The Washington PostDemocracy Dies in Darkness

Private prison stocks collapse after Justice Department promises to phase them out

August 18, 2016 at 1:48 p.m. EDT
The Post’s Matt Zapotosky explains why the Justice Department announced Aug. 18 that it plans to stop contracting private prisons across the country. (Video: Bastien Inzaurralde/The Washington Post, Photo: PIET VAN LIER/The Washington Post)

The Justice Department on Thursday announced that it will end the use of private prisons, which currently house more than 22,000 federal prisoners, or about 12 percent of the total federal prison population.

These prisons had become increasingly controversial in the past several years. A DOJ Inspector General's report recently found that these prisons were on average less safe and secure than government-run prisons. Mother Jones magazine recently published a searing, 35,000-word expose on abuses at one private prison in Louisiana.

Criminal justice reformers also raised concerns that private prisons have a profit motive to put more people behind bars. The companies that own these prisons, like the Corrections Corporation of America (CCA)and the GEO Group, stand to make more money if the prison population grows. Many private prison contracts mandate a minimum occupancy rate -- often 90 or even 100 percent. In some cases, the government must pay for 100-percent capacity regardless of how many beds are filled.

Poor white kids are less likely to go to prison than rich black kids

As a result, they've become a powerful lobbying force on Capitol Hill.

So it's perhaps not surprising to see that the stocks of CCA and GEO -- two of the largest private prison companies in the U.S. -- are crashing today on the Justice Department's news. As of this writing, shares of CCA stock (NYSE:CXW) are down by close to 40 percent, while shares of GEO (NYSE:GEO) are down by about 35 percent.

Corrections Corporation of America

Geo Group

Trading in both stocks at the moment is highly volatile, so these numbers are likely to change significantly by the day's end. But they signal that investors are worried about the long-term viability of these companies.

It's important to note, however, that the Justice Department's announcement only affects federal prisons. Many states contract with private prison companies too, and those relationships are unaffected.

The states that spend more money on prisoners than college students

It's also worth pointing out that the Justice Department's move was largely unexpected. In a June 8 call with investors, the CEO of Corrections Corporation of America assured investors that "I think we’ll be just fine" regardless of who wins the White House in November.

"I think about the next president, whoever that is, if it’s Hillary Clinton or if it’s Donald Trump, there’s going to be so many things that he or she are going to have to deal with next year or next administration, both nationally and internationally, that I think having a view on our business, our industry is going to be really, really low on the priority list,” CEO Damon Hininger said at the time.

If today's decision is any indication, it's likely that private prisons were higher up on federal priority lists than Hininger had expected.

More from Wonkblog:

Obama's advisers just revealed an unconventional solution to mass incarceration

What makes the Stanford sex offender's six month jail sentence so unusual

There’s been a big decline in the black incarceration rate, and almost nobody’s paying attention