Posts Tagged Supreme Court

Supreme Court Health Care Reform: Wall Street Feels Good About Insurance Companies

Even as the health insurance industry openly warns about a doomsday scenario that would throw the market into chaos, Wall Street seems pretty optimistic about the Supreme Court’s decision on health care reform.

Share prices for big publicly traded health insurance companies like UnitedHealth Group and WellPoint jumped on Thursday. Traders reacted with optimism that when the Supreme Court rules on the constitutionality of health care reform, the decision won’t disadvantage insurers, according to an analysis by TheStreet.com.

Aetna led gains, reaching a 52-week high of $49.90 before closing at $49.56, a 6.5 percent hike from its opening price on Thursday. Coventry Health Care rose 5.9 percent to $34.60 and UnitedHealth closed up 4.8 percent at $58.11. The other three big health insurance companies — WellPoint, Humana, and Cigna — also saw gains in New York Stock Exchange trading.

The financial markets have had a more positive stance over the last two years toward the impact of health care reform on insurance companies than the firms themselves. The reason: profit margins are up and share prices have risen since President Barack Obama signed health care reform into law in March 2010, according to a study by Bloomberg Government.

Another reason why investors may not be panicking is that health insurance companies make a lot of money on lines of business that wouldn’t be much affected by whatever the Supreme Court does. Most Americans with health coverage get it at work and health insurance companies also have lucrative Medicare and Medicaid contracts that wouldn’t go away.

The Supreme Court spent the first three days of this week hearing oral arguments in a challenge against health care reform brought by 26 states and other plaintiffs. The chief issue is the law’s individual mandate that most U.S. residents obtain health coverage starting in 2014 or face a tax penalty. The plaintiffs contend it’s an overreach by the federal government while the Obama administration argues it’s necessary to regulate the national health care market. A ruling is expected by the end of June.

Court watchers on Wall Street may be keying on Chief Justice John Roberts saying “without the mandate, the whole thing falls apart” during yesterday’s session, according to TheStreet.com. Some believe this suggests Roberts is inclined to invalidate the entire law if he determines the individual mandate to be unconstitutional.

The health insurance industry and the White House contend the mandate is so closely tied to insurance-market reforms in the law that they should stand or fall together. The Court’s four liberal members are expected to support upholding health care reform and Roberts and Justice Anthony Kennedy are viewed as the most likely of the five conservatives to join them.

The Court could uphold the entire law, overturn the whole thing or repeal only portions of it, such as an expansion of Medicaid for the the poor or the individual mandate. Health insurance companies and the Obama administration are sounding the alarm about the latter outcome. Doing so would leave in place rules that insurers must sell policies to anyone who wants one, regardless of health status or age, and that limit their ability to charge higher premiums to people with bigger medical bills.

A full repeal of health care reform would deny health insurance companies access to the 24 million people protected to buy coverage through the law’s “exchanges” by 2019. But the health insurance industry lobbied hard against the health care reform legislation, suggesting the companies wouldn’t mind seeing the law disappear. Insurers have already incorporated some of the law provisions, such as not discriminating against children with pre-existing conditions, and may not jettison those policies even after a repeal. Other programs, including a government-funded health plan for adults with pre-existing conditions, would be nullified by repeal.

Source:  Huffington Post

Posted by Steven Maimes, The Trust Advisor

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Feds Order Trust Firms to “Unbundle” Fees

Trust clients expecting to deduct bundled fees to the limit of the law may need to find providers who can break down fees as the IRS requires.

Two years ago, the US Supreme Court in Knight v. Commissioner held to be eligible to deduct investment management fees in a trust, they cannot be grouped together or bundled with trustee fees in one bill. As a result of this famous case, trust firms in the US are now getting ready to comply with an IRS directive requiring trustee and IM fees to be billed separately for a taxpayer to gain a deduction. 

Michael KnightA decade ago, Michael Knight was under the impression that investment management fees for trusts were fully deductible. After all, hiring the best possible advice was part of his fiduciary duty as trustee for a $2.8 million Pepperidge Farm family trust.

