Pittsburgh Pension Settles Lawsuit with Molina Healthcare

Steamfitters Local 449 Pension Plan agreed to drop the case for $7.5 million.


The Steamfitters Local 449 Pension Plan of Pittsburgh has settled its securities class action lawsuit against Molina Healthcare for $7.5 million.

The lawsuit, which was filed in 2018, alleged that Molina and its senior executives misled investors regarding the scalability of its existing administrative infrastructure. The suit accused Molina executives of falsely claiming that the company could support rapid growth into existing Medicaid markets. The class period for the lawsuit was Oct. 31, 2014, through Aug. 2, 2017.

Also named in the lawsuit as individual defendants were Molina CEO Mario Molina, Chief Financial Officer (CFO) John Molina, Chief Operating Officer (COO) Terry Bayer, and Chief Information Officer Rick Hopfer.

The lawsuit accused Molina executives of lying about the company’s ability to cost effectively move into existing Medicaid markets and new Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA) health insurance marketplaces, also known as ACA Health Exchanges. It said that Molina later admitted its existing administrative infrastructure was built for a “much smaller, simpler business” and was never designed to support the company’s growth strategy.

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As a result, the lawsuit said Molina’s “failed growth strategy and inadequate administrative infrastructure” were revealed through a series of disappointing financial results, such as when, in August 2017, the company reported a quarterly net loss of $230 million, termination of its ACA Health Exchange participation in Utah and Wisconsin, and a major restructuring plan.

“Investors were led to believe that the company’s aggressive expansion and revenue growth, plus reduced costs, would drive share value, and that the anticipated growth would not require a rebuild of the company’s existing platform or a migration to an entirely new platform,” said the lawsuit.

Under the settlement, Molina Healthcare and the individual defendants deny any wrongdoing, or that they violated securities laws, and continue to deny the allegations that they made any material misstatements or omissions, that any member of the settlement class has suffered damages, or that the prices of Molina common stock were artificially inflated. However, Molina said it decided to settle after concluding that the lawsuit would be protracted, time-consuming, and expensive.

The court is set to hold a hearing to determine whether to approve the settlement on Oct. 22.

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The Federal Deficit Is a Forgotten Menace, Cooperman Says

Billionaire hedgie knocks Trump’s pre-recession big spending.


Does nobody care about the federal deficit anymore? Well, hedge fund bigwig Leon Cooperman sure does.

“I am focused on something the market is not focusing on at the present time,” Cooperman said. “And that is: Who pays for the party when the party is over?”

The government’s deficit is growing at a pace “well in excess of the growth rate of the economy,” the billionaire financier told CNN. “To me, that means more of our nation’s income will have to be devoted to debt service, which will retard economic growth in the long term.”

Certainly, the economy is not growing. Estimates for the second quarter, due out July 30, range from a drop of 30% to 50% from the year-prior period. The Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget estimates that, thus far, federal recession-fighting efforts are comparable to those arrayed against the Great Recession (2.3% of GDP now, 2.4% then). But if Congress’ proposed new stimulus program is enacted, the currant outlay will dwarf the one a dozen years ago.

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What bugs Cooperman is that the Trump administration had been spending lavishly even before the COVID-19 crisis and the recession it has produced. For the current fiscal year, which began on Oct. 1, the deficit projection was $1 trillion, at a time that unemployment was near 3% and the gross domestic product (GDP) was solid.

Now the deficit estimate is more than three times the earlier red-ink number. Added to that are plans afoot in Congress to spend even more trillions to offset the coronavirus and its ill economic effects.

Cooperman said he thought the surging stock market was way ahead of itself in light of the recession, the virus, and, of course, the accelerated federal expenditures. The S&P 500 has finally moved into positive territory for the year, closing Tuesday at 0.86% above where it started 2020, and closing in on February’s record.

A longtime financial backer of GOP candidates, Cooperman expressed support on the TV show for some of President Donald Trump’s policies, such as getting tough on trade, but was dismayed about his fiscal actions, as well as his personal conduct.

Trump is “worse than I feared in many respects, better in some respects, but worse than I feared overall,” he said. “But his behavior is very offensive.”

In the recent past, Cooperman attacked Sen. Elizabeth Warren, when the Massachusetts Democrat was running for president, over her plan to tax the wealthy, such as himself. He told CNN now that he worried about a Democratic sweep in November.

“If Democrats control Congress and the White House, I think that there’s going to be a big increase in taxation, which will not be a positive for the market,” he said.

A one-time star at Goldman Sachs and noted investment celebrity, Cooperman opened his hedge outfit, Omega Advisors, in 1991. He converted it to a family office in 2016. Forbes calculates that Cooperman’s net worth is $2.5 billion.

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