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Clover Health (CLOV) Q4 2025 Earnings Transcript

The Motley Fool·02/27/2026 00:59:05
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DATE

Thursday, February 26, 2026 at 5 p.m. ET

CALL PARTICIPANTS

  • Chief Executive Officer — Andrew Toy
  • Chief Financial Officer — Peter Kuipers

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TAKEAWAYS

  • Medicare Advantage Membership -- Ended the year at approximately 140,000, up 38% year over year, with 53% membership growth reported during the annual enrollment period.
  • Insurance Revenue -- Fourth-quarter insurance revenue was $486 million, increasing 47% year over year; full-year insurance revenue reached $1.9 billion, up 41%.
  • Total Revenue -- Full-year 2025 total revenue increased 40% year over year.
  • Adjusted EBITDA -- Delivered $22 million for 2025 and achieved adjusted EBITDA profitability for the full year while growing average membership by 33%.
  • Adjusted Net Income -- Reported $20 million for the year.
  • Consolidated Gross Profit -- New metric introduced; reached $356 million in 2025, with consolidated gross profit now replacing Insurance segment BER as the company’s primary operating metric.
  • Medical Cost Trend -- Underlying medical cost trend, excluding pharmacy, was well controlled at 5% year over year.
  • Insurance Segment Benefit Expense Ratio (BER) -- 2025 BER was 90.9%, increasing 970 basis points year over year, or about 700 basis points after normalization, primarily from new member dilution and quality investments.
  • Adjusted SG&A -- Fourth quarter was $98 million, slightly above expectations due to higher commissions and quality investments; adjusted SG&A as a percentage of revenue improved 560 basis points year over year in the quarter and 410 basis points for the year, finishing at 17% for 2025.
  • Returning and New Member Contribution -- Returning member contribution profit was $200 per member per month (PMPM); new member contribution loss improved to $145 PMPM.
  • Cash and Investments -- $320 million at year-end, including $122 million at the unregulated subsidiary.
  • Operating Cash Flow -- Cash flow used in operating activities totaled $67 million for the year, driven primarily by working capital timing related to membership growth.
  • Retention and Engagement -- Greater than 95% retention reported for annual enrollment period; approximately two-thirds of members received care powered by Clover Assistant in 2025.
  • 2026 Guidance: Membership -- Anticipated average between 154,000 and 158,000, with 46% growth at the midpoint.
  • 2026 Guidance: Revenue -- Projected between $2.81 billion and $2.92 billion, implying 49% year-over-year growth at the midpoint.
  • 2026 Guidance: Consolidated Gross Profit -- Expected between $470 million and $510 million.
  • 2026 Guidance: Adjusted EBITDA -- Targeted between $50 million and $70 million.
  • 2026 Guidance: GAAP Net Income -- Management guided to first full year of GAAP net income profitability, ranging from breakeven to $20 million.
  • Market Positioning -- Management stated, "We are now the largest individual non-special needs plan PPO plan in New Jersey."
  • Part D & IRA Impact -- Seasonal Part D pressures related to IRA changes noted, with improved Part D margin year over year and additional optimization initiatives implemented for 2026.

SUMMARY

Management expects 2026 to be the company’s first profitable year on a GAAP net income basis, citing stable benefits, strong retention, and a four-star payment year for the PPO plan. The company highlighted its strategic focus on cost control, clinical integration, and expanding its technology platform, particularly through the Clover Assistant and Counterpart Health initiatives. Executives flagged ongoing investments in quality, operational leverage from scale, and enhanced unit economics in core markets as drivers for forward profitability. The firm outlined its model’s prospective resilience to rate changes and regulatory policy shifts, pointing to a differentiated approach compared to competitors dependent on favorable rates or risk-score optimization.

  • Management stated, "2025 was a year of execution that demonstrated the earnings power of our model, even amid significant new member growth and dilution."
  • Stable liquidity is projected, with $320 million in year-end cash and investments and a focus on a self-funding model supported by maturing member cohorts.
  • Executives reaffirmed that increased policy rigor around risk adjustment and reimbursement is viewed as an industry tailwind, not a headwind, for the company.
  • No material financial contribution from Counterpart Health is included in the 2026 guidance, but management emphasized near-term goals to expand that business segment’s reach to match core Clover Assistant volume.

