U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission
                              Washington, DC 20549

                         NOTICE OF EXEMPT SOLICITATION

1. Name of the Registrant:

                                WELLPOINT, INC.
___________________________________________________________________________

2.  Name of the person relying on exemption:

                              CTW INVESTMENT GROUP
___________________________________________________________________________

3. Address of the person relying on exemption:

               1900 L STREET, NW, SUITE 900 WASHINGTON, DC 20036
___________________________________________________________________________

4.  Written materials.  Attach written materials required to be submitted
pursuant to Rule 14a6(g)(1):



                       CtW Investment Group   April 2012

  WHAT INVESTORS NEED TO KNOW ABOUT WELLPOINT'S POLITICAL SPENDING PRACTICES,
                        DISCLOSURES AND GOVERNANCE

WellPoint's corporate political spending, in our view, lacks robust governance
and puts shareholder value at risk. The health insurer's activities during the
healthcare reform debate in 2009-10 epitomize the gaps in accountability,
governance and disclosure so troubling to many institutional shareholders.
However, and critically, the risk to shareholders persists going forward, with
WellPoint continuing to ignore failures in transparency and oversight.

For a heavily regulated company such as WellPoint, facing ongoing legal
uncertainty, re-establishing accountability is vital. Accordingly, the board
should be held directly accountable for the failure to ensure a legitimate,
transparent, accountable and responsible policy framework.

The CtW Investment Group works with the pension and benefit funds sponsored by
unions affiliated with Change to Win, which collectively hold of $200 billion in
assets.


WELLPOINT'S POLITICAL AND LOBBYING ACTIVITIES SUFFER FROM ACUTE FAILURES OF
TRANSPARENCY AND A LACK OF CLEAR INTERNAL CONTROLS.

  - In the midst of the 2009-10 health care reform debate, health insurers
    provided $86 million to their trade association, America's Health Insurance
    Plans (AHIP), which in turn provided the funds to the U.S. Chamber of
    Commerce./1/  Brought to light by dogged investigative journalism, this is
    perhaps the most egregious example of the persistent disclosure loopholes
    that allow huge sums of money to be contributed without detection by
    shareholders.
  - Despite pledges by the industry, led by AHIP, to take a collaborative
    approach to healthcare reform, the funds - equivalent to 40% of the U.S.
    Chamber of Commerce's entire budget a year earlier - were used to push an
    aggressive, highly divisive public campaign to oppose the health care
    overhaul law, which bore no trace of its ultimate funding by the health
    insurance industry. As a result, critics charge that the health insurers,
    including WellPoint, were duplicitous in their behavior./2/
  - In spite of opportunities to address the issue directly, WellPoint avoids
    disclosing its involvement, what corporate funds were involved, and what
    internal controls were in place to ensure funds were used in accordance with
    its policies and positions.
  - Outsourcing such activities on one of most critical issues facing the
    company in decades not only tests the boundary of "responsible advocacy" -
    how WellPoint describes its political activities - but also, we believe,
    risks losing control over messaging and alignment with "in-house" political
    advocacy.

__________

/1/ "Insurers Gave U.S. Chamber $86 Million Used to Oppose Obama's Health Law,"
Bloomberg, Nov. 17, 2010. In a Jan. 13, 2010 article "Health Insurers Funded
Chamber Attack Ads," The National Journal, citing people familiar with the
situation, reported that WellPoint was among the contributors. The article was
written, however, prior to the release of tax records used by Bloomberg, and
estimates the total industry contribution at between $10 million and $20
million.
/2/ E.g. "Health Insurer Lobbying, Sopranos Style," Dec. 23, 2010, Alliance for
a Just Society

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SHAREHOLDERS QUESTION WHETHER THE CONTRIBUTION SERVED THEIR LONG-TERM INTERESTS
AND IF IT RISKED REPUTATIONAL DAMAGE AND OTHER UNINTENDED CONSEQUENCES FOR THE
COMPANY AND INVESTORS.

