UnitedHealth Group’s executives on Tuesday somberly conveyed lower profit expectations for the rest of 2025, as the health care conglomerate battles higher medical costs across all lines of health insurance and heightened regulatory scrutiny over its business practices.
In May, UnitedHealth withdrew this year’s financial projections, prompting CEO Andrew Witty to resign. Stephen Hemsley, who was UnitedHealth’s chief from 2006 to 2017 and has been the company’s leading board member since then, replaced Witty. Tuesday marked Hemsley’s official return to earnings calls.
UnitedHealth now expects revenue will reach roughly $447 billion this year, down almost $6 billion, or 1%, from its initial estimate in December of $452.5 billion. Profit, meanwhile, will be “at least” $16 per share — down 44% from its $28.40 per share projection. Many Wall Street analysts predicted the new profit numbers would be closer to $18 per share.
STAT+ Exclusive Story
Already have an account? Log in
This article is exclusive to STAT+ subscribers
Unlock this article — plus daily market-moving biopharma analysis — by subscribing to STAT+.
Already have an account? Log in
Individual plans
Group plans
To read the rest of this story subscribe to STAT+.