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Health-Care Stocks Are Big Super Tuesday Winner - The Wall Street Journal

Democratic U.S. presidential candidate and former Vice President Joe Biden addresses supporters at his Super Tuesday night rally in Los Angeles.

Photo: mike blake/Reuters

The big winner of Super Tuesday was former Vice President Joe Biden, whose presidential campaign found new life.

Investors in health-care stocks had a nice win as well.

As the stock market rallied Wednesday, health-care stocks led the way, rising 5.8% in the S&P 500. That was the largest gain among the 11 sectors and outpaced the broader index, which climbed 4.2%. Within the sector, health insurers were doing even better.

Anthem Inc. added 16%; Humana Inc. climbed 14%; Centene Corp. rose 16%; and Cigna Corp. was up 11%. UnitedHealth Group Inc., which is among the biggest companies in the group and a component of the Dow Jones Industrial Average, also rose 11%.

Between the political battle over health care and the market’s steep slide over the past two weeks, it has been a rough ride for investors in the sector.

These stocks fell sharply after Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders officially entered the race in February 2019, while the rest of the market was rising. Mr. Sanders and Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren favor a single-payer health-care program, Medicare for All, that would entail major changes for the industry.

Mr. Biden, who plans to enhance the existing Affordable Care Act, is generally seen as less disruptive to the industry, and his ascension has helped the sector. The S&P’s health-care group is down 2.1% this year, but its losses are narrower than the S&P 500’s 3.1% year-to-date loss through Wednesday.

Even though Mr. Biden and Mr. Sanders will likely be engaged in a long primary fight, Wednesday’s gains show how closely investors in these stocks are following the political tides, said Jared Holz, a health-care-sector strategist at Jefferies.

“It’s basically a reflection of greater confidence around fewer changes to the overall health-care industry,” he said.

For these investors, he said, they have been weighing primary results on one hand against the sector’s performance relative to the rest of the market. Buying or selling has been a sliding scale of whether or not the sector has appeared under- or overvalued at any time, he said.

With Mr. Biden’s victories, that decision-making process went into overdrive, Mr. Holz said. “You’re seeing so much of that happening in one single trading session.”

But the Democratic nominee won’t be decided until the summer, and the election isn’t until November. Before any of that, investors have to be mindful of the effects of the coronavirus epidemic on the stocks in the sector, Mr. Holz said.

If the epidemic sends large numbers of patients to their doctors or to hospitals, it will likely put pressure on insurers’ margins, he said.

“The ‘decision tree’ is, do you believe the stocks already reflect a best-case scenario, or is there still upside?” he said.

Write to Paul Vigna at paul.vigna@wsj.com

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