logo
The Best 4 Healthcare Stocks To Buy Now In A Growing Sector

The Best 4 Healthcare Stocks To Buy Now In A Growing Sector

Forbes5 hours ago
The relatively high dividends paid by some of these companies may prove worth the uncertain revenue ... More impact of Medicaid cuts.
The healthcare sector is one of the largest in the U.S., with spending expected to account for 20% of the American economy as it reaches $5.2 trillion in 2025, according to NerdWallet.
But the healthcare sector is likely to suffer considerably in the wake of the passage into law of the so-called Big Beautiful Bill. The industry's pain will result from a roughly $1 trillion reduction in Medicaid spending through 2034, according to the Congressional Budget Office.
These cuts are likely to cause widespread pain. For example, 15.9 million Americans could lose Medicaid coverage, according to the Urban Institute. Hospitals' expenses for Medicaid patients could fall by $37 billion, estimated the Commonwealth Fund; to offset the lower revenue, hospitals, nursing homes, and doctors' offices could eliminate 477,000 jobs, according to the American Association of Medical Colleges. And many rural hospitals may be forced to close, forcing patients to travel further for care, noted the American Hospital Association.
Nevertheless, the growth of companies providing high-value solutions to painful problems whose business models are relatively impervious to Medicaid cuts could provide attractive opportunities for investors.
4 Top Healthcare Stocks to Buy Now
Healthcare consists of interconnected industries including the following:
From this sector, the following stocks stand out.
1. Cardinal Health (CAH)
Dublin, Ohio-based Cardinal Health distributes pharmaceuticals and medical products to more than 100,000 locations – controlling roughly 50% share of the market. Cardinal Health's stock rise can be attributed to a 2% boost, to $8.18, in analysts' 2025 consensus earnings per share due to stronger-than-expected growth and profitability in the company's pharmaceutical distribution and medical products segments, according to AInvest. Moreover, the stock could rise should the company report better than expected second quarter 2025 earnings. Due to Cardinal Health's 'cost discipline, supply chain stability, and rising demand for healthcare services post-pandemic,' analysts anticipate the company will report EPS of $2.04 – two cents above the Zacks consensus.
Cardinal Health is on my list because investors have recognized the company is improving its operations, and many anticipate the company will exceed investor expectations. If demand remains strong and profitability rises, its shares could rise more.
Medicaid cuts pose a significant risk to the healthcare sector, including Cardinal Health. Yet the company's diversified business model could enable it to withstand the worst damage from these cuts, AInvest reports.
2. Cencora (COR)
Conshohocken, Pennsylvania-based Cencora – formerly known as AmerisourceBergen – is a drug wholesaler and contract research organization. Cencora's stock rise is likely due to the company's faster than expected growth in the first quarter of 2025. This growth resulted from higher unit volume, a boost in demand for diabetes and weight loss drugs, and a 2% increase, to $15.83, in the company's fiscal year 2025 earnings per share guidance, according to StockTwits.
Although the pharmaceuticals distribution industry is intensely competitive, Cencora is expected to deliver solid profit growth and to exceed investor expectations. Specifically, investors anticipate the company's profits will rise 12.8% over the next five years in the wake of delivering 6% better than expected EPS for each of 'the trailing four quarters,' noted Zacks.
I included Cencora due to its track record of beating investor expectations. However, Medicaid cuts could reduce drug sales as millions of Americans lose their Medicaid coverage – thus cutting into Cencora's revenues, noted AInvest.
However, the company's focus on growing areas like specialty pharmaceuticals and its acquisition of a retinal care company could help offset the likely negative effects of Medicaid policy changes, according to Zacks.
3. Hinge Health (HNGE)
San Francisco-based Hinge Health develops healthcare software for musculoskeletal care, acute injury, chronic pain and post-surgical rehabilitation. The company's stock market rise flowed from its torrid revenue growth – up 420% in the quarter ending in March, according to Google Finance.
Hinge Health stock rose 23% after the company's May 2025 initial public offering. The stock is propelled by strong investor confidence in the company's digital musculoskeletal care platform and positive financial performance, according to BusinessInsider.
Hinge Health is on my list for these same reasons. What's more, since the company primarily targets self-insured employers and is partnering with major health plans to expand into the Medicare Advantage market, this diversification could mitigate the pain of Medicaid cuts, noted AlphaSense.
Nevertheless, Hinge Heath's stock price will likely rise only if the company beats expectations and raises guidance when the company next reports quarterly earnings.
4. Gilead Sciences (GILD)
Foster City, California-based Gilead Sciences researches and develops antiviral drugs used in the treatment of HIV/AIDS, hepatitis B, hepatitis C, influenza and COVID-19.
Gilead's stock rise resulted from expectations-beating earnings in the first quarter, coupled with an optimistic forecast for 2025 EPS due to strong sales of existing products and new treatments, according to Reuters. In addition, the company's 99.9% effective HIV drug Sunienca received regulatory approval in the U.S. and Europe.
Gilead is on my list because of its strong growth and bright prospects. However, since about 25% of the company's revenue is exposed to Medicaid – notably to its HIV drug Biktarvy – the Medicaid cuts could reduce the company's total revenue by 1% to 2%, according to Fierce Pharma.
Bottom Line
Healthcare is a huge, complex industry. Medicaid cuts could take a sizable bite out of many industry participants' revenue. The four companies described above – Cardinal Health, Cencora, Hinge Health, and Gilead – are likely more impervious to these cuts than owners of hospitals – particularly rural ones. Investors should scrutinize whether the relatively high dividends paid by some of these companies are worth the uncertain revenue impact of the Medicaid cuts.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Democrats see political gift in Trump's ‘big, beautiful bill'
Democrats see political gift in Trump's ‘big, beautiful bill'

