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CNBC: Alphabet puts another $375 million into Josh Kushner's Oscar Health, just months after previous investment

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Alphabet puts another $375 million into Josh Kushner's Oscar Health, just months after previous investment

  • Alphabet is investing $375 million in insurance start-up Oscar Health.

  • Early Google employee Salar Kamangar will also be joining Oscar's board.

  • Oscar and Alphabet subsidiary Verily have previously considered jointly bidding on a contract that would allow them to manage care for thousands of low-income Rhode Island residents on Medicaid.

Jillian D'Onfro | @jillianiles

Published 12:30 PM ET Tue, 14 Aug 2018  Updated 1:50 PM ET Tue, 14 Aug 2018

Alphabet has invested $375 million in Oscar Health, a 6-year-old health insurance start-up co-founded by Joshua Kushner, the brother of Donald Trump adviser Jared Kushner.

The new funding comes only a few months after two other subsidiaries of Alphabet — venture firm Capital G and life sciences division Verily — participated in a $165 million round that sources familiar say valued Oscar at $3.2 billion. Wired reports that Alphabet now owns roughly 10 percent of the start-up, which has created a technology platform to better process insurance claims.

Oscar, which ranked No. 12 on CNBC's 2018 Disruptor 50 List, uses a mix of technology, provider partnerships and member experience to try to make health insurance pricing clearer for patients, while giving doctors more flexible payment models.

As part of the strategic investment, early Google employee and former YouTube CEO Salar Kamangar is joining Oscar's board. Oscar CEO Mario Schlosser said in a statement that Alphabet's investment will help bring Oscar's product to more cities and allow it to start selling to seniors through Medicare Advantage by 2020.

Alphabet and Oscar have had a close relationship for years: CNBC reported in February that in 2016 Oscar and Verily mulled putting in a joint proposal to manage care for thousands of low-income Rhode Island residents on Medicaid. Although the bid never materialized, Verily is still interested in the insurance sector.

— CNBC's Christina Farr contributed reporting.