Interesting...

WVUCOOPER

Redshirt
Dec 10, 2002
55,556
40
31
(Reuters) - Amazon.com Inc, Berkshire Hathaway and JPMorgan Chase & Co will form a healthcare company aimed at cutting costs for their U.S. employees, they said on Tuesday, sending shares in the broad healthcare sector sharply lower.

The independent company will be “free from profit-making incentives and constraints,” they said. It will initially focus on technology to provide “simplified, high-quality and transparent healthcare” at a “reasonable” cost for its more than 500,000 employees in the United States, they said.

Investors in the healthcare sector have been nervous about technology giant Amazon becoming a competitor and eating away at profits, just as it has done in the retail sector.

Amazon has been looking at the pharmacy business and pharmacy distribution, according to numerous media reports and Wall Street analysts.

With Amazon (AMZN.O) teaming up with JPMorgan (JPM.N>, a leading financial company, and Berkshire <(BRKa.N), the third largest public company in the world, the behemoth online retailer could broaden the scope of its efforts to affect U.S. health insurers.

The announcement knocked about $19 billion off UnitedHealth Group Inc’s (UNH.N) market capitalization in premarket trading.

U.S. healthcare spending increases each year faster than inflation, and in 2017, accounted for 18 percent of the U.S. economy.

Corporations, which sponsor healthcare plans for more than 160 million Americans, and the U.S. government are trying to cut costs.

“Investors have continually asked what unexpected development might spoil the strong investor sentiment toward managed care. Unfortunately, this seems tailor-made to fit the bill,” BMO Capital Markets analyst Matt Borsch said in a research note.

Shares in health insurers UnitedHealth, Anthem Inc (ANTM.N) and Cigna Corp (CI.N) all fell 5 percent premarket. Drugstore operators CVS Health Corp (CVS.N) and Walgreen Boots Alliance (WBA.O) as well as pharmacy benefits manager Express Scripts Holding Co (ESRX.O) dropped between 5 percent to 7 percent. Drug distributors Cardinal Health (CAH.N) and McKesson (MCK.N) were down more than 4 percent.

The plan, currently in the early stages, will be spearheaded by Berkshire investment officer Todd Combs, JPMorgan managing director Marvelle Berchtold and Amazon senior vice president Beth Galetti.

“The ballooning costs of healthcare act as a hungry tapeworm on the American economy,” said Berkshire Hathaway Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Warren Buffett. “Our group does not come to this problem with answers. But we also do not accept it as inevitable.”
 

COOL MAN

Sophomore
Jun 19, 2001
34,696
109
63
I have no clue as to what extent this effort can ultimately succeed; but it's nice to see a consortium with seeds and financial clout actually take on the insurers and drug management firms. Might be the first time ever that those companies had any reason at all to sweat.

Meanwhile, I wonder what a conference room with Jeff Bezos and Warren Buffett at the same table is like.....
 

Airport

All-American
Dec 12, 2001
86,250
6,929
113
(Reuters) - Amazon.com Inc, Berkshire Hathaway and JPMorgan Chase & Co will form a healthcare company aimed at cutting costs for their U.S. employees, they said on Tuesday, sending shares in the broad healthcare sector sharply lower.

The independent company will be “free from profit-making incentives and constraints,” they said. It will initially focus on technology to provide “simplified, high-quality and transparent healthcare” at a “reasonable” cost for its more than 500,000 employees in the United States, they said.

Investors in the healthcare sector have been nervous about technology giant Amazon becoming a competitor and eating away at profits, just as it has done in the retail sector.

Amazon has been looking at the pharmacy business and pharmacy distribution, according to numerous media reports and Wall Street analysts.

With Amazon (AMZN.O) teaming up with JPMorgan (JPM.N>, a leading financial company, and Berkshire <(BRKa.N), the third largest public company in the world, the behemoth online retailer could broaden the scope of its efforts to affect U.S. health insurers.

The announcement knocked about $19 billion off UnitedHealth Group Inc’s (UNH.N) market capitalization in premarket trading.

U.S. healthcare spending increases each year faster than inflation, and in 2017, accounted for 18 percent of the U.S. economy.

Corporations, which sponsor healthcare plans for more than 160 million Americans, and the U.S. government are trying to cut costs.

“Investors have continually asked what unexpected development might spoil the strong investor sentiment toward managed care. Unfortunately, this seems tailor-made to fit the bill,” BMO Capital Markets analyst Matt Borsch said in a research note.

Shares in health insurers UnitedHealth, Anthem Inc (ANTM.N) and Cigna Corp (CI.N) all fell 5 percent premarket. Drugstore operators CVS Health Corp (CVS.N) and Walgreen Boots Alliance (WBA.O) as well as pharmacy benefits manager Express Scripts Holding Co (ESRX.O) dropped between 5 percent to 7 percent. Drug distributors Cardinal Health (CAH.N) and McKesson (MCK.N) were down more than 4 percent.

