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The healthcare sector has been a rollercoaster in 2025, and
(MOH) finds itself in the eye of the storm—wrongly, in my view. While the stock has lagged behind sector peers, I'm convinced this is a classic case of the market overreacting to short-term headwinds. Let me break down why now is the time to buy before the storm clears and the sun shines on its long-term potential.
Molina's Q1 2025 results show a company fighting through cyclical challenges but fundamentally intact. Revenue soared 12% to $11.1 billion, driven by Medicaid contracts, Medicare growth, and the ConnectiCare acquisition. Yet net income dipped 1% to $298 million, sending shares down. The market is fixated on two things: the loss of its Virginia Medicaid contract and a rising medical cost ratio (MLR) in its Marketplace business.
Let's dissect these “worries” one by one.
Effective June 30, Molina's Virginia Medicaid contract is ending. This will reduce Medicaid membership by 6.1%—a hit of 311,000 members. But here's why this isn't the end of the world:
- Diversification is working. The loss is offset by aggressive growth in the Marketplace (up 91% in membership to 316,000), Medicare (up 0.8%), and new Medicaid contracts in Nevada, Illinois, Florida, and Wisconsin. These states are key battlegrounds for Molina's future.
- Virginia's impact is backloaded. The financial hit won't fully materialize until Q3 2025, giving the company time to execute its mitigation strategies.
The Medicaid MLR rose to 90.3% in Q1, up from 88.5% in 2024, driven by rising costs for behavioral health, long-term services, and seasonal illnesses. The Marketplace MLR spiked to 81.7%, but this is partly due to the ConnectiCare acquisition, which brought higher-cost members. Here's why I'm not worried:
- Rate increases are coming. States are approving modest Medicaid rate hikes to offset rising acuity. Molina's Q1 premium revenue beat estimates, and its 2025 guidance assumes $42 billion in premiums—up 9%—which suggests pricing power.
- Operational discipline is intact. The G&A expense ratio dropped to 6.9% of revenue, and
The stock's YTD return of 7.4% lags behind the healthcare sector's 9.5% gains, and its $343.46 average price target suggests ~10% upside. But here's why the bulls have the upper hand:
Yes, debt rose 22% to $3.6 billion to fund acquisitions and buybacks. But:
- Free cash flow is robust. A 26.72% return on equity (ROE) suggests efficient capital use.
- Share repurchases are a win. $500 million bought back in Q1 boosted EPS by 5.4%, and another $1 billion is authorized.
At 13.8x 2025 EPS estimates ($24.50), MOH trades at a discount to its 5-year average P/E of 16.8. This is a company with a 13%–15% long-term EPS growth target—targets it reaffirmed despite the Virginia loss.
The market is pricing in worst-case scenarios for Molina's Virginia exit and MLR issues. But the data shows a company that's pivoting decisively: expanding into new markets, leveraging acquisitions, and maintaining financial discipline.
This is a contrarian buy at $312 (as of June 19). Set a stop-loss at $280 and aim for the $340–$360 price target by year-end. The storms will pass, and when they do, Molina's growth engine will roar back.
Action Item: Buy MOH now. Let the panic fade—then watch the rewards flow in.
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