What the upcoming Supreme Court ACA hearing could mean for debt of healthcare companies

With the presidential election looming as well as a Supreme Court hearing on the Affordable Care Act, BondCliq CEO Chris White joins Yahoo Finance to discuss how the debt of healthcare companies has performed.

Video Transcript

ADAM SHAPIRO: Let's talk about health care. Let's talk about debt. Let's talk about bonds. Chris White is the CEO of BondCliq. We invite him into the stream joining us from the borough of Brooklyn, not too far from where I'm sitting right now.

Good to see you, Chris. I've got to ask you-- so with Amy Coney Barrett now on the Supreme Court, the expectation that the Affordable Care Act will be overturned, what does that do for different kinds of health care companies as far as their debt outlook? Does it really-- how is it going to impact, or will it have any impact?

CHRIS WHITE: Well, obviously, you know, the changes to the Supreme Court and what's coming up in terms of the cases that they're looking at-- changes to the Affordable Care Act, particularly around pre-existing conditions, would completely change the outlook for insurers, because obviously, they could create a community of healthy people that they insure and deny insurance to other folks. So from an investment standpoint, that's positive for the insurers. And what we're seeing in the bond market over the past 30 days is that really, the insurance names, from a debt standpoint, have been rallying.

JULIE HYMAN: And you know, there's so many things that could change after the election. You know, there's the Supreme Court ruling, of course. But also, if there is, for example, a blue wave, even if the ACA gets overturned, you could see, in theory, other legislation to replace it. So does it feel like the health care debt market is fully capturing the sort of range of outcomes here?

CHRIS WHITE: Well, I think what the health care debt market right now is pricing in is it's pricing in the potential for positive news around health care, because we're not just looking at the Affordable Care Act, of course. There's also the possibility of a vaccine for COVID. And whoever can come up with that first and really get it established in the marketplace, obviously-- not just from a debt standpoint, but from an equity standpoint-- is going to be the hot name in the industry.

So betting-- placing bets on health care, whether it be for the insurers or whether it be for the drug makers, seems to be smart and contrarian to where the broader market's going from a performance standpoint.

ADAM SHAPIRO: Chris, something caught my eye, which I was going to read this weekend. It's from the Center for Economic Policy Research. And it has to do with private equity moving in and buying up different kind of medical centers, hospitals, but as well as launching businesses where doctors work for them.