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Goldman Sachs Tells How to Cash in on Health Care Reform
First we bailed out the teetering Wall Street giant Goldman Sachs; then we had to watch this behemoth firm, flush with taxpayer funds, recoup its losses and plan more big bonuses, while one in ten Americans is jobless. Now we learn, via Huffington Post, of Goldman’s dispassionate analysis of which health care reform scenario stands to make its clients the most money. Best bet, says Goldman, is to jettison reform altogether and watch insurance stocks rise 59 percent. And if that can’t happen, they should hope for the weakest bill possible.
This, folks, is how power really operates in this country. While the rest of us suckers, who cling to the notion that we still live in a democracy, are dutifully calling our members of Congress about health care reform, the movers and shakers are calling their brokers. And when they’ve done that, they make another campaign contribution or send another lobbyist to the Hill. Is it any wonder that we can’t seem to get a decent bill passed?
Here's Sam Stein's summary of the Goldman Sachs internal memo:
A Goldman Sachs analysis of health care legislation has concluded that, as far as the bottom line for insurance companies is concerned, the best thing to do is nothing. A close second would be passing a watered-down version of the Senate Finance Committee’s bill.
A study put together by Goldman in mid-October looks at the estimated stock performance of the private insurance industry under four variations of reform legislation. The study focused on the five biggest insurers whose shares are traded on Wall Street: Aetna, UnitedHealth, WellPoint, CIGNA and Humana.
The Senate Finance Committee bill, which Goldman’s analysts conclude is the version most likely to survive the legislative process, is described as the “base” scenario. Under that legislation (which did not include a public plan) the earnings per share for the top five insurers would grow an estimated five percent from 2010 through 2019. And yet, the “variance with current valuation” — essentially, what the value of the stock is on the market — is projected to drop four percent.
Things are much worse, Goldman estimates, for legislation that resembles what was considered and (to a certain extent) passed by the House of Representatives. This is, the firm deems, the “bear case” scenario — in which earnings per share for the top five insurers would decline an estimated one percent from 2010 through 2019 and the variance with current valuation is projected to be negative 36 percent.
What the firm sees as the best path forward for the private insurance industry’s bottom line is, to be blunt, inaction. The study’s authors advise that if no reform is passed, earnings per share would grow an estimated ten percent from 2010 through 2019, and the value of the stock would rise an estimated 59 percent during that time period.
The next best thing for the insurance industry would be if the legislation passed by the Senate Finance Committee is watered down significantly. Described as a “bull case” scenario — in which there is “moderation of provisions in the current SFC plan” or “changes prior to the major implementation in 2013″ — earnings per share for the five biggest insurers would grow an estimated ten percent and the variance with current valuation would rise an estimated 47 percent.The report, a Goldman official stressed, was analytic not advocacy-based. Their job was to provide a sober assessment of the market realities facing private insurers under various versions of health care reform.





























They were shit-for-brains
They were shit-for-brains stupid when it came to creating the obscene fun-house-mirror bogus "economy" built on CDR's and other vaporous derivatives—you know, the one that collapsed a year ago.But when it comes to running the numbers and working out how much of the lifeblood of our communities their fellow corporate vampires can suck from our veins, they're whip-smart.This should be the best evidence yet for recalcitrant Democrats that a robust, real world public option is the only way to go. It's crucifixes and garlic for the insurance company vampires.
One party rule in America
New legislation substantially written by industry lobbyists. It happens all the time in this country. Did congress ever get around to repairing the flawed legislation in Medicare Part D that was written by PHARMA in 2004?
This is the end product of the monopoly in this country of the two fake political parties that act as one. One lies to the left, the other lies to the right and both serve the same 2% of the population exclusively.
“To turn your back on the corrupt Republican Party and the corrupt Democratic Party---the gold-dust lackeys of the ruling class----counts for something. It counts still more….to join a minority party that has an ideal, that stands for a principle, and fights for a cause.“ Eugene Victor Debs from his 1918 speech at Canton, Ohio for which he was sentenced to 10 years in federal prison in this “the land of the free”.
Not quite accurate
He was arrested for speaking out against the draft in WWI, specifically he violated the Espionage Act of 1917, and was sentenced to 10 years in prison for making a speech that "obstructed recruiting".
Don't see how your statement
Don't see how your statement on Debs is at odds with mine. It was one sentence out of a speech in which Debs came out against the war and was in violation of the Espionage Act. There were thousands of voices speaking out against the war. Debs was singled out because he had the largest audience.