UnitedHealth (UNH) has not had a healthy time for the better part of the last 12 months. The company has been rocked by the assassination of its CEO Brian Thompson in December 2024, as well as by the questioning of its policy practices, shareholder lawsuits, and Justice Department investigations. UNH shares are now down 44% on a year to date basis.
To compound matters further, analysts have been slashing their price target ahead of its second quarter earnings. Morgan Stanley’s Erin Wright cut the price target from to $342 from $374 earlier, citing ongoing challenges at UnitedHealth’s health services unit, Optum, and Wolfe Research trimmed its price target sharply to $330 from $363, warning about near-term earnings volatility and delayed sentiment recovery around the stock. Meanwhile, Barclays lowered its price target to $337 from $350, highlighting earnings pressure. All retained their “Buy” or “Outperform” ratings on the stock, though.
Over the past 20 years, the UNH stock has been a bona fide wealth creator for its shareholders, amassing share price growth of a whopping 450%. The company now operates through two segments, UnitedHealthcare and Optum.
While UnitedHealthcare offers health insurance plans, including Medicare Advantage and commercial products, Optum is a fast-growing services arm providing pharmacy benefits, care delivery, analytics, and IT services.
Additionally, it is the largest health insurer in the United States and ranked number one globally by revenue in the healthcare industry.
So, can UNH finally find its mojo back? I think it can and here’s why.
As highlighted above, UnitedHealth commands a dominant position as the largest health insurer in the United States. That scale gives it real leverage in the market. But perhaps more important is how the company brings together two traditionally separate lines of business. UnitedHealth commands a level of coordination that pure-play insurers can’t match, allowing for operational synergies that offer both efficiency and flexibility.
In the first quarter of 2025, customer growth in UnitedHealthcare was particularly notable, rising by 780,000 individuals from the previous quarter. The total number now stands at 3.2 million. This uptick appears to be linked to strong uptake in some of the company’s more tailored healthcare offerings. The benefits of that growth are evident in the top-line momentum across all key business segments, including Optum Insight and Optum Rx.

