UnitedHealth Group expects continued growth in revenue and earnings next year despite what its CEO called a significant "price cut" in government payments for seniors in the company's Medicare Advantage health plans.
Federal officials announced in March a series of changes to improve the accuracy of government payments to Medicare health plans. The decision came as part of their annual update to rates in the program, where seniors opt to receive government benefits from private managed care companies.
Taken together, the changes will have a "material impact" on revenue at the insurance division of Minnetonka-based UnitedHealth Group, said Andrew Witty, the company's chief executive officer, during a Wednesday investor conference.
"Yet here we are today, standing up and saying despite that change — despite that impact — we are committed to the kind of earnings growth rate over the next 12 months that you would expect from us, even if there hadn't been a rate notice cut," Witty said.
On Wednesday, executives forecast that revenue next year will grow by about $30 billion, or roughly 8%, to between $400 billion and $403 billion.
UnitedHealth Group is Minnesota's largest company by revenue. In addition to operating UnitedHealthcare, which is one of the nation's largest health insurers, the company has a fast-growing division for health care services called Optum.
For more than a decade, more seniors have been opting for Medicare Advantage plans and UnitedHealthcare is the largest seller of the coverage.
"We focused on how we can protect members and their benefits, we focused on how we can take more cost and efficiency into our organization and we focused on how we can double down on eliminating waste and unnecessary care in the health system more generally," Witty said.