Browse the full management transaction log of Bright Health Group Inc., a listed equity based in United States. Shares are listed on US US, under the authority of SEC (Form 4). Operating in the Healthcare & Pharma sector, Bright Health Group Inc. has recorded 61 reports. The latest transaction was disclosed on 8 March 2022 — Acquisition. Among the most active insiders: Kadre Manuel. The full history is openly available.
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Bright Health Group Inc. is a United States healthcare company historically listed on the NYSE under ticker BHG before its corporate rebrand to NeueHealth in 2024. The company was founded in 2015 with a mission to re-engineer healthcare by aligning care delivery, local provider networks, and technology with the financing of care. Its historical headquarters were in Minneapolis, Minnesota, and in January 2024 the company announced a relocation of its corporate headquarters to Doral, Florida as part of a broader strategic reset. For French-speaking investors, Bright Health is best understood as a U.S. healthcare turnaround story: a business that moved away from a broad insurance-led model toward a more focused, value-based care platform. Over the past several years, the company has materially simplified its portfolio. It exited commercial health plans at the end of 2022 and completed the sale of its California Medicare Advantage business at the start of 2024. As a result, the remaining business is much more centered on value-based healthcare delivery and provider enablement. The core model now emphasizes owned and affiliated clinics, care coordination, population health tools, and services that help providers and medical groups operate in performance-based arrangements. In practical terms, Bright Health is no longer a traditional mass-market health insurer; it is a specialized operator focused on care management, clinical integration, and payer-provider alignment. From a competitive standpoint, the company operates in a crowded U.S. healthcare landscape that includes large national insurers, managed care organizations, provider groups, and tech-enabled care platforms. Its differentiated pitch is based on local market intimacy, tighter clinical integration, and the ability to manage medical costs while improving care quality and consumer experience. Management has repeatedly framed the strategy around capital-efficient growth, deeper partnerships with payors and providers, and a more sustainable operating model. The company’s geographic footprint remains entirely U.S.-based, with operations anchored in selected healthcare markets rather than a broad national insurance franchise. Recent developments underscore the extent of the transformation. The brand change to NeueHealth, the headquarters relocation, the divestiture of the California Medicare Advantage business, and the wind-down of commercial plans all point to a company reshaping itself around a narrower but potentially more scalable set of services. For investors tracking SEC Form 4 insider transactions, that context matters: this is primarily a restructuring and execution story, not a simple growth stock narrative. Key variables to watch include the company’s ability to deepen its value-based care partnerships, sustain operating discipline, and turn its redesigned model into durable earnings power on the NYSE in the United States.