  - There is a clear justification for WellPoint to responsibly engage in the
    public policy debate around health care reform; however, less clear is how
    funding anonymous attack ads, which risked jeopardizing health reform in its
    entirety, serves corporate interests. Along with peers, WellPoint
    acknowledged the economic un-sustainability and social shortcomings of the
    status-quo and the need to rein in cost and expand coverage. Moreover, the
    Affordable Care Act offers a market-friendly solution to health care
    spending with its main provisions closely mirroring proposals which
    WellPoint supports (i.e., a universal mandate, health insurance exchanges
    and cost control). In fact, WellPoint stands to realize significant top line
    growth from the expansion of coverage to more than 30 million presently
    uninsured persons (see appendix).
  - A recent Bloomberg Government study finds that large insurers are already
    reaping bottom-line benefits from aspects of the reform law currently in
    place and expect to expand their business as the law is fully
    implemented./3/
  - The effort to cover up funding may damage the company's reputation with
    investors and other stakeholders. At the same time, the ads and other
    efforts by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce to drum up grass roots opposition
    may, in part, fuel current efforts to repeal health care reform - a
    potentially damaging outcome for WellPoint in the long-run, considering that
    the industry 'won' many key provisions in the bill./4/

CREDIBILITY OF BOARD OVERSIGHT IS UNDERMINED BY CONFLICTED DIRECTORS AND ONGOING
FAILURE TO ADDRESS THE ISSUE AND SHAREHOLDERS IN GOOD FAITH.

  - Flawed governance allows conflicted directors to have influence over
    political spending. At the time of the health reform debate, oversight was
    compromised by the close connections of four directors to lobbying groups or
    political actors with connections to the reform debate and its partisanship
    (see appendix) and WellPoint's failure to disclose these key relationships.
    Two of these directors continue to hold board seats.
  - WellPoint has ignored repeated queries to clarify its involvement in AHIP's
    $86 million contribution and to reconcile the U.S. Chamber of Commerce's ad
    campaign against healthcare reform with WellPoint's support for key
    provisions included in the health reform overhaul and its opportunities for
    growth going forward under the new law. Unfortunately, the board's
    opposition statement to a shareholder proposal requesting further
    disclosure, Item 4 on the ballot, is just the latest in a line of smoke and
    mirror tactics in which it has repeatedly asserted to shareholders that it
    is committed "to participating in the political process in a responsible
    way," and that "ample information about our contributions" is already
    available. Yet, despite claiming to provide significant, detailed
    disclosures of political contributions, WellPoint refuses to disclose
    "special assessments" (any payments made in addition

__________

/3/ "Insurers Prosper Under Overhaul," Bloomberg Government, January 2012.
/4/ Key provisions, such as the universal mandate and health insurance
exchanges, closely mirror the proposals for which WellPoint repeatedly expressed
support in investor presentations during 2009 and 2010 even as they were being
put at risk by the USCoC's war on reform. In fact, WellPoint stands to realize
significant top-line growth from the expansion of coverage to more than 30
million presently uninsured, a point CEO Angela Braly stressed at BMO Capital
Markets Focus on Healthcare Conference, Aug.5, 2010.

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    to regular dues) to trade associations, which would cover contributions like
    AHIP's $86 million to the U.S. Chamber of Commerce. MOST ALARMING: THIS
    APPEARS TO VIOLATE THE SPIRIT OF AN AGREEMENT WELLPOINT STRUCK IN 2007 WITH
    A SHAREHOLDER TO PROVIDE CLEARER DISCLOSURE OF ITS INDIRECT SPENDING THROUGH
    TRADE ASSOCIATIONS./5/
  - In another sign of what we view as its disdain for shareholders and good
    governance, the board also requested, and received, permission to exclude a
    2012 proposal to separate the positions of chairman and CEO positions - a
    plain-vanilla governance reform that had won support from 44% of WellPoint
    shares cast at the 2011 AGM.

THE POOR TRANSPARENCY, WEAK GOVERNANCE FRAMEWORK AND QUESTIONABLE ACTIVITIES
POSE RISKS GOING FORWARD FOR SHAREHOLDERS.

