UnitedHealth stock drops as CEO Witty is replaced by Hemsley and company suspends financial outlook
Witty is leaving for personal reasons, the company said, and will remain as a senior adviser. He will be replaced as chief executive by former CEO and longtime company leader
The shakeup at the top of Minnesota’s largest company comes at a remarkably difficult time, just over six months after the fatal ambush of
Shares in the
The company employs some 400,000 people, including 19,000 in
On Tuesday morning, with the share price plunging further even prior to the official market opening,
“I’ll start by conveying on behalf of the
The company said it was suspending its 2025 outlook as care activity continued to accelerate while also broadening to more types of benefit offerings than seen in the first quarter. Medical costs of many Medicare Advantage beneficiaries new to UnitedHealthcare remained higher than anticipated,
Challenges are continuing to pile up for the company, said Morningstar analyst
“Since December,
Hemsley, 72, is an accountant by training. He joined the company as chief operating officer in 1997 and became president two years later, serving beside Dr.
Witty, 60, became chief executive of
Optum is the faster-growing but less visible part of
Early in the COVID-19 pandemic, Witty stepped away from company leadership to work on the development of vaccines at the
It was Witty
“Leading the people of
Despite the recent stock plunge,
Hemsley said he was deeply disappointed in recent setbacks in financial performance and apologized for them, saying they involved both external and internal challenges.
UnitedHealthcare is continuing to see greater health care spending, Rex said, for seniors
Hemsley said he remained confident in the company’s strategy built on “value-based care” initiatives, meaning health plan contracts with financial incentives for doctors and hospitals to provide better care at lower total cost. The new CEO also pledged
“I hope that people understand that there are a whole host of remedial responses in motion across this enterprise on both the UnitedHealthcare side and the Optum side,” Hemsley said. “So, we are gaining momentum on these things.”
“We remain optimistic that Hemsley can guide this company through this period,” wrote
Utterback of Morningstar wrote that
The CEO change “doesn’t strike us terribly surprising in light of recent business developments and deterioration in investor trust,” wrote
The transition Tuesday is the second time Hemsley has stepped into the CEO role at a critical juncture for the nation’s largest health care company.
When he did so back in 2006, some former executives told the
Described over the years as everything from a numbers guy to a brainy professor type, Hemsley on Tuesday almost suggested an appetite for broccoli as he soberly described the path ahead.
“I am humbled to return to the mission of this company and to the thousands of employees dedicated to that mission,” Hemsley said. “I have every confidence in the leadership team and the capacities of this enterprise to continue to create and pursue significant opportunities to make substantial contributions to health care in this country and to return to our long-term growth expectations.”
©2025 The Minnesota Star Tribune. Visit startribune.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC
Why do cuts to Medicaid matter for Americans over 65? 2 experts on aging explain why lives are at stake
Minnesota's UnitedHealth Group CEO Andrew Witty stepping down due to 'personal reasons'
Advisor News
Annuity News
Health/Employee Benefits News
Life Insurance News