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Health Stocks Rise After Passage Of Health Care Reform Bill

Health Care Stocks

STEPHEN BERNARD and TIM PARADIS   03/22/10 06:47 PM ET   AP

NEW YORK — Drug and hospital companies led stocks higher Monday after House lawmakers ended months of uncertainty and approved the health care overhaul bill.

The Dow Jones industrial average rose about 44 points. Broader indexes also climbed.

Investors had expected the health care bill would pass the House, but the approval late Sunday removed some of the anxiety that has dogged stocks of hospitals and drug makers. A bill with changes made by the House now goes back to the Senate for approval. Debate could begin Tuesday.

The 10-year, $938 billion bill will extend benefits to 32 million uninsured Americans. That will have far-reaching effects on health companies. With the bill in hand, investors could place bets on winners and losers. Hospital stocks rose on expectations they would see more business and increased revenue. Some insurers fell because of greater restrictions imposed by the changes.

Many key points of the bill will not take effect for several years, though others like provisions allowing children to remain on their parents' insurance until age 26 will kick in this year.

Hospital operator Tenet Healthcare Corp. rose 9 percent, while insurer UnitedHealth Group Inc. fell 3.2 percent.

"You've got some uncertainty here lifted," said Jack Ablin, chief investment officer at Harris Private Bank in Chicago. Ablin noted, however, that other industries will face higher costs to pay for wider coverage. "What it really comes down to is that as a result of this bill health care is a beneficiary at the expense of every other sector."

Stocks have been rising steadily in recent weeks as investors have grown more confident in a rebound following a string of improved economic reports. At the same time, much of the advance has come on light trading volume. That signals that not all the gains are tied to increasing expectations about the economy. Some analysts say that stocks are rising in a vacuum rather than because investors strongly believe that the market is poised to go higher.

The Dow rose 43.91, or 0.4 percent, to 10,785.89. It has risen 14 of the past 17 trading days and stands at its highest level since October 2008.

The Standard & Poor's 500 index rose 5.91, or 0.5 percent, to 1,165.81. The Nasdaq composite index rose 20.99, or 0.9 percent, to 2,395.40. It closed at a new high for the year and is at its best level since August 2008.

Bond prices rose, pushing down yields. The yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note fell to 3.66 percent from 3.70 percent late Friday.

The dollar fell against other major currencies. Gold fell.

Crude oil rose 57 cents to $81.25 per barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange.

Stock fell Friday because of renewed concerns about budget problems in Greece. More questions about Greece hurt stocks early Monday. The country's debt woes have dragged down global stock markets on and off for nearly two months as the country tries to cut its budget deficit.

Investors have been worried that Greece and other European nations that use the euro, like Spain and Portugal, could struggle to recover as they try to pay down debt. That could upend a global economic recovery.

Questions about Greece arose again when Germany's chancellor said Sunday that a bailout for Greece won't be discussed at a European summit this week. But concern eased after European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet said Monday that Greece wouldn't be able to dump the euro as its currency.

Meanwhile, retailers signaled that affluent consumers are stepping up spending. Jeweler Tiffany & Co.'s fourth-quarter profit quadrupled though earnings fell short of analysts' forecasts.

Williams-Sonoma Inc. said increased revenue boosted profits by more than sevenfold from a year ago, when one-time costs dented results. The seller of kitchen goods forecast stronger results for its current fiscal quarter.

The improvement in sales is a welcome sign for the economy as the end of the January-March quarter approaches.

Richard E. Cripps, chief market strategist for Stifel Nicolaus in Baltimore, is encouraged that expectations are growing for first-quarter profits. Corporate earnings are the biggest driver of the stock market.

"More analysts than not are choosing to increase their estimates and that's a good thing," Cripps said.

Tiffany rose 16 cents to $47.41, while Williams-Sonoma advanced $2.96, or 12.3 percent, to $27.10.

Google Inc. fell $2.50, or 0.5 percent, to $557.50 after the company stopped censoring the Internet in China by moving its search engine off the mainland. Visitors to Google's China service were redirected to Google's Chinese-language service based in Hong Kong.

Among health stocks, Tenet rose 52 cents, or 9 percent, to $6.27, while drug maker Pfizer Inc. rose 24 cents to $17.15.

UnitedHealth fell $1.09, or 3.2 percent, to $33.30.

Two stocks rose for every one that fell on the New York Stock Exchange, where consolidated volume came to 4.3 billion shares, compared with 5.7 billion Friday. Trading was heavy Friday because of the expiration of options and futures contracts.

The Russell 2000 index of smaller companies rose 9.02, or 1.3 percent, to 682.91.

Britain's FTSE 100 fell 0.1 percent, Germany's DAX index and France's CAC-40 each rose 0.1 percent. Markets in Japan were closed for a holiday.