The Hill

time23 minutes ago

  • The Hill

Democrats see political gift in Trump's ‘big, beautiful bill'

Democrats say Republicans have given them a political gift with President Trump's 'Big Beautiful Bill.' They say they can easily sell the bill to the public as a threat to working class voters, given its cuts to Medicaid and food stamps and significant tax breaks for the ultra-wealthy. 'This is a rare policy gift to Democrats in that it was perpetrated by Republicans, harms almost everybody, and it's actually relatively easy to talk about,' said Democratic strategist Christy Setzer. With that in mind, Democratic campaign operatives — with a big assist from liberal advocacy groups — have kicked off a messaging blitz that's likely to continue until Election Day. On Monday, the House Democrats' campaign arm launched its first national digital ad campaign of the year targeting 35 battleground Republicans who voted for Trump's bill despite reservations over Medicaid cuts. The House Democrats' top super PAC is finalizing another slate of ads — a six-figure mix of television and digital — that will launch in the coming weeks. And Unrig the Economy, an outside advocacy group, wasted no time complementing the effort. They've launched a seven-figure ad blitz targeting 12 vulnerable Republicans, with plans to spend an additional $10 million in the coming months. The ads highlight three of the most contentious provisions of the GOP bill: the cuts to health and nutrition programs, combined with a rollback of green-energy subsidies that's expected to spike utility costs across large parts of the country. 'Those are the three arguments that we see as the ones that hurt people the most, and the place that Republicans are most vulnerable to accountability,' a spokesperson for the group said Tuesday. The strategy is reminiscent of the Republican attacks on the Affordable Care Act, another wildly contentious bill that was broadly unpopular when Democrats passed it under President Obama in 2010. Months later, Republicans would pick up 63 House seats and flip control of the chamber — the same goal Democrats have set for next year's midterms. And the campaign extends far beyond Capitol Hill. Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear (D), who says he is weighing a 2028 presidential bid, has already begun using the controversial legislation as a talking point as he looks toward next year's elections. 'Next year, I'll also be the head of the Democratic Governors Association, and especially in these rural states, where Republican governors have not spoken up whatsoever to stop this devastating bill, we're going to have strong candidates, we're going to win a lot of elections,' Beshear said in a CNN interview on Sunday. Republicans are also vowing to go on the offensive, highlighting the tax cuts as a windfall for workers and the immigration crackdown as a boon for public safety. If anyone should be on the defensive, they say, it's Democrats for opposing the legislation. 'National Democrats' desperate and disgusting fear-mongering tactics are nothing more than a lame attempt to distract voters from the fact that they just voted to raise taxes, kill jobs, gut national security, and allow wide open borders,' Mike Marinella, a spokesman for the House Republicans' campaign arm, said Tuesday. 'We will use every tool to show voters that the provisions in this bill are widely popular and that Republicans stood with them while House Democrats sold them out.' But some Republicans have already handed Democrats easy soundbites to put in their ads in the lead-up to 2026 midterms. 'What do I tell 663,000 people in two years or three years when President Trump breaks his promise by pushing them off of Medicaid because the funding isn't there anymore?' Sen. Thom Tillis (R-N.C.), one of the three GOP senators to oppose the bill, said last week on the chamber floor. The criticisms were not overlooked by Democrats, who see Tillis as an asset to their messaging efforts. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) cited Tillis in arguing against the bill last week, and Tillis himself warned his colleagues about an Obamacare-style backlash to the bill. 'When you have even Republicans saying it on the record, it kind of rebuts any argument that the NRCC's gonna try to make,' said a Democratic operative. 'I think you will definitely see Thom Tillis in campaign ads — or his words, at minimum.' On the heels of the bill's passage, Democrats are already pointing to polling foreshadowing favorable outcomes in 2026. A Quinnipiac University poll out in late June revealed that 55 percent of voters oppose the 'Big Beautiful Bill,' and a Fox News poll out last month showed 59 percent of voters oppose it. But some Democrats worry that merely defining Republicans with the bill may not be enough, saying that the party needs to coalesce around an agenda of their own for voters to turn to. 'Democrats have done a good job defining the bill as being bad for regular people. The Democrats have to do better at making an argument that they have an agenda that will challenge the status quo on behalf of working people to make their lives better,' said Democratic strategist Jamal Simmons. 'It's something Democrats need to start doing now because it's a long term problem that needs a long term solution.' A further challenge facing Democrats involves the timing of some of the law's provisions. While benefits like the tax cuts take effect long before the midterms, the cuts to Medicaid and food stamps are delayed until January of 2027 — after voters go to the polls. 'It will be harder to show someone who has lost his or her health care. Instead, they'll have to talk about who's at risk,' said Simmons. 'From a messaging perspective, it's more compelling to show someone who has…already lost their benefits than to discuss someone in jeopardy of losing their benefits.' Regardless, Democrats agree that the bill's impacts must be told at the local level with the stories of voters who are at risk or already affected. They're already pointing, for instance, at a rural hospital in Nebraska that's closing its doors as a direct result of the coming Medicaid cuts. 'You might see rural hospitals closing a little bit sooner. It's got to be about rural hospitals that were open and this month they're closed because of what Donald Trump and Republicans did,' said Democratic strategist Joel Payne. 'It's got to be an effect. It's got to be stories. It's got to be individuals and real people.' '…This can't be a Washington, inside-the-Beltway story. This has to be a story that's told all around the country,' Payne added. In recent years, political observers say Democrats have struggled to reach broader audiences, the latest example being their inability to connect with middle-income voters in the 2024 presidential election. But they say the time is ripe for Democrats to push beyond their 'very same tried and true tactics,' as Setzer put it. 'We have a messengers problem. We have a message problem. We don't actually have a substance problem right now,' Setzer said. 'We have a very important piece of legislation to run against right now that is very wide-ranging in its impact. So they need to expand who they are talking to…and expand the platforms on which we are talking to people.' 'In every electoral victory that we've seen lately, whether it is Donald Trump or Mamdani, you see someone who is willing to branch out in the platforms that they're going to,' Setzer added.

