DAILY UPDATE: Amazon Pharmacy, Healthcare Spending Boom, Companies and the Bi-Hybrid Markets

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Amazon Pharmacy announced on June 18 that, effective immediately, its RxPass medication delivery service will be available to more than 50 million Medicare beneficiaries, a move the company says could save up to $2 billion annually for the federal health insurance program.

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Here’s where the major benchmarks ended:

  • The S&P 500 index fell 8.55 points (0.2%) to 5,464.62, up 0.6% for the week; the Dow Jones Industrial Average® ($DJI) gained 15.57 points (0.04%) to 39,150.33, up 1.5% for the week; the NASDAQ Composite® ($COMP) shed 32.23 points (0.2%) to 17,689.36, little changed for the week.
  • The 10-year Treasury note yield (TNX) was little changed at 4.255%.
  • The CBOE Volatility Index® (VIX) dipped 0.06 to 13.22.

What’s up

  • Sarepta Therapeutics soared 30.14% thanks to FDA approval of Elevidys, its new Duchenne muscular dystrophy treatment.
  • Zealand Pharma rose 18.62% after Phase 1b trial results revealed its new weight-loss drug could compete with Ozempic.
  • Asana jumped 14.95% on the news that its board has approved a share repurchase program of up to $150 million of its own stock.
  • CarMax shares rose 0.37% after the company reported first-quarter earnings. The number isn’t big, but the performance is impressive considering the used car company posted a 33% decline in profits.
  • Hertz Global popped 15.95% after the company announced it was raising the size of its bond offering to $1 billion as it looks to update its fleet of rental cars.

What’s down

  • Nvidia fell another 3.22% today as the sell off continued, with investors taking profits after a record run higher.
  • Smith & Wesson Brands dropped 12.87% after the gun maker beat earnings forecasts but announced that next quarter’s sales will be lower than expected.
  • LendingTree slid 2.48% after a Bloomberg report revealed that hackers are auctioning off stolen customer data.
  • Palantir fell 6.78% after the company earned an analyst downgrade for its “gluttonous valuation,” a phrase you never want to hear as an investor.
  • Bitcoin mining stocks took a hit today, selling off after popping higher yesterday after bitcoin prices rallied. Marathon Digital Holdings dropped 7.02%, Riot Platforms fell 8.35%, and CleanSpark sank 9.81%.

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With a record number of people insured and seeking healthcare services post-pandemic, US health spend growth is outpacing GDP growth, and is expected to keep doing so through 2032, according to a June 12 report from actuaries at the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS). By 2032, CMS actuaries project healthcare spending will total $7.7 trillion and make up 19.7% of total US GDP, compared to $4.8 trillion and 17.6% of GDP in 2023.

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Are Soaring Health-Care Costs Hurting the U.S. Economy?

Are Soaring Health-Care Costs Hurting the U.S. Economy?

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By Dan Timotic CFA

About 8% of U.S. household spending went toward health care in 2015, up from 5.8% in 2007. Even though the growth of nationwide health-care spending has slowed, the cost burden is falling more heavily on consumers.1

More than 118 million people qualify for coverage through government programs such as Medicare, which serves individuals age 65 and older and the disabled, or Medicaid, which provides care for the poor. Still, more than 55% of the U.S. population rely on health insurance provided by an employer.2

The health-care landscape has changed over the last decade, but some economists believe uncontained costs still pose a threat to broader economic growth. Here’s a closer look at recent trends, and why it’s more important than ever to be an informed health-care consumer.

Public Spending

Growth in U.S. health-care spending has outpaced total economic growth over the past five decades. In 2014, health-care expenditures accounted for about 17.5% of GDP, up from 5.6% in 1965.3 Though major advances in medical technology have contributed to spending growth, they have also led to better health and well-being overall.4

Public-sector spending has grown more quickly than private spending, largely due to an aging population, rising Medicare enrollment, and the expansion of Medicaid. The share of total spending by Medicare and Medicaid increased from 6.8% in 1966 to 36.8% in 2014.5

ACA Under Way

The Affordable Care Act created state-based exchanges where self-employed individuals, part-time workers, and others without access to group coverage can buy private health insurance. Consumers can compare plans online, and families with incomes up to 400% of the federal poverty level may be eligible for tax credits that reduce premiums. As income rises, subsidies decrease. In 2016, about 85% of the 12.7 million individuals who purchased coverage from the Health Insurance Marketplace received a subsidy.6

Since 2014, all citizens and legal residents have been required to have “minimum essential” health coverage or pay a penalty. The health insurance mandate was intended to add healthy individuals to the insurance pool and counterbalance a provision that prohibits insurers from excluding people with pre-existing conditions. As a result, the uninsured rate has decreased from 13.3% in 2013 to 9.1% in 2015.7

division-of-population-health-logo_crop

Workplace Plans

Employers have been paying around 80% of individual health insurance premiums, but plan changes, including higher deductibles and coinsurance rates, have shifted costs to workers who use health-care services.8

For example, the average deductible for individual coverage in an employer-provided health plan was $1,318 in 2015, up from $917 in 2010. A deductible is the amount the patient must pay before the insurance payments kick in. Health insurance deductibles grew 67% between 2010 and 2015, almost three times as fast as premiums and about seven times as fast as wages and inflation.9

If health insurance premiums continue to rise, it is conceivable that employers could pass more of the costs on to workers by raising premiums and coinsurance or limiting wage increases.

Accounting for Costs

It’s estimated that total U.S. health- care spending increased 5.5% to reach $3.2 trillion in 2015, and growth is projected to average 5.8% annually through 2025. Cost increases have moderated after averaging nearly 8% annually over the previous two decades, but they are still increasing much more than overall inflation.10 Prescription drug prices have been rising at a faster pace. According to one drug-benefits manager, the average price of brand-name drugs rose 16.2% in 2015, surging 98.2% since 2011.11

The research and development of breakthrough medical technologies is undoubtedly a valuable endeavor. Even so, experts say newer and more expensive treatments are not always more effective than existing lower-cost options. It has also been suggested that the fee-for-service payment model — in which insurers reimburse providers based on the number and type of treatments — may drive inefficiency and unnecessary spending by rewarding the quantity rather than the quality of care.12

Economic Impact

Even with insurance coverage, an illness or injury can cause financial pain for a middle-class family with limited disposable income. The prospect of medical bills may cause some families to skip or postpone necessary care, and those who do seek treatment have less money available to spend on other basic needs. A Brookings Institution analysis found that middle-income household spending on health care increased nearly 25% between 2007 and 2014, while spending on restaurant meals and clothing dropped significantly (–13.4% and –18.8%, respectively).13

Health spending across the economy is expected to accelerate and reach 20% of GDP by 2025, which could put additional strain on consumers, employers, and the federal budget.14

Obama Care

Open Enrollment

This is the time of year when employers introduce changes to their benefit offerings, so choosing — and then using — your health plan carefully could help you save money. Before you sign up for a specific plan, consider the extent to which your prescription drugs are covered, estimate your potential out-of-pocket costs based on last year’s usage, and check to see whether your doctors are in the insurer’s network.

Citations:

1, 8, 11, 13) The Wall Street Journal, August 25, 2016 2, 7) U.S. Census Bureau, 2016 3, 5, 10, 14) Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, 2016 4, 12) The Brookings Institution, 2015 6) U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, 2016 9) Kaiser Family Foundation, 2015. 

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