  - Investors need to know whether the company is truly positioning itself to
    succeed under PPACA (as it has stated several times) or whether, in light of
    AHIP's paying the U.S. Chamber of Commerce to run attack ads before the law
    was enacted, it is spending corporate resources to overturn the law.
  - The governance remains deficient and potentially conflicted, lacking
    detailed disclosure on the board's actual oversight, and whether there is a
    committee excluding potentially conflicted directors Susan Bayh and Shelia
    Burke./6/
  - Most significantly, latest disclosure (i.e. the 2010 WellPac Report) leaves
    gaping holes in reporting.  It appears that special assessments or payments,
    such as the AHIP payment, are not captured and there is no indication that
    the company will rectify the situation. These disclosure loopholes have
    persisted in spite of years of shareholder engagement aimed at enhancing
    transparency./7/


For more information, please contact Michael Pryce-Jones, CtW Investment Group
at michael.pryce-jones@changetowin.org.


APPENDIX:
  * Table 1 - Profile of past and present conflicted WellPoint directors
  * Table 2   How does WellPoint perform under the new ICGN Policy Framework
  * Exhibit 1   CtW Investment Group Jan. 24, 2012 letter to WellPoint

__________

/5/The Center for Political Accountability (CPA), in a report issued April 9,
2012, highlights that in 2007 WellPoint agreed to disclose "any portion of dues
or similar payments made by WellPoint to any national trade association that are
identified by the trade association as being used for non-deductible political
expenditures, if such portion is $50,000 or more in a calendar year." The CPA
concludes, however, that current disclosure, by not including special
assessments, "leaves significant room for misrepresentation of the company's
political spending  and undermines the ability of shareholders to assess risks."
CPA report available
http://politicalaccountability.net/index.php?ht=a/GetDocumentAction/i/6297
/6/ An analysis of Burke and the other directors is contained in the appendix.
/7/ Ibid. 7

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TABLE 1: PROFILE OF CONFLICTED PAST AND PRESENT WELLPOINT DIRECTORS (based on
CtW Investment Group analysis)

                             
NAME         TENURE   NASDAQ          CERTAIN RELATIONSHIPS WITH LOBBYING AND/OR
                      CLASSIFICATION  POLITICAL RELATED GROUPS OR ACTORS

Donald W.    2001-11  Independent     * A former Senator, Riegle is an active,
Riegle, Jr.                           registered lobbyist and worked with
                                      clients during the health care reform
                                      debate in lobbying Congress.
                                      * Chairman of APCO Government Affairs
                                      (since 2001), a prominent lobbying and
                                      public affairs firm with extensive
                                      experience working with health insurers
                                      and other sectors of the health care
                                      industry; assisted groups on health care
                                      reform during debate, including PhRMA, a
                                      prominent pharmaceutical trade
                                      association.  Based on tax disclosure,
                                      both AHIP and the US Chamber of Commerce
                                      are substantial clients of APCO; in 2009,
                                      for instance, the US Chamber of Commerce
                                      paid APCO $17.4 million, whilst APCO
                                      received over $5 million from AHIP between
                                      2007 - 2009.

Sheila P.    2004-    Independent     * Since Oct. 2009, senior Policy Advisor
Burke        present                  (on health care) for Baker, Dondelson,
                                      Bearman, Caldwell & Berkowitz, a
                                      registered lobbying firm that specializes,
                                      among other things, in health care policy
                                      and lobbying.
                                      * Former Chief of Staff to Bob Dole.
                                      According to her workplace biography: "In
                                      these roles she was involved with numerous
                                      legislative issues including those related
                                      to Medicare, Medicaid and the Maternal and
                                      Child Health programs, welfare reform,
                                      budget reconciliation and the previous
                                      legislative efforts to reform health
                                      care."

