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Monday, July 29, 2019

Trump Proposes Making Hospitals Disclose Discounts to Insurers

Hospitals would have to disclose the discounted prices they negotiate with insurance companies under a Trump administration rule that could upend the $1 trillion hospital industry by revealing rates long guarded as trade secrets.
Hospitals that fail to share the discounted prices in an online form could be fined up to $300 a day, according to information on the proposal viewed by The Wall Street Journal. The price-disclosure requirements would cover all the more than 6,000 hospitals that accept Medicare.
Comments on the proposal would be due in September and, if completed, the rule would take effect in January.
Hospitals would have to disclose the rates for services and treatment that they have negotiated with individual insurance companies such as Aetna Inc., Cigna Corp. and Anthem Inc. under the proposal released Monday. The Trump administration is also working on initiatives that could compel insurers to disclose their rates, part of a push to publicize costs that is likely to spur lawsuits and sharp resistance from the industry.
The initiative represents the Trump administration’s growing effort to shift away from rolling back the Affordable Care Act rollback and put its own stamp on health care instead. Central to that strategy is the notion that more price transparency will inject greater competition into the market and lower costs.
“It’s very significant. It’s a turning point in health care and a turning point to free market in health care,” Seema Verma, administrator of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, said in an interview. “It hasn’t been a competitive free-market system.”
The initiative contrasts sharply with proposals by some leading Democratic presidential contenders who say Medicare for All will drive down costs by lowering administrative overhead, curbing spending and leveraging the federal government’s negotiating clout to drive down prices.
Industry groups have argued that mandatory price disclosure could push up costs if hospitals see competitors are getting higher payments and demand the same. They say the federal government is overstepping its statutory authority and interfering in private contracts between insurers and hospitals. The contracts are generally bound by confidentiality agreements.
Tom Nickels, executive vice president of the American Hospital Association, has said consumers care more about their expected out-of-pocket costs.
“Disclosing negotiated rates between insurers and hospitals could undermine the choices available in the private market,” he told the Journal in March, when the White House was considering initiatives on price disclosure. “While we support transparency, this approach misses the mark.”
The proposed rule is estimated to cost hospitals around $6 million. It would affect hospitals as well as their subsidiaries, including outpatient health clinics.
Hospitals must already post their list prices for services. The administration’s proposal would expand that requirement to include gross charges before discounts as well as the insurer-specific negotiated charges for all items and services. The charges would have to be linked to the name of the insurer.
The data would have to be displayed in a machine-readable format so it could be processed by a computer, and listed by common billing or accounting codes to create a framework for comparing standard charges among hospitals.
The proposal would also require hospitals to disclose insurer-specific negotiated charges for about 300 services consumers are likely to shop for before obtaining care, such as X-rays, outpatient visits, lab tests or childbirth. That price data would have to be made public in a prominent location online or in written form on request.
The rule, if finalized, would reveal how widely costs vary in the U.S. for care. A magnetic-resonance image of the lower back costs $141 at an imaging center in Jefferson, La., but runs $47,646 at a hospital in Torrance, Calif., according to data from Clear Health Costs, a New York company that publishes information about health-care costs.
Prices vary so greatly in part because of the prearranged discounts with insurers. Patients may pay the actual list charge if they are uninsured or have high-deductible health plans, which are becoming more common as employers move to such plans. About 40% of large employers offer only high-deductible plans, according to a 2018 survey by the National Business Group on Health.
“I would hope this drive on transparency would unify the left and right, ” Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar said in an interview. “The opponents here are the proponents of the status quo who will attack us.”
Technology companies will use the information to make it available for consumers and patients, he said. “Just imagine having that information out there, how powerful it will be,” he said. Employers could also consider negotiated-cost information when selecting health plans.
The White House is also looking into ways to connect information on the negotiated rates with data on hospital quality, allowing consumers to compare prices as well as possible treatment outcomes.
The proposal follows President Trump’s executive order in June that called for the release of more health-cost information for consumers and employers, actions the White House has said could empower patients to price-shop for care.
Industry groups have already mobilized to fight any such requirement, which would likely change the dynamics of the health market. They have said consumers typically aren’t well-inclined to shop for health-care services, even when they face significant costs under high-deductible health plans.
Data on the effect of increasing price transparency in health care shows mixed results. In some cases, consumers equate higher cost with higher quality and can be attracted to higher-priced treatments and services. Other studies show that only a fraction of people who have price data actually use the information to shop around for care. Many are already shielded from the full costs because insurance covers the bulk of their treatments.
But proponents say obscured prices means there is no truly functional, economically competitive health-care market. Transparency, they say, will introduce competition that can drive down costs, and linking it to quality data may improve accountability.
The proposal wouldn’t affect hospitals run by Veterans Affairs, Indian Health Services and Defense Department military treatment centers.

