UnitedHealth Group Inc.’s solid third-quarter earnings on Tuesday sparked the sector’s biggest rally in a decade as it helped ease concerns about rising medical costs. While expectations were low heading into the report, the magnitude of the move illustrates just how negative sentiment has gotten. Also roiled by fears of a single-payer system, health insurers appear to have found their footing as investors turned more optimistic about the industry’s business outlook, according to BMO analyst Matthew Borsch.

It would be difficult to see a reversal of the rally following the debate as investors are familiar with Democrats’ health-care proposals, according to Borsch. Warren could get pushed for more specifics on her plans, but it’s unlikely that will impact investors’ views, he said. “We know what we know at this point.”
Other analysts are less sanguine. Bloomberg Intelligence’s Glen Losev said he wouldn’t be surprised to see health insurance stocks pull back from Tuesday’s gains after the debates and stay range-bound in the near term. “The Washington overhang remains and will continue” to be there until a Democratic nominee emerges, he said by telephone.
Scott Fidel of Stephens agrees that the sector is not clear of the political uncertainties, saying Tuesday’s rally just reflects investors’ increased comfort with fundamentals.
“The market is still pricing in a lot of uncertainty with these stocks, just not at the extreme levels that we had” heading into UnitedHealth’s earnings, Fidel said.
https://www.bloomberg.com//news/articles/2019-10-15/health-insurers-may-have-bottomed-as-investors-tire-of-politics?srnd=markets-vp
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