

Speaker Change: There will be a very strong focus on total cost of care, so as we know what the pricing and the benefits are for the risk that we're managing, to make sure we have the underlying clinical resources and total cost of care models to manage the risk appropriately.

Speaker Change: You'll see an acceleration of how we integrate the assets within this business to help us drive down the cost and improve the overall experience for the members that we're serving. So again, just reinforcing the fact that this is a really important product for our business.

Speaker Change: and one that we're going to have the collective enterprise focused on on execution.

Speaker Change: Thank you. We now have John Ransom with RJF, Llewellyn's Open.

John Ransom: Thank you.

John Ransom: Hey, good morning. Signify and Oak, are they tracking in line with your expectations? Do you think that trend will change in any way next year?

Speaker Change: Signify, is that a great year?

Speaker Change: As we noted, the volume was up, I think, 37 percent year-over-year inside the third quarter. That business has continued to perform very well. Oak Street overall has performed in line with the guidance that we gave at the earlier part of the year. You know, there are Medicare

Speaker Change: you know, focused business. And so they're not immune to some of the pressures that others have seen in that marketplace because of the nature of that membership. But we've been very pleased with how they've performed. They've, you know, maintained a risk adjustment headwind that's plus or minus a little bit below three percent.

Speaker Change: which we feel is a great first step given the first year of the implementation of V28. And we think that there could be some nice tailwinds in that business next year as we think about, you know, some of the changes that competitors and ourselves have made as we continue to grow our share of Aetna members inside those clinics.

Speaker Change: And just to reinforce the importance of both of those acquisitions, Oak Street, obviously,

Speaker Change: is managing the cost far better than the rest of our book. So the fact is the model works, and it works in an underserved market specifically for the population that's important to this business.

Speaker Change: and the integration between Aetna and Oak Street are improving. So we've had a 4x increase in the members since the acquisition. So I'm proving out the fact that when we put the collective efforts of the business

Speaker Change: We can't actually see performance same thing on signify. We've seen a 2x increase

Speaker Change: and the members served within Aetna. The goal here is obviously to use Signify as a platform. The sophistication and the technology that they've invested around the logistics and reaching members in their homes, it is a platform which we can certainly build beyond just the in-home assessment. So that will be the message and the focus of.

Speaker Change: of the business to continue to serve people both in the care delivery setting as well as in the home, and we believe we have the appropriate assets to be able to execute that.

Speaker Change: Thank you.

Speaker Change: Learn more at www.plastics-car.com

Speaker Change: Our final question comes from Brian Tinkwell with Jeffreys, please go ahead.

Brian Tinkwell: Hey, good morning and thanks for the update on the cost advantage program. So just curious what those discussions have been like and how do the contracts shake out in terms of what you expected pricing structures to look like versus what the 50% of the book looks like. And, you know, how do you think about the opportunity or the ability to increase that number before we get to January 1? Thanks.

Speaker Change: Yeah, so first and foremost, as you recall, last year we launched CostVantage with the very intentional reason to solve one of the biggest industry challenges we had around reimbursement pressure. And so we made really good progress, as David and Tom alluded to in the prepared remarks.

Speaker Change: We have over 50% of our clients in the program. We expect to have our commercial book, 100% of our commercial book signed.

Speaker Change: you know, by the end of this year. I'm really excited about what it brings to the marketplace and how we end some of the cross-subsidization.

Speaker Change: that exist in pharmacy as it relates to this. So, you know, if we continue to make really good progress as it relates to.

Speaker Change: The financial outlook from Cost Management will come back to you early next year with what we're seeing, but we continue to see really strong

Speaker Change: performance, as I mentioned earlier, in our retail pharmacy business.

Speaker Change: We're really excited about what Cost Manage will bring to the marketplace and how it's going to...

Speaker Change: transform the way we price pharmaceuticals in this country, and lastly, the benefits that it brings to consumers as well. So, more to come, but at this point, I would say we continue to make really great progress here across the board of moving the industry.

Speaker Change: So I'd just follow on to Prem's comment about cost advantage.

Speaker Change: The complexity of pharmaceutical pricing in this country, this is obviously one of the paths in which to address the confusion, the complexity of how drugs actually are priced at the consumer level. So, Prem's move in the retail setting combined with the true cost

Speaker Change: drive within the PBM, we believe is a concerted effort to address what we know is a headline around the confusion, the complexity of the pricing.

Speaker Change: This elimination of cross-subsidization, the ability to get to a more stable and less variable pricing strategy will help us solve what we know is a headline risk and more importantly allow us to serve our members and our clients more effectively.

Speaker Change: So, with that, this ends the call, and before closing here, I just want to thank you for all joining the call today. I'm incredibly excited and humbled by the opportunity and the potential of this combined enterprise.

Speaker Change: We have clear line of sight into the issues, and a plan is in place to address them. We look forward to providing updates on our progress going forward. And I also just want to thank again the 300,000 colleagues that help us serve our customers and our patients day in and day out. So thank you for that support.

Speaker Change: Thank you all for joining today's conference call with TVS Health. I can confirm today's call has now concluded. Please enjoy the rest of your day and you may now disconnect from the call.

Q3 2024 CVS Health Corp Earnings Call

Demo

CVS Health

Earnings

Q3 2024 CVS Health Corp Earnings Call

CVS

Wednesday, November 6th, 2024 at 1:00 PM

Transcript

No Transcript Available

No transcript data is available for this event yet. Transcripts typically become available shortly after an earnings call ends.

Want AI-powered analysis? Try AllMind AI →