Quick Read
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Pfizer’s 7% yield and forward P/E of 8 complement Viatris’s three FDA PDUFA decisions arriving before year-end 2026.
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Kimberly-Clark’s pending acquisition of Kenvue at $3.50 cash plus shares gives holders a defined takeout floor with shareholder approval already secured.
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Healthcare has been an unloved corner of the market in 2026, but that neglect has created a rare setup: quality names trading in single-digit and low-double-digit territory while still throwing off cash, growing earnings, and reaffirming guidance. For retail investors scanning for value, the sub-$30 shelf in healthcare currently offers exposure to a pending strategic buyout, a 7% dividend yield backed by a reaffirmed outlook, and a restructuring story with multiple near-term FDA catalysts. That is a lot of optionality for very little share price.
With that in mind, here are three healthcare stocks trading under $30 that look attractively priced heading into the back half of 2026.
Kenvue (NYSE: KVUE)
Kenvue (NYSE:KVUE) is the consumer health company spun off from Johnson & Johnson (NYSE:JNJ), home to Tylenol, Neutrogena, Aveeno, Listerine, BAND-AID, Zyrtec, and Nicorette. Shares closed the last session at $19.83, comfortably under the $30 ceiling and up 17.65% year to date, which still leaves the stock below its 52-week high of $21.85.
The fundamentals are firming quickly. Q1 FY26 delivered adjusted EPS of $0.32 versus $0.26 expected, a 23.08% beat, on revenue of $3.91 billion, up 4.49% year over year. Gross margin expanded 90 basis points to 58.9% and adjusted operating margin reached 24.0%, while free cash flow climbed 60.64% to $400 million. Kenvue carries a forward P/E of 17 and a 4.28% dividend yield, with an analyst consensus price target of $19.50.
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The bull case is anchored by the pending acquisition by Kimberly-Clark (NYSE:KMB), structured as $3.50 cash per share plus 0.14625 Kimberly-Clark shares, expected to close in the second half of 2026 with shareholder approval already secured and the HSR waiting period expired. That gives holders a defined takeout floor while the underlying business keeps expanding margins. CEO Kirk Perry said the company is “confident in our ability to navigate ongoing macro uncertainty” as it works toward closing the combination.
