5 BEST Healthcare STOCKS to Buy in 2020 - YouTube

Channel: Let's Talk Money! with Joseph Hogue, CFA

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Healthcare stocks have been getting hammered lately but that might mean it鈥檚 the perfect
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time to buy.
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I鈥檝e screened through the two-thousand plus names in the sector to find five that should
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be on every investor鈥檚 radar for 2020.
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I鈥檒l not only show you those best healthcare stocks to buy but reveal why this entire group
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of stocks could be ready to explode.
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We鈥檙e talking healthcare stocks to buy today on Let鈥檚 Talk Money!
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Beat debt.
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Make money.
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Make your money work for you.
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Creating the financial future you deserve.
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Let's Talk Money!
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Hey Bowtie Nation, Joseph Hogue with the Let鈥檚 Talk Money channel.
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A special shout-out to all you in the nation, thank you for spending a part of your day
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here.
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If you鈥檙e not part of the community yet, just click that little red subscribe button.
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It鈥檚 free and you鈥檒l never miss an episode.
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Today is part four in our series on the best stocks to buy from each sector in 2020 and
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I鈥檓 excited about this one.
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Today we get into one of the big universal forces I鈥檝e been following for more than
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a decade, first as an economist and then as an equity analyst.
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Not only will healthcare stocks benefit from an aging population, that big picture trend,
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but this is going to be one of the best safety sectors you can buy.
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So what I want to do is going to be a little different from our previous sector investing
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videos.
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Instead of talking about how I picked these five healthcare stocks to buy, I鈥檓 first
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going to cover the big catalysts for the sector and a strategy for getting the most from the
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group.
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I鈥檒l then reveal my five top stocks in healthcare and why I think they should go in your long-term
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portfolio.
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I鈥檓 loving this series, covering the best stocks in each sector and it鈥檚 something
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so important but that most investors just don鈥檛 realize.
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Creating a portfolio that not only beats the market but is also diversified away from the
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biggest market risks means finding those best of breed companies from each sector.
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You can鈥檛 just leave this up to chance, trying to find the best stocks to buy and
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hoping you鈥檙e diversified across sectors, it has to be a strategic effort.
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So over these 11 episodes, one for each stock sector, I鈥檒l show you how to pick the best
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of breed in each.
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If you鈥檙e coming in later to the series, I鈥檒l link in the first comment below the
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video to the most recent video.
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I鈥檒l also be linking in the video description, all the videos in the series so you can see
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all the stocks for each sector.
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Very important here, since we鈥檙e not covering how I picked these stocks like we usually
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do, make sure you check out that first video in the series.
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In it, not only do I highlight some great tech stocks to buy, I detail the criteria
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I鈥檓 using to find stocks across the entire series.
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Here鈥檚 that graphic again and today we鈥檙e looking at the healthcare sector including
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drug stocks, biotech, medical services and equipment.
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Comparing the sector performance here we see that healthcare has lagged four of the 11
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sectors and the market in the five-year period with a 40% return and has actually only produced
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a 4% return over the last year, lagging every sector except energy stocks.
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So it seems the sector had a real breakout period from 2012 through 2015 where it outperformed
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the market but it鈥檚 lagged ever since.
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That鈥檚 not necessarily a bad thing as it actually means healthcare stocks aren鈥檛
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as expensive as the rest of the market.
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If you look at the sectors on a price-to-earnings basis, so how much investors are paying for
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those earnings per share, we see that healthcare is the second least-expensive after financials.
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Healthcare stocks are trading for 14.8-times analyst expectations for earnings, that鈥檚
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the dark-blue bar.
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If you look at the green bar, the 10-year average multiple for the sector is 14.3-times.
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That means stocks in the group are only trading at 3.5% more expensive compared to that longer-term
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average which is really nice considering some of these other sectors like tech trading for
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31% over its average and the market itself at 14% more than its long-term average.
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Besides that fundamental reason to look at the sector, you鈥檝e got a group of stocks
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with a stable revenue stream and pricing power.
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Inflation in healthcare costs have grown at 3.4% annually over the last two decades against
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just 2.1% growth in overall inflation and it鈥檚 that universal force of an aging population.
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Over 10,000 baby boomers are reaching 65 years old every single day and that trend is going
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to continue until 2029.
