Health care stocks rise after Dems drop public option

By Raw Story
Wednesday, December 9th, 2009 -- 9:20 am
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unitedhealth logo Health care stocks rise after Dems drop public optionFrom Reuters:

Shares of U.S. health insurers rose on Wednesday after efforts to overhaul the health system moved away from creating a government-run insurance plan long viewed as damaging to the industry.

However, gains may have been held back as analysts said new measures that would expand the Medicare government plan to younger adults and require insurers to spend a certain amount of premiums on medical costs presented new potential risks.

Senate Democratic healthcare negotiators agreed late on Tuesday to replace a government insurance option with a scaled-back non-profit plan.

The S&P Managed Healthcare index (^GSPHMO - News) of larger U.S. health insurers rose 1.3 percent, compared to a 0.6 percent drop for the broader S&P 500 index (^SPX - News). UnitedHealth Group (NYSE:UNH - News) increased 1.7 percent, Aetna Inc (NYSE:AET - News) rose 1.3 percent and Humana Inc (NYSE:HUM - News) climbed 1.1 percent.

Story continues below...

Healthcare stocks plunged after Obama's election and discussion of healthcare reform, but have rallied from recent lows.

More here.

WASHINGTON – After days of secret talks, Senate Democrats tentatively agreed Tuesday night to drop a government-run insurance option from sweeping health care legislation, several officials said, a concession to party moderates whose votes are critical to passage of President Barack Obama's top domestic priority.

In its place, officials said Democrats had tentatively settled on a private insurance arrangement to be supervised by the federal agency that oversees the system through which lawmakers purchase coverage. Additionally, the emerging agreement calls for Medicare to be opened to uninsured Americans beginning at age 55, a significant expansion of the large government health care program that currently serves the 65-and-over population.

At a hastily called evening news conference in the Capitol, Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., declined to provide details of what he described as a "broad agreement" between liberals and moderates on an issue that has plagued Democrats' efforts to pass health care legislation from the outset.

With it, he added, the end is in sight for passage of the legislation that Congress has labored over for months.

The officials who described the details of the closed-door negotiations did so on condition of anonymity, saying they were not authorized to discuss them publicly.

At its core, the legislation would expand health care to millions who lack it, ban insurance companies from denying coverage on the basis of pre-existing medical conditions and rein in the rise of health care spending nationally.

The developments followed a vote on the Senate floor earlier in the day in which abortion opponents failed to inject tougher restrictions into sweeping health care bill, and Democratic leaders labored to make sure fallout from the issue didn't hamper the drive to enact legislation. The vote was 54-45.

Taken together, the day's developments underscored the complexity that confronts the administration and Reid as they seek the 60 votes needed to overcome Republican opposition and pass a bill by Christmas.

Despite their reluctance, some senators had talked openly and in detail earlier in the day about the progress of the negotiations.

The provision in the legislation to be dropped under the emerging agreement provides for a government-run insurance option to be available to consumers, with individual states permitted to drop out. Liberals have long sought such as arrangement, as a means of forcing competition on insurance companies.

One participant in the talks, Sen. Tom Harkin, D-Iowa, told reporters he didn't like the deal, but he added, "I'm going to support it to the hilt" in hopes of securing passage of the health care bill.

Another senator involved, Sen. Russ Feingold, D-Wis., issued a statement saying, "I do not support proposals that would replace the public option in the bill with a purely private approach. We need to have some competition for the insurance industry to keep rates down and save taxpayer dollars." But he did not rule out voting for the measure.

In his comments to reporters, Reid said the emerging compromise "includes a public option and will help ensure the American people win in two ways: one, insurance companies will face more competition, and two, the American people will have more choices."

It wasn't clear what he meant by a "public option," the Medicare expansion or another as yet unknown element.

It was unclear, for example, what fallback steps would be included in case private insurance companies declined to participate in the nationwide plan envisioned to be overseen by the Office of Personnel Management. One possibility was for the agency to set up a government-run plan, either national in scope or on a state-by-state basis, but no confirmation was available.

