
Healthcare: Winning Sector ETF Amid Soft U.S. July Jobs Report
In July, job growth was mainly concentrated in the health care sector, which added 55,000 positions, thanks to gains in ambulatory health care services (34,000) and hospitals (16,000). Social assistance also contributed 18,000 new jobs.
However, employment in most other major sectors — including mining, construction, manufacturing, wholesale and retail trade, transportation and warehousing, information, financial activities, professional and business services, and leisure and hospitality — remained largely unchanged.
Sector in Focus
Healthcare
Healthcare added 55,000 jobs in July, above the average monthly gain of 42,000 over the prior 12 months. Over the month, job gains occurred in ambulatory health care services (+34,000) and hospitals (+16,000). Also in June, the healthcare sector stood strong in job creation.
ETFs in Focus
Health Care Select Sector SPDR ETF XLV can be played to tap the moderate momentum, although Trump's tax bill may lead millions of Americans to lose healthcare coverage. The fund has 30% exposure to the pharma industry, followed by 22.32% exposure to the healthcare providers & services industry, about 22% focus on Health Care Equipment & Supplies, 17.1% focus on the biotech sector and 8.7% focus on the life sciences tools & services. The fund sports a Zacks Rank #1 (Strong Buy).
iShares U.S. Healthcare Providers ETF IHF concentrates on companies in the healthcare provider and services sector. It measures the performance of the healthcare providers sub-sector of the U.S. equity market. It includes health maintenance organizations, hospitals, clinics, dentists, opticians, nursing homes, rehabilitation & retirement centers. The fund charges 40 bps in fees. It currently carries a Zacks Rank #3 (Hold).
Vanguard Health Care ETF VHT tracks the MSCI US Investable Market Health Care 25/50 Index made up of stocks of U.S. companies in the healthcare sector. The fund charges 9 bps in fees and sports a Zacks Rank #1.
Stocks in Focus
HCA Healthcare HCA, which has a Zacks Rank #3 (Hold), deserves a mention. It is the largest non-governmental operator of acute care hospitals in the United States. The company has a trailing four-quarter earnings surprise of 7.02%, on average.
Welltower WELL is a real estate investment trust (REIT) that is engaged in investments with seniors housing operators, post-acute providers and health systems. The company has a trailing four-quarter earnings surprise of 4.22%, on average. The stock has a Zacks Rank #3.
Zacks Rank #3 Omega Healthcare Investors OHI is a self-administered REIT, investing in income-producing healthcare facilities, principally long-term care facilities located in the United States and the United Kingdom. The company has a trailing four-quarter earnings surprise of 2.07%, on average.
Research Chief Names "Single Best Pick to Double"
From thousands of stocks, 5 Zacks experts each have chosen their favorite to skyrocket +100% or more in months to come. From those 5, Director of Research Sheraz Mian hand-picks one to have the most explosive upside of all.
This company targets millennial and Gen Z audiences, generating nearly $1 billion in revenue last quarter alone. A recent pullback makes now an ideal time to jump aboard. Of course, all our elite picks aren't winners but this one could far surpass earlier Zacks' Stocks Set to Double like Nano-X Imaging which shot up +129.6% in little more than 9 months.
Free: See Our Top Stock And 4 Runners Up
Want the latest recommendations from Zacks Investment Research? Today, you can download 7 Best Stocks for the Next 30 Days. Click to get this free report
Omega Healthcare Investors, Inc. (OHI): Free Stock Analysis Report
HCA Healthcare, Inc. (HCA): Free Stock Analysis Report
Health Care Select Sector SPDR ETF (XLV): ETF Research Reports
Vanguard Health Care ETF (VHT): ETF Research Reports
Welltower Inc. (WELL): Free Stock Analysis Report
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Globe and Mail
9 minutes ago
- Globe and Mail
Business Brief: The price of protecting Air Canada
Good morning. Air Canada says it could take up to 10 days for operations to return to normal after a tentative deal with flight attendants ended the strike. For passengers, frustrations may linger far longer. That's in focus today, along with a look at what's fuelling inflation. Inflation: Canada's annual inflation rate slowed to 1.7 per cent in July. But that was mainly owing to a decline in gasoline prices, which reflected Ottawa's removal of the consumer carbon tax. Trade: The U.S. is hiking steel and aluminum tariffs on more than 400 products including appliances, railcars, and EV parts. Energy: Alberta carbon-capture test site is powering up despite an uncertain cleantech outlook. Catch up quick: Air Canada resumed flying yesterday afternoon after reaching a tentative labour agreement