Innovations In Health Care

The health care sector is growing faster than the rest of the economy. This trend has accelerated because of the global pandemic, a heightened awareness of the importance of the sector and the need for rapid progress in this area.
OUR RECOMMENDATIONS |
• Parallel to investing in stocks of a handful of leading companies, in the riskier sub-segments, we like investing in diversified funds, which are managed by highly-specialised professionals. |
Advances in technology improve the quality of health care
With the aid of new technologies, considerable improvements are being made in product research and development processes. New (types of) medical treatments, tools and services are constantly emerging. The management of therapies and care centres has become much more efficient through the more optimal use of large amounts of quality data.
The health crisis ushers in more innovations in the sector
Amid fears of new diseases, health-related spending is expected to soar in the coming years and support numerous developments in:
- Prevention, hygiene, vaccines and testing;
- Remote diagnostics (several companies active in laboratories, testing and online/remote diagnosis have seen their share price rally in recent times);
- Treatments in general and more specifically for viruses (attentive investors will have observed good progress on the stock market by promising companies developing potential treatments and vaccines for Covid-19);
- Rapid data exchanges and processing (Artificial Intelligence);
- Medical and robotic equipment, for example to treat infected patients remotely;
- And by extension, the entire hospital and technological infrastructure that supports these improvements.
Conversely, while a genuine ‘war effort’ is being deployed to defeat Covid-19, some industry players are suffering from this redeployment. Non-urgent operations, such as fitting artificial limbs, are being postponed.
The shares of some medical equipment-makers are under pressure. But these operations cannot be constantly delayed and a certain normalisation should take place.
Despite the outperformance of the Health Care sector in 2020 (often better than the expected 1Q20 financial results), and particularly 'Health Technology', relative valuations are generally not expensive.
MAIN RISKS |
• Moreover, even if this debate has been ruled out with the pandemic, receiving treatment is very expensive in the US and there is regularly pressure to lower costs in the health system. |
