Health Insurers Tumble. Molina Healthcare Forecasts 2026 Profit Below Estimates as Costs Weigh

Reuters
Feb 06

Molina Healthcare on Thursday forecast 2026 profit far below Wall Street expectations and said it would exit its traditional Medicare Advantage Part D plans in 2027, triggering a nearly 34% slide in its shares in aftermarket trading.

Shares of other health insurers also fell in extended trading, with Centene down 11.77%, UnitedHealth down 3.16%; and Elevance Health down 1.66%.

The Long Beach, California-based insurer projected adjusted earnings of at least $5 per share for 2026, sharply under analysts' estimate of $13.76, according to LSEG data.

Health insurers have been grappling with persistently high medical expenses as demand for behavioral health services and specialty drugs across government-backed healthcare plans pushed up costs over the last two years.

Molina said the annual profit forecast was burdened by $2.50 per diluted share, which includes $1.50 per diluted share due to the implementation of the new Florida CMS Medicaid contract , and $1 per diluted share due to underperformance in the traditional Medicare Advantage Part D product.

Medicare Part D is the prescription drug benefit that helps Medicare enrollees pay for outpatient medications through approved private plans.

"We believe that the imbalance between rates and trend marks 2026 as a trough year for Medicaid industry margins. Even at this low point in the cycle, we continue to produce positive pre-tax margins in Medicaid," CEO Joseph Zubretsky said.

The company expects premium revenue of about $42.2 billion in 2026, nearly 2% lower than 2025 and below analysts' expectation of $45.46 billion.

Molina expects its annual medical cost ratio, the percentage of premiums spent on medical services, to be 92.6% compared to an estimate of 89.78%.

Total 2026 revenue is expected to reach $44.5 billion, also below the estimate of $46.55 billion.

For the fourth quarter ended December 31, Molina reported an adjusted loss of $2.75 per share, missing analysts' estimate of a profit of 33 cents per share .

Its medical cost ratio for the quarter was 94.6%, compared with its estimate of 92.12%. The company's reported 2025 medical cost ratio was 91.7%, below the estimate of 90.4%.

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