with the union that represents its 10,000 flight attendants, who had been on strike since Aug. 16. The cost of returning to autopilot: Now that Air Canada has agreed to pay cabin crew for their work before takeoff and after landing, the airline could turn to strategies to offset those losses, such as: Given Canada's foreign ownership restrictions, Air Canada may be more inclined to push some of those options further than others. That's because WestJet – the only other Canadian competitor its size – isn't giving it much of a race. They're both just sort of jogging at the pace of a couple of baseball players headed toward the dugout. In the U.S., where markets are less regulated, consumer choice compels companies to cut costs. Canada's oligopolistic airline industry faces no such pressure, writes Eugene Lang, acting director of the School of Policy Studies at Queen's University. Geoff White, executive director and general counsel at the Public Interest Advocacy Centre, said Canadian travellers are stuck with the effects of an uncompetitive industry – unless policymakers step in. 'This will take a legislative fix – this is fundamentally a failure of competition,' White told The Globe. 'When it comes to Canada's addiction to monopolies, it's a matter of political will.' The case for changing course Beyond lowering prices, competition also presses companies into becoming more efficient and innovative – two factors that lead to productivity growth, which basically means making more of something with the same amount of work. Being able to produce more of a good or service allows a company to invest more in skills or equipment, and to pay higher wages. That means productivity growth also helps companies and their employees navigate higher costs. Rather, it might have: Productivity has flatlined in recent years as Canadian businesses invest at levels that rank among the lowest of its peers in the OECD. That weakness leaves households more vulnerable to rising costs. Yesterday's inflation report might suggest Canada is holding up better than expected since U.S. tariffs went into effect, but prices for shelter and groceries are still high, and getting higher. The strain has put fresh focus on whether government policy can bring relief — including proposals to boost competition in the airline industry. In June, the federal competition watchdog recommended 10 ways Ottawa could boost competition in the airline industry. Two of those recommendations were to open the skies to more foreign investment, and to allow foreign airlines the ability to fly domestic routes. More competition delivers major benefits to Canadian travellers, the report found. New companies have entered the market and are making progress, the authors noted, yet Canada's domestic aviation market remains 'highly concentrated.' Some industry leaders pushed back, arguing too much foreign money and competition for domestic routes – a practice known as cabotage – would be devastating to Canada's homegrown employers. (Air Canada called the very premise that the country lacks competition a 'myth,' instead blaming high government charges for keeping prices elevated. There's a lot of truth in the taxation argument, but little evidence that eliminating them would lead to more spending on innovation.) The government, by and large, seems to agree with the industry – it isn't expected to enforce the watchdog's recommendations – and applies similar logic in protecting banks and telcos. Basic offerings from the Big Six make the banks virtually interchangeable for most Canadians. And have you ever caught yourself pausing to remember if you're a Bell or Rogers customer because you've bounced between them more than once? Ottawa could allow more competition, Air Canada could feel more pressure to innovate, and Canadians could see cheaper fares. Instead, consumers are left with rising costs and fading patience — in an economy where protecting incumbents has become the default across airlines, banks, and telecoms alike. Crypto thefts in 2025 have already topped US$2.17-billion – surpassing all of 2024. In real estate: The collapse of an Ontario brokerage is raising questions about the industry's financial oversight. On autopilot: Tesla must face a class action over self-driving claims, a U.S. judge has ruled. Crushing beers: The Beer Store is closing several locations in Ontario. Here's what you need to know. Global markets came under pressure after a tech-led selloff on Wall Street yesterday. U.S. futures pointed lower, while TSX futures pointed higher. Overseas, the pan-European STOXX 600 was up 0.15 per cent in morning trading. Britain's FTSE 100 rose 0.29 per cent, Germany's DAX fell 0.34 per cent and France's CAC 40 edged up 0.06 per cent. In Asia, Japan's Nikkei closed 1.51 per cent lower, while Hong Kong's Hang Seng inched up 0.17 per cent. The Canadian dollar traded at 72.08 U.S. cents.

