Historically, healthcare has been an all-weather sector, with stocks that can compound earnings over the cycle. The pandemic reversed this trend for the ASX 200 healthcare sector. Since April 2020, the ASX 200 is up 49%; the healthcare sector is flat.
We think the next 12 months will be very different from the last, with vital signs improving for the sector.
We moved overweight the sector in August by adding ResMed (RMD). The Focus Portfolio is currently 14% weighted to healthcare vs the market at 10%.
We are overweight healthcare as:
CY23 could continue to be challenging due to inflation, rate hikes and worries about a recession. Against this backdrop, we think healthcare stocks - which have historically been reliable defensives - can provide a degree of downside protection amidst volatile conditions.
As a result of the range of dynamic products and services now dominating the healthcare market, select stocks have the ability to withstand challenging economic environments while delivering long-term growth.
Over the next 12-24 months, stock selection will be key in the healthcare sector. We remain cautious about healthcare stocks that benefited from the pandemic; analyst earnings forecasts in these stocks look to be over-optimistic in a post-pandemic world.
Spending on healthcare actually fell in some countries during the pandemic. The battle against COVID-19 led to non-urgent care being cancelled and/or patients avoiding hospitals.
The pandemic also meant that healthcare product sales reps were unable to access hospitals as usual to conduct their sales activities.
However, after this pandemic-induced downgrade cycle, we believe we are at the beginning of an upgrade cycle for the healthcare sector. Like travel or leisure stocks, the market is still too pessimistic on the speed of the recovery. As this spending recovers, we should start to see earnings coming in ahead of consensus. This should be a tailwind for outperformance.
As a portfolio buffer when equity markets turn volatile, healthcare has long been considered one of the most reliable defensive sectors.
During the pandemic, this came under question.
However, ultimately this was an extraordinary set of circumstances, and we continue to believe that healthcare remains a defensive sector with a relatively inelastic demand profile. It is unlikely that households will cut back on healthcare expenditures relative to discretionary items, even in the face of a downturn. As a result of this robust demand profile, the sector can generate defensive earnings that enable it to outperform in weak macroeconomic environments.
Healthcare stocks have plenty of defensive characteristics that help them outperform in recessions and late in economic cycles. But they can also generate significant structural earnings growth over the cycle. This is one of the key reasons why the sector should outperform over the long-term.
If we look at earnings and performance before the pandemic, these stocks typically outperformed in slowdowns, but also perform well in most market conditions. The pandemic was really an anomaly in what is usually a strong performing sector.
Thus, we think the sector is relatively well placed irrespective of what direction the global economy takes over the next few years. This is unlike some other traditional defensive sectors (like utilities and consumer staples) which would likely underperform in stronger market conditions.
Large caps in the healthcare sector are some of the most highly valued on the ASX. Since the beginning of the year, higher bond yields have put pressure on these valuations. Valuations now appear relatively inexpensive, especially in light of a global slowdown. Over the next 12 months, we believe healthcare could rerate as a safe haven asset.
Additionally, a sector which is generally considered to be growth-oriented could benefit if inflation fades, central banks pivot, and bond yields compress. Falling bond yields could be another opportunity for healthcare to rerate, which is a plausible scenario for next year.
Large-cap healthcare stocks on the ASX tend to be high-quality companies with pricing power. CSL (CSL), Resmed (RMD), and Cochlear (COH) have strong positions in the market. Consequently, if costs rise, they can be passed on to consumers, who are price takers. In an inflationary environment, this is very valuable. Cost pressures should not adversely impact these companies' earnings margins.
Some ASX 200 healthcare stocks experienced supernormal profits during the pandemic due to an increased demand for vaccination/testing centres, consumables (like masks) and respirators.
The challenge for healthcare analysts is forecasting earnings for these companies in a post-COVID world, and we believe this is fraught with risk – most likely downside risk.
We believe these earnings levels are unlikely to be sustainable into the future and these stocks face the risk of earnings downgrades.
Sonic Healthcare (SHL) is a case in point. Pre-COVID, the company saw a steady increase in EPS from 2017-2020, growing at ~1% per annum. Extrapolating this “normalised” growth to FY25E gives an EPS lower than consensus, at around $1.25. Consensus is forecasting an EPS of ~$1.63.
We believe this is too high and still accounts for the one-off COVID spending that is already fading. This leaves room for earnings downgrades over the next few financial years.
ResMed (RMD): Gaining dominance
RMD develops, manufactures and sells continuous positive air pressure (CPAP) devices for the treatment of sleep disordered breathing. Its Respiratory Care franchise focuses on non-invasive ventilators, high-flow oxygen and mechanical ventilators to manage chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and associated breathing disorders like Obstructive Sleep Apnea (OSA). RMD is also a leading provider of software-as-a-service (SaaS) solutions for healthcare settings adjacent to hospitals.
Why we like RMD:
Read latest update ResMed (RMD) | 1Q23: AS11 war-chest building
CSL (CSL): Plasma recovery
CSL is the dominant and lowest cost player within the global blood plasma industry. The business develops a range of biotherapies and vaccines that treat people with serious diseases and chronic medical conditions.
Why we like CSL
Read latest research report CSL (CSL) | O/W: The way to patients’ hearts is through their kidneys
Telix Pharmaceuticals (TLX) - Pipeline of opportunities
TLX was established to create a new industry leader in radiopharmaceuticals. Telix has programs focused on prostate, renal and brain cancer indications among others. In April 2022, Telix launched its first FDA approved product, ILLUCCIX, a diagnostic imaging agent for prostate cancer. With proof of product sales now demonstrated, Telix has moved out of the pre-revenue biotech space and into a commercial business with a capacity to meet, and potentially exceed revenue forecasts.
Why we like TLX
Read more about the Phase III ZIRCON study results in Telix Pharmaceuticals (TLX) | Positive ZIRCON top line results
Company Name | Ticker | Focus Portfolio Weight % | Beta | Share Price | Market Cap (US$b) |
Forecast Multiples | EPS CAGR % | Revenue CAGR % | Dividend Yield % | ROE | Net Debt/EBITDA | |
12mth fwd PE | 12mth fwd EV/EBITDA | (FY0-FY3) | (FY0-FY3) | 12mth fwd | (FY1) | (FY1) | ||||||
CSL | CSL | 8.50% | 0.43 | 277.16 | 133.7 | 31.2 | 18.2 | 16% | 15% | 1% | 17% | 2.4 |
Resmed | RMD | 3.50% | 0.2 | 32.36 | 48.2 | 31.7 | 22.3 | 9% | 9% | 1% | 26% | -0.1 |
Telix Pharmaceuticals | TLX | 2.00% | 2.47 | 6.96 | 2.2 | na | 317.2 | na | >100% | 0% | na | 1.5 |
Source: Refinitiv, Wilsons.
Rob is an experienced research analyst with a background in both equity strategy and macroeconomics. He has a strong knowledge of equity strategy, asset allocation, and financial and econometric modelling.
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