INDUSTRY GLOSSARY

  • BER (Benefit Expense Ratio): The percentage of insurance premium revenue spent on medical claims, excluding administrative or other non-claims expenses.
  • PPO (Preferred Provider Organization): A type of Medicare Advantage plan offering patients more provider flexibility than HMO plans, typically with a broader network.
  • Part D: The Medicare program component providing prescription drug coverage to beneficiaries; changes in Part D legislation may impact margin and utilization.
  • IRA (Inflation Reduction Act): Recent U.S. legislation impacting Medicare drug benefit cost dynamics and insurer reimbursement requirements.
  • PMPM (Per Member Per Month): A key metric expressing contribution profit or loss on a monthly per-enrollee basis, isolating margin performance for individual cohorts.
  • AEP (Annual Enrollment Period): The designated time frame when Medicare beneficiaries can enroll, switch, or disenroll from Medicare Advantage plans, driving significant changes in membership.

Full Conference Call Transcript

Andrew Toy: Thank you, Ryan, and welcome everyone to Clover Health Investments, Corp.'s fourth quarter earnings call. The headline takeaway is this. In 2025, we achieved full-year adjusted EBITDA profitability, delivered a well-controlled medical cost trend, and reestablished market-leading membership growth, all in a year marked by elevated utilization across the industry. What makes this especially notable is that we achieved these results while absorbing the natural first-year dilution that comes with membership growth in Medicare Advantage. Because we retain full underwriting risk, rather than delegating it downstream, that near-term pressure sits entirely with us. Sustaining profitability while growing 38% within that structure is not easy.

However, as those members mature into returning cohorts, we capture the full economic upside, and we are excited about the accelerating earnings power that dynamic unlocks. This reinforces the durability of our model and the strength of our cohort economics, which we believe are among the strongest in the industry. What also gives us confidence moving forward is the contrast between Clover Health Investments, Corp.'s trajectory and the broader Medicare Advantage market. Headlines that might read as negative for the Medicare Advantage industry are clear tailwinds for Clover Health Investments, Corp. from a competitive lens, and the past three years are our evidence of this.

When regulatory actions have tightened risk adjustment and reimbursement rates, incumbents have reacted by reducing benefits, exiting markets, and eroding margins. This only serves to strengthen Clover Health Investments, Corp.'s competitive positioning, making us an even more attractive option for consumers. For years, we have been explicit that Medicare Advantage should reward real clinical value and disciplined cost management, not coding intensity or favorable rate assumptions. As far back as 2021, we publicly supported heightened rigor around risk adjustment and emphasized that our model focuses on clinical value with no incentive for increased coding.

In 2022 and 2023, we reiterated that sustained growth would come from empowering physicians through technology and bending the cost curve over time, not by benefiting from medical cost inflation or temporary rate tailwinds. When the broader market faces pressure, it reinforces the durability of our model and the structural choices we made in building Clover Health Investments, Corp. With this foundation, combined with clear structural tailwinds this year, we expect to achieve our first full year of GAAP net income and EPS profitability in 2026. This metric will be the cornerstone for our 2026 guidance that Peter will discuss in more detail later in the call.

I will now walk through our results in three parts: first, how we executed our 2025 strategy; second, why we believe that we are well positioned for 2026; and third, as we look ahead, why we feel good about the durability of our model in 2027 and beyond. Starting with 2025, we set out to achieve adjusted EBITDA profitability while absorbing meaningful new member dilution, to continue to deliver industry-leading quality, and to prove that our growth strategy works. We delivered on each of those priorities even against a difficult industry backdrop, higher-than-expected intra-year new member growth, and during a 3.5-star payment year. Secondly, we also demonstrated that our growth strategy could be repeatable.

During the 2026 annual enrollment period, we delivered 53% year-over-year membership growth, driven by a stable benefit offering, strong retention, a focus on our core markets where Clover Assistant coverage is strong, and minimal reliance on e-brokers. This reinforces that our growth strategy makes sense and is also durable. Lastly, our 2025 benefits continue to be the clear and compelling choice in our core New Jersey markets, and at the same time, our underlying medical cost trend remains strong. Growing membership while maintaining cost discipline is what enables us to balance profitability through the inherent earnings power of our model.