Lucid Shatters World Record With 749-Mile Drive On A Single Charge
Lucid Shatters World Record With 749-Mile Drive On A Single Charge

Yahoo

time24 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Lucid Shatters World Record With 749-Mile Drive On A Single Charge

The widespread adoption of electric vehicles has long been hindered by a two-headed dragon: the lack of public charging infrastructure and the typical driver's range anxiety. These obstacles push automakers to find ways to improve range and show off their progress. A Lucid Air Grand Touring took the Guinness World Record for the longest trip in an EV on a single charge last weekend. The luxury sedan completed an impressive 749-mile journey between St. Moritz, Switzerland and Munich, Germany, shattering the previous record by nearly 100 miles. Behind the wheel of the Lucid was Umit Sabanci, a London-based entrepreneur who has the eccentric hobby of breaking Guinness World Records. In 2017, Sabanci set the record for visiting the most countries in 24 hours by scheduled transportation. He and a friend darted to 13 countries across Europe. In 2022, he completed the fastest circumnavigation of the Earth by scheduled flights. Sabanci flew a three-flight itinerary from and to Los Angeles International Airport in 46 hours and 23 minutes via Doha, Qatar and Brisbane, Australia. Sabanci previously worked with Lucid. He broke the record driving to the most countries on a single charge in June 2024. The vanity record breaker drove 567 miles southward through the Netherlands, Belgium, Luxembourg, Germany, France, Switzerland, Austria, Liechtenstein and Italy. In a statement regarding the single-charge distance record, he said: "When I completed the nine-country journey in 2024, it was just the beginning. This new achievement takes that journey even further. I'm proud to be part of a movement that proves electric mobility isn't just the future; it's already redefining what's possible today." Read more: These Are The Cars Our Readers Wish Would Depreciate Faster If his background didn't show it, he isn't an elite-level EV hypermiling tuner. The run was done in collaboration with Lucid. The California-based manufacturer likely provided the modifications and expertise necessary to extend the drive far beyond the Lucid Air Grand Touring's EPA-estimated range of 516 miles. Lucid has stripped the record from a privately run Mercedes-Benz EQS 450+. The previous record of 645 miles was set just last month and broke the symbolic 1,000-kilometer barrier. One can only hope that competition for bragging rights between manufacturers will drive the record even further out and lead to technology that will become standard across all EVs. It's hard to believe that we're only three years removed from Mercedes-Benz Vision EQXX's unveiling. The German automaker built a hyper-efficient electric concept car to prove that an electric vehicle could have 1,000 kilometers of range. However, the one-off car was designed as a bland, blobby teardrop to minimize drag, taking function over form to the extreme. Now, we're seeing typically styled electric cars blasting past the 1,000-km mark. It's impressive to see how far EVs have progressed in recent years, and hopefully, this level of development won't stop. Want more like this? Join the Jalopnik newsletter to get the latest auto news sent straight to your inbox... Read the original article on Jalopnik.

