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Macro Headwind-Immune CVS Health Stock Set to Extend 50% YTD Rally

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CVS Health (CVS) is a top S&P 500 performer in 2025, with year-to-date returns exceeding 50%. Moreover, the stock has shirked off Trump-mania, tariff levies, and a global trade war like water off a duck’s back. The stock is up 3% over the past five days and up 42% since January — wholly opposed to the market squall enveloping the world’s major stock indices and shaving trillions from index valuations, in recent days.

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CVS Health (CVS) price history since the start of 2025
CVS Health (CVS) price history since the start of 2025

Most recognizable for its corner drugstores, CVS’ transformative acquisition of Aetna, a major health insurer, expanded its healthcare footprint despite current profitability challenges. While higher medical costs and utilization have significantly impacted this segment, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) decision to increase Medicare Advantage payment rates by 5% in 2026 puts wind in CVS’ sails. Its diversified revenue mix and growing insurance offerings (with membership up 1.4 million to 27.1 million) make me cautiously bullish on CVS’s long-term prospects.

Medicare Advantage Woes and Recovery

CVS is the third-largest Medicare Advantage Provider behind UnitedHealth (UNH) and Humana (HUM). While its Health Care Benefits segment saw 23% year-over-year revenue growth in 2024 to reach $33 billion, it turned to an operating loss of $439 million in 2024 from an operating income of $676 million in the previous year.

CVS attributed this to “increased utilization, the unfavorable impact of the Company’s Medicare Advantage star ratings for the 2024 payment year, and the impact of higher acuity in Medicaid following the resumption of redeterminations.” Given that the segment makes up nearly one-third of total revenues, the inability to turn a profit from it weighs heavily on the bottom line.

<em><a href="https://mainstreetdata.com/cvs?utm_source=finance.yahoo.com&utm_medium=referral" rel="nofollow noopener" target="_blank" data-ylk="slk:Main Street Data;elm:context_link;itc:0;sec:content-canvas" class="link ">Main Street Data</a> showing CVS’ operating income since 2022 split by segment</em>
Main Street Data showing CVS’ operating income since 2022 split by segment

Earlier this week, fortunes changed for CVS when the CMS announced that government payments to Medicare Advantage programs will increase 5.06% on average, considerably higher than previous estimates. The company’s Aetna unit currently has 88% of its Medicare Advantage members enrolled in highly-rated plans. Why does this matter? Plans rated four stars or higher receive significant bonus payments from CMS. Recall that in 2023, only 21% of its members enrolled in plans with four or more stars. So, this will have a compounding effect on CVS. The star rating bonuses function as multipliers on top of the base rate increase.