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CVS, Aetna win U.S. approval for $69 billion deal

October 10, 2018 9:54 AM EDT

FILE PHOTO - Shoppers walk outside a CVS store and pharmacy in Medford, Massachusetts, U.S. December 4, 2017. REUTERS/Brian Snyder

By Diane Bartz and Caroline Humer

WASHINGTON/NEW YORK (Reuters) - Pharmacy chain CVS Health Corp (NYSE: CVS) won U.S. antitrust approval for its $69 billion acquisition of health insurer Aetna Inc (NYSE: AET), the Justice Department said on Wednesday, paving the way for a combination with potential to cut U.S. healthcare costs for consumers.

The companies have said they will save administrative and patient care costs when they combine, in part by steering Aetna customers to walk-in clinics in CVS stores for less expensive medical services. CVS could offer more preventive care services and screenings in its clinics, such as enabling patients with diabetes to monitor blood sugar levels, avoiding higher cost visits to doctors or emergency rooms.

CVS aims to cut costs by $750 million annually by the end of the second year after the deal closes.

It is the second large recent healthcare deal to win U.S. Justice Department approval. The agency gave the green light to health insurer Cigna Corp's (NYSE: CI) $52 billion acquisition of the nation's largest pharmacy benefit manager (PBM), Express Scripts Holding Co (NASDAQ: ESRX), on Sept. 17.

Shares of CVS and Aetna each rose about 1 percent on Wednesday, a day when the broader market was sharply lower, with CVS trading at $80.20 and Aetna at $206.48.

The deal was approved on the condition that the companies sell Aetna's standalone Medicare prescription drug plan business, known as Medicare Part D, the Justice department said.

Aetna last month said it would sell all of those standalone plans for prescription drugs that are part of the Medicare program for Americans aged 65 and older and the disabled to WellCare Health Plans Inc (NYSE: WCG), paving the way for the deal's approval.

Without the sale the two companies would have owned more than a 30 percent share of those standalone Medicare drug plans, creating concern about the amount of control the new CVS would have had over this part of the Medicare insurance market. Drugs administered by doctors and hospitals are covered under a separate Medicare benefit.

Together Aetna and CVS have 6.8 million members in standalone Medicare drug plans, the Justice Department said. CVS also has a large PBM business.

"The divestitures required here allow for the creation of an integrated pharmacy and health benefits company that has the potential to generate benefits by improving the quality and lowering the costs of the healthcare services that American consumers can obtain," Makan Delrahim, head of the department's Antitrust Division, said in a statement.

ON TRACK TO CLOSE THIS YEAR

California, Florida, Hawaii, Mississippi and Washington also joined the antitrust review.

"We know that over consolidation is bad for healthcare and leaves millions of Californians with fewer options. We will keep close watch to ensure that the terms of this settlement are met," California Attorney General Xavier Becerra said in a statement.

CVS Chief Executive Larry Merlo said in a statement that the deal is on track to close early in the fourth quarter. CVS first announced plans to buy Aetna last December.

Since then, online retailer Amazon.com Inc (NASDAQ: AMZN) stepped into the healthcare market with the purchase of online pharmacy PillPack, which Wall Street analysts say can help it expand further in healthcare and undercut major players across the prescription drugs supply chain.

Amazon has also aligned itself with JP Morgan Chase & Co (NYSE: JPM) and Berkshire Hathaway Inc to experiment with new models for employee healthcare - one of Aetna's target markets for health insurance.

The decision comes as the Trump administration intensifies pressure on healthcare industry "middlemen," such as PBMs, over practices it says increase the cost of prescription medicines for U.S. consumers.

After the deals were announced, antitrust experts described them as "vertical" combinations that were less troublesome from a competitive standpoint than a previous round of proposed consolidation deals among insurers, which were blocked.

The Justice Department sued and won its case to stop Aetna's $37 billion plan to acquire smaller U.S. health insurer Humana Inc (NYSE: HUM). It also blocked a combination of health insurers Anthem Inc (NYSE: ANTM) and Cigna.

(Reporting by Diane Bartz and Caroline Humer; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama, Susan Thomas and Bill Berkrot)



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