Under the tentative agreement, liberals lost their bid to expand Medicaid, the federal-state program that provides health care for the poor, elderly and disabled. But they prevailed on the Medicare expansion, and the negotiators appeared ready to maintain a separate health care program for children until 2013, two years longer than the bill currently calls for, according to officials familiar with the details.

Additionally, there was consensus support for a requirement long backed by Sen. Jay Rockefeller, D-W.Va., and other liberals for insurance companies to spend at least 90 percent of their premium income providing benefits, a step that supporters argue effectively limits their spending on advertising, salaries, promotional efforts and profits.

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Story comments are below...

  • burnsrunner
    But there is no progress. Why all of the meetings and discussion. We all know what we need to help us with our health care, but nothing is changing.

    There are great resources out there for this purpose. Bend the Health Care Trend is a great example.
    http://www.strategicvisionpublishing.com/about-...

    This guide by Mark S. Gaunya and Jennifer A. Borislow, talks about CDHP's. The premise when consumers are engaged and empowered to make informed, responsible, and cost-conscious decisions about their lifestyle and healthcare spending, they will be healthier and happier which in turn will help drive down the rapid rise in health care spending.
  • AF
    George W. Bush ruined healthcare. He basically let private insurance companies take over the industry. That being said, we've got to irradiate them now while they're stage 1A, or they'll continue to grow and disseminate throughout the bloodstream, metastasizing through various organs like the drug companies spreading their vermin throughout the halls of congress. Healthcare's biggest player's market cap is but 1/5th of big pharma's right now. Like the wolf protecting its home, kill the enemy cubs while they're young! (But of course, this killing analogy should not extend to the actual treatment of Americans, who should be left on respirators until they die in the 130s.)
  • jimbo701
    Lets keep this in perspective. You can't blame the entire democratic party for this. Its the Blue Dog democrats that fucked things up and they should be tossed back to the GOP.

    Any congressmen that fought against the public option while simultaneously recieving money from the private insurance lobby is nothing more than an employee for the private insurance industry. The insurance industry should simply send them a W-2 to make it official.

    What bothers me is that whatever restrictions are placed on private insurers, they will continue to try to wiggle, squirm, cajole, demand, beg their way out of them and gradually over time will be back to the same bullshit as before. Throw in a GOP administration and even the small gains that were made will be lost.
  • Kevin
    People, this country is Fascist controlled and will always benefit the corporations as long as our "leaders" are bought and owned, aka "WHORES". Banks, big oil, drug company's, war profitering corps, etc. We just continue to sink deeper and deeper. FORGET the dems, as they are owned as well. Perpetual war???? Get a clue. We are done as a "democratic" country. welcome to the Fascist states of aMERICA!!! WAKE UP!!
  • donofcali
    Isn't this clear evidence that the bill is bad? The whole point is to reduce the profits that these parasites extract from health care. If the insurance companies stocks go up, that means they are not going to lose profit margins.

    All these useless dems cozying up to bullshit compromise (e.g., "trigger") does not help my anger management issue.
  • damixaustex
    I've watched the health insurance stocks every day during this discussion. It's been interesting to see them sometimes rise and fall PRIOR to announcements of developments in the negotiations. It's made me wonder if some of these Congressmen or their aids have been calling their brokers BEFORE they go on TV and announce changes.
  • jimbo701
    Of course they do.
  • enorceht
    This election year and for any piece of mail received from any politician (accept the ones that meet my high standard of requirements such as Nader, Kucinich etc.) they will get that piece of mail returned with a sticker on it saying:

    You can take this piece of propaganda paid for by the Corporations you work for and send it to someone who cares, because I don’t care what you tell me you will be doing for ME, I know you will only be interested in taking care of the only constituent you care about – Corporations, Lobbyists, and rich fat cats that can pay to get you into office so you can do their bidding.
  • TomDegan
    The public option is obviously as dead as a doornail. My advice to the progressives is to take what they can get now.

