NEW YORK, December 30, 2025, 11:18 ET — Regular session
- UnitedHealth shares rose in late-morning trade, outperforming other large U.S. health insurers.
- Markets were choppy in thin year-end volumes as investors waited for Federal Reserve meeting minutes.
- UnitedHealth’s next major catalyst is its Jan. 27 results and 2026 guidance.
UnitedHealth Group Incorporated shares rose about 1.3% to $333.32 in late-morning trade on Tuesday, after swinging between $329.18 and $336.03. Humana gained about 0.5%, Elevance Health and Cigna edged higher, while CVS Health slipped; the Health Care Select Sector SPDR ETF was down about 0.1%.
The move came as Wall Street drifted lower in thin holiday trading, with technology shares under pressure and U.S. markets set to close on Thursday for New Year’s Day. “I wouldn’t try to make too much out of anything that happens in a holiday-shortened week,” said Art Hogan, chief market strategist at B Riley Wealth. Reuters
Why this matters now: UnitedHealth is the largest U.S. health insurer and a heavyweight Dow component, so even modest swings can influence broader sentiment. With just a handful of sessions left in 2025, traders often rebalance portfolios, which can amplify moves in heavily owned blue chips.
UnitedHealth has faced a tougher backdrop this year after warning earlier that medical costs in its Medicare Advantage business were running higher than expected. Medicare Advantage refers to private plans that deliver Medicare benefits for seniors and people with disabilities. Reuters
Macro was also in focus. Investors were awaiting the Federal Reserve’s meeting minutes at 2 p.m. ET — the detailed record of policymakers’ debate — for clues on the path of interest rates into 2026. Investopedia
For UnitedHealth, the next hard catalyst comes Jan. 27, when it will report full-year 2025 results and provide 2026 guidance before the market opens, followed by an 8 a.m. ET conference call, the company said. UnitedHealth Group
That guidance will be a key test of whether medical-cost trends are stabilizing, particularly in government-backed health plans where pricing and patient mix can swing margins. Utilization — how much care patients use — has been the key swing factor for managed-care earnings.
Investors will also listen for updates from Optum, UnitedHealth’s health-services arm. Optum Rx, its pharmacy benefit manager, negotiates drug prices and manages prescription benefits for health plans and employers.
In the near term, traders will be watching whether UnitedHealth holds above the $330 area, a round-number level that often acts as a psychological support zone in fast markets. A steadier tape after the Fed minutes could keep attention on stock-specific catalysts into January.
UnitedHealth’s performance also stood out against a cautious tone in U.S. equities, where year-end positioning has kept liquidity thin and single-stock moves more volatile than usual. That dynamic can cut both ways if a headline hits.
For now, the stock’s late-morning gains left it outperforming most large managed-care peers as investors looked ahead to the Fed’s next signal — and to UnitedHealth’s own January update for a clearer read on 2026.