Susan B.    2001-     Independent     * An attorney, she is married to Evan Bayh
Bayh                                  - U.S. senator from 1999 until 2011.
                                      During the health care reform debate, Evan
                                      Bayh's vote was considered particularly
                                      important, based on media reports. Indeed,
                                      ever since Evan Bayh entered politics,
                                      questions have arisen in the media over
                                      the potential conflicts this raises with
                                      Susan Bayh's board seats.
                                      Since leaving Congress, Evan Bayh has
                                      become a partner for McGuire Woods LLP, a
                                      registered lobbying firm that includes
                                      services for the health insurance
                                      industry. Evan Bayh, since 2011, has also
                                      been a consultant to the US Chamber of
                                      Commerce.
                                      * Birch Bayh, her father-in-law, is a
                                      registered lobbyist who lobbied on
                                      healthcare reform for various clients.
                                      * In 2009, Susan Bayh sat on 8 other
                                      corporate boards; she currently sits on
                                      the boards of four other companies
                                      presently (four total), which remains an
                                      over-boarding concern. Based on Form 10-K
                                      statements, there are two biomedical
                                      companies (Dendreon and Curis) with
                                      long-standing profitability issues and
                                      uncertainty about future profitability;
                                      the third (Emmis Communications) suffers
                                      from continuing operating losses and heavy
                                      debt. Bayh sits on two key committees at
                                      each of her other boards.
                                      * In addition, the three biomedical
                                      companies (Curis and Dendreon, plus Dyax,
                                      which she left recently) note healthcare
                                      reform issues as risk factors in Form
                                      10-Ks; there is a potential, therefore,
                                      that the companies had conflicting public
                                      policy interests during health care
                                      reform.

William     2004-11   Independent     * The brother of former President G.H.W.
H.T. Bush                             Bush, uncle to former President G.W. Bush
                                      and former Florida Governor J. Bush;
                                      campaigned and helped raise funds for
                                      various electoral campaigns.


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TABLE 2: HOW DOES WELLPOINT PERFORM UNDER THE NEW ICGN POLICY  FRAMEWORK FOR
POLITICAL LOBBYING DONATIONS?


THE CTW INVESTMENT GROUP BELIEVES WELLPOINT FAILS TO MEET THE ICGN CRITERIA
ACROSS THE BOARD:


                                                                          
Legitimacy
- "Clearly serves the interests of the company as a whole and
   its investors."                                                           No

Transparency
- "Clarity on the policy framework and exactly what the company is doing,
  who the decision makers are, when and how the company seeks to influence
  public policy and the political process."
- "Transparency should also cover the direct and indirect costs of
  political activity."                                                       No

Accountability
- "Company managers involved with political activity are held accountable
  by the company's Board. The Board, in turn, is held accountable by the
  company's shareholders for the company's political policies and their
   implementation."                                                          No

Responsibility
- "Political influence is sought within the constraints of legal and
  ethical norms and does not seek undue influence for special interest
  groups at the expense of broader public welfare."                          No



Source: ICGN Political Disclosure Guidance on Political Lobbying and Donations;
assessment is the opinion of the CtW Investment Group./8/

__________

/8/ Available at http://www.responsible-investor.com/images/uploads/advertising/
ICGN_PLD.pdf

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                       CtW Investment Group    April 2012

EXHIBIT 1: CTW INVESTMENT GROUP JAN. 24, 2012 LETTER TO WELLPOINT

January 24, 2012

Jackie M. Ward
Lead Director
WellPoint, Inc.
120 Monument Circle
Indianapolis, IN 46204

Dear Ms. Ward:

Like other long-term investors in the health insurance sector, we are alarmed by
the high-risk and ultimately short-sighted approach taken by WellPoint Inc. in
the recent health care reform debate.  Even though WellPoint stands to benefit
in the long run from passage of the 2010 Patient Protection and Affordable Care
Act (PPACA), and despite pledges to avoid a repeat of 1994, when the industry
led public opposition to President Clinton's Health Security Act, we believe
that WellPoint may have spent considerable resources to defeat the bill.
Specifically, we are concerned that WellPoint was among the health insurance
companies that surreptitiously channeled $86 million through America's Health
Insurance Plans (AHIP) to the U.S. Chamber of Commerce (US CoC) to run an
aggressive, high-risk, public campaign to oppose the health care overhaul law.
The existence of this huge contribution -- equivalent to 40% of the total
contributions to the US CoC for the year and more than AHIP's entire budget for
the prior year -- became public only after a Bloomberg investigation in November
2010, six months after passage of the health reform legislation./9/

Accordingly, we call on WellPoint's board of directors, prior to the 2012
shareholder meeting, to disclose whether any WellPoint funds were contributed to
AHIP with the understanding that they would in turn be transferred to the US
CoC, and if so, to explain what steps the board took to ensure that the
advertising and other political activity the US CoC would undertake with the
contributed funds would comply with management's stated positions and strategic
objectives. Absent such disclosure and explanation, we will be unable to support
the re-election of incumbent directors at WellPoint's 2012 annual meeting.