The plan, currently in the early stages, will be spearheaded by Berkshire investment officer Todd Combs, JPMorgan managing director Marvelle Berchtold and Amazon senior vice president Beth Galetti.

“The ballooning costs of healthcare act as a hungry tapeworm on the American economy,” said Berkshire Hathaway Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Warren Buffett. “Our group does not come to this problem with answers. But we also do not accept it as inevitable.”
That is interesting. Wonder why they waited until now and didn't try this 4 years ago?
 

op2

All-Conference
Mar 16, 2014
11,681
1,285
103
I saw that article too and considered posting it. The thing that struck me was when it said that the shares of health care companies when down on the news. That tells me that the people putting their money where their mouth is think that someone can do better than the current companies are doing.
 

Airport

All-American
Dec 12, 2001
86,250
6,929
113
(Reuters) - Amazon.com Inc, Berkshire Hathaway and JPMorgan Chase & Co will form a healthcare company aimed at cutting costs for their U.S. employees, they said on Tuesday, sending shares in the broad healthcare sector sharply lower.

The independent company will be “free from profit-making incentives and constraints,” they said. It will initially focus on technology to provide “simplified, high-quality and transparent healthcare” at a “reasonable” cost for its more than 500,000 employees in the United States, they said.

Investors in the healthcare sector have been nervous about technology giant Amazon becoming a competitor and eating away at profits, just as it has done in the retail sector.

Amazon has been looking at the pharmacy business and pharmacy distribution, according to numerous media reports and Wall Street analysts.

With Amazon (AMZN.O) teaming up with JPMorgan (JPM.N>, a leading financial company, and Berkshire <(BRKa.N), the third largest public company in the world, the behemoth online retailer could broaden the scope of its efforts to affect U.S. health insurers.

The announcement knocked about $19 billion off UnitedHealth Group Inc’s (UNH.N) market capitalization in premarket trading.

U.S. healthcare spending increases each year faster than inflation, and in 2017, accounted for 18 percent of the U.S. economy.

Corporations, which sponsor healthcare plans for more than 160 million Americans, and the U.S. government are trying to cut costs.

“Investors have continually asked what unexpected development might spoil the strong investor sentiment toward managed care. Unfortunately, this seems tailor-made to fit the bill,” BMO Capital Markets analyst Matt Borsch said in a research note.

Shares in health insurers UnitedHealth, Anthem Inc (ANTM.N) and Cigna Corp (CI.N) all fell 5 percent premarket. Drugstore operators CVS Health Corp (CVS.N) and Walgreen Boots Alliance (WBA.O) as well as pharmacy benefits manager Express Scripts Holding Co (ESRX.O) dropped between 5 percent to 7 percent. Drug distributors Cardinal Health (CAH.N) and McKesson (MCK.N) were down more than 4 percent.

The plan, currently in the early stages, will be spearheaded by Berkshire investment officer Todd Combs, JPMorgan managing director Marvelle Berchtold and Amazon senior vice president Beth Galetti.

“The ballooning costs of healthcare act as a hungry tapeworm on the American economy,” said Berkshire Hathaway Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Warren Buffett. “Our group does not come to this problem with answers. But we also do not accept it as inevitable.”
I looked up wellpoint, I have 296 shares and it had lost 5%. I told my son that if he went to dental school, I would give him the stock to help pay for school.
 

Airport

All-American
Dec 12, 2001
86,250
6,929
113
Sounds like this is all Obama's fault.
No, it was bershires announcement. Hey, I have no problem with business involvement in a problem. Government created a worse problem by writing a 2000 page law.
 

Airport

All-American
Dec 12, 2001
86,250
6,929
113
No. Actually just look at those companies under Obama. Massive, massive growth.
HA,HA, massive employment? No, just laying off workers, making people work fewer hours but the companies did what companies do, layoff workers and make more profits.
 

Airport

All-American
Dec 12, 2001
86,250
6,929
113
lol [roll]
Better business climate and what's good for business is good for America. All those companies were just waiting for a real American to become president not some muslim loving, communist loving, community organizer, white hater, paper hanger.
 

moe

Junior
May 29, 2001
32,848
279
83
Better business climate and what's good for business is good for America. All those companies were just waiting for a real American to become president not some muslim loving, communist loving, community organizer, white hater, paper hanger.
 

op2

All-Conference
Mar 16, 2014
11,681
1,285
103
Pretty obvious all those corporations wanted to do it when Obama was president, wasn't it? :chairshot:

I saw a clip of Jeff Daniels speaking in a serious movie recently and I couldn't take it seriously because all I heard was the voice of the character in Dumb and Dumber. That was a really good movie. Flush, you bastard!
 

Shirley Knott

Redshirt
May 26, 2017
12,831
0
0
Better business climate and what's good for business is good for America. All those companies were just waiting for a real American to become president not some muslim loving, communist loving, community organizer, white hater, paper hanger.
Take away government from business matters and you get more efficient...become profitable and expect government interference...Wash Rinse and repeat...