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Published: September 3, 2009
Even as the S&P 500 Index sits at a multi-year
valuation peak (see chart), some sectors aren't faring as well.
Any investor who watches the news could guess that financial
companies are among the laggards. Many bank shares, for
instance, are still stymied by bad loans.
But a subset of the financial world is being held back by
another factor entirely.
I'm referring to health insurers. And it's clear that Uncle Sam
is to blame for their troubles.
Government action is usually a boon to companies. Washington's
stimulus efforts, for example, have helped scores of firms. Most
experts say the spending has added between two and three
percentage points to U.S. economic growth in the second and
third quarters.
But the debate about health care, and the looming possibility of
a government-run "public option" plan, is holding back health
insurers' share prices.
Investors have a laundry list of fears about the current
health-care proposal:
The short-term worry is companies will drop their existing
coverage to participate in the government-run option, which may
prove cheaper. Losing policyholders and their premiums en masse
would hurt insurers and significantly alter the ability to
generate earnings.
Long-term, investors are worried that the government will drive
any surviving health insurers out of business. Wall Street
doesn't buy the notion that the government will negotiate
payment rates with medical providers in good faith. Medicare,
the largest purchaser of health care in the United States,
doesn't negotiate. It sets prices that providers must accept.
This threatens insurance companies because they have to pick up
the slack. Medicare generates a net loss for health-care
providers that they can only make up by charging higher rates to
private insurers. As government buys more health care at lower
and lower costs, insurers will be forced to pay more and more.
Wall Street is worried this cycle will feed on itself until the
last private insurer goes belly up.
Investors also bear the fear of legislative unknowns. Congress
is coming back from its recess and will be back to work in
earnest next week, with health-care reform at the top of its
to-do list. Wall Street fears the unknown, and heaven can only
guess what Congress has cooked up while on vacation.
These concerns about government action are amplified by the
nation's unemployment rate. The more people without jobs --
which is nearly 10% of the work force -- the fewer participants
in the nation's health care plans. That means less premium
dollars.
But rising unemployment has another consequence: More
health-insurance claims. Workers afraid of losing their jobs
begin to use their employee benefits more aggressively. If you
begin to think you're going to lose your job -- and, say, your
dental plan -- then the first thing you'd do is make sure
everyone in the family is up-to-date on their checkups. So
insurance companies have fewer people paying premiums but more
people filing claims.
That's one of the reasons earnings were off -36.9% from 2007
through the end of 2008.
Debate Drags Down Values
As I noted earlier, the S&P 500
Index, the market's broadest
benchmark, is trading at a peak, not
in terms of index value but relative
to earnings. The index is at 18.4
times earnings, slightly ahead of
its typical valuation of around
16.5. That underscores Wall Street's
deeply held faith -- and perhaps
overconfidence -- in these
companies' ability to deliver
continued earnings growth.
Wall Street has no such confidence
in the health insurers, and traders
have devastated the sector's six
largest companies. The best
performing of the six, Cigna, trades
at a -21.7% discount to its typical
valuation (See table). The hardest
hit, Humana, sells at a -62.1%
discount.
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This data illustrates the fear Wall
Street has of a potential shift in
the nation's health-care policy and
of its effects on these companies.
The average health-insurance
company, which should be valued in
line with the overall S&P, can now
be bought at a -52.7% discount to
the benchmark average. Almost all of
this can be attributed to the
uncertainty of the health-care
debate.
Cigna, Wellpoint and Coventry have
all mounted impressive rallies this
year. Cigna is up +75.5%; Coventry
shares have gained +47.8%. Yet
Humana and Aetna still trade at a
wide discount to their norm, and
Wellpoint and UnitedHealth -- which
cover 100 million Americans between
them -- are also grossly
undervalued.
Betting on the Demise of the
Health-Care Plan
Removing the legislative threat
appears to be the catalyst that
would right-size valuations at
health-insurance companies.
Conventional wisdom is that the plan
is in real trouble, though the
Democratic Party still has a big
enough majority to win along a
party-line vote.
Investing in health insurers is
casting a vote with your dollars
that the public-option plan put
forth by Obama will fail. Investors
who are willing to shoulder this
political risk could see a healthy
gain should the plan be defeated.
-- Andy Obermueller
Editor
Government-Driven Investing |