A Buyout May Be the Best Hope for Clover Health Now

A Buyout May Be the Best Hope for Clover Health Now

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Clover Health (NASDAQ:CLOV) was supposed to be one of Chamath Palihapitiya’s biggest special purpose acquisition company (SPAC) wins. When Palihapitiya announced plans to take Clover public, traders gravitated to the play as a natural fit. The idea? CLOV stock would upend the sleepy health insurance industry with a big dose of Silicon Valley expertise.

Person holding smartphone with logo of healthcare company Clover Health (CLOV Stock) Investments Corp on screen in front of website
Person holding smartphone with logo of healthcare company Clover Health (CLOV Stock) Investments Corp on screen in front of website

Source: Wirestock Creators / Shutterstock.com

Except, it hasn’t worked. At all. Clover Health stumbled out of the gate. It failed to disclose a government investigation into its business. Shares dropped by nearly half as short sellers revealed that fact.

Subsequently, Clover has failed to recover. That’s primarily because it simply isn’t very good at its actual core business. Clover runs a dreadfully high medical loss ratio. This means its policy underwriting isn’t working; it’s paying out too many claims compared to the premiums it receives.

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An insurance company that can’t make money on its policies will struggle to survive. You can have all the tech glitz and great user interfaces you want, but if the insurance product is no good, something has to change. CLOV stock is now down more than 75% for the past one year as analysts raise hard questions about its future.

CLOV Stock: Running Out of Time

Back in January, analyst Jonathan Yong of Credit Suisse downgraded CLOV stock from “neutral” to “underperform.” Yong took his already skeptical view to outright bearishness given Clover’s inability to get basic pieces of the business right.

For one thing, Yong is rightly concerned about Clover’s “continuous need” to raise capital. The balance sheet is not in particularly great shape and the company is running massive operating losses. Analysts see Clover losing 90 cents per share in 2022, which is a gigantic loss considering CLOV stock sells for less than $3 per share. Yong also points out how Clover Health simply hasn’t been able to make the needed improvements in its medical loss ratio, thus meaning there is little reason for optimism on earnings going forward.

Clover will have to issue more stock to stay in business if it keeps losing hundreds of millions of dollars a year. But with CLOV stock already below $3 and in a dismal downtrend, what investors would want to buy a secondary offering from the company today? This has massive stock dilution written all over it.

A Takeover May Be the Best Hope

Given this backdrop, it seems unlikely that Clover Health will remain an independent publicly traded company in future years. The company’s losses are too large and its capital base too thin to make a successful go of it from here. If Clover had issued a lot more equity up at $10 per share, it would be a different story. But given the stock has already collapsed, it would be incredibly painful to raise funds at current prices.