Market review: May was a turbulent month for the healthcare sector, marked by
underperformance and intense policy scrutiny. Managed Care and biopharma were
hit hardest, while Medtech, hospitals and drug distributors saw relative resilience.
The rotation out of healthcare was driven primarily by escalating policy risks,
particularly around drug pricing and Medicaid funding, with investor
conversations overwhelmingly focused on these themes.
The biggest
headline came on May 12, when President Trump signed an executive order aiming
to cut drug prices by “30–80%” through a Most Favored Nation (MFN) pricing
model. While the order initially spooked markets, its vague structure and lack
of immediate enforcement brought some short-term relief. The US Department of
Health & Human Services (HHS) is tasked with negotiating discounts over 30
days, with broader legislative options deferred for up to six months. Biopharma
stocks fell on the news, compounded by uncertainty around the US Centers for
Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS)’s draft rules on Medicare drug
negotiations.
A surprise FDA
leadership change added to volatility, with RFK Jr. naming Vinay Prasad to lead
the Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research (CBER), triggering the biotech
sector’s largest one-day drop this year.
The month also saw
high-profile leadership changes. UNH replaced its CEO after a 50% stock decline
since December, Novo Nordisk’s chief stepped down following steep losses, and
Intuitive Surgical announced a smooth succession after years of strong performance.
Sentiment
stabilized late in the month after Trump delayed a 50% tariff on EU imports to
July 9, following a positive call with EU Commission President von der Leyen.
While a trade breakthrough remains uncertain, the delay briefly lifted broader
risk appetite and boosted consumer confidence.
Overall, May
underscored persistent investor anxiety around healthcare policy, with little
resolution expected in the near term.
Portfolio changes: No new positions were initiated and we exited
Humana and Icon.
Performance review: The largest attributors vs. the index were Eli
Lilly (+44 bps / The stock returned -17.8% in May and we are underweight versus
the reference index), Veeva (+38 bps / The stock rose 19% after a strong
top-and bottom-line beat and guidance raise) and Dexcom (+26 bps / Solid Q1
results and guidance confirmed, driven by strong US. Further, a USD 750mn share
buyback was announced).
The largest
detractors vs the index were Lantheus (-23 bps / Small miss and guidance cut
led to oversized share price move), Globus (-14 bps / Lower-than-expected Q1
results, mainly driven by one-time challenges) and J&J (-11 bps / Not
invested).
ESG: Firms in the
portfolio did not report any material ESG issues in May.