The CtW Investment Group works with pensions and benefit funds sponsored by
unions affiliated with Change to Win, which collectively hold over $200 billion
in assets.  Our concerns, detailed below, stem from the following key points:

  * Several major health insurance companies secretly contributed over $86
    million to AHIP, which in turn contributed this same sum to the US CoC to
    fund aggressive political activity in opposition to the PPACA.
  * The advertisements and other activities undertaken by the US CoC
    unambiguously opposed the PPACA, and specifically attacked provisions -
    including insurance purchase mandates, subsidies for individuals and small
    businesses, cost control initiatives, and expanded coverage   for which
    WellPoint had repeatedly made explicit endorsements and that stand to
    benefit the managed care sector, and WellPoint in particular./10/
  * With the fate of health reform unclear due to various constitutional court
    challenges, questions of implementation, and uncertainty from the 2012
    election, this is a continuing and pressing issue for shareholders in health
    insurance stocks.

DESPITE OPPOSITION, PPACA IS A MARKET-FRIENDLY SOLUTION TO RUNAWAY HEALTH CARE
SPENDING

__________

/9/ "Insurers Gave U.S. Chamber $86 million Used to Oppose Obama's Health Law,"
Bloomberg, Nov. 17, 2010
(http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2010-11-17/insurers-gave-u-s-chamber-86-million-u
ed-to-oppose-obama-s-health-law.html).
/10/ In fact, in a follow-up study Bloomberg argues that insurers are
"profit[ting] from [the] health law they fought," noting "companies saw their
average operating profit margins expand to 8.24 percent in the six quarters
since the overhaul became law, compared with 6.88 percent for the 18 months
before it was passed." See "Insurers Profit from Health Law they Fought
Against," Bloomberg, Jan. 5, 2012
(http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-01-05/health-insurer-profit-rises-as-obama-s
health-law-supplies-revenue-boost.html).

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The PPACA, signed by President Obama on March 23, 2010 has three major
interconnected components: expansion of health insurance coverage (and the taxes
and fees to pay for this expansion), a new regulatory structure for the
individual insurance market, and a variety of cost control measures.  Despite
heated rhetoric over the demise of managed care under the reform law, these key
provisions -- once it is accepted that some kind of overhaul is essential to
addressing society's spiraling health care costs -- represent a favorable result
for the private insurance industry.  Moreover, as we will see, these provisions
closely mirror the proposals for which WellPoint and its executives repeatedly
expressed support in 2009 and 2010, even as they were being undermined by the US
CoC's war on reform.

Under this legislation, top line revenue for the industry as a whole will
receive a significant boost from the addition of 30 million Americans currently
lacking health insurance to the addressable market.  The new enrollees will be
covered primarily through two mechanisms: an expansion of the Medicaid program
to cover all individuals under age 65 with income up to 133% of the federal
poverty line, and subsidies paid to Americans without employer-provided health
insurance covering at least 70% of the premium cost of a mid-range health
insurance policy.  These coverage expansion measures account for nearly the
entire $900 billion cost of the legislation over its first 10 years, and these
costs are met in turn through: fees charged to pharmaceutical companies, health
insurers, and medical device manufacturers; a gradual reduction in Medicare
Advantage payments to the level of traditional Medicare costs; an increase in
the Medicare tax on high-income Americans; and an excise tax on very high
premium health plans (essentially capping the tax deductibility of these plans).
While two of these revenue provisions may adversely affect some health insurers,
essentially all increased spending on subsidizing coverage for Americans without
employer-provided plans will become revenue for the health insurance industry,
providing an once-in-a-lifetime boost to revenue growth.

