Showing posts with label profit. Show all posts
Showing posts with label profit. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 17

4 stocks to profit from Obamacare

4 stocks to profit from Obamacare
| By James Brumley, InvestorPlace

Investors can lament Obamacare, or they can capitalize on it by owning stakes in the companies best-positioned to profit from the changes.

Any anti-Obamacare voters expecting a Republican to take over the oval office in 2016 and to repeal all 2000 pages of President Obama's healthcare overhaul might want to adjust those expectations. That snowball has been set into motion for too long -- and has already gathered too much momentum -- to be stopped now.

As they say, though, when life gives you lemons, make lemonade. Investors can lament Obamacare, or they can capitalize on it by owning stakes in the companies best-positioned to profit from the changes. Most of the top prospects can be found on the medical-technology and the medical-data arena.

Just for the record, it's not Obamacare that's creating the real opportunity in the healthcare IT industry. It was 2009?s HITECH Act (part of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act) -- which clarified how many of the electronic record-keeping requirements could and would be met -- that's actually driving the growth in the electronic healthcare records, or EHR, arena.

What's HITECH? Essentially, it's mandated improvement in the accuracy of medical records specifically by compelling caregivers, hospitals, and pharmacies to begin using digital medical records. It's an acronym for "Health Information Technology for Economic and Clinical Health", if that helps. Of course, the advent of Obamacare -- which will successfully complicate the process of getting or receiving care -- is setting a bullish stage for the healthcare technology industry's players. The top prospects within that arena are (in no particular order):

Though nowhere near the top of the average investor's watchlist, Cerner (CERN) is probably one of the first medical technology names well-versed investors think of. Aside from being one of the biggest with a market cap of $16.65 billion, its revenue and earnings growth have almost been freakishly reliable.

While there's nothing especially unique working in the company's favor, its sheer size means it can muscle its way into new markets.

HMS Holdings (HMSY) is, for all intents and purposes, a government watchdog that will almost certainly play a bigger role in billing management once Obamacare is fully implemented.

HMS drives the bulk of its revenue by earning a percentage of billing mistakes it catches. Medicaid is one of its biggest customers, and Medicare is a major client too. With both programs on pace to become more complicated and open new doors to potential fraud and reimbursement confusion, the opportunity for HMS Holdings will grow significantly.

And to be clear, HMS has only scratched the surface of the opportunity. The Department of Health and Human Services estimates that nearly $65 billion worth of improper Medicare and Medicaid payments were made, and only $4.2 billion of it was actually found and recovered. The industry needs HMS Holdings doing more digging.

Accretive Health (AH) operates in the uglier part of the healthcare billing industry. It's a debt collector -- the nation's biggest. It's not an industry that's going away either. In fact, the need may ramp up once the healthcare industry expands this year and next year.

Additionally, Accretive Health offers a proactive solution that will theoretically keep some patients out of the emergency room in the first place. The company's data-driven computer system identifies patients who likely need preventive care, rather than waiting for serious conditions to arise that send the patient into the emergency room. The system also handles medical billing and medical record-keep tasks, making it a one-stop, efficiency-driving option.

It might not be anything special on the surface, but boring companies have a funny way being cash cows, and in the past three years Accretive Health has grown its top line faster than any other of the companies under the microscope here.

While Quality Systems (QSII) is downright dwarfed by industry top dog Cerner, there's still something compelling about this $1.2 billion company.

At first glance, Quality Systems looks like just another digital healthcare records play. It's got a hand in a little bit of everything, but specializes in nothing. And truth be told, the company hasn't exactly been well-respected lately. The company's services rank fairly low in terms of customer satisfaction, and the management team has been under pressure from activist investment company Clinton Group of late, culminating in some sweeping changes on the company's board.

So where's the upside in that kind of disruption? Because the organization (despite shortcomings and a lack of pizzazz) has an attractive book of business and an existing framework that would be attractive to a suitor interested in tweaking it. And, the buzz is that the new board is open to such a strategic alternative. While buying a stock solely for its buyout potential isn't always a strong idea, when it's a turnaround story too, it sure doesn't hurt.

Tuesday, January 29

Microsoft profit forecast slightly beaten

Microsoft profit forecast slightly beaten

Although the sales of Windows 8 is not as impressive as investors hope that revenue in Microsoft's Windows Division rose 24 percent over the previous year.

Microsoft said that it had more than 60 million copies of Windows 8 license. The revised system that puts car as its predecessor, Windows 7 on the same early sales after it came out in 2009.

Investors have already signaled their disappointment with Windows 8 and the surface. The overall market floats Redmond, Washington, the shares of the company around the same price as when these products were released three months ago, while later increased.

So far, tech earnings were mixed. On Tuesday, missed IBM profit and sales exceeded Wall Street expectations for the Apple sales forecasts on Wednesday, send the stock already squeezed even deeper in trading on Thursday.

Saturday, April 28

Goldman profit tops estimates; raises dividend

Goldman profit tops estimates; raises dividend
Brendan Mcdermid / REUTERS


A Goldman Sachs sign is seen on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange.


Goldman Sachs said Tuesday its first-quarter earnings fell from a year earlier, but were better than many analysts had anticipated thanks to aggressive cost-cutting and better-than-expected investment banking and trading revenues.


Goldman earned $2.1 billion, or $3.92 per share, during the quarter. In the year-ago period, which was generally stronger for investment banks' trading and banking activity, Goldman earned $4.38 per share, excluding a one-time cost for buying back preferred stock.


The Wall Street investment bank also said it would raise its quarterly dividend to 46 cents per share from 35 cents.


Late last week, Goldman revealed that its Chief Executive Lloyd Blankfein received a $16.2 million pay package last year, a 15 percent increase over the year before that came primarily from a salary bump and greater stock rewards.


According to a filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, Blankfein's compensation package included a $2 million salary, a $3 million bonus and $10.7 million worth of stock.


Goldman earned a $2.5 billion profit during 2011, down from $3.6 billion in 2010, and its share price fell 46 percent last year, amid a slowdown in investment banking deals and volatile trading conditions.


One of Wall Street’s most prestigious investment banks, Goldman hit the headlines in March after a column on the opinion pages of The New York Times decried a culture of greed and arrogance at the company.


Reuters contributed to this report.

Sunday, February 26

Groupon surprises by failing to net a profit

Groupon surprises by failing to net a profit

Groupon employees celebrate the company's IPO last November.


By msnbc.com staff and wire


Groupon has surprised Wall Street by failing to make a profit since becoming a publicly-traded company in late 2011.


The daily deals website’s first earnings report has revealed its saw a fourth-quarter net loss of $42.7 million. That’s better than one year ago, when it saw a loss of $378.6 million, but still disappointing to analysts who had expected a small profit.


Groupon shares fell sharply on the news.


Earnings were dented by a huge tax bill worth $35 million following the opening of an international headquarters in Switzerland, the company said.


While the tax bill caught Wall Street's eye, analysts were more unsettled by signs that Groupon's breakneck pace of growth from recent quarters may be slowing, especially in North America, its most mature market.


Several other new technology companies have gone public in recent months, including Zynga, Pandora and LinkedIn. Some analysts have raised questions about the viability of these companies.


Social media giant Facebook filed documents last week for a $5 billion initial public offering of stock that’s expected to be one of the biggest and most talked about share offerings in recent memory.


Reuters contributed to this report.

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