FHLB Dallas and Origin Bank Celebrate Awarding $2M in Affordable Housing Program Funds to Support The Wellspring's Holly Haven
FHLB Dallas and Origin Bank Celebrate Awarding $2M in Affordable Housing Program Funds to Support The Wellspring's Holly Haven

Business Wire

time27 minutes ago

  • Business Wire

FHLB Dallas and Origin Bank Celebrate Awarding $2M in Affordable Housing Program Funds to Support The Wellspring's Holly Haven

MONROE, La.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--A new campus slated to open early 2027 to assist families experiencing homelessness in Monroe, Louisiana, received much needed support in the form of a $2 million Affordable Housing Program (AHP) grant from the Federal Home Loan Bank of Dallas (FHLB Dallas), awarded through member Origin Bank. The banks celebrated awarding the funds to The Wellspring Alliance for Families Inc. (The Wellspring) during a ceremonial check presentation today. The AHP grant will support the development of Holly Haven, a private-living housing campus designed to serve unsheltered families and individuals, including those escaping domestic violence. 'This grant is crucial to the construction of a facility with private living spaces where families and individuals escaping trauma can find not just safety but also privacy and dignity,' said The Wellspring's President and CEO Caroline Cascio. 'Holly Haven will launch a new era of service delivery for The Wellspring and we are grateful to FHLB Dallas and Origin Bank for their support of this development, which will create a pathway to stability and self-sufficiency for families in Northeast Louisiana.' The Holly Haven campus will house two private-living facilities, one on the north side and the other on the south side of Holly Street in Monroe. Together, the two facilities will offer 28 units, some of which will adjoin to accommodate larger families. Both facilities will be equipped to meet the basic needs of those in residence and will be adjacent to service sites, including case management, safety planning and support groups for adults and children. 'We're proud to support The Wellspring and the creation of a facility that will offer both adults and children in our community a safe haven during trying times of their lives,' said Origin Bank's Senior Vice President, Commercial Relationship Manager Rick Guillot. 'This project aligns with Origin's purpose of enriching the lives of people in our community.' AHP funds are awarded through FHLB Dallas member institutions and assist FHLB Dallas members in financing the purchase, construction and rehabilitation of owner-occupied, rental or transitional housing and housing for homeless individuals. The funds must be used to benefit households with incomes at or below 80 percent of the median income for the area. 'Whether in bustling urban centers or underserved rural communities, everyone deserves a place to feel secure and supported,' said Greg Hettrick, senior vice president and director of Community Investment at FHLB Dallas. 'We're proud to fund a project that will offer families in this community a vital lifeline, close to home, during times of crisis.' In 2024, FHLB Dallas awarded $21.7 million in AHP General Fund grants to Louisiana-based affordable housing projects. The grants will help create 684 new or rehabilitated housing units. FHLB Dallas will announce 2025 grant awardees this fall. Learn more about the FHLB Dallas Affordable Housing Program. About Origin Bank Deeply rooted in Origin's history is a culture committed to providing personalized, relationship banking to businesses, municipalities and personal clients to enrich the lives of the people in the communities it serves. Origin offers a broad range of financial services and currently operates more than 55 banking centers located throughout Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama and Florida. About the Federal Home Loan Bank of Dallas The Federal Home Loan Bank of Dallas is one of 11 district banks in the FHLBank System created by Congress in 1932. FHLB Dallas, with total assets of $109.9 billion as of March 31, 2025, is a member-owned cooperative that supports housing and community development by providing competitively priced loans and other credit products to approximately 800 members and associated institutions in Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, New Mexico and Texas. For more information, visit

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store