The star of this week's "unlikely new highs" department: the U.S. Healthcare Providers investment fund, symbol IHF.
IHF is a one-click way to invest in a broad swath of the U.S. heath care industry. Major holdings include Cigna (insurance), UnitedHealth (insurance), Quest Diagnostics (testing), DaVita (dialysis services), and Express Scripts (pharmacy management). The fund is up 35% in the past seven months and just registered a new 52-week high.
The conventional thinking is at odds with this price action. After all, won't the government's reform efforts drive down profits for anyone who gives a flu shot, performs a lab test, or asks you to fill out an insurance form? We asked medical stock expert Rob Fannon (editor of the Phase 1 Investor) for his take on the situation...
Rob says sure, reform may pressure profit margins. But remember how the ancient law of supply and demand works. The government could make health care "free" to tens of millions of people. When you make a product or service free, you create unlimited demand for it. That's why Rob recommends getting on board this trend. Profits may go down a bit, but if Washington's "free houses, cars, and health care" panderers get their way, a lot of new demand and revenue is headed toward IHF and its holdings.
IHF is a one-click way to invest in a broad swath of the U.S. heath care industry. Major holdings include Cigna (insurance), UnitedHealth (insurance), Quest Diagnostics (testing), DaVita (dialysis services), and Express Scripts (pharmacy management). The fund is up 35% in the past seven months and just registered a new 52-week high.
The conventional thinking is at odds with this price action. After all, won't the government's reform efforts drive down profits for anyone who gives a flu shot, performs a lab test, or asks you to fill out an insurance form? We asked medical stock expert Rob Fannon (editor of the Phase 1 Investor) for his take on the situation...
Rob says sure, reform may pressure profit margins. But remember how the ancient law of supply and demand works. The government could make health care "free" to tens of millions of people. When you make a product or service free, you create unlimited demand for it. That's why Rob recommends getting on board this trend. Profits may go down a bit, but if Washington's "free houses, cars, and health care" panderers get their way, a lot of new demand and revenue is headed toward IHF and its holdings.
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