Turning to 2026, we entered this year with exceptional member retention, more operating experience, and a focus on deep Clover Assistant engagement. With greater than 95% AEP retention and approximately two-thirds of our members receiving Clover Assistant-powered care in 2025, we are carrying forward a stable 2026 benefit offering that builds directly on last year's performance. That combination of retention, engagement, and underwriting discipline drives our confidence in delivering our first full year of GAAP net income profitability in 2026 while continuing to grow at a market-leading pace. Further reinforcing this is our underlying cohort economics, which we expect to be structurally stronger in 2026 versus 2025.

As I discussed earlier, new members are inherently dilutive across the industry, and because we do not delegate risk to providers, we absorb that near-term pressure more directly. However, as these members mature into returning cohorts, we retain the full economic upside, and our data consistently shows profitability improves with tenure. That dynamic, combined with our four-star payment year, favorable market rate dynamics, and earlier care management via Clover Assistant, highlights the structural earnings power of our model and gives us real conviction in the year ahead. Now looking ahead to 2027, our view is that the broader MA policy direction and the underlying strength of our business remain aligned.

Overall, we support the intent and goals of the proposed changes around unlinked chart review records as they aim to further align payment with documented clinical care delivered in real patient encounters. Our model has always been grounded in encounter-based claims-linked documentation, with Clover Assistant enabling earlier, more accurate diagnosis and better clinical decision-making directly at the point of care. That said, we believe that there is one unintended consequence of the proposal related to switchers. For example, when members switch plans, the new plan currently lacks the data needed to link records to prior encounters. Our view is that CMS can close this gap by simply sharing that data.

Nonetheless, we support CMS' broader goals of strengthening payment accuracy and fostering fair competition. Because our clinical insights are generated and acted on within real physician workflows, this policy direction is consistent with how we operate and reinforces the long-term integrity of the Medicare Advantage program. Similarly, our model was built to perform without relying on annual rate increases, unlike many other plans, which gives us a differentiated perspective on the 2027 Medicare Advantage Advance Rate Notice. From the beginning, we designed Clover Health Investments, Corp. to make the math work through disciplined cost management and clinical integration, not through elevated rate assumptions or policy optimization.

It is through this lens that we view the recent announcement, which we believe highlights structural differences across the industry. Plans built around favorable rate environments feel pressure, and plans built to better manage total cost of care through real clinical engagement are positioned differently. At its core, Medicare Advantage exists to improve care delivery and clinical outcomes while keeping medical cost growth under control for the country. That principle is foundational to how we operate. When payment policy moves closer to documented clinical reality, it reinforces how we have built Clover Health Investments, Corp. to improve care while bending the cost curve through Clover Assistant and deeper clinical integration.

As a result, we believe our model is structurally less sensitive to policy cycles and better positioned in periods of industry adjustment. Beyond policy, our long-term confidence rests on two things: sustained core New Jersey market leadership and a technology-driven model that can grow comfortably even in a 3.5-star environment. We are now the largest individual non-special needs plan PPO plan in New Jersey, and that is not accidental. It reflects our intention not only to establish leadership in our core New Jersey markets, but to sustain it and extend it into 2027 and beyond.

And our scale in New Jersey matters, as it makes us a more attractive partner across the network while creating natural efficiencies that strengthen the economics of our model as we scale. Additionally, we have demonstrated our ability to grow and maintain profitability while offering attractive market-leading benefits priced against a 3.5-star benchmark. This validates the resilience and differentiation of our model compared to competitors and reinforces that while a four-star payment year represents meaningful upside, it is not a hard dependency for profitability. This relative independence to both rates and stars is differentiating in an industry where many plans often depend on both to simply maintain baseline membership.

Importantly, the same technology platform and operating strengths that underpin our core Medicare Advantage business also form the foundation for Counterpart Health. Our near-term goal is to achieve the milestone of managing as many members under Counterpart Assistant as we manage under Clover Assistant in our growing MA plan. As payers and risk-bearing providers face ongoing pressure around medical costs, quality performance, and fragmented health data, we believe there is a clear need for clinically grounded, AI-powered solutions that operate in real-world workflows. Our priority right now is to expand total lives on the Counterpart platform and deepen clinician adoption, positioning Counterpart as a long-term growth engine alongside our growing and profitable Medicare Advantage business.