Neurocrine Biosciences EPS beats by $0.32, beats on revenue

Neurocrine Biosciences (NASDAQ:NBIX): Q2 GAAP EPS of $0.54 beats by $0.32.
Revenue of $183.58M (+89.4% Y/Y) beats by $21.79M.
Shares +9.23%.

Medpace EPS beats by $0.17, beats on revenue

Medpace (NASDAQ:MEDP): Q2 Non-GAAP EPS of $0.81 beats by $0.17; GAAP EPS of $0.73 beats by $0.17.
Revenue of $214.1M (+25.8% Y/Y) beats by $13.11M.
Shares +3.43%.

Encompass Health EPS beats by $0.11, revenue in-line

Encompass Health (NYSE:EHC): Q2 Non-GAAP EPS of $1.08 beats by $0.11; GAAP EPS of $0.92 misses by $0.05.
Revenue of $1.14B (+6.5% Y/Y) in-line.

CRISPR Therapeutics EPS misses by $1.10, misses on revenue

CRISPR Therapeutics (NASDAQ:CRSP): Q2 GAAP EPS of -$1.01 misses by $1.10.
Revenue of $0.32M (-70.6% Y/Y) misses by $47.25M.
Shares -1.71%.

Illumina EPS beats by $0.01, beats on revenue

Illumina (NASDAQ:ILMN): Q2 Non-GAAP EPS of $1.35 beats by $0.01; GAAP EPS of $1.99 beats by $0.75.
Revenue of $838M (+1.0% Y/Y) beats by $2.88M.
Shares -2.1%.

Candidate wants Wall Street to pick up the tab for her ‘Medicare For All’ plan

As the summer rolls on and a crowded field of Democratic presidential candidates tries to stand out from the pack, fresh policy proposals appear nearly every week. There are nuances, of course, but one theme runs through many of the proposals: the finance industry should pay, whether it’s for health care, student debt, or, even just for being Wall Street.
On Monday, California Sen. Kamala Harris unveiled a plan for, in her words, “comprehensive health insurance that covers every American.” Harris wants an expanded version of Medicare, popularly known as “Medicare For All,” to accomplish that. And she wants to pay for it in part by taxing financial trading.
Harris says her plan — including taxing stock trades at 0.2%, bond trades at 0.1% and derivative transactions at 0.002% — would raise “well over $2 trillion” over 10 years.
Unlike an earlier proposal from Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders, another 2020 candidate, the Harris plan would not tax families making under $100,000, and her trading tax would, Harris says, be “more than enough to make up the difference from raising the middle-class-income threshold.

Some analysts argue that it’s impossible to tax “Wall Street trading” without also impacting the retirement savings of millions of ordinary Americans, the funds they need to operate small businesses, and so on, as the tax could be passed on through fees, impacting overall returns.
The Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association, a trade group, wrote up an analysis of what it calls “financial transaction tax,” in June. Among other things, SIFMA points out that “a typical mutual fund investor will have to save an additional $600 per year (a 12% increase in savings) or work an additional two years over their career to achieve his/her retirement goals” if the tax were 0.1% — and more if the tax were higher.
“Investors in an active small-cap equity mutual fund would see returns diminished by up to 1.62% annually,” the trade group said.
What’s more, points out Steve Blitz, chief U.S. economist for TS Lombard, some investors can look elsewhere if they don’t like the U.S. tax landscape. “I can trade anywhere in the world and markets can open up anywhere in the world and I can just move my money offshore,” he said.
Market maneuvering aside, Blitz thinks there are bigger problems with, as he puts it, “this idea of ‘I’m gonna tax this activity to pay for that.’”
Sanders, for instance, has his own proposal to “cancel all student debt” to be paid for by a “tax on Wall Street speculation.”
Democrats should be talking more about creating a strong, resilient economy, Blitz told MarketWatch. Instead, “they want to take this from the perspective of leveling the playing field across socio-economic groups. They should attack each problem on its own instead of trying to say, here’s a pot of money.”

Representatives of other financial markets regulators, the Commodities Futures Trading Commission and the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
The idea of providing health-care coverage, as Harris sets out to do in her Medicare For All proposal, is a sound one, Blitz said. “But the solution to health care is really getting a stronger and younger work force.”