CG
Cigna Group (CI)·Q3 2025 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Cigna delivered a solid Q3: revenue $69.7B (+10% y/y) and adjusted EPS $7.83, both above S&P Global consensus; GAAP EPS was $6.98. Strength was led by Evernorth (specialty volume, biosimilars), while Cigna Healthcare saw a higher MCR of 84.8% driven by Individual & Family Plans and stop-loss costs . EPS/revenue beats vs consensus: $7.83 vs $7.64* and $69.7B vs $66.7B* .
- Management reaffirmed full‑year 2025 adjusted EPS of at least $29.60 and segment targets (Evernorth ≥$7.2B pre‑tax AOI; Cigna Healthcare ≥$4.125B; MCR 83.2–84.2%), now expecting the full‑year MCR at the high end of the range .
- The key strategic catalyst is a rebate‑free, fee‑based PBM model (front‑end discounts, lowest price at counter, pharmacy reimbursement reform) that management says improves transparency and supports independent pharmacies; Cigna Healthcare will adopt it for fully insured lives in 2027 and it becomes Evernorth’s standard in 2028 .
- 2026 setup: EPS growth expected despite PBM margin compression tied to large client renewals/terms and transition investments in the new model; specialty & care and Cigna Healthcare expected at the high end of long‑term growth, Evernorth PBM down in 2026 with long‑term durability intact .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
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What Went Well
- Evernorth specialty & care grew revenues +10% y/y to $26.3B and pre‑tax AOI +11% to $928M, aided by strong specialty volume and increased biosimilar adoption .
- Consolidated revenue rose 10% y/y to $69.7B; adjusted EPS rose to $7.83, while adjusted SG&A ratio improved to 4.6% (vs 5.5% y/y), reflecting mix .
- Strategic innovation: “new market‑defining rebate‑free pharmacy benefit model” to “lower costs and enhance transparency,” with management emphasizing upfront discounts and lowest‑price technology at the counter . Quote: “Our new … rebate‑free pharmacy benefit model will further lower costs and enhance transparency” — CEO David M. Cordani .
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What Went Wrong
- Cigna Healthcare pre‑tax AOI declined 12% y/y and MCR increased to 84.8% (vs 82.8% y/y), driven by Individual & Family Plans and higher stop‑loss medical costs .
- Evernorth PBM pre‑tax AOI fell 6% y/y (to $975M) amid “strategic investments and initiatives to support business growth” .
- Management flagged 2026 PBM margin pressure from large client renewals/extensions and transition investments for the rebate‑free model; Evernorth segment income expected slightly down in 2026 even as enterprise EPS grows, increasing investor focus on transition execution risk .
Financial Results
Q3 actuals vs S&P Global consensus (estimates):
- EPS: $7.83 vs $7.64* → beat by ~$0.19 .
- Revenue: $69.75B vs $66.74B* → beat by ~$3.0B .
Values marked with * are from S&P Global.
Segment breakdown – Evernorth Health Services
Cigna Healthcare
KPIs
Guidance Changes
Notes: Management reiterated inability to reconcile forward adjusted metrics to GAAP due to unknown future net investment results and special items .
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- Strategic positioning: “We’re introducing new solutions to create meaningful value… our new rebate‑free model… will enable customers and patients to automatically pay the lowest price at the counter…” — CEO David M. Cordani .
- 2026 framing: “Over the next two years, we will invest… As a result, we expect margin pressure within our pharmacy benefit services segment… We expect to grow EPS in 2026.” — CEO .
- PBM economics clarity: “Category one… ~$90B annual revenue… 2026 margin profile should run through the end of the decade… Category two… transitional investment spend in 2026–2027; Category three… balance of book comparable earnings under rebate‑free model.” — President/COO Brian Evanko .
- CHC drivers: “Stop‑Loss repricing executed with typical retention… 2026 will be a step forward toward margin recovery by 2027” — CFO/COO team .
- Long‑term PBM margin: “4% margin benchmark… reasonable in the long term” (portfolio mix dependent) — President/COO .
Q&A Highlights
- PBM guarantees and model economics: Management emphasized the new fee‑based, delinked design eliminates rebate guarantees and delivers lowest price at counter; long‑term Evernorth algorithm intact, but 2026 Evernorth will be below algorithm due to PBM investments/renewals .
- 2026 PBM headwinds sizing: Evernorth income slightly down vs ≥$7.2B 2025; >50% of PBM decline from large client terms, <50% from transition investments (2026–2027) .
- EPS growth algorithm: Despite PBM pressure, CHC and specialty & care expected at high end, supporting 2026 EPS growth; capital deployment and back‑half cash flow noted .
- CHC outlook/membership: CHC income growth at high end off ≥$4.125B guide; 2026 national accounts flat to slightly down, Select segment growth, individual exchange enrollment to decline roughly with market .
- Long‑term PBM margin: 4% remains reasonable at portfolio level under rebate‑free model; mix (large vs mid/small clients) will drive variation .
Estimates Context
- Q3 2025 results vs S&P Global consensus: Adjusted EPS $7.83 vs $7.64*; Revenue $69.75B vs $66.74B* — both beats, driven by Evernorth specialty growth and pharmacy volumes; EPS outperformance tempered by higher CHC MCR .
- Forward estimate implications: Management’s 2026 commentary (PBM margin pressure; CHC and specialty at high end) suggests estimate revisions likely to shift mix (lower Evernorth PBM, higher CHC/specialty) while preserving consolidated EPS growth .
Values marked with * are from S&P Global.
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Q3 delivered clean top‑line and adjusted EPS beats with reaffirmed FY25 EPS ≥$29.60; mix shows Evernorth leading, CHC pressured by MCR .
- Specialty & care remains a structural growth engine (double‑digit AOI growth, biosimilar adoption), partially offsetting near‑term PBM compression .
- The rebate‑free PBM pivot is the central narrative: short‑term investment and contract term impacts in 2026, but improved transparency, client stickiness, and potential simplification of the story longer‑term .
- 2026 enterprise: EPS growth expected even as Evernorth PBM declines; watch execution on transition spend and client economics, and CHC margin recapture (stop‑loss repricing) .
- Cash generation remains strong (Q3 OCF $3.4B); leverage elevated (44.9%) after Shields investment but trending toward ~40% longer term; capital returns balanced with de‑leveraging .
- Guidance discipline: All FY25 guideposts maintained; CHC MCR bias to high end indicates continued underwriting and pricing vigilance into 2026 .
- Trading setup: Near‑term debate centers on PBM transition costs vs durability; catalysts include further detail on 2026 outlook at Q4 call and early proof points of rebate‑free model adoption/benefit realization .
Footnote: S&P Global consensus values are marked with an asterisk (*) and were retrieved from S&P Global.