Bets On Health Care Paying Off For Investors
Despite high prices, shares of health care companies continue to soar. Elsewhere, an investor wins an arbitration award against UBS, the feds crack down on Medicare Advantage fraud and health insurer Anthem is offering workers free college tuition to entice new employees.
Reuters:
Fund Managers Boost Bets On Health Care Even Amid High Prices
Last July, when Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen spurred a sell-off in healthcare stocks by saying that valuations in shares of biotech companies looked "stretched," portfolio manager Graham Tanaka saw an opportunity. After a year-long buying spree, he now has more than a quarter of his $17 million Tanaka Growth fund portfolio in healthcare companies such as Gilead Sciences Inc, up from just 5 percent at the start of last year. (Randall, 6/2)
The Wall Street Journal:
Activist Investor Wins $2 Million Arbitration Award From UBS
An activist investor has won a $2 million arbitration award from UBS AG, which he said derailed his proxy fight against a health-care information systems company by calling a margin loan and selling almost 2.3 million shares he had in the business. (Rieker, 6/2)
The Fiscal Times:
Medicare Advantage Fraud: Heat On Justice Dept. To Investigate
The way the federal government calculates benefits for the Medicare Advantage program has been under scrutiny for years—with reformists and health policy experts claiming that the formula used to calculate benefits can be easily inflated and potentially wastes billions of tax dollars a year. (Ehley, 6/2)
Bloomberg:
Anthem Offers Free College As Newest Perk
Health insurer Anthem Inc. is the latest big employer to offer its workers a free college education. Anthem employees can sign up for online degrees in business and health care at the College for America at Southern New Hampshire University. About 34,000 of the company’s 55,000 workers haven’t graduated from college. (Tracer, 6/2)