Managed-care stocks rise despite appeals court ruling against Obamacare individual health insurance mandate

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Shares of managed-care companies including rose Thursday after a federal appeals court on Wednesday upheld a previous ruling striking down Obamacare’s individual mandate, but left open the question of whether the rest of the Affordable Care Act remains valid after Congress removed the penalty for not having health insurance.

The three-judge panel instead sent the case back to a Texas federal judge, who previously threw out the entire law, to reconsider how much of the Affordable Care Act will survive.

The ruling keeps the legal threat to Obamacare alive while reducing the likelihood the Supreme Court could render a final verdict on the law before the 2020 elections.

That breathing space bodes well for managed-care companies that have attributed much of their growth in recent years to the health insurance exchanges and state Medicaid expansions set up under Obamacare.

See also:Spending deal to repeal certain ‘Obamacare’ taxes, lift tobacco-buying age to 21

In trading on Thursday, Centene’s CNC, +2.50%  stock gained 3.9%, Molina MOH, +1.18% 3.1% and WellCare HealthPlans Inc. WCG, +1.75%  2.6%. Centene is buying WellCare for about $17 billion. That deal is expected to close early next year.

“While the overhang is not going away soon, neither is the ACA,” Oppenheimer’s Michael Wiederhorn wrote in a note. “So this is status quo for the ACA-impacted stocks (Medicaid managed care, hospitals), in our view, and it pushes off another overhang that has been plaguing the group for some time.”

Shares of health insurers including Anthem Inc. ANTM, +1.72%, Cigna Corp. CI, +0.26%  and UnitedHealth Group Inc. UNH, +0.59% were also up, each around 1% on Thursday morning. Hospital stocks like Community Health Systems Inc. CYH, +0.16%  and Universal Health Services Inc. UHS, +1.66%  rose, as well.

Read: Centene, WellCare announce merger a day after ruling puts Affordable Care Act in doubt

Anticipated stock movements among managed-care companies are “limited by a consensus view that [the Supreme Court] was eventually going to protect their ACA earnings from ever being at risk and the likelihood that a possible SCOTUS decision (if necessary) is now deferred until summer 2021 at the earliest,” wrote Gary Taylor, an analyst at J.P. Morgan.

This isn’t the only upside for insurers and managed-care companies this week.

The government spending deal that was reached on Monday scrapped the health insurance tax, another Obamacare requirement that would have cost insurers $15.5 billion in 2020, according to Internal Revenue Service guidance. Stocks of Anthem, Cigna and UnitedHealth Group rose after Politico first reported that the tax might be eliminated.

The Health Care Select Sector SPDR Fund XLV, +0.36%  exchange-traded fund is up 17% year-to-date.

Centene has been the managed-care sector’s best performer this decade with stock up 1,075%, followed by UnitedHealth Group, which has gained 868% under Obamacare.

The Affordable Care Act took full effect in late 2013, opening access to new markets through state-led Medicaid expansion and the public exchanges.

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