The fund managers: Dr Daniel Mahony, Gareth Powell
The managers’ view: Capitalise on emerging healthcare trends
PCGH lead manager Dr Daniel Mahony explains that the proposed investment strategy for PCGH’s continuation is based on three main structural changes in the healthcare market: an increase in demand for services from an ageing global population, an attendant pressure on finances for public services given a larger retired population compared with the number of those working and paying taxes, and the disruptive impact of new technology. He argues that 20th century public healthcare systems are largely unsustainable and must adapt in order to meet the need of providing better healthcare to more people for less money.
The rising dependency ratio (the proportion of retired to working people; see Exhibit 3) goes hand-in-hand with a lower rate of GDP growth because fewer people are economically productive. In a low-growth world, Mahony argues, investors need to focus on large companies with stable earnings growth and cash flows that compound over time, or small and mid-cap companies that are innovating and disrupting industries through the use of technology. He points out that both types of company are relatively abundant in the healthcare sector.
Exhibit 3: Old-age dependency ratio for selected major economies
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Source: Polar Capital, United Nations Statistics Division, Edison Investment Research. Note: The old-age dependency ratio is the ratio of the population aged 65 years or over to the population aged 15-64. All ratios are presented as number of dependants per 100 persons of working age (15-64).
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In a time of change, Mahony says, it is not enough simply to buy the incumbents and hope for the best. While there are perceived risks from lower government spending on healthcare, the manager sees this as a catalyst for change, driving innovation in search of efficiency savings.
The recent past has been a challenging time for healthcare, with the focus on drug pricing in advance of the US election putting pressure on pharmaceutical and particularly biotechnology stocks throughout 2015 and 2016. Generalist investors have largely withdrawn from the market and forward P/E valuations for the healthcare sector are a little below their long-term average and stand at a rare discount to the forward P/E of the broad US S&P 500 index. The two previous periods in the last 40 years when this has occurred were at times of mooted healthcare reform in the US: first under President Clinton in the early 1990s, and second in 2009 at the start of the process that led to the Affordable Healthcare Act (‘Obamacare’). At the same time, the rate of upward earnings revisions has been lower for healthcare companies than for the wider market, because cyclical companies have been rerated on the back of higher inflation. Mahony points out that share price performance tends to follow earnings revisions, which currently stand at a seven-year low for the healthcare sector versus the US S&P 1500, suggesting a recovery may be likely. Regardless of expectations, the healthcare sector has consistently produced positive year-on-year earnings growth, even during the global financial crisis of 2008/09 (Exhibit 4). These defensive growth characteristics, in Mahony’s view, argue in favour of an allocation to stable, large-cap healthcare companies.
However, with the provision of healthcare undergoing change, the manager says investors need to look further than big-name drug companies. In the US, the world’s largest healthcare market, there is an increasing trend towards focusing on value and outcomes of treatment, rather than on cost. This is being driven by the big health insurance companies, and goes hand-in-hand with a trend for US consumers (a majority of whom receive healthcare through an employer-sponsored insurance plan) to have to meet more of the cost of their treatment before the insurance company starts to pay.
Mahony points out that increasing use of technology and ‘big data’ is enabling governments and insurers to reach a better understanding of which treatments offer the best patient outcomes for a given cost. Much of the data capture and analysis is being driven by specialist healthcare IT companies, some of which have been developed or acquired by the insurers. This arguably shifts the balance of industry power away from the drug companies – whose efficacy data is based on tightly controlled trial situations – to the buyers and users of treatments, where large-scale data analysis can test efficiency based on real-world outcomes.
Exhibit 4: A defensive growth sector – healthcare versus S&P 500 y-o-y earnings growth
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Source: Polar Capital, UBS, Edison Investment Research.
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IT is also a key factor in the shift in healthcare delivery to the lowest-cost setting. Mahony points to the example of US pharmacy chain CVS Health’s MinuteClinic, a walk-in service where customers can be seen by a nurse or have a video consultation with a doctor via the internet. Prescriptions can be filled at the pharmacy and, as well as CVS capturing the whole value of the consultation, the consumer pays less than if they had visited their GP. Mahony adds that ‘telemedicine’ is also gaining ground in the UK, where GP appointments can be hard to access. While patients have to pay a fee for an online consultation, the economic cost to them may be lower than if they had to take time off work; meanwhile, the ‘virtual GP’ service offers flexible working opportunities for GPs who may otherwise be outside the workforce while bringing up a family or undertaking research.
Mahony explains the proposed new PCGH investment strategy takes advantage of two key trends that are emerging: large-cap consolidators that are adapting to change, and smaller firms that are driving technological innovation. The main allocation (c 90%) to large-cap, blue chip companies will focus on those that are beginning to consolidate on their core franchises (Mahony points to the 2015 asset swap between GlaxoSmithKline and Novartis, where Glaxo – which is strong in vaccines – exchanged its oncology assets with Novartis in return for the latter’s vaccines business). These companies are benefiting from their capacity to standardise processes and create economies of scale, as well as having the ability to buy in growth and innovation through acquisition. Another example is Abbott, whose purchase of rival St Jude Medical allowed it to consolidate its position in medical devices for cardiothoracic indications, allowing it to compete better with industry leader Medtronic. Mahony points out that buyers of services will tend to use two main suppliers, with a proportion of their budget perhaps reserved for a smaller, specialist firm; therefore, a company needs to be in the top two or three in its sector in order to ensure its long-term survival.
The smaller allocation to ‘innovators’ will focus on those companies that are using technology to change established medical practice, creating new markets and targeting unmet medical needs. Mahony says such companies are particularly prevalent in the areas of IT and medical devices, as well as the more widely known sector of emerging biotechnology.
The manager says the proposed new strategy will be concentrated in a relatively small number of names: “we are stock selectors, not stock collectors”. The portfolio will be constructed without reference to indices, and is therefore likely to diverge widely from index weightings. The core large-cap portfolio will contain c 25-30 stocks, with 10-20 in the small-cap innovation portfolio.