    I don't know what kind of health care reform will come out of this session, but I strongly suspect it won't be much. There is, however a silver lining behind this very dark cloud. I am reminded of the Civil Rights Act of 1957. Don't be embarrassed if you've never heard of it, there really isn't a hell of a lot to remember about it; a mere pittance, really - a scrap of leftovers tossed out to "American Negros" (in the parlance of the age) in order to appease them. But it made the passing of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - the one we remember - all the more easier seven years later.

    We'll live to fight another day.

    http://www.tomdegan.blogspot.com

    Tom Degan
  • donofcali
    I strongly disagree. The dems should put in a strong public option and force a fillibuster.

    All while the fillibusters are happening, and the republicons (and blue shit dems) are reading from telephone books, they can be shown on CSPAN looking like the scum that they are.

    And Liberal media can simultaneously run non-stop broadcasts of the personal tragedy stories of Americans in these fillibustering republicon's districts who have been bankrupted and lives destroyed by the health insurance industry.
  • winski
    IF the Public Option goes away and is NOT REPLACED by something of a different name, then Reid has FAILED...Obama has FAILED and the Nation has failed. This, by no means, infers that the re-no-licans or the conservadems have won..they failed the worst by keeping their collective heads-up-the-arses of the insurance companies and their own bankers to protect their bribes....

    It's always been about THEIR money...
  • really?
    failed? he is doing exactly what they planned to do. the people that call themselves democrats and liberals are the ones that failed for voting for these liars.

    you stupid democrats/liberals did this to us because you were too stupid and lazy to read what these jackasses were actually saying and instead listened to CNBC and CNN's lies.
  • BigBearCO
    I am a life long liberal democrat and I will never vote for the Democratic Party again. The Democratic Party deserves to loose control of Congress next year and I predict they will.

    How dare they mandate American citizens to support the corrupt and completely broken private health insurance industry. I will go to jail before I am forced to purchase an unnecessary and evil product from the corrupt health insurance industry.

    Congress needs to start working for the people and stop taking bribe from private corporations.
  • overdoneputaforkinit
    I'm going to emigrate to a country where I can get health care or afford health care. Spain? Portugal? UK? What is recommended? Also, if One-World-Government run by The Illuminati were to bring universal health care to the US, maybe it's not a bad thing!
  • thx1138a
    .
    SADAAM LOVING FREEDOM FRIES FRENCH HAVE #1 HEALTHCARE IN WORLD

    -- U.S. Ranked #37 In Healthcare But #1 In War Profiteering And Legalized Torture --

    -- U.S. Also Ranked #1 For Imprisoning Citizens And #2 In Executions Behind China --

    -- Texas GOP Working Hard To Overtake Chinese Execution Numbers --
    .
  • BigBearCO
    This bill does absolutely nothing to control costs yet mandates that every American purchase private heath insurance. Our government is completely controlled by corporate special interests. This is a terrible terrible law for the American people but a great boon for the insurance industry.
  • dennycrane
    .......and when the stocks go up, it doesn't do a damn thing to the average "joe."
  • damixaustex
    If only that were true.
    Insurance company stocks are a favorite for investment groups like teacher retirement systems and public workers.

    It's part of what's wrong with publicly held "private" insurance. There's a lot at stake when legislation affects their profits, which fuels arguments against eradicating them.
  • samhoustonTX
    Dem politicians are moving to their new base -- the rich who are willing to play ball with the newly elected popular politicians.

    Time to move to the Green Party and never again vote for a Dem (or GOP) candidate.
  • Hologram5
    Time to vote all these assclowns out of office. If they aren't going to listen to the public that VOTED THEM INTO OFFICE, then they need to be dismissed. They are voting for corporate America not public America.
  • thelonegunman
    great job Mumbles (the so-called 'leader' of the MAJORITY party in the senate) on the great-giveaway to your corporate masters... and caving in on what the MAJORITY of THE PEOPLE wanted: a public option... but then, you and your peers aren't representing the people - you're representing the interests of your corporate contributors (i.e., masters)
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