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NEW YORK — Drug and hospital companies led stocks higher Monday after House lawmakers ended months of uncertainty and approved the health care overhaul bill. The Dow Jones industrial average ro...
NEW YORK — Drug and hospital companies led stocks higher Monday after House lawmakers ended months of uncertainty and approved the health care overhaul bill. The Dow Jones industrial average ro...
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05:00 PM on 03/23/2010
What do you think now, you Tea Party ignorami?
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04:47 AM on 03/23/2010
It could be that many find that nobody is coming to save them,
but there are many that are diligently working to figure out how to take from them that which they have accumulated over a lifetime of working.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Carolab
Walking an 87-year-old in the sand isn't easy
02:09 AM on 03/23/2010
Spain's intelligence services are investigating the role of investors and media in debt market turbulence over the last few weeks.

The National Intelligence Centre (CNI) is looking into 'speculative att-acks' on Spain following the Greek debt crisis, according to El Pais newspaper.

'The (CNI's) Economic Intelligence division... is investigating whether investors' att-acks and the aggressiveness of some Anglo-Saxon media are driven by market forces and challenges facing the Spanish economy, or whether there is something more behind this campaign,' the newspaper added.

The report comes days after Public Works Minister Jose Blanco protested 'somewhat murky manoeuvres' were behind financial market pressure on Spain. 'None of what is happening in the world, including the editorials of foreign newspapers, is coincidental or innocent,' Blanco said.

Some economists have said Spain's deficit could be more of a threat than Greece to the euro, the common currency of 16 European countries.

Markets doubt that Spain will be able to cut back drastically on spending with unemployment running at 20 per cent and a big slice of the budget in the hands of fiercely independent regional governments.
Underscoring those doubts, the premium demanded by investors for buying Spanish rather than German government bonds has risen in recent weeks and the cost of insuring Spanish bonds against default by the government has also risen.

Read more:

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/worldnews/article-1251136/Spanish-intelligence-probe-debt-attacks-blamed-sabotaging-countrys-economy.html#ixzz0ggDcGr3e
04:30 AM on 03/23/2010
It's what's happening to America. It's just taking longer because we're bigger.
Health care is just part of the Banker take over. It's why the IRS has massively expanded powers written into this bill.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Carolab
Walking an 87-year-old in the sand isn't easy
04:56 AM on 03/23/2010
It appears I misread you. No stranger to tin foil labeling yourself, are you?

I put up a post from Denninger earlier tonight that you might want to read:

http://market-ticker.denninger.net/archives/2104-How-Far-Down-The-Rabbit-Hole-Must-We-Go.html
11:37 PM on 03/23/2010
Ireland and the UK are in even worse shape.
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Roy Piper
01:14 AM on 03/23/2010
Is the author HAPPY that the stocks of health companies went up??? What does that tell you about how much their massive profits will be in any way curtailed??? Think about it. What does their rise REALLY say about the bill?
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DRaymond
Network administrator, voiceovers
03:31 AM on 03/23/2010
That if they make less per person that they insure, but insure more people, that they can make more money. Of course we already pretty much knew that.
12:53 AM on 03/23/2010
I applaud President Obama for his effort to get healthcare reform passed. This legislation has many much needed fixes for our current system. However, being the independent voter and healthcare professional I am I do believe that we still fall far short of addressing the core of this nation's healthcare crisis. And this would be - an unhealthy America.

Michelle Obama is the one fighting the bigger more important fight with her campaign to reduce obesity in children. This needs to be expanded to everyone in America. Because if you still have 2/3 of Americans who are overweight and sick you still have a healthcare crisis regardless of the legislative fixes you put in place. To learn more and to find specific resources we can all use to make an even bigger impact on our nation's healthcare system please read my article on healthcare reform below. It turns out that we all individually have much more control over what happens about this issue than we think.

A healthcare professional's view on health care reform - http://bit.ly/9QLV8
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Carolab
Walking an 87-year-old in the sand isn't easy
12:43 AM on 03/23/2010
Any jobs in this picture?
04:37 AM on 03/23/2010
Yes, many openings in SWAT, census and IRS. God knows what else the government has for us.
Maybe they will pay us to spy on each other.
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VictoryBlue
Motorcycle rider, Legalization supporter, Texan
06:17 AM on 03/23/2010
They don't need us to spy on each other. They already have the wire-taps from W's run.
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TheRLeePost
A 'blue' Southerner
11:46 PM on 03/22/2010
The reactions of the market are no surprise.

While It is good that the bill passed, that doesn't mean it is a good bill. Sounds like a contradiction, but only because of the madness we live in.

Most Dems believe this bill will reign in those wretched insurance companies. NOT; because there's really not much to reign in. Yep, the bill has all sorts of mandates about coverage and eligibility, but that doesn't bother the insurers. They don't care as long as it applies across the board and they are protected against being laden with an unhealthy pool of clients.

As health care providers raise their prices, insurers will just add their cost on top and voila. And now another 46 million folks are being insured; it's like YIPPEE.

