According to reporting today, Centene offered voluntary buyouts to most employees and indicated layoffs could follow if enough employees don't accept. CEO Sarah London told employees, "When our membership shifts, we need to shift our organization accordingly." The company reportedly had about 61,000 employees in Q1 2026. (Bloomberg Law)
## Updated Timeline
### Phase 1: 2022–2024
New leadership takes over.
Board thesis:
- Modernize Centene
- Become more technology-driven
- Improve member outcomes
- Diversify beyond traditional Medicaid dependence
At this point, the strategy was defensible.
### Phase 2: 2024–2025
Warning signs emerge.
Management faced:
- Medicaid redeterminations
- Rising utilization
- ACA Marketplace volatility
- Expiring enhanced subsidies
This is where forecasting and scenario planning become critical.
### Phase 3: 2025–2026
The strategy begins unraveling.
What happened:
Membership
- Medicaid enrollment declines.
- ACA Marketplace enrollment drops far more than originally anticipated after subsidy changes and premium increases. Centene expected ACA membership to fall from roughly 5.5 million to about 3.5 million after repricing. (Healthcare Dive)
Financials
- Massive earnings deterioration.
- Guidance credibility damaged.
- Investor confidence weakened. (Healthcare Dive)
Organization
- Executive restructuring announced in April 2026. (Investor Relations | Centene Corporation)
- Now voluntary buyouts and potential layoffs announced in June 2026. (Bloomberg Law)
# The New Insight
The buyout program is not the problem.
It is evidence of the problem.
When a payer begins broad voluntary separation programs after:
- Membership losses
- Earnings deterioration
- Multiple prior layoffs
- Organizational restructuring
it usually means management now believes the revenue base has permanently reset lower than previously expected. (Bloomberg Law)
In other words:
They are no longer planning for a temporary disruption.
They are resizing the company for a smaller future membership base.
That is a much more significant signal than the layoffs themselves.
# What This Says About Leadership
My view now:
## CFO Accountability: 40%
The CFO owns:
- Forecasting
- Scenario modeling
- Guidance
- Financial planning
The Marketplace membership collapse should have been modeled more aggressively.
Questions a board should ask:
- What was the expected subsidy expiration impact?
- What was the worst-case scenario?
- Why were forecasts so far off?
- Why did guidance have to be revised?
Those are CFO questions.
## CEO Accountability: 60%
The CEO owns:
### Strategic Direction
The critical decision wasn't the forecast.
The critical decision was:
"Marketplace will offset Medicaid losses."
That appears increasingly incorrect.
The company effectively:
- Lost Medicaid members
- Lost Marketplace members
- Lost operating leverage
And now must shrink the workforce to match the new reality. (Bloomberg Law)
That's fundamentally a strategic issue.
# What Would a Board Likely Do?
If I were sitting on the board today, I would ask:
### Question 1
Was this primarily:
- a forecasting failure?
or
- a strategy failure?
The answer determines who goes.
### If Forecasting Failed
Replace:
- CFO
- Chief Actuary
- Finance leadership
Retain CEO.
### If Strategy Failed
Replace:
- CEO
Possibly retain CFO if forecasts reflected the risks and leadership ignored them.
# My Assessment Today
With everything now known:
- Medicaid losses
- Marketplace losses
- Subsidy expiration effects
- Pricing issues
- Guidance issues
- Workforce reductions
- Voluntary buyouts
I no longer see this as primarily a finance problem.
I see it as a strategy and execution problem.
The workforce reduction announcement is especially important because it demonstrates leadership is now reacting to membership losses rather than benefiting from a growth strategy. (Bloomberg Law)
# If This Were My Board Recommendation
Near term (next 6 months)
- Replace or restructure portions of Finance and Actuarial leadership.
- Bring in an external operating advisor with deep Medicaid and payer turnaround experience.
- Require a comprehensive membership recovery and profitability plan.
Medium term (next 12 months)
If:
- Membership stabilizes,
- Margins recover,
- Workforce reductions achieve targets,
then the CEO survives.
If:
- ACA membership continues declining,
- Medicaid pressure persists,
- Another major earnings miss occurs,
then I would expect the board to seriously evaluate replacing the CEO.
## Final Assessment
Looking at Centene from before Sarah through today, the company appears to have moved from a highly disciplined Medicaid operator under Michael Neidorff to a company attempting a broader transformation under Sarah London. The challenge is that the transformation coincided with one of the most difficult payer environments in decades. The latest buyout program is a strong signal that leadership now believes the enrollment and revenue outlook is materially lower than previously expected, forcing the organization into another round of cost reductions. Based on the information available today, I would assign greater accountability to the CEO than the CFO because the root issue appears to be strategic positioning and market assumptions, not simply financial forecasting. (Bloomberg Law)