Stock of the Day

July 2, 2026

UnitedHealth Group (UNH)

$426.67
+$11.04 (+2.7%)
Market Cap: $377.45B

About UnitedHealth Group

UnitedHealth Group Incorporated operates as a diversified health care company in the United States. The company operates through four segments: UnitedHealthcare, Optum Health, Optum Insight, and Optum Rx. The UnitedHealthcare segment offers consumer-oriented health benefit plans and services for national employers, public sector employers, mid-sized employers, small businesses, and individuals; health care coverage, and health and well-being services to individuals age 50 and older addressing their needs; Medicaid plans, children's health insurance and health care programs; and health and dental benefits, and hospital and clinical services, as well as health care benefits products and services to state programs caring for the economically disadvantaged, medically underserved, and those without the benefit of employer-funded health care coverage. The Optum Health segment provides care delivery, care management, wellness and consumer engagement, and health financial services patients, consumers, care delivery systems, providers, employers, payers, and public-sector entities. The Optum Insight segment offers software and information products, advisory consulting arrangements, and managed services outsourcing contracts to hospital systems, physicians, health plans, governments, life sciences companies, and other organizations. The Optum Rx segment provides pharmacy care services and programs, including retail network contracting, home delivery, specialty and community health pharmacy services, infusion, and purchasing and clinical capabilities, as well as develops programs in the areas of step therapy, formulary management, drug adherence, and disease/drug therapy management. UnitedHealth Group Incorporated was founded in 1974 and is based in Minnetonka, Minnesota.

UnitedHealth Group Bull Case

Here are some ways that investors could benefit from investing in UnitedHealth Group:

  • The company reported a quarterly earnings per share of $7.23, exceeding analyst expectations, which indicates strong financial performance and potential for growth.
  • UnitedHealth Group has increased its quarterly dividend to $2.32 per share, reflecting a commitment to returning value to shareholders, with an annualized dividend yield of approximately 2.2%.
  • Analysts forecast earnings per share of $18.32 for the current year, suggesting positive growth prospects and confidence in the company's future performance.
  • The company has a solid return on equity of 14.65%, indicating effective management and profitability relative to shareholder equity.
  • The current stock price is around $400, which may present an attractive entry point for investors looking to capitalize on the company's growth trajectory.

UnitedHealth Group Bear Case

Investors should be bearish about investing in UnitedHealth Group for these reasons:

  • The company's net margin is relatively low at 2.68%, which may raise concerns about profitability and cost management in a competitive healthcare market.
  • UnitedHealth Group's payout ratio is currently at 70.09%, indicating that a significant portion of earnings is being distributed as dividends, which could limit reinvestment in growth opportunities.
  • Despite recent positive performance, the healthcare sector can be volatile and subject to regulatory changes, which may impact future earnings and stock performance.
  • Some analysts have issued mixed ratings, with one rating the stock as a "Sell," suggesting that there may be underlying concerns about the company's long-term outlook.
  • Market conditions and economic factors could affect the company's ability to maintain its growth trajectory, making it a riskier investment in uncertain times.

Beyond the AI Trade: 3 Defensive Stocks Built for Stability

Written By Thomas Hughes on 6/20/2026

A decorative shield and stacked gold coins sit before a blurred stock market chart display.

AI stocks are the hot trade in 2026 and may continue to dominate markets. However, knowing which AI stock will experience the next pop or drop is tricky, driving the need for diversification. Diversification protects portfolios from unnecessary volatility and risk, providing stable, albeit slower, returns while waiting for those higher-risk tech stocks to appreciate. Defensive stocks share some qualities, including stable demand, reliable dividend payments and lower-than-average beta.

Beta is a widely misunderstood metric. It measures a stock’s volatility relative to a benchmark, typically the S&P 500, rather than the expected volatility of the underlying issue. Low-beta stocks are not immune to volatility, but they have historically been less sensitive to broad market moves. The difference is that their price action is less tied to macroeconomic swings than the average stock because of income stability and capital returns.

UnitedHealth Is Set Up for Sustainable Price Recovery

UnitedHealth (NYSE: UNH) has struggled the past year with an executive shakeup, legal woes, and margin pressure. However, the company has navigated its headwinds well, setting itself up to resume growth in upcoming quarters, accelerate it, and drive improving profitability. This underpins a healthy capital return outlook, which includes dividends and share buybacks. The dividend yields more than 2.25% annualized as of mid-June and is expected to grow over time.

UNH is on track to be included in the Dividend Champions index, has increased its distribution at a double-digit compound annual growth rate over the past few years, and pays approximately 50% of its earnings. Share buybacks are also substantial, having reduced the count by an average of nearly 1% as of Q1 2026.

UNH’s beta is very low at 0.64 over the trailing three years. Factors contributing to the low beta include the company's predictable cash flow, visible catalysts, and capital returns—its owners include a high percentage of long-term, buy-and-hold investors.

Despite recent woes, analysts have maintained a Moderate Buy consensus for UNH stock. The story in mid-2026 is that price targets are rising again, signaling a reversal in this market. Institutional activity is also robust, with them owning approximately 88% of the shares and accumulating for seven consecutive quarters.

Long-term stock price chart for UNH showing a price reversal pattern.

Brookfield Corporation: The Crown Jewel of Real Asset Investing

Brookfield Corporation (NYSE: BN) is the crown jewel of real asset investing as it is the world’s largest alternative investment corporation. Real assets are tangibles like commodities, natural resources, real estate, and infrastructure. They are an asset class in their own right, attractive for their intrinsic value, inflation-resistance, and cash-generating qualities. The company operates in three segments, providing exposure to wealth management, insurance services, and direct asset ownership.

Among Brookfield’s attractions are its cash-generating qualities and capital returns. The dividend is barely more than a token at a 0.6% yield, but it's compounded by share buybacks. The latest authorization is worth up to 10% of the share count, with trailing-12-month activity reducing the count approximately 0.65% as of Q1.

Brookfield is not a low-beta stock, as it is exposed to commodity price swings and geopolitical risks. However, it is viewed as a safe haven because of its tangible assets, inflation-linked cash flow, and substantial fee-based management business. The combination provides steady, predictable cash flow, enabling business growth, financial strength, and capital return.

BN stock chart showing an upward trend from 2020 to 2027 with MACD indicators.

American Electric Power: Monopolizing Cash Flow and Capital Return Safety

Utility companies are traditional safe-haven plays with heavily regulated, entrenched businesses. Operators like American Electric Power (NYSE: AEP) provide stable, steady income, reliable yields, and growth opportunities. Not only is the U.S. power grid old and ailing, in need of updating, but demand is growing and expected to remain strong in the upcoming years. Data centers are only part of the story, as growth in the household and business sectors is also at play.

American Electric Power provides a strong dividend, yielding nearly 3% as of late Q2 2026. The payout ratio is a bit high, over 60%, but only when compared to average companies. Utilities such as AEP, with highly visible and relatively unimpeded cash flows, tend to sustainably pay out a larger portion of earnings. Regulation means rising costs can be offset by higher prices, which is a catalyst in the industry today.

AEP’s stock beta is approximately 0.53, reflecting price action only half as volatile as the average stock. Fundamentally, AEP is in an uptrend, supported by rising demand and plans to expand capacity, which have analysts buzzing. In their view, datacenter demand changes the story from humdrum utility to a high-growth story with legs.

Multi-year stock price chart for AEP showing an upward trend.

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