Health insurer Anthem has struck a deal to acquire rival Cigna for $48 billion — a buyout that would create the country's largest health insurer by enrollment.
The combined entity would have an estimated revenue of $115 billion and cover 53 million people in the U.S.
According to
The New York Times
"We believe that this transaction will allow us to enhance our competitive position and be better positioned to apply the insights and access of a broad network and dedicated local presence to the health care challenges of the increasingly diverse markets, membership, and communities we serve," Joseph R. Swedish, Anthem's chief executive,
said in a statement.
As The Associated Press notes: "In just three weeks, starting with
Aetna's [$37 billion] bid for Humana Inc.
The Times reports that: "Under the terms of the deal, Anthem said it would pay $188 a share in cash and stock, representing a 38.4 percent premium to Cigna's closing price on May 28, before news of Anthem's interest emerged."
In June,
Cigna rejected an offer from Anthem
The Washington Post
"While the deals make business sense, it is far less clear what impact the mergers will have on customers."Some analysts say that the growth of insurance premiums could slow because the industry is regulated and the new companies will be more efficient. However, a 2012 study of the 1999 merger between two large insurers, Aetna and Prudential, found that premiums rose by seven percentage points. Another study in the American Journal of Health Economics found that having more insurers in the marketplaces set up by the Affordable Care Act brought the cost of premiums down."Copyright 2016 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.