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Aetna Rises After WSJ Reports CVS in Talks to Buy Insurer

Aetna Gains on Wall Street Journal Report CVS to Buy Insurer

(Bloomberg) -- Aetna Inc. gained in New York trading after the Wall Street Journal reported that CVS Health Corp. is in talks to buy the insurer for more than $66 billion.

Aetna jumped 12 percent to $178.60, closing at a record high, while CVS fell 2.9 percent to $73.31. Spokesmen for Aetna and CVS declined to comment. CVS has offered to buy Aetna for more than $200 a share, the paper said.

A deal would create a health-services giant and a bigger competitor for UnitedHealth Group Inc., which is the largest U.S. health insurer and has its own own clinics and a pharmacy-benefits unit. CVS runs drugstores and clinics, helps insurers manage their pharmacy benefits, and already sells a pharmacy-insurance plan for older people, known as Medicare Part D. The company has a market value of about $75 billion, while Aetna was valued at about $53 billion before surging on the Journal’s report.

Aetna Chief Executive Officer Mark Bertolini has talked in the past about deepening the insurer’s relationship with CVS, and relying on the company to deliver some types of care to the insurer’s customers or provide them with medical equipment.

CVS has been an aggressive deal maker in its history, though buying Aetna would easily be the biggest deal CVS has ever done. In 2007, it bought drug benefit manager Caremark Rx Inc. in a deal valued at the time at $27.2 billion, to become a powerhouse in the benefit management business. And in 2015, it acquired the nursing home pharmacy operator Omnicare Inc. for $12.9 billion.

Aetna Rises After WSJ Reports CVS in Talks to Buy Insurer

Any transaction would signal a return to deal-making in the health-services industry, after two blockbuster health-insurance mergers were scuttled by opposition from antitrust regulators.

Aetna had made a deal for rival Humana Inc., while Anthem Inc. sought to acquire Cigna Corp. The two megamergers would have reduced the ranks of big U.S. health insurers from five to three, a prospect that led the Justice Department to oppose both.

To contact the reporters on this story: Zachary Tracer in New York at ztracer1@bloomberg.net, Robert Langreth in New York at rlangreth@bloomberg.net.

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Cecile Daurat at cdaurat@bloomberg.net, Drew Armstrong at darmstrong17@bloomberg.net, Timothy Annett

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