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Health Care Swoon Puts Sector’s Stable Profits on Discount

It was a bruising quarter for global Health Care stocks, with the sector underperforming the MSCI All Country World Index by the most in more than 25 years, as fears spread over shifting US policies and the country’s cuts to funding for medical research. But Health Care has weathered storms before.

In the chart above, the gray bars are the cash flow return on investment (CFROI) of companies in the sector for each year since 1999. The gray line is the sector’s average valuation—a blend of price-to-earnings, price-to-book, and price-to-cash-flow ratios—relative to the broader index. What the data show is that despite a series of political and regulatory developments that spooked investors (the portions shaded purple) over the past two-and-a-half decades—from the roll out of the Affordable Care Act to the COVID-19 pandemic—the profitability of the underlying businesses in the sector has been remarkably stable.

Health Care stocks are now trading at some of their most attractive levels relative to the broader market in decades. And while investor sentiment can be fragile, the long-term reasons to own Health Care companies remain intact, including that aging populations with unmet medical needs continue to fuel demand for treatment options.

Ex US Marks the Spot: Mapping Opportunities in International Equities

In this video series, we share highlights from a conversation between Portfolio Manager Uday Cheruvu and Portfolio Specialist Apurva Schwartz exploring the forces behind the recent shift in global market leadership. From macroeconomic recovery abroad to valuation gaps and policy uncertainty in the US, they discuss why international equities are gaining ground—and why quality growth opportunities outside the U.S. may be just beginning.

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Why Analysts May Be Wrong About L’Oréal

Is L’Oréal overvalued? Your answer to that might depend on where your investment focus lies—Europe, or the entire world.

L’Oréal, based in France, is the world’s largest maker of cosmetics, with about a 13% share of the global market. Some of the century-old company’s best years were just before the COVID-19 pandemic, as demand soared for luxury skincare products, particularly among young consumers in China. But growth in the beauty industry has slowed since the pandemic, and the main reason for that slowdown is China, where economic struggles have weighed on consumer spending. While nearly 30% of L’Oréal’s sales came from North Asia in 2021, that figure shrank to 24% last year.

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The Other Novo Doesn’t Need Ozempic

At an industrial hub about an hour outside Copenhagen, engineered yeast cells are fermented to produce semaglutide, the key ingredient in Ozempic and Wegovy, the highly sought-after GLP-1 drugs made by pharmaceutical giant Novo Nordisk. Denmark has a long history as an important contributor to biomedical innovation, including the diabetes treatments for which Novo Nordisk is known. The company, one of the largest employers there, produces half the world’s insulin and was among the first to commercialize its use a hundred years ago.

But Novo Nordisk isn’t the only company in the neighborhood that uses the alchemy of fermentation science to turn microbes into high-demand products. It isn’t even the only Novo.

Just around the corner from the cauldrons of Ozempic is another facility, where three-story fermentation tanks are similarly filled with bacteria and fungi multiplying by the millions in a nutrient-rich broth. The enzymes that get secreted are eventually used by dozens of industries to make everything from food and laundry detergents to biofuel and medicines. The Novo that produces and sells these enzymes is Novonesis.