Globe and Mail
9 minutes ago
- Globe and Mail
Fed's July minutes could reveal whether there was broader consensus for rate cuts
Last month's decision by the U.S. Federal Reserve to hold interest rates unchanged prompted dissents from two top central bankers who wanted to lower rates to guard against further weakening of the job market, and a readout of that two-day gathering on Wednesday could show whether their concerns had started to resonate with other policymakers, perhaps reinforcing expectations that borrowing-cost reductions could begin next month. Not even 48 hours after the conclusion of the July 29-30 Federal Open Market Committee meeting, data from the Labor Department appeared to validate the concerns of Fed Vice Chair for Supervision Michelle Bowman and Governor Christopher Waller when it showed far fewer jobs than expected were created in July, the unemployment rate ticked up and the labor force participation rate slid to its lowest since late 2022. More unsettling, though, was an historic downward revision for estimates of employment in the previous two months. That revision erased more than a quarter of a million jobs thought to have been created in May and June and put a hefty dent in the prevailing narrative of a still-strong-job market. The event was so angering to President Donald Trump that he fired the head of the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Opinion: The real reason behind the U.S. job revisions and why Trump's firing of the BLS commissioner is utter nonsense Data since then, however, has provided some fodder for the camp more concerned that Trump's aggressive tariff regime risks rekindling inflation to hold their ground against moving quickly to lower rates. The annual rate of underlying consumer inflation accelerated more than expected in July and was followed by an unexpectedly large jump in prices at the producer level. 'The minutes to the July Federal Open Market Committee will give a more nuanced sense of the split on the committee between the majority that voted to leave rates on hold and the dovish bloc led by dissenting Governors Miki Bowman and Christopher Waller,' analysts at Oxford Economics wrote ahead of the minutes release, set for 2 p.m. ET (1800 GMT) on Wednesday. 'However, the minutes are more stale than usual since they predate the revised payroll figures, which prompted a rapid repricing of the probability of a September rate cut.' Heading into the release of the minutes, CME's FedWatch tool assigns an 85 per cent probability of a quarter-point reduction in the Fed's policy rate from the current range of 4.25-to-4.50 per cent, where it has remained since December. Another reason the minutes may feel stale on arrival is they come just two days before a highly anticipated speech from Fed Chair Jerome Powell at the annual economic symposium near Jackson Hole, Wyoming, hosted by the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City. Powell's keynote speech on Friday morning - set to be his last Jackson Hole address as Fed chair with his term expiring next May - could show whether Powell has joined ranks with those sensing the time has come for steps to shield the job market from further weakening or if he remains in league with those more wary of inflation in light of its moves away from the central bank's 2 per cent target. The lack of Fed rate reductions since Trump returned to the White House has agitated the Republican president, and he regularly lashes out at Powell for not engineering rate cuts. Trump is already in the process of screening possible successors to Powell and after the unexpected resignation earlier this month of one of the seven Board of Governors members, he has a chance to put his imprint on the Fed soon. He has nominated Council of Economic Advisers Chair Stephen Miran to fill the seat vacated by Adriana Kugler, a term that expires at the end of January. It is unclear whether Miran will win Senate confirmation before the Fed's September 16-17 meeting.

National Post
9 minutes ago
- National Post
CIBC Innovation Banking Provides Growth Capital Financing to MedMe Health
Article content TORONTO — CIBC Innovation Banking announced today that it has provided a growth-focused credit facility to MedMe Health ('MedMe'). The company will use the financing to expand its product suite and scale its operations in North America. Article content Founded in 2019, MedMe has rapidly established itself as a leading platform for pharmacy care delivery in Canada, supporting over 4,500 pharmacies across North America. MedMe enables pharmacies to operate as true clinical hubs, delivering vaccinations, chronic disease management, and preventative care at scale. Article content 'With growing traction in the US and the launch of AI-powered tools such as Clinical Assistant and Patient Concierge, MedMe is setting a new standard for how community providers engage, document, and care for patients,' said Purya Sarmadi, CEO and Co-Founder of MedMe. 'We are excited to work with CIBC Innovation Banking to fuel our next stage of growth. This financing will accelerate our US expansion, extend our medical billing capabilities for pharmacist-led care, advance our AI roadmap, and scale our presence across specialty pharmacy and adjacent healthcare providers.' Article content Niramay, Executive Director at CIBC Innovation Banking, added 'MedMe is helping to transform pharmacy care delivery with its innovative, customizable software platform. We are proud to support its next phase of growth as it expand into new markets and continues to drive digital transformation in the healthcare sector.' Article content MedMe is backed by leading investors including Microsoft's M12, Graphite Ventures, MaRS IAF, and YCombinator. Article content About CIBC Innovation Banking Article content CIBC Innovation Banking has 25 years of specialized experience in growth-stage tech and life science companies across North America – a longer track record than most banks. CIBC Innovation Banking now has over $11 billion in funds managed including life sciences, health care, cleantech companies, investors, and entrepreneurs, and has assisted over 700 venture and private equity-backed businesses over the past six and a half years. The bank operates out of 14 global locations in San Francisco, Menlo Park, New York, Toronto, London, Austin, Boston, Chicago, Seattle, Vancouver, Montreal, Atlanta, Reston, and Durham. Connect with us today to start the conversation. About MedMe Health MedMe Health is a scaling-stage digital health company transforming how pharmacies and community-based providers deliver care. Founded to address the growing gap between traditional pharmacy systems and the clinical demands of modern practice, MedMe replaces fragmented, outdated tools with a configurable, all-in-one platform built specifically for pharmacist-led care. Article content Trusted by over 4,500 pharmacy locations and leading national chains across North America, MedMe's platform has powered more than 25 million patient services to date. The company is expanding rapidly across the US and adjacent verticals such as specialty pharmacy. MedMe's modular infrastructure streamlines scheduling, intake, documentation, and communication for pharmacy clinical services such as vaccinations, minor ailments, POCT, and chronic disease management. Article content MedMe is also leading the integration of AI in pharmacy care. Its Clinical Assistant transcribes and auto-fills clinical notes in real time, while Patient Concierge, a voice agent, autonomously answers and makes calls to handle refills, bookings, and follow-ups. These tools reduce administrative burden, improve access, and enable pharmacists to operate at the top of their license. Article content Article content Article content Article content Article content Article content