The global growth rate of the healthcare sector has consistently outpaced global GDP growth
Broadly diversified healthcare all-rounder with a focus on mega and large caps, complemented by small and mid caps
Active approach with a focus on structural growth and disciplined monitoring of portfolio metrics
Indexed performance (as at: 06.03.2026)
NAV: USD 138.18 (03.03.2026)
Rolling performance (06.03.2026)
| I2-USD | Benchmark | |
| 03.03.2025 - 03.03.2026 | 4.86% | 7.04% |
| 03.03.2024 - 03.03.2025 | 3.20% | 3.24% |
| 03.03.2023 - 03.03.2024 | 14.22% | 14.06% |
Annualized performance (06.03.2026)
| I2-USD | Benchmark | |
| 1 year | 4.86% | 7.04% |
| 3 years | 7.32% | 8.02% |
| Since Inception p.a. | 2.59% | 4.53% |
Cumulative performance (06.03.2026)
| I2-USD | Benchmark | |
| 1M | -0.54% | -0.10% |
| YTD | -0.17% | 0.92% |
| 1 year | 4.86% | 7.04% |
| 3 years | 23.61% | 26.04% |
| Since Inception | 10.54% | 19.02% |
Annual performance
| I2-USD | Benchmark | |
| 2025 | 14.11% | 14.83% |
| 2024 | 2.73% | 1.13% |
| 2023 | 0.95% | 3.76% |
Facts & Key figures
Investment Focus
The Bellevue Diversified Healthcare fund aims to achieve long-term capital growth, is actively managed and invests worldwide in companies with innovative business models that are active in all subsectors of the healthcare sector, such as biotechnology, medical technology, generics, pharma and healthcare services, Show moreShow less
Investment suitability & Risk
Low risk
High risk
General Information
| Investment Manager | Bellevue Asset Management AG |
| Custodian | CACEIS BANK, LUXEMBOURG BRANCH |
| Fund Administrator | CACEIS BANK, LUXEMBOURG BRANCH |
| Auditor | PriceWaterhouseCoopers |
| Launch date | 31.03.2022 |
| Year end closing | 30. Jun |
| NAV Calculation | Daily "Forward Pricing" |
| Cut of time | 15:00 CET |
| Management Fee | 0.70% |
| Subscription Fee (max.) | 5.00% |
| ISIN number | LU2441706681 |
| Valor number | 116533033 |
| Bloomberg | BDHCI2U LX |
| WKN | A3DEAU |
Legal Information
| Legal form | Luxembourg UCITS V SICAV |
| SFDR category | Article 8 |
Key data (28.02.2026, base currency USD)
| Beta | 0.93 |
| Volatility | 11.58 |
| Tracking error | 3.70 |
| Active share | 29.60 |
| Correlation | 0.95 |
| Sharpe ratio | 0.25 |
| Information ratio | -0.57 |
| Jensen's alpha | -1.94 |
| No. of positions | 49 |
Portfolio
Top 10 positions
Market capitalization
Geographic breakdown
Breakdown by sector
Benefits & Risks
Benefits
- Profit from the worldwide growth of the healthcare sector, which has clearly outpaced the growth of global GDP during the past ten years.
- Take advantage of the positive characteristics of the healthcare sector and generate alpha through a bottom-up selection process and factor allocation strategies.
- Strategic overweighting of the “structural growth” factor and underweighting of blue-chip pharmaceutical stocks.
- Low earnings risk – above-average earnings growth, even in crisis years, leading to stable portfolio components.
- Bellevue – healthcare pioneer since 1993 and today one of the biggest independent investors in the sector in Europe.
Risks
- The fund actively invests in equities. Equities are subject to strong price fluctuations and so are also exposed to the risk of price losses.
- The fund may invest a proportion of its assets in financial instruments that might under certain circumstances have a relatively low level of liquidity, which can in turn affect the fund’s liquidity.
- The fund invests in foreign currencies, which means a corresponding degree of currency risk against the reference currency.
- Investing in emerging markets entails the additional risk of political and social instability.
- The fund may engage in derivatives transactions. The increased opportunities gained come with an increased risk of losses.
Review / Outlook
Global equity markets continued to grind up, with the MSCI World Index rising 0.7% in February, supported by resilient earnings momentum, despite a negative thesis building on the impact of artificial intelligence (AI) on software companies. The healthcare sector outperformed the broader market, with the MSCI World Health Care Index up 2.9% in the month. The Bellevue Diversified Healthcare (Lux) Fund – (I shares) delivered a positive absolute return of 2.4% in USD, although it underperformed its benchmark by 52 bp. Relative performance was driven primarily by stock-specific factors and subsector allocation, in a month that strongly favored defensive large-cap pharma over innovation-led and life science tools exposure.
Performance across healthcare subsectors was mixed in February, with dispersion increasing significantly. Pharmaceuticals (+5.4%), healthcare services (+5.2%), and biotechnology (+3.5%) outperformed, supported by their defensive characteristics and a building narrative that pharmaceuticals in particular could be winners from AI efficiency gains. In contrast, healthcare IT (-13.6%), life science tools (-7.0%), and medtech (-0.7%) lagged amid cautious guidance during the results season, and in the case of healthcare technology and parts of life science tools (e.g. CROs), building concerns around AI disrupting business models. Regionally, Asia led (+6.5%), followed by the US (+3.2%), Emerging Markets (+2.9%), while European healthcare lagged (+1.9%).
Within the fund, the three best absolute performers in February were McKesson (+18.8%; strong results/guidance), Chugai Pharmaceuticals (+17.4%; expectation building ahead of the orforglipron oral GLP-1 launch), and Laboratorios Farmaceuticos Rovi (+14.5%; strong results/guidance). The three weakest absolute performers in the month were Novo Nordisk (-36.1%; poor results/guidance and weak REDEFINE-4 clinical trial data), IQVIA (-29.5%; negatively impacted by the AI narrative), and Boston Scientific (-17.8%; slowing growth).
The most important clinical trial readout in the month was the REDEFINE-4 Phase-III trial, in which Novo Nordisk’s CagriSema produced meaningful weight loss (23 % at 84 weeks) but failed to meet its primary endpoint of non-inferiority versus Eli Lilly’s Zepbound/tirzepatide (25.5 % weight loss), reinforcing Lilly’s superiority in the obesity drug market.
The healthcare sector is entering a new and durable phase of growth following several years of structural and policy-related headwinds. Policy and regulatory uncertainty has materially eased, valuations remain close to decade lows, and investor confidence is gradually returning as fundamentals stabilize across biopharma. Despite contributing approximately 18% of US GDP, healthcare equities still represent only around 10% of the S&P 500, highlighting a persistent disconnect between economic relevance and market representation. Key industry overhangs – pricing reform, FDA restructuring, and the implementation of the Inflation Reduction Act – have largely cleared or proven manageable.
Within this recovery, biotechnology has emerged as a primary growth engine, transitioning from binary R&D outcomes toward cash-generative, launch-driven business models supported by premium pricing, leaner cost structures, and disciplined capital allocation. At the same time, large pharmaceutical companies face a significant biologic patent cliff between 2029 and 2032 and hold strong balance sheets with over USD 200 bn in aggregate acquisition capacity, underpinning a multi-year M&A cycle. Investor participation continues to broaden, with specialist investors remaining highly engaged and generalist investors selectively returning via large-cap value, structural growth, and commercial-stage biotechnology opportunities.
Against this backdrop, the fund maintains a selective, high-conviction investment approach with diversified exposure across healthcare subsectors.
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