A number of regulatory changes were included in the Act, the most important of
which relate to the creation of health insurance exchanges in each state where
individuals receiving subsidies will be able to purchase coverage.  These
exchanges are modeled on the successful Massachusetts "Connector," and allow
participating insurers to offer standardized plans providing benefits ranging
from 60% to 90% of actuarial value.  Participating insurers will be required to
accept enrollees regardless of prior health conditions ("guaranteed issue"), and
to limit the variation in premiums by age to a ratio of 3 to 1 ("community
charge").  However, in ameliorating the insurance industry's long-running
objection to guaranteed issue, the reform includes the "enforceable mandate,"
discouraging individuals from waiting to buy insurance until they need it.
Employers with more than 50 employees will be required to pay a fee if they do
not provide health insurance coverage and have at least one employee receiving
subsidies (effectively an employer mandate).  At the same time, individual
adults whose income is greater than 133% of the federal poverty line will be
required to purchase health insurance (the individual mandate).  Other
regulations which apply to health insurers include elimination of lifetime
benefit limits, elimination of co-pays for preventative care, and regulatory
limits to medical loss ratios.

Finally, the PPACA includes a variety of measures to reduce the rate of increase
in health care costs. The most prominent of these is the Medicare Payment
Advisory Board, which will propose cost-saving changes to Medicare's payments
system.  These proposals will be implemented absent an explicit Congressional
disapproval.  The PPACA provides for the gradual simplification of health
insurance administration and for the conversion of health insurance billing and
payments to an electronic basis.  It also provides funding for comparative
effectiveness research which will inform the Payment Advisory Board's
recommendations, and for a variety of trials and experiments in new care and
payment procedures (including per capita payments) to determine which hold the
greatest promise of reducing health care cost growth and improving the quality
of care and the efficiency of delivery.  Other cost-containment provisions in
the Act include measures to reduce waste, fraud, and abuse, to develop
alternatives to tort litigation to resolve medical malpractice, and to promote
preventative care and wellness programs.

While certain provisions of the PPACA impose new obligations on health insurers,
the Act clearly provides an immense opportunity to compete for what will
eventually be over $300 billion in annual federal spending to provide coverage
to the currently uninsured.  Moreover, post reform, large insurers stand to gain
a competitive advantage through economies of scale, and companies successful at
cost containment are expected to gain market share and benefit from industry
consolidation.  Indeed, a recent Bloomberg Government study/11/ suggests that
large insurers are already reaping bottom-line benefits from aspects of the
reform law and are "betting on something like full implementation of the
overhaul law with its promise of substantially expanding insurance coverage and
their business." Most of all, comprehensive reform removes the uncertainty that
has long hung over the industry owing to the widespread acknowledgement that
spiraling health care costs are

__________

/11/ "Insurers Profit from Health Law they Fought Against," Bloomberg, Jan. 5,
2012.

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unsustainable and demand changes to current health care markets. As the next
sections demonstrate, key components of the PPACA provide strong benefits to
WellPoint in particular.  These components correspond very closely to the
proposals for which WellPoint and its executives repeatedly expressed support,
even as they were explicitly targeted by the US CoC's advertisements aimed at
defeating the PPACA.

WELLPOINT POISED TO BENEFIT IN THE LONG-RUN

With, as many expected throughout the debate, the final bill excluding a
Government-run competitor, or the so-called  public option,' WellPoint emerges
from comprehensive health reform well positioned to capitalize on the expansion
of healthcare.  As the largest underwriter of individual and small group
insurance in the country and a sizeable player in Medicaid-managed care programs
and other government run programs, WellPoint stands to realize significant top
line growth from the expansion of coverage to more than 30 million presently
uninsured Americans.  At the same time, with just 4% of its members enrolled in
Medicare Advantage, the company has minimal exposure to cuts in this program
under the reform legislation.

This growth opportunity was highlighted to the market at the company's 2011
Investor Conference.  With more than half of the potential enrollees,
approximately 17 million, residing in states currently served by WellPoint, the
insurer expects sizeable membership growth even if it only maintains market
share./12/  However, there is good reason to believe WellPoint will expand its
market share. With the emphasis on cost containment, market analysts, including
Credit Suisse, Jefferies & Co., and Sanford Bernstein & Co., see economies of
scale emerging as a critical competitive advantage post-reform./13/  This
would, in turn, drive market concentration and ultimately sector consolidation.
Given its scale and best-in-class consumer capabilities, these dynamics should
underpin strong market growth at WellPoint.  Indeed, folding in the likelihood
that employer-sponsored coverage would lose members to the more flexible
individual insurance market, Citadel Securities believe WellPoint "will thrive
under this scenario."/14/