In summary, 2025 was a year of execution that demonstrated the earnings power of our model, even amid significant new member growth and dilution. 2026 is about building on that foundation as we anticipate our first full year of GAAP net income profitability. And beyond that, we see a scalable platform that continues to improve care, strengthen economics over time, and deliver long-term value for seniors. With that, I will turn it over to Peter to walk through the financials in more detail.

Peter Kuipers: Thank you, Andrew. Before I walk through the financial results, I want to highlight why we believe Clover Health Investments, Corp. is exceptionally well positioned as we enter 2026 and beyond. We are starting from a position of strength, with improving earnings power, disciplined underwriting, and a technology-enabled model designed to perform across cycles. In 2025, we demonstrated financial resilience. We grew Medicare Advantage membership well above the market while maintaining underwriting discipline, and we delivered full-year adjusted EBITDA profitability. We did this in a 3.5-star payment year despite new member margin dilution and elevated utilization across the industry. Our benefits remain a clear and compelling choice in our New Jersey markets.

This drove strong membership growth while maintaining pricing discipline. We absorbed new member margin dilution while keeping underlying medical cost trends, excluding pharmacy, well controlled at 5% year over year. Overall, this validates our 2025 pricing strategy, our balance of growth and profitability, the strength of our Clover Assistant-powered model, and it gives us confidence as we enter 2026 with a stable benefit design. In 2025, both new and returning member cohort contribution profit performed in line with expectations. Returning member contribution profit remains strong at $200 PMPM year over year. New member contribution loss improved to $145 PMPM, reflecting better execution and disciplined benefit design even in a challenging utilization environment.

As we enter 2026, we expect meaningful improvements in new member contribution profit and continued strength in returning cohorts, consistent with our historical progression and supported by structural tailwinds. As members mature on our platform and Clover Assistant engagement deepens, profitability improves with tenure. With AEP retention above 95%, we are entering the year with a larger base of seasoned cohorts. This structurally strengthens our earnings profile and supports a strong path to continued above-market growth and our first full year of GAAP net income profitability. Turning now to our fourth quarter and full year 2025 results. Medicare Advantage membership increased 38% year over year to approximately 140,000 members at year-end.

Insurance revenue in the fourth quarter was $486 million, an increase of 47% year over year. 2025 insurance revenue was $1.9 billion, an increase of 41% year over year. In 2025, total revenue increased 40% year over year. Our medical costs remained well controlled in 2025. In the fourth quarter, we did see continued cost pressure, particularly in outpatient settings, in line with broader industry trends. As expected, we also saw seasonal Part D pressure related to the IRA changes. Despite this, we improved the Part D margin year over year and delivered higher gross profit in 2025. Overall, our performance was in line with our guidance.

Starting this quarter, we are introducing consolidated gross profit as a primary operating metric for guidance and reporting. We define consolidated gross profit as total revenue minus medical claims. We believe consolidated gross profit gives the clearest view of our consolidated business performance and underlying earnings power. As we scale, it better reflects the operating leverage and capital efficiency of our model. Beginning this year, consolidated gross profit will replace Insurance segment BER as our primary operating guidance metric. For the full year 2025, consolidated gross profit was $356 million. Turning to Insurance segment BER. For 2025, BER was 90.9%, an increase of 970 basis points year over year.

After normalizing for prior period developments in both periods, BER increased by approximately 700 basis points year over year, primarily driven by new member dilution and incremental quality investments. As we move to SG&A and operational leverage, fourth quarter adjusted SG&A of $98 million was slightly above expectations. This was mainly due to higher commissions and stronger-than-expected new sales, and continued quality-focused investments to improve cohort performance and margins in 2026. We continue to demonstrate operating leverage as we scale. Adjusted SG&A as a percentage of total revenue was 20% in the fourth quarter, improving 560 basis points year over year, and was 17% for the full year, improving 410 basis points year over year.

