Health insurer shares pummeled by Sanders surge, virus worries
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[February 25, 2020]
By Lewis Krauskopf
NEW YORK (Reuters) - As concerns over the
spreading coronavirus outbreak hammered U.S. stocks, one corner of the
market was confronted with another potentially game-changing prospect: a
Bernie Sanders nomination.
The S&P 500 managed healthcare index of health insurance stocks <.SPLRCHMO>
tumbled over 7% early Monday afternoon, compared to a 3.5% fall for the
overall S&P 500 <.SPX>. Shares of industry bellwether UnitedHealth Group
Inc <UNH.N> dropped 7.6% and were the biggest individual drag on the Dow
Jones Industrial Average <.DJI>, while shares of Centene Corp <CNC.N>
fell more than 10%.
Sanders, a U.S. senator whose progressive agenda includes a national
Medicare for All health plan, scored a dominant win in the Nevada
caucuses over the weekend, adding momentum in his bid for the Democratic
presidential nomination to face off against U.S. President Donald Trump
in the November general election.
The Vermont senator authored Medicare for All legislation that would
essentially abolish private insurance in favor of a single
government-run plan that covers every American. The ambitious proposal
would cost more than $30 trillion over 10 years, according to
independent analyses.
His dominant performance has taken some market participants by surprise.
"It wasn't clear that it was going to be that big of a win for him,"
said Sarah James, a healthcare analyst at Piper Sandler, adding that the
senator "is still pushing his Medicare for All, anti-health insurer
platform."
James said most investors doubt Sanders' health-reform plan will receive
enough support to pass in Congress and would be too disruptive to even
be feasible to implement.
"But you have two scenarios," James said, "one, an acknowledgement that
the chance isn't absolutely zero; or two, an extension of the
uncertainty, neither of which is a great setup."
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U.S. presidential candidate Senator Bernie Sanders (I-VT) delivers a
speech to defend his support for a sweeping "Medicare for All"
healthcare plan at George Washington University in Washington, U.S.,
July 17, 2019. REUTERS/Erin Scott/File Photo
Health insurer stocks have proved volatile throughout the Democratic
presidential race, sometimes falling as polls showed improvement for
Sanders and fellow progressive candidate Elizabeth Warren.
On Monday, the stocks also felt pressure from news that the
coronavirus was accelerating its spread outside China, with Italy,
South Korea and Iran reporting sharp rises in cases on Monday.
"If it were to become a pandemic in the United States, that would be
a significant impact to the operations for managed care," said David
Heupel, healthcare analyst at Thrivent Investment Management.
"Obviously you would have a massive increase in ER visits ...,"
Heupel said. "There's a lot of expenditures associated with that, so
this would be a pretty significant increase in cost trend. That
plays directly to the managed care group."
Among other health insurer shares, Humana Inc <HUM.N> dropped 6.4%,
while Anthem Inc <ANTM.N> was off 5.6%.
Shares of hospital operators were also under pressure, with HCA
Healthcare <HCA.N> down 5.6% and Tenet Healthcare Corp <THC.N> off
4.6%.
(Reporting by Lewis Krauskopf; editing by Ira Iosebashvili and
Richard Chang)
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