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They鈥檙e moving into an age group that spends twice the amount on prescription drugs, hospital
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services and other healthcare costs.
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Now of course, the big overhang on healthcare has always been regulation, or the threat
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of it by Washington.
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I鈥檓 not going to get into a debate about the cost or price controls.
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I鈥檓 here to help you make money, not to put together a perfect society.
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Regulation is always going to be a threat to profits for companies in the space and
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it鈥檚 something you need to watch but it鈥檚 also something these companies manage every
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single day.
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Instead of worrying about what might be passed, focus on finding the best of breed companies
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in their industry, the best management teams running these companies, and let them worry
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about regulation.
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Now I want to reveal those five best healthcare stocks to buy but first lets look at three
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exchange traded funds, three ETFs, you can buy to get broad exposure to the sector.
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Use these if you can鈥檛 find individual companies you want to buy so you get that broader exposure
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for your portfolio.
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First we鈥檝e got the Healthcare Select Sector SPDR Fund, ticker XLV, with its 1.6% dividend
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yield and super-low 0.13% expense ratio.
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The fund is pretty well diversified across industries in the sector so it鈥檚 going to
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give you that overall investment.
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Healthcare is an extremely diverse sector with growth industries like biotech and more
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stable companies in services.
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Getting exactly the theme you want might mean looking for a fund that covers or excludes
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a specific industry.
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So maybe if you want that growth part of healthcare, you go with the iShares Nasdaq Biotechnology
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fund, ticker IBB.
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This one is more expensive with an expense ratio of 0.47% and doesn鈥檛 pay much of a
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dividend at all but the idea is you get faster growth and the fund has produced a 14% annualized
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return over the last decade so it might be something to watch.
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Or conversely, if you want a more stable return and want healthcare without the volatile biotech
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group, you can go with something like the iShares US Healthcare Providers, ticker IHF.
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This one is also slightly more expensive with a 0.43% expense ratio but has an excellent
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4% dividend yield and has produced a 15% annual return over the last decade.
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The fund is split among the more stable industries in the sector like managed healthcare, services
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and facilities so you shouldn鈥檛 get the big ups-and-downs you see in biotech.
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Now let鈥檚 look at the five stocks I鈥檝e found that should be on everyone鈥檚 radar
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and what I鈥檝e tried to do here is look for best of breed companies across the industries
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in healthcare.
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I want to give you ideas across the whole sector so we鈥檝e got some drug makers and
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distributors, a biotech name, a services company and one in the retail consumer segment.
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CVS Health, ticker CVS, has gone nowhere this year but if you want one company that represents
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almost the entire healthcare sector, this is it.
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Between the 9,800 retail pharmacies, insurance under the Aetna acquisition, a PBM and managed
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care organization, this company controls just about every step in the healthcare chain except
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drug making.
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Being able to control almost that entire supply chain from discounts on buying pharmaceuticals
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to the patient experience, that advantage helps CVS control costs and customers like
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no other company.
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Shares trade for just 9.5-times earnings which is a welcome change after some of the other
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sectors we鈥檝e covered with shares topping 20-times earnings and higher.
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Analysts expect earnings to be slightly lower over the next year but given management鈥檚
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ability to consistently beat expectations, I think EPS will come out flat at around $7.50
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per share over the next four quarters.
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Now as you鈥檙e thinking about any of these healthcare stocks but especially CVS, understand
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the rhetoric is going to get hot and heavy the closer we get to the 2020 election.
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Healthcare is a hot button issue and railing against company profits always plays well
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with voters.
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It鈥檚 going to happen from both sides but I鈥檇 look at any news-related dips as buying
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opportunities.
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Just look at what regulation has changed in the past, pretty much nothing, and I don鈥檛
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think we have too much to worry about for the near future.
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CVS is well covered with 13 analysts providing price targets here.
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We鈥檝e got a low target of $63 a share which is slightly below the current price and a
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high of $91 per share for around a 35% gain.
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Merck, ticker MRK, is one of the most diversified drug makers in the sector with a strong pipeline
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of drugs in heart disease, cancer, a vaccine business and even sales in the animal-health
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space.
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This is a $212 billion company with operating cash flow of almost $11 billion a year.
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The scale and cash power here is unmatched by just about any other drug maker which is
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hugely important when you consider an average of $800 million to bring a big drug to market.