We continue to manage expenses with discipline, investing in initiatives that strengthen core economics. Our focus remains on turning growth into consistent margin improvements and durable long-term earnings. 2025 shows that we can grow and be profitable at the same time. We managed new member dilution effectively, even with higher industry utilization. For the full year, we delivered $22 million of adjusted EBITDA and $20 million of adjusted net income. As expected, the fourth quarter reflected normal seasonal patterns. For the full year, we remained profitable on an adjusted EBITDA basis while growing membership by 33% on average. That demonstrates the strength of our model, the durability of our cohorts, and our ability to turn growth into sustainable earnings.

Let us turn to the balance sheet. We ended the fourth quarter with $320 million in cash and investments on a consolidated basis, including $122 million at the unregulated subsidiary level. Cash flow used in operating activities for the full year was $67 million, primarily driven by working capital timing related to membership growth. Our capital allocation framework remains disciplined and consistent. First, we prioritize preserving balance sheet strength and liquidity. Second, we choose to selectively reinvest in initiatives that enhance long-term core economics and deeper clinical integration to Clover Assistant. We are not pursuing growth for growth's sake. Our strategy is designed to become increasingly self-funding over time, supported by improving cohort performance and expanding operating leverage.

We believe our liquidity position remains strong, and we expect to generate meaningful operating cash flow while achieving GAAP net income profitability. Let us move to the guidance for 2026. Medicare Advantage membership is expected to average between 154,000 and 158,000, reflecting 46% growth year over year at the midpoint. Total revenue is expected to be between $2.81 billion and $2.92 billion, reflecting continued market-leading year-over-year top-line growth of 49%. Consolidated gross profit is expected to be between $470 million and $510 million. We expect to continue improving operating leverage in adjusted SG&A due to cost initiatives and scale efficiencies.

We target reducing adjusted SG&A as a percentage of total revenue by approximately 100 to 150 basis points year over year. Adjusted EBITDA is expected to be between $50 million and $70 million. We expect 2026 to be the first full year of GAAP net income profitability with net income between breakeven and $20 million. In 2026, we expect stronger cohort performance and continued market-leading membership growth to drive higher consolidated gross profit and adjusted EBITDA while we stay disciplined on SG&A and continue to gain operating leverage as we scale. Our adjusted SG&A includes material investments in quality improvement and in research and development that strengthen our care delivery and technology.

As our fundamentals continue to improve, we will keep flexibility in SG&A to reinvest in clinical programs, care management, and innovation where we see strong returns. Overall, our approach balances disciplined cost management with continued investment in long-term value creation while maintaining clear accountability for bottom-line performance. Our conviction in achieving our first full year of positive GAAP net income in 2026 is based on several clear drivers that we believe strengthen Clover Health Investments, Corp.'s earnings profile. First, strong 2025 execution reinforces our underwriting discipline as we enter 2026 with stable benefits and a second year of executing the same growth playbook.

Second, we delivered strong returning member retention during AEP, resulting in a larger and more profitable returning member base in 2026, with continued favorable performance from our year-three-and-older cohorts as they mature. Third, 2026 is a four-star payment year for our PPO plans, providing a material financial tailwind, with approximately 97% of members enrolled in our wide-network PPO plan. Fourth, we expect a favorable impact from the 2026 Part C final rate notice. Fifth, we continue to expand Clover Assistant coverage and deepen PCP adoption, supported by ongoing investments in the platform and clinical and operational capabilities.

The vast majority of 2026 new member growth is concentrated in our core markets, where Clover Assistant PCP penetration is highest and our model is most integrated and economically advantaged. Sixth, we are directing intra-year 2026 growth toward more cost-efficient acquisition channels, which improves new member unit economics. Seventh, Part D optimization initiatives implemented in 2025, with enhanced utilization and unit cost management now in place, position us to better manage the second year of IRA changes. Eighth, as discussed on prior calls, we implemented targeted remediation and recovery actions to address abnormal dental and DME activity experienced in 2025. Finally, we expect continued margin expansion from SG&A leverage as efficiencies across variable, fixed, and growth-related expenses compound with scale.

In closing, the tailwinds we have outlined today underpin our conviction in delivering meaningful improvement in new member cohort economics and continued strength in returning members. Our confidence comes from the inherent earnings power of our full-risk model. We have absorbed the near-term impact of new member growth, and as cohorts mature, we retain the full economic upside. Unlike delegated structures that rely primarily on incremental growth to expand earnings, our model is designed to compound profitability as membership seasons and clinical integration deepens. We saw this dynamic clearly in 2025, generating adjusted EBITDA profitability while growing at a market-leading pace.

