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A Cheap, Wide-Moat Health Insurer

A Cheap, Wide-Moat Health Insurer

Jake Strole: We've taken a fresh look at the managed care industry and have come away a bit more constructive in our outlook, particularly in regard to UnitedHealth. We think the firm has been able to dig a wide economic moat underpinned by scale-based advantages that ensure the company touches nearly every aspect of the healthcare system.

United is the largest private insurer in the country and is expected to generate over $240 billion in net revenue during 2019. With the largest private insurance book, a leading presence in Medicare Advantage, and supporting services through its pharmacy benefits, analytics, and provider platforms, United's breadth of scope makes it the standout in the industry. The firm's wide moat is supported by cost advantages and network effects that ultimately allow for a lower claims expense per member than United's comparably smaller peers. The combination of fixed cost leverage and a better negotiating position allows the company to post best-in-class returns year in and year out.

Management has built these advantages through uniquely thoughtful capital deployment, typically adding capabilities to the business years before peers follow suit. This long-term thinking drives our high opinion of current leadership and helps us have added confidence in our long-run expectations that call for excess returns to persist well into the next decade.

Concurrent with our moat upgrade, we’ve raised our fair value estimate to $300 per share. We believe the market is likely underestimating the durability of United’s competitive advantages, putting undue emphasis on policy uncertainty over the coming years. We think shares are attractive at current market prices and encourage investors to consider an investment in this wide-moat enterprise.

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About the Author

Jake Strole

Equity Analyst
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Jake Strole is an equity analyst for Morningstar Research Services LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Morningstar, Inc. covering companies in the healthcare sector. He focuses on multiple industries within the sector including hospitals and other care providers, along with hospital suppliers and diagnostics companies.

Before joining Morningstar in 2017, Strole spent over two years working for a Chicago area investment manager covering the healthcare sector for multi-asset class mutual fund products.

Strole holds a Bachelor’s of Business Administration in Finance from the University of Wisconsin, Madison’s Wisconsin School of Business. He also holds a Master’s of Science in Finance from the University of Wisconsin, Madison’s Applied Security Analysis Program within the business graduate school. Strole also holds the Chartered Financial Analyst® designation.

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