UnitedHealth Group CEO Andrew Witty steps down
By: bitcoin ethereum news|2025/05/14 00:15:05
0
Share
Andrew Witty, CEO of UnitedHealth Group, testifies during the Senate Finance Committee hearing titled “Hacking America’s Health Care: Assessing the Change Healthcare Cyber Attack and What’s Next,” in the Dirksen Building in Washington, D.C., on May 1, 2024. Tom Williams | Cq-roll Call, Inc. | Getty Images UnitedHealth Group on Tuesday announced the surprise exit of CEO Andrew Witty and suspended its 2025 forecast, sending shares of the health-care giant tumbling more than 10% in morning trading. Witty is stepping down immediately for “personal reasons,” the company said. He will act as a senior advisor to his successor, Stephen Hemsley, who served as UnitedHealth Group’s CEO from 2006 to 2017 after first joining the company in 1997. “We are grateful for Andrew’s stewardship of UnitedHealth Group, especially during some of the most challenging times any company has ever faced,” Hemsley said in a release. The company said its decision to pull its guidance was partly due to higher medical costs, which dragged down other insurance stocks. Shares of CVS Health dropped more than 4% and Elevance Health fell over 6%, while Humana also slid more than 6% and Cigna lost over 2%. Witty became CEO of UnitedHealth in 2021 after previously running British pharmaceutical giant GlaxoSmithKline for nearly a decade. He oversaw a tumultuous last year for the company, which grappled with government investigations, a historic cyberattack, higher-than-expected medical costs and the torrent of public blowback after the murder of Brian Thompson, the CEO of the company’s insurance unit UnitedHealthcare. Witty in December publicly acknowledged that the U.S. health system is “flawed” and needs reform, but also defended UnitedHealthcare. UnitedHealth Group on Tuesday said it partly suspended the outlook because the medical costs for new enrollees in the company’s private Medicare plans remained higher than expected. The company also said “care activity continued to accelerate while also broadening to more types of benefit offerings than seen in the first quarter.” More CNBC health coverage It comes just weeks after UnitedHealth Group slashed its annual profit forecast, warning of elevated medical costs in so-called Medicare Advantage plans. Those higher expenses have dogged the entire insurance industry over the past year as more seniors return to hospitals to undergo procedures they had delayed during the Covid-19 pandemic, such as joint and hip replacements. The company in April also posted its first earnings miss since 2008, and the ensuing stock decline erased nearly $190 billion in market capitalization at the time. But investors may welcome the return of Hemsley, who oversaw the company’s transformation into a $400 billion health-care conglomerate that controls everything from the nation’s largest private insurer to one of the biggest pharmacy benefit managers, along with physician groups and sensitive health-care data of millions of Americans. “UnitedHealth Group has tremendous opportunities to grow as we continue to help improve health care and to perform to our potential — and, in so doing, return to our long-term growth objective of 13 to 16 percent,” Hemsley said. The company expects to return to growth in 2026, according to the release. Don’t miss these insights from CNBC PRO Source: https://www.cnbc.com/2025/05/13/unitedhealth-group-ceo-andrew-witty-steps-down.html
You may also like

These days, even hackers are losing money
Although hackers possess excellent skills and can complete a meticulous harvest in a matter of hours, the market does not care where the chips come from; in the face of a bear market, everyone is treated equally.

Arm Chips In-House: Rewire News Brief
For Intel and AMD, the x86 Moat Just Got a Little Less Secure

IOSG: Stablecoin Reshaping Asia Cross-Border Payments? Strategic Landscape and Investment Opportunities Analysis
Stablecoins have not truly addressed the two core pain points of domestic settlement and exchange rate conversion.

\$73 Billion OpenAI Aims for IPO: Drops Sora, Snubs Disney, Puts Microsoft in Risk Factors
Altman is Telling a Growth Story in Subtraction

The Chip Industry's Most Secure Middleman Just Took a Very Risky Turn
Arm's decision to fabricate chips is essentially competing with its own customers

CZ's Latest Interview: My Experience is Replicable, Writing a Book to Inspire Young Entrepreneurs
How will CZ measure the success of this industry and how far have we really come?

Morning News | Invesco acquires a $900 million on-chain fund from Superstate; ParaFi has raised $125 million for its new fund; Solana Foundation launches developer platform SDP
Overview of Important Market Events on March 24

What is the background of this new fund that the two major prediction market platforms have rarely joined forces to create?
When Klashi's early employees went out to raise funds, the two CEOs chose to appear together on the list of investors.

SIREN, another leveraged scam
What kind of experience can we gain from these similar situations?

Token has become extremely popular, and the blockchain is very sad
When AI's tokens become the new "digital oil," blockchain can only watch its once-dreamed dreams materialize in a completely unfamiliar way. This misaligned popularization is a victory for AI, but also the deepest helplessness for blockchain.

Tether's major shareholder invests £12 million to support the "British version of Trump" in the cryptocurrency sector
In the United States, the story of the cryptocurrency industry pouring money to support Trump and reclaiming regulatory dominance has come to an end. In the United Kingdom, the same script is being replayed.

Huang Renxun's Latest Podcast: Will NVIDIA Reach $1 Trillion? Will the Number of Programmers Increase Instead of Decrease? How to Deal with AI Anxiety?
Hashpower will determine everything; human work will only be restructured, not disappear

Besides Resolv Hack, This DeFi Vulnerability Type Has Occurred Four Times
17 minutes, 100k turned into 25M.

Trump Cries Peace, $1.5 Billion Dash | Rewire News Evening Brief
In the first 15 minutes of trading, $1.5 billion in futures trades have already taken place

From x402 to MPP: Cloudflare's crucial vote, will it go to Coinbase or Stripe?
Cloudflare is both building walls and opening windows. It provides both blocking tools and paid access tools. They decide what is kept out, what is allowed in, and under what conditions it can enter.

BlackRock CEO issues annual open letter: The wave of tokenization has arrived, and we will lead this trend
Rebuild capitalism that belongs to everyone.

When Backpack backstabs the community
Once a fundamental rift in trust appears, the cost that Backpack must pay to repair it is likely far more expensive than the profits previously "harvested" through service fees.

When gold is no longer a safe haven, and Bitcoin continues to panic
The whole world is waiting for the Strait of Hormuz to reopen. Why not guess which type of asset will return to pre-war levels first?
These days, even hackers are losing money
Although hackers possess excellent skills and can complete a meticulous harvest in a matter of hours, the market does not care where the chips come from; in the face of a bear market, everyone is treated equally.
Arm Chips In-House: Rewire News Brief
For Intel and AMD, the x86 Moat Just Got a Little Less Secure
IOSG: Stablecoin Reshaping Asia Cross-Border Payments? Strategic Landscape and Investment Opportunities Analysis
Stablecoins have not truly addressed the two core pain points of domestic settlement and exchange rate conversion.
\$73 Billion OpenAI Aims for IPO: Drops Sora, Snubs Disney, Puts Microsoft in Risk Factors
Altman is Telling a Growth Story in Subtraction
The Chip Industry's Most Secure Middleman Just Took a Very Risky Turn
Arm's decision to fabricate chips is essentially competing with its own customers
CZ's Latest Interview: My Experience is Replicable, Writing a Book to Inspire Young Entrepreneurs
How will CZ measure the success of this industry and how far have we really come?
