New York, May 12, 2026, 16:05 EDT
- UnitedHealth gained 3.1% late Tuesday, closing at $396.45 after shaking off an opening slide. Humana, Elevance Health, and Cigna were also up. This action pointed to a managed-care play rather than pressure on just one stock.
- Bigger Q1 figures, a hike to 2026 profit targets, some Medicare Advantage rate relief, and Optum Rx’s newly announced pricing reset for PBM scrutiny—all of it fueling the rally.
- Bulls are pointing to signs that UnitedHealth’s repair plan is starting to work. Bears, on the other hand, aren’t convinced—medical-cost pressures, regulatory concerns, and a stock that’s already rallied remain front of mind.
UnitedHealth Group shares climbed Tuesday, last changing hands at $396.45, up $12.01—roughly a 3.1% jump. The session saw some volatility: the stock kicked off at $383.68, dipped to $382.06, before momentum took over and bulls drove it up to $397.33 toward the close.
It matters now because investors have shifted focus: instead of simply questioning whether UnitedHealth can contain last year’s regulatory and cost setbacks, they’re beginning to factor in a recovery that looks less tangled. On Tuesday, senior executives will discuss strategy, financial performance, and market outlook at the BofA Securities Health Care Conference, as detailed in an 8-K filing. That gives Wall Street a fresh progress report following the April earnings reset.
The earnings reset is still pulling its weight. UnitedHealth turned in $111.7 billion in first-quarter revenue, with adjusted earnings hitting $7.23 per share. The company bumped up its 2026 adjusted earnings target to above $18.25 per share. Medical care ratio landed at 83.9%—that metric tracks premium dollars spent on claims; lower is tighter.
Management kept things measured. CFO Wayne DeVeydt pointed to “improving fundamentals” this quarter, but CEO Steve Hemsley told analysts there’s still “a long way” to go before reaching full potential. Investors might be buying into the sense of progress, yet leadership continues to cast the story as one of ongoing repair, not a finished turnaround. The Motley Fool
It’s Optum Rx stirring things up. On Monday, UnitedHealth’s pharmacy benefit manager rolled out a new approach: PBM customers will be switched to a transparent, fee-based pricing setup. The model involves a monthly charge—unlinked to drug list prices or prescription counts. PBMs handle drug price negotiations and oversee pharmacy benefits; with spread pricing, they pocket the difference between what clients pay and what pharmacies receive. According to Optum, group purchasing will completely transition to flat service fees by the end of 2027.
The stock’s jump wasn’t just about earnings. UnitedHealth’s PBM shift addresses the cloud of regulatory and legal uncertainty, signaling that Optum is taking steps ahead of possible Washington crackdowns. “Simpler and more predictable pharmacy system,” is how Optum CEO Patrick Conway described the new setup. Optum
The bear thesis kicks off on similar ground. Last year, Reuters said the Justice Department was probing Optum Rx’s prescription-management unit and also investigating UnitedHealth over its Medicare segment; according to that report, the company hadn’t been accused of any wrongdoing. In a separate document, the FTC singled out the top three PBMs — Optum, CVS Caremark, and Cigna’s Express Scripts — alleging they inflated certain drug prices, generating $7.3 billion in extra revenue between 2017 and 2022.
Peers moved too. Humana surged 7.8%, Elevance tacked on 2.6%, and Cigna advanced 2.4%, signaling UnitedHealth wasn’t the only name catching a bid. Humana’s sharper rally stands out—its heavier tilt toward Medicare Advantage, the private side of Medicare that’s been fueling the sector’s margin arguments, may be amplifying the reaction.
The outlook for Medicare Advantage just got a lift. CMS signed off on a 2.48% average payment bump for 2027, adding over $13 billion to MA plan coffers. Factoring in risk-score trends, the increase jumps to 4.98%. That’s a dose of relief for insurers, following months of higher utilization and squeezed reimbursements.
Bulls are pointing to a few things falling into place: Q1 claims costs improved, guidance moved higher, and the expected pain from Medicare funding didn’t materialize. Optum Rx is also pushing transparency ahead of stricter rules. After the CMS decision, Leerink’s Whit Mayo told Reuters, “At minimum, the sector will be perceived to be more investable.” Reuters
The main pushback from the bears: lower rates don’t guarantee margin protection. UnitedHealth’s Bobby Hunter, on the earnings call, flagged that the much-discussed 2027 medical trend remains “meaningfully above” available funding. Translation: the company still faces pressure to price plans right, trim benefits, work networks, and keep utilization in check. All this comes on the heels of a rapid rally in the stock. The Motley Fool
Today’s action isn’t triggered by a single headline—it’s really about the shift in who has to prove what. Earlier this year, UnitedHealth had to show it could steady itself. Now, with the shares trading like stabilization is a given, investors are left to figure out just how much of the recovery story is already baked into the price.