As cohorts continue to mature and Clover Assistant engagement increases, we believe this structural advantage positions us to achieve our first full year of GAAP net income profitability in 2026 and compound earnings over time. With that, I will turn the call back over to Andrew for closing remarks.

Andrew Toy: To close, I want to reinforce a few simple takeaways. 2025 was a year of execution, where we delivered sustained profitability while absorbing new member dilution, reestablished meaningfully above-market growth, and continued to lead the nation on quality among PPO plans. 2026 is about building on that foundation. With improving cohort economics, strong retention, and a stable benefit design carried forward, we are positioned for what we expect to be our first full year of GAAP net income profitability, and importantly, not due to favorable conditions, but because of the structural earnings power embedded in our model. And as we look beyond that, what gives us confidence is not just the durability of our model but its potential scale.

We believe Clover Assistant can power better care for all Medicare beneficiaries broadly, improving clinical outcomes through earlier care management and lowering total cost of care at the same time. Our Medicare Advantage plan allows us to rapidly iterate our technology in real-world clinical settings, and Counterpart enables us to scale those capabilities across the entire healthcare ecosystem. That combination gives us the ability to improve lives while strengthening the Medicare system itself, and we are excited about the opportunity ahead to deliver upon this.

Taken altogether, we believe Clover Health Investments, Corp. is well positioned to grow where others pull back, remain resilient across operating environments, and stay focused on what matters most: delivering better, more affordable care for seniors while creating long-term value. With that, we are happy to take your questions.

Operator: Thank you. At this time, if you would like to ask a question, please click on the raise-hand button, which can be found on the black bar at the bottom of your screen. When it is your turn, you will receive a message on your screen from the host allowing you to talk, and then you will hear your name called. Please accept, unmute your audio, and ask your question. We will wait one moment to allow the queue to form. Our first question comes from Jonathan Yong with UBS. Your line is open. Please unmute and ask your question.

Jonathan Yong: Hey, can you hear me? Yes, we can. Yep, we can. Just going to the gross profit margin to start, it looks like the gross profit margin is stepping down 150 bps year on year, and given the improving cohort economics and improving membership cohorts, I am a little surprised that it is declining. Can you kind of talk about what is the driver of that, especially given you are in a four-star payment year? Thanks.

Peter Kuipers: Yeah, thanks, Jonathan. This is Peter. I will answer this question. To really look at it is really the leverage here as well as we grow. So the first step, of course, is the new cohort. We grew 53% in AEP, so that is a large group that we are taking on, and given our historical progression and actual results, we are very confident that we can improve the profitability of that group as it moves into year two. We do see, of course, the impact of the year before the AEP from 2024 going to 2025.

That maturity of the cohort is now year two, so we see that improvement, and then year three and beyond is improving as well. Now I would say net-net, we really see volume leverage here, so

Andrew Toy: Yeah, Jonathan, this is Andrew. I would just emphasize what Peter is saying here as well, which is we are actually pretty pleased that with the four-star year, there is obviously quite significant growth with over 50% growth, and that new cohort is dilutive for us. I think less so than for other folks. It would be harder for other models to bring on that level of first-year cohort, so I think that having just a bit of a step down in the gross profit is perfectly reasonable from our perspective.

Jonathan Yong: Okay. And then just turning to 2027 with the flat rate update, obviously, there is the benchmark, but the risk model change. Can you kind of talk about how the risk model component may or may not impact you guys? And then just conceptually, is that effective growth rate that is embedded in CMS' rate update, preliminarily at least, keeping up with cost trend for you? How would you frame that as you think about the go-forward rate? Thanks.

Andrew Toy: Thanks for the question. I will take it in reverse order on the Advance Notice. I think based upon the trend, as I said in the commentary, we actually think it is a somewhat reasonable trend. I know that the industry was looking for a higher-level trend coming in there, and CMS did a number of things, taking the waste and abuse out and looking at more recent data. Now I think that there is an opportunity, and potentially the rate might move upwards a little bit, but we are certainly not relying upon that.

