PUBLISHED
MON, DEC 2 2019 6:27 UPDATED MON, DEC 2 2019 6:58 PM EST Berkeley Lovelace Jr.@/IN/BERKELEYLOVELACE@BERKELEYJR
KEY
POINTS
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UnitedHealth’s stock
has “caught fire” due in part to Warren appearing to “back away” from her
“Medicare for All” proposal, according to Jim Cramer.
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The stock has also
rallied because Warren has faltered in some political polls, Cramer says.
WATCH NOW
VIDEO01:29
Jim Cramer: Warren’s ‘Medicare for All’
backtrack props UnitedHealth’s stock
UnitedHealth’s stock has “caught fire” due in
part to Sen. Elizabeth Warren appearing to “back away”
from her “Medicare for All” proposal, CNBC’s Jim Cramer said
Monday.
Shares of the managed-care company got hammered
in September when Warren became the new frontrunner in the crowded 2020
Democratic presidential race. Warren’s platform has called for the elimination
of private health insurance, like UnitedHealth, and replacing it with a
universal Medicare plan for all Americans.
However, Warren said last month that she wouldn’t
immediately transfer to a single-payer system. Instead, she would push to pass
a bill to allow all Americans to either buy into Medicare or get covered for
free through special budget rules. She wouldn’t move to eliminate private
insurance until her third year.
Warren “backed away from ‘Medicare for All,’
saying she’d wait until her third year to implement it — in other words, it’s
not a priority and it probably won’t happen,” Cramer explained on “Mad Money.”
The stock has also rallied because Warren has
faltered in some political polls, Cramer said.
“Wall Street was terrified of Warren, but as her
numbers have faded,” UnitedHealth has rallied, he said.
UnitedHealth CEO David Wichmann has
previously warned investors that Medicare for All would “destabilize the
nation’s health system.”
Despite concerns from UnitedHealth, public
support for a single-payer system has grown. According to a survey from the
Kaiser Family Foundation, a majority of Americans
support a national health plan in which all citizens would get
insurance from a single government plan.
Cramer said the stock market would love to have
a more centrist, “business-friendly Democrat” like former Vice President Joe
Biden or Pete Buttigieg running against President Donald Trump next year.
Disclosure: Cramer’s charitable trust owns
shares of UnitedHealth.
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