He was surprised when the IRS bounced most of the deduction back, leaving the trust with a $4,000 tax bill and gnawing questions about how to account for pure trust expenses (which are fully deductible) versus investment expenses going forward. He took the case all the way to the Supreme Court, only to lose in 2008.

The Supreme Court ordered trustees to split or “unbundle” pure trust expenses from everything else if they want to make sure their accounts get all the deductions they deserve. Two years later, Knight and everyone else in the trust business is still trying to figure out how to obey that order as the IRS delays issuing firm guidance on more than a year-to-year basis.

“You know they just extended the review process again a few weeks ago,” Knight told me. “That means they’ve deferred yet again on making a decision on unbundling. At this point, I wonder if I lost the battle only to win the war,” he added.

“A real pain”

If and when the IRS makes up its mind, trust companies that currently don’t break out their expenses are looking at headaches ahead.

“The Supreme Court ruled in their favor, but I agree that if that’s what’s going to happen, it’s going to be a real pain,” Douglas Blattmachr of Alaska Trust told me.

Tommy Tucker, Dunham Trust

Other trust companies are steeled for what they see as inevitable. Reno-based Dunham Trust has the accounting systems in place to unbundle its fees as soon as the government tells it to push the button, Tommy Tucker, the company’s president, told me.

“When I checked into it, my operational people said we’re ready to go,” he says.

In fact, there are software fixes out there, says Les Revzon, president of Advisors Institutional, a firm that helps trust companies form in South Dakota and provides back office support for about a dozen trust company clients.

“Most trust accounting systems like SEI, Sungard, Infovisa and HWA can easily break fees down any way the trust company wants,” he says.

While the technology may not be a hurdle, figuring out where to assign every basis point of a previously unified fee may cause some consternation. Firms like Alaska Trust simply charge one all-in fee based on assets and service level, and so, Blattmachr tells me, they’re still working on what an itemized fee breakdown would look like.

Even asking trust companies to do this is pointless, as far as Texas lawyer Carol Cantrell, who argued Knight’s case against the IRS, is concerned.

“I am not sure it can even be done,” she told me. “It would be like asking a real estate broker to unbundle his real estate commission among the various duties he performed,” she added, noting the complexity of all the unique variables involved.

“No two trusts are alike”

Cantrell points to another serious issue: What happens when trust companies disagree in how they split up the basis points, even as far as trusts administered by the same company are concerned?

On the one hand, every trust and every trust company is different, but ultimately the line-item approach will force fee allocations to converge throughout the industry, Cantrell says. That could lead to a competitive race to the bottom, but it’s not likely to happen any time soon.

As things currently stand, there’s no need to unbundle unless the IRS mandates it. The Supreme Court’s issue was not so much with fee transparency but with whether bundled fees are fully deductible. Theoretically, any trust officer could simply charge a wrap fee and accept potentially less favorable tax treatment.

In the meantime, Dunham Trust, for example, is still treating all of its fees—trust and investment management alike—as deductible. However, Tommy Tucker has talked to colleagues who are being told to unbundle and not write off a cent of their investment fees.

Michael Knight originally argued that making sure his accounts were invested in the best possible way was part of his fiduciary duty, and so investment management necessarily qualifies as a fiducuary expense. It’s a great point, and there are efforts in Congress to change the law to accommodate it.

Whether that happens this year is anybody’s guess, given Washington’s distracted and fractious mood. Nobody I talked to expects anything to shake out before the November elections, and even when it does, there could probably be a long wait before new rules go into effect.

As for Knight, he told me he’s really just scratching his head when it comes to the Supreme Court decision.

“The lack of focus on the fiduciary relationship was disconcerting to me,” he says. “Some of these judges have been in private practice. I guess they didn’t do a lot of trustee work.”

Scott Martin, contributing editor, The Trust Advisor Blog. Steven Maimes contributed to the research.

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