So I think at the high-level benchmark rate, while perhaps others were looking for an even higher rate, we see that as being pretty straightforward and reasonable. The second thing I will say about the risk adjustment is that, as I said in my notes, overall, we think that increasing the amount of linking of claims and clinical data is a really important thing to do. We think that there are great opportunities to improve interoperability, which we think will be powerful as well.

The one area we would note that we think there is a bit of an oversight from CMS is where, on that first year with members coming to us, especially for a fast-growing plan like us, when people are switching in from other MA plans, CMS is not providing all the data we need to provide that linking that they want on the risk adjustment side. So I am pretty sure that they will close that gap. Obviously, we have given them that feedback, and if and when they do so, we think that is a great thing for the industry.

Jonathan Yong: Great. Thanks.

Operator: Our next question comes from John Granville Pinney with Canaccord Genuity. Your line is open. Please unmute and ask your question.

John Granville Pinney: Hi. Can you hear me? Hello? Okay, great. You can hear us. There you go. Go ahead. Sorry. Yeah, thanks for the questions. I guess just to start on this new cohort, you announced the membership growth in January. Has anything surprised you in these first couple of months? Is there anything about this cohort that is any positive or negative in these first couple of months of getting to know the cohort coming in?

Peter Kuipers: Yeah, thank you for the question. Of course, it is early in the year. I would say, though, the profitability that we see for the new members is coming in line with expectations. We, of course, have the MMR files already, and it is in line with what we expected and planned for. And then, also, we see utilization coming down so far in January and February.

John Granville Pinney: Year to date.

Peter Kuipers: For the total population.

John Granville Pinney: Okay, great. I guess second question here. Any update on Counterpart Health and how much of a contribution that is into 2026 guidance? Is it anything material to call out at this point?

Andrew Toy: Yeah, so we have always said, Peter and myself, that we will report in when we expect Counterpart to provide meaningful adjustments to our economics. I would say that our strategy right now, and we are very pleased with the progress, is to make sure that we bring a significant number of folks under a Counterpart Assistant management similar in size to the bolus of folks that we have under a Clover Assistant management, as I said in my remarks. So nothing to talk about yet on the economic guidance, but we are making good progress on rolling out our system to more and more people.

John Granville Pinney: Okay. And then in the prepared remarks, you had mentioned that the near-term goal is to bring an equal number of patients under Counterpart technology as we have currently under the Clover Assistant technology inside our own insurance plan. So I think that is an important marker to look at as well that, of course, precedes financial guidance. Okay. And I guess one more from me. I think I heard in the prepared remarks that in 2025, two-thirds of membership was being seen by a Clover Assistant-powered physician. With such a large cohort coming in, what would be success for you as far as this new cohort being seen by a Clover Assistant-powered physician?

Do you expect that to dip a little bit, but how many of them are being seen by a Clover Assistant-powered physician already, or what would be success as far as proportion when we get to the end of 2026? Thanks.

Andrew Toy: Yeah, that is a good question. I think that you are right that as we grow, naturally, there will be a bit more pressure on that number. One thing that gives us confidence there is that, as we said, we focus a lot of our growth to be in our core markets, and so there we would expect roughly about the same amount of Clover Assistant penetration as we have historically, and we feel pretty good about that. I want that number to keep going upwards. The historic rate is something we are very proud of, but I want to keep it higher, because the more we can bring the clinical benefits of Clover Assistant to everyone, that is fantastic.

We did have some growth in some markets that are a little bit outside of our core. Georgia is obviously a great new market for us. We are growing over there. We are very focused on bringing and growing the Clover Assistant network in Georgia, so there might be some pressure from Georgia. That is part of our strategy there: to grow out the Clover Assistant network there as well.

Peter Kuipers: Alright. Thank you.

Operator: There are no further raised hands. Please feel free to rejoin the queue to ask another question. We will pause a moment to assemble the queue. At this time, there are no further questions. This completes the allotted time for questions. I will now turn the call back over to Andrew Toy for any closing remarks.

Andrew Toy: Alright, thanks to everyone for joining us today and for the thoughtful questions. We appreciate the continued engagement with Clover Health Investments, Corp., and I look forward to sharing our developments in subsequent quarters. Thanks, everyone. Have a great night.

Operator: Thank you for joining Clover Health Investments, Corp.'s fourth quarter 2025 earnings call. You may now disconnect.

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