Addressing WellPoint's strategy for maintaining its leadership position in the
individual and small group market post-reform, CFO Wayne Deveydt told
participants at a Deutsche Bank conference in May 2009 that WellPoint, "will do
incredibly well, in terms of acquiring new membership in that type of a design.
Considering the fact that within our 14 states, we have the number one market
share in the vast majority of those states, 12 of the 14, and the fact that we
have the broadest discounts and the best G&A structure . . . we ought to be able
to win our fair share of membership."/15/

Moreover, once the legislation was finalized and passed, WellPoint maintained
that reform represents a significant opportunity for business.  At a BMO
conference in August 2010, Michael Kleinmen, VP of Investor Relations, told
attendees that WellPoint "match[s] up pretty well to get some additional
business from these folks getting into the insurance market."  He went on to
say: "We are one of the largest state-sponsored writers, managed Medicaid
writers in the country.  We're the largest writer of individuals in the country,
have roughly 2 million members right now. And of these 34 million uninsured,
about 17 million live in WellPoint states currently.  So if we just get our
market share of these folks, we should probably see some pretty good membership
growth from them."/16/

REFORM LEGISLATION ADDRESSES MANY NEEDED CHANGES VOICED BY WELLPOINT

Critically, not only did WellPoint offer general support for reforming the
current health care system, but statements by WellPoint executives during 2009
and 2010 reinforce the impression that the PPACA, as actually enacted, did much
that WellPoint had hoped healthcare reform would achieve.

At the outset of the debate, in a February 2009 report, WellPoint publicly
acknowledged that the current path of rising costs was unsustainable and that
reform is required./17/  It also affirmed its support for universal coverage,
one of the more controversial components of the bill.  A few months later at the
May 2009 Bank of America Healthcare Conference, Brian Sassi of WellPoint's
Consumer Business told analysts: "I think any discussion of health care reform
needs and is rightly

__________
/12/ 2011 WellPoint Investor Conference, February 23, 2011.
/13/ "Healthcare Team Outlook," Credit Suisse, December 20, 2011; "Healthcare,"
Jefferies, January 12, 2011; "US Managed Care," Bernstein Research, October 11,
2010.
/14/ "Initiation of Coverage," Citadel Securities, January 19, 2011.
/15/ Deutsche Bank Healthcare Conference, May 18, 2009.
/16/ BMO Capital Markets Focus on Healthcare Conference, August 5, 2010.
/17/ "Building a Sustainable Healthcare System", by WellPoint, February 2009.

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focused on the 46 plus million Americans who do not have health insurance."
Furthermore, at the same conference, WellPoint outlined the key tenets of its
reform platform: "One is an enforceable effective individual mandate to insure
that everyone is covered, to provide premium assistance for those that can't
purchase insurance in the open market, guarantee issue with no pre-existing
condition in the reform market while maintaining rating flexibility for age,
geography, family size and benefit design."/18/  A position that was
later echoed at the Deutsche Bank Healthcare Conference, where CFO Deveydt told
analysts: "We believe in universal coverage, and we support it.  We believe
individuals should have the ability to get coverage, and that a guaranteed issue
is not something that we are debating."/19/

As the debate progressed in Congress, WellPoint continued to claim both an
active role in the reform process and support for many of the underlying
elements of reform.  At a BMO conference in the summer of 2009, VP Kleinman said
WellPoint is "very active right now in the healthcare reform discussions that
are going on in Washington" and "continue[s] to advocate affordable, sustainable
solutions to the healthcare issues in this country." He continued: "We are not
simply opposed to healthcare reform. To the contrary, we have come to the table
recognizing that affordability is a very significant issue and offering
solutions that we believe are appropriate both as a Company and as an industry
to the country."/20/  Indeed, following passage of the PPACA, VP Kleinman told
attendees at the BMO conference in 2010 that the company is "committed to making
healthcare reform as successful as possible [ ] and are preparing our company to
survive and thrive in this environment."/21/