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Merck has a cash flow opportunity with its Keytruda and Lynparza blockbusters and is
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using almost $15 billion a year to buy back shares and pay out the dividend.
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Shares trade for 16-times earnings but look at the blowout third quarter they just announced.
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Merck beat earnings expectations by 21% over the quarter.
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Earnings are only expected 2.5% higher over the next four quarters but given management鈥檚
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history, we could see the actual number much higher than the $5.23 per share expected.
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Merck has largely missed the opioid litigation against many of the other drug makers so it
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could have the opportunity to really speed ahead in some key drug segments while competitors
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are facing uncertainty in the courts.
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Analysts have a low target of $89 a share which is just above the current price and
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a high target of $105 each which would be a 26% return on the shares.
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At $26 billion in market cap, Mckesson is the world鈥檚 largest pharmaceutical and medical
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supply distributor in the world.
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For example, with Merck you鈥檝e got a drug maker and with CVS you鈥檝e got a retail pharmacy.
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McKesson is the company that sits in-between the two, negotiating lower prices with Merck
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and selling to CVS.
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Between the three distributors; McKesson, AmerisourceBergen and Cardinal Health, these
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three companies control over 90% of the distribution business globally.
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What I like about McKesson is that it also has its own retail pharmacies and an IT infrastructure
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that helps it manage the supply chain better than the other two competitors.
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Now of course, this controlling status over pricing between pharmacies and drug makers
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puts McKesson and its two peers right in the middle of any fight over drug prices.
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It鈥檚 unavoidable and there will bound to be ups-and-downs whenever the issue comes
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up.
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The group has been working through a major settlement over the opioid crisis and has
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enough financial flexibility to negotiate any drug pricing legislation.
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Shares trade for 9.7-times earnings which are expected higher by 5.8% over the next
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year.
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Not a huge move but stable and I think just clearing out some of the uncertainty around
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the opioid litigation will be enough to send shares higher.
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Analysts see the shares at a low around $135 over the next year or as high as $169 per
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share which would be a return of 25% over the period.
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UnitedHealth Group, ticker UNH, is the largest private health insurer in the U.S. as well
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as a strong business line internationally.
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The company insures 50 million members covering 15% of the insured population.
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That puts it well above the next largest rival with just 10% of the market.
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Combine this scale with a strong health information technology business and a pharmacy benefits
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manager to negotiate costs and you鈥檝e got a business model that can鈥檛 be beat.
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In fact, the CVS/Aetna and Cigna/Express Scripts mergers over the last several years were both
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an attempt to copy the UnitedHealth business model.
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Shares trade for 17.3-times earnings, so a little more expensive than other stocks on
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the list but maybe worth it on that remarkably stable earnings growth.
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Earnings are expected almost 11% higher over the next year and will likely be much higher
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considering management鈥檚 history of beating estimates.
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This is another one that could be uncharacteristically volatile around headlines going into the 2020
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elections but where the dips could be a buying opportunity.
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For all the talk around government-paid health coverage, nobody has a workable plan or a
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way to pay for it that can get through Congress.
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Analysts have a low target around $257 per share over the next year with a high at $310
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a share which would be 24% from the current price.
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Gilead Sciences, ticker GILD, is another solid stock in the drug maker space with a 4% dividend
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that beats most others.
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Gilead is a leader in drugs treating HIV and Hepatitis, two of the highest profit margin
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markets in drug-making.
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In fact, Gilead is so successful in HIV treatments that it serves 80% of the patients in the
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United States.
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Shares trade for 9.7-times earnings on a PE basis with earnings expected 4.6% higher over
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the next year.
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Now that first and fourth quarter, the next two to be reported, have historically been
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weak for Gilead so you might buy half of your investment now and wait to see if shares fall
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on a bad earnings release when those reports come out.
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Analysts have a low target at $66 a share, right where the stock is now, and a high target
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of $95 per share or 45% higher than the current trade.
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Watch the first video in the series, the best tech stocks to buy now and the factors I used
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to find stocks in these videos by clicking the video on the right.
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Don鈥檛 just follow me into these stocks.
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Find out how I picked them and how to find other great investments.
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Don鈥檛 forget to join the Let鈥檚 Talk Money community by tapping that subscribe button
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and clicking the bell notification.