Health-Care Investors Bank on Congress Snarling RFK Jr.'s Plans

(Bloomberg) -- On the surface, the US health-care industry is facing a pivotal year in 2025 as President-elect Donald Trump re-enters the White House.

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Trump has promised to “knock out” drug-industry middlemen, a potential disaster for pharmacy benefit managers. He named prominent vaccine skeptic Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to run the Department of Health and Human Services, which could wreak havoc on shot developers. And his nomination of celebrity doctor Mehmet Oz to lead the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services is considered a boon for companies that offer private versions of government health insurance.

But for all the noise, many Wall Street professionals believe the policy risk in the health-care sector is lower than feared.

“If you combine the fact that Congress is so divided that making policy changes is going to be just incredibly difficult, and the fact that the executive branch just doesn’t have the level of power that they think they have, it’s going be very difficult for them to implement a lot of the policy reforms they’re pushing,” said Spencer Perlman, director of health-care policy research at Veda Partners.

It’s been a tough year for health-care stocks, with the sector essentially unchanged over the last 12 months while the S&P 500 Index rose 25%, making it the benchmark’s worst performing group over that time. For 2025, investment pros recommend looking at individual health-care companies based on fundamentals rather than focusing on the index level.

“Investors will be more interested in picking the right stocks within the index versus playing to the index,” said Arda Ural, EY’s Americas life sciences sector leader.

In particular, some money managers are questioning how much the new administration will affect vaccines and drug approvals.

“We know the health-care mechanism, in terms of approving of drugs and looking at vaccines, is very evidence-based,” said Jason Kritzer, a portfolio manager at Morgan Stanley. “I don’t see that changing.”

What’s more, the uncertainty surrounding health care and the possibility for short-term panics based on vague pronouncements could create market opportunities. “If the stocks sell off because of fears that I think are unwarranted, if you have this one- to three-year time horizon or longer, you can make a lot of money,” Kritzer said.