SURREPTITIOUS FUNDING OF CHAMBER'S OPPOSITION TO HEALTH CARE REFORM

The US CoC does not disclose exactly what activities have been financed by
particular contributions, nor do we have clear reporting on the "grass-roots"
activities that press accounts include among the uses to which the US CoC put
the $86 million it received from AHIP.  However, we do have cached copies of
television advertisements targeting health care reform for which the US CoC
takes credit.  These advertisements give us a clear sense that the US CoC was
not only opposing health care reform per se, but was also targeting specific
provisions which WellPoint and its executives had repeatedly endorsed.  For
instance, in an ad titled "Fast Sale," the narrator suggests that Congress is
attempting to keep the public from recognizing the "$1 trillion cost" and
"billions in new taxes" associated with health care reform.  But of course, this
"cost" is almost entirely spending to expand insurance coverage, which WellPoint
supported and which its executives believe the company is in a strong position
to benefit from.  In another advertisement produced by the US CoC, the narrator
decries new "mandates" that threaten to destroy jobs; but WellPoint has clearly
supported an individual mandate for adults to purchase insurance, as well as
incentives to broaden the number of businesses that provide insurance to their
employees.  A US CoC ad titled "Say NO to Government Run Health Care" urges
viewers to call their Senators to vote against the PPACA, pointing again to
precisely the increases in spending and revenue that make possible the move to
the universal health insurance coverage that WellPoint repeatedly endorsed.

In addition to the content of its advertisements, we note that 94% of the US
CoC's spending in the 2010 Congressional elections went to Republican
candidates, and that no Republican in either the House or the Senate voted in
favor of the PPACA.  The US CoC did not support any Democratic candidates for
the US Senate, and of the 11 House Democrats supported by the US CoC, none voted
in favor of the PPACA.  In contrast, some House Democrats with very high ratings
from the US CoC based on votes in 2009 and 2010, such as Betsey Markey of
Colorado, who had a 73% rating, but who supported the PPACA, faced US CoC
opposition and lost their races. More recently, US CoC President Tom Donahue has
expressed support for repealing the PPACA. Clearly, if WellPoint did contribute
funds to AHIP with the understanding that these would in turn be passed along to
the US CoC for political activity pursuant to shaping health care reform, it
failed to ensure that such money was being spent in a manner consistent with the
strategic objectives outlined by senior management and supported by the board.

Significantly, with opponents of reform continuing to target key provisions of
the law, both politically and legally, the company's association with the US CoC
remains a very much "live" issue for shareholders.  The organized push-back
against the constitutionality of the law, for instance, would be a very risky
wager for the industry.  The most detrimental outcome for

_________

/18/ Bank of America Securities Healthcare Conference, May 12, 2009.
/19/ Deutsche Bank Healthcare Conference, May 18, 2009.
/20/ BMO Capital Markets Focus on Healthcare Conference, August 5, 2009.
/21/ BMO Capital Markets Focus on Healthcare Conference, August 5, 2010.

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commercial managed care, JPMorgan notes, would be one that would strike down the
individual mandate but uphold the guaranteed issue./22/

CONCLUSION

WellPoint and its top executives repeatedly stressed both their support for
health care reform legislation including guaranteed issue, community rating,
subsidies for affordability, an individual mandate, and cost-control measures,
and their desire to play a constructive and informative role in the legislative
process.  We believe that AHIP's contribution to the US CoC to oppose the PPACA,
which the US CoC likely utilized to target members of Congress that voted in
favor of legislation clearly fitting much of the criteria identified by
WellPoint and its principals, threatens the credibility of the company, its
executives, and the board.  We challenge the board to disclose to shareholders
whether WellPoint was among the insurers participating in the AHIP-US CoC
contributions, and if so to explain what steps were taken to ensure that these
funds were utilized in a manner consistent with WellPoint's public position and
strategy, and what consequences have or will follow given that these funds were
clearly not utilized in that way.  Absent such an explanation, we will be unable
to support incumbent directors at the 2012 annual meeting.

In closing, we ask WellPoint to provide a written response to this
correspondence that we can share with other concerned investors.  We look
forward to your prompt reply.  For further information or discussion, please
contact me at 202-721-6060.

Sincerely,



Richard Clayton
Director of Research

CC: Board of Directors



/22/ "Healthcare Services: Supreme Court & Health Reform," JPMorgan North
America Equity Research, November 14, 2011.

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