TSC Ratings provides exclusive stock, ETF and mutual fund ratings and commentary based on award-winning, proprietary tools. Its "safety first" approach to investing aims to reduce risk while seeking solid outperformance on a total return basis.
With a tight Congressional calendar and a full-court press by President Barack Obama, health care reform takes center stage this week. Lawmakers are trying to come up with a plan to fix a highly dysfunctional health insurance system. Obama has been trying to generate support for a government-backed health plan that people would cover the uninsured and serve as an alternative to employer-sponsored coverage. This strategy aims to make covered services and costs easier to compare among various plans.
Whether or not a public option survives, Obama says reforms will include ways to contain health care prices that are growing faster than inflation and incomes. Those cost controls will create winners and losers.
For the week ending Thursday, Jun. 26, the average health and biotechnology fund we track rose 1.5%, excluding inverse funds that sell these stocks short.
The ProShares Ultra Health Care Fund (RXL), up 3.6%, was the best-performing fund. The ProShares UltraShort Health Care Fund (RXD) was the worst, down 4.1%. These exchange-traded funds are 200% leveraged to the Dow Jones U.S. Health Care Index but move in opposite directions.
Six of the top 10 health funds target biotechnology and drugmaker stocks. Topping this segment is the First Trust Amex Biotechnology Index Fund adding 3.1%. One holding, Nektar Therapeutics (NKTR) jumped 16% on optimism about partnerships to treat rheumatoid arthritis and pneumonia. Second-tier names InterMune (ITMN) and Vertex Pharmaceuticals (VRTX) rose 8.1% and 6.7%, respectively.
Industry leaders Amgen (AMGN) and Biogen Idec (BIIB) slipped 2.1% and 3.8%.
|
- Loading Comments...
- Loading Comments...
Recent Comments
Featured Photo Galleries
-
Google and Partners Seek Foothold in the Living Room
New York Times
-
Banks Face Trial Over Derivatives
The Wall Street Journal.
-
Germany backtracking on IMF involvement in Greece
Credit Writedowns
-
Google Exit Could Help China Firm
The Wall Street Journal.
-
Net piracy takes 'toll on jobs'
BBC
-
UK to produce Nissan electric car
BBC
-
CIT Net Worth 16% Above Stock as Thain Plots Recovery (Update3)
BusinessWeek Online
-
Bank Fraud 101: How to Rob A Bank
Credit Writedowns
-
China’s Home Prices Unlikely to Plunge, Hong Kong Builders Say
BusinessWeek Online
-
Working for a Living
Latest Business News from Times Online
| Dow Jones | S&P 500 | NASDAQ | 10-Year Note | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 10,733.67 | 1,166.21 | 2,389.09 | 36.42 |
Oil *
81.99
|
|
UP
47.69
|
UP
6.75
|
UP
11.08
|
DOWN
0.11
|
10 Yr
3.64%
SPDR Gold
109.59
|
|
+0.45%
|
+0.58%
|
+0.47%
|
-0.30%
|
Data delayed 20 minutes |
More From TheStreet
Latest HeadlinesBrokerage Partners
Sponsored Links