Yep, this is not the bill that should have been passed, but is the only baby step that could get passed. We're still going to pay twice what the rest of the world pays for health care. The next steps are for a state or two to use their federal funds for a state run health system and/or for the feds to implement the so called 'public insurance option' which would eventually segue into a managed health care system.

The only immediate benefits are providing broader and more complete coverage; we're still stuck with the most horrifically structured health care market in the entire world, and will be for many years to come.

-RLee
http://therleepost.blogspot.com
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texastrixie
I invented the internet.
11:55 PM on 03/22/2010
Agreed. If the entire health care sector of the stock market shoots up when you pass "health care reform," its a sign you don't have a very good bill. But its something. And if you listen to the conservatives, its the end of the world, so there has to be significance here. I think the big win is that people will actually get health care now who have been unable to do so, especially for their kids. If the media had any brains, they would have someone on the front page of the paper, every day, whose life had been changed or saved due to their new access to health care. It should be easy to find someone in every major media market, every day after the changes start taking effect.
11:21 PM on 03/22/2010
its a win-win for the public and the healthcare industry.

you know that people are screwed up when instead of celebrating the victory for the healthcare bill, they are worried and upset that the stock market is rising..LOL.

of course the healthcare companies will still make money. If they cant make money, they should just close up shop, lay off all the people and move to a different industry. would that be a good outcome?
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11:20 PM on 03/22/2010
Hospital operator Tenet Healthcare Corp. rose 9 percent, while insurer UnitedHealth Group Inc. fell 3.2 percent.

This is good news!! Health Insurance Companies that have been robbing me, fall, while hospitals rise.

Proof of a good bill.
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Mikeeee
conservatism = "low-effort" thinking.
11:10 PM on 03/22/2010
Speaks volumes about price control of insurance. If I can only pocket 15%, then I better raise the price.
11:08 PM on 03/22/2010
This is a shock? LOL Gees, this is an industry laiden bill. Just watch everything will skyrocket in the next 4 years.
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11:23 PM on 03/22/2010
It already did under bush. My insurance premiums tripled under Rethuglican Rule. The Rethugs sucked the American people dry in Gas Costs, Health Ins. Cost, Bad Loans and too much supply reduced everyones equity.

Where did all the wealth go? Straight to the top.

Where did all the jobs go? Right overseas

Republicans hate America.
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Y3rMawm
veni, vidi, bibi.
12:19 AM on 03/23/2010
.and the Kool-Aid enters the room.

You ain't seen nothin' yet. How exactly do we come out on top buy implementing 10 years of taxes to pay for 6 years of services?
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studioh!
just.words.
11:02 PM on 03/22/2010
stocks up? what happened to armageddon?
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Y3rMawm
veni, vidi, bibi.
12:20 AM on 03/23/2010
Like all those Big Mac's America eats, its a long slow death.
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10:54 PM on 03/22/2010
Wasn't Cramer saying the healthcare stocks were going to tank if the bill passed?
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04:39 AM on 03/23/2010
Cramer says everything.
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ibsteve2u
Someone who cares - to his unending regret
10:44 PM on 03/22/2010
Now we wayyyyyy need a government program to churn out doctors like infantrymen in a draft-driven war.

If the righties are inconvenienced by another 15 or 30 minutes tacked onto the time the spend in the doctor's waiting room, they'll forever be the mortal enemies - literally - of the *87.6 million American men, women, and children who currently go without health care insurance at least part of the year.

Yeah, I think they're that petty; the right hasn't done anything of late to convince me that a human being's life means more to them than 15 lousy minutes spent reading Sports Illustrated in a doctor's office.

Unless that life has not yet been born, of course. Strange contradiction, that.

(*http://www.cnn.com/2009/HEALTH/03/04/uninsured.epidemic.obama/)
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ibsteve2u
Someone who cares - to his unending regret
10:47 PM on 03/22/2010
Huh...link no workie...try, try again:

http://www.cnn.com/2009/HEALTH/03/04/uninsured.epidemic.obama/
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Y3rMawm
veni, vidi, bibi.
12:27 AM on 03/23/2010
No doctor will want to participate once their incomes are reduced by the unintended consequences of this sham.
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wonketteRAWKS
Hypocrisy is prevalent in BOTH parties!
10:23 PM on 03/22/2010
They're getting their bailout people, what did you expect? The smoke and mirrors of how this will control their costs and punish those bad insurers was just that, smoke and mirrors!

Like the credit card bill, just watch those rates increase before 2014!

They got everything they demanded from Obama. No single payer, no public option and all those new clients! Bet now they're really high-fiving!
11:08 PM on 03/22/2010
I AGREE
11:17 PM on 03/22/2010
the public option is not dead yet... they have the momentum and if the health care plan gains popularity the public option will be next in line...

im not one to believe politicians but reid promise a vote on the public option within the next 2 months, which hopefully means we will see a vote in the next 6 months.. or at least before the Nov elections