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With well-publicized losses for companies including UnitedHealth Group (NYSE: UNH), Elevance Health (NYSE: ELV), and Wegovy and Ozempic maker Novo Nordisk (NYSE: NVO), the healthcare sector failed to outperform the broad market last year.
In the three years prior to that, the sector finished with gains of just 2.6% in 2024 and 2.1% in 2023, and a loss of 2.0% in 2022.
But healthcare stocks have appeared to turn a corner. Over the past six months, the sector—which enjoys inelastic demand—has led all 11 sectors of the S&P 500 with a nearly 19% gain.
According to investment professionals, the trend that began in mid-2025 is likely to continue into the new year.
For shareholders of the Vanguard Health Care ETF (NYSEARCA: VHT), that is already proving to be true.
There are two major tailwinds that should help health stocks continue to enjoy this bullish momentum. One—the mass adoption of weight loss drugs—was partly responsible for the sector’s bullish reversal halfway through 2025. The other—comparatively low valuations—could continue to attract inflows as investors look to lock in profits and hedge against positions that present more inherent volatility.
Weight loss treatments including GLP-1 agnostics and semaglutide treatments such as Novo Nordisk’s products Ozempic as Wegovy are becoming widely adopted.
At the same time, pharmaceutical companies are shifting from injectable treatments to pill form, while others, like Pfizer (NYSE: PFE), are doubling down on their investments in the weight loss market.
Speaking on the popularity of these drugs, Catherine Brown, vice president of clinical services at digital health firm Welldo, recently told Reuters that “We're imagining these medications may become so common that everybody's got a GLP-1 app ... right there on your phone next to your bank account."
Forecasts from industry consultancy firm Grand View Research indicate that the GLP-1 drug market could grow by a compound annual growth rate of 18.54% between 2024 and 2030, resulting in a global market value increase from $13.84 to $48.84 billion.
In the wake of President Trump’s tariff announcements in April 2025—trade policies that have had an adverse effect on imported pharmaceuticals—stocks operating in the health care sector have experienced almost comically low valuations, particularly when juxtaposed with the historically high valuations of tech and communication services stocks.
Pfizer, for example, sports a trailing 12-month (TTM) price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio of 14.7, while Health benefits provider Elevance and Johnson & Johnson (NYSE: JNJ) have P/E multiples of 15.32 and 19.86, respectively.
For context, tech favorites such as Palantir (NASDAQ: PLTR) and Tesla (NASDAQ: TSLA) have TTM P/E multiples of 421.11 and 290.53, respectively.
In turn, it was only a matter of time until health care’s ratios caught the eye of value investors looking for opportunities at the tail end of 2025 and heading into 2026.
In November 2025, Mizuho’s healthcare equity strategist Jared Holz told Barron’s that “When you see money come out of a space, especially one that’s filled with trillion-dollar [tech] companies, it really doesn’t take much to get some of the underperforming sectors a little juice.”
The Vanguard Health Care ETF is up 2.30% this year after gaining more than 18% over the past six months. Much of those gains were fueled by rebounds and strong end-of-year performances from the fund’s top holdings.
Those positions include the ETF's top five holdings: Eli Lilly (NYSE: LLY), AbbVie (NYSE: ABBV), Johnson & Johnson, UnitedHealth, and Merck (NYSE: MRK).
Drilling down further into the holdings, VHT also has allocations to Pfizer, CVS Health (NYSE: CVS), which acquired health insurance giant Aetna on Nov. 28, 2018, and the United States’ largest hospital chain HCA Healthcare (NYSE: HCA).
The ETF carries a negligible expense ratio of 0.09% while paying a dividend that currently yields 1.58%, or $4.64 per share annually.
Based on analysts’ ratings of 23 companies in the VHT portfolio (64.3% of its total), the fund receives a Moderate Buy rating.
Perhaps the strongest indication of Wall Street’s enthusiasm about the health care sector is the ETF’s current short interest of just 0.33% of the float, or less than 195,000 shares of the 60.17 million shares outstanding. That marks a nearly 37% decrease in short interest since the last reporting period.
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The article "This ETF Is Proof That the Healthcare Rebound Is Real" first appeared on MarketBeat.
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