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This has been disseminated on behalf of Oncolytics Biotech. Under $1… But Building Like a Company That’s Thinking in Decades? Why Oncolytics Biotech (Nasdaq: ONCY) Is Starting to Look Like More Than Just Another Small-Cap Cancer Story! 
FDA Alignment. Fast Track Momentum. New Patent Protection Into 2044. Early Combination Signals. ONCY Is Starting to Stack the Kind of Catalysts That Can Force the Market to Pay Attention! Greetings All, Small-cap biotech is usually chaos. A flashy press release. A quick spike. Then the market moves on. But every once in a while, a company starts connecting enough dots that the story begins shifting from speculation into execution. That’s where ONCY is starting to get interesting. Oncolytics Biotech isn’t showing up with one headline and asking investors to imagine the future. It’s quietly stacking pieces of an actual long-game: FDA alignment, expanding intellectual property, encouraging survival data, platform expansion, and a growing focus on indications where treatment options remain limited. At under $1, ONCY still sits in speculative territory—but the conversation around the company appears to be changing. This isn’t just “look at our science.” This is increasingly starting to look like: “here’s the pathway, here’s the moat, here’s the scale plan.” This Isn’t Just About a Drug… It’s About a Platform… The biotech market has seen countless single-asset stories flame out. What ONCY is trying to build looks different. Its lead asset, pelareorep, is being developed as a systemically delivered immunotherapy designed to activate immune responses and potentially improve how difficult gastrointestinal tumors respond to treatment. The broader thesis is that pelareorep may help convert historically immune-resistant “cold” tumors into more immune-active environments. That matters because GI oncology has historically been one of the hardest places for immunotherapy to consistently win. And ONCY isn’t aiming at tiny niche markets. The company is advancing programs across colorectal cancer, anal cancer, and pancreatic cancer—three categories where unmet need remains huge and where even incremental survival improvements can attract major attention. The FDA Moment…. This might be the catalyst that made people start looking twice. ONCY announced alignment with the FDA around a pivotal registrational study for pelareorep in metastatic anal cancer. That matters because the proposed path appears designed around one randomized study with the potential to support both accelerated approval and full approval at different stages of execution. That’s a different conversation than exploratory science. The planned study is expected to focus on second-line and later patients—an area where treatment options remain limited after first-line therapy. Reported data from the company’s GOBLET program in this setting showed signs of activity including response durability that helped support moving toward the registrational path. For traders and biotech investors, FDA engagement tends to change the narrative. The market starts asking less: “Can they get there?” And more: “What happens if they do?” The Data That Has People Talking… Drug development is crowded. Durability isn’t. One reason ONCY started generating attention is because pelareorep’s colorectal data has shown signals that materially exceeded historical benchmarks in a difficult-to-treat patient population, according to company-reported comparisons. Highlights included: • 33% overall response rate
• 16.6-month progression-free survival
• 27-month overall survival Those figures supported Fast Track designation for second-line KRAS-mutant MSS metastatic colorectal cancer earlier this year. Important reminder: these are clinical development results and larger studies are still needed to confirm outcomes. But in biotech, strong durability signals tend to get attention fast. The Sleeper Catalyst… ONCY’s patent news may be bigger than you think. This update relatively flew under the radar. ONCY just secured a new U.S. patent protecting pelareorep’s commercial manufacturing process through 2044. Translation in market language: This isn’t only about proving the therapy works. It’s about protecting the ability to manufacture it at scale if it works. The company also said a previously filed method-of-use application remains under review and could extend protection into 2046 if granted, with additional filings planned this year across applications, treatment settings, and combination strategies. That’s the kind of thing long-term biotech investors watch. Because commercialization isn’t just science. It’s manufacturing, protection, execution, and staying power. Expanding the Playbook… Then came another interesting signal. ONCY released early preclinical findings suggesting pelareorep showed stronger anti-tumor activity when paired with RAS-targeted approaches versus either approach alone. The company now plans additional studies in pancreatic and colorectal cancer models and is evaluating combinations involving KRAS G12C inhibitors, pan-RAS strategies, and next-generation pathway approaches. Preclinical data is early. But the idea investors may be watching is bigger: Could pelareorep eventually become an immune-priming layer that enhances targeted therapies rather than competing with them? If that thesis develops, the ceiling starts looking different! The Bottom Line… ONCY still carries all the usual biotech risks. Clinical risk. Funding risk. Regulatory risk. Execution risk. Nothing is guaranteed. But when investors start seeing multiple signals line up at once—FDA engagement, encouraging durability data, Fast Track momentum, expanding IP protection, platform optionality, and upcoming study catalysts—the market tends to start paying attention!! If pelareorep keeps moving from promise toward proof, this may end up being one of those moments investors look back on and say: “The market saw a sub-$1 biotech… while the company was trying to build something a whole lot bigger.” Put ONCY at the top of your radar!!
More Reading from MarketBeat.com
Healthcare Added 35,200 Jobs—3 Stocks Positioned to BenefitAuthor: Chris Markoch. Article Posted: 6/15/2026. 
Key Points
- Healthcare added 35,200 jobs in May, extending a year-long trend of strong employment growth and rising demand for medical services.
- UnitedHealth Group benefits from increased healthcare utilization through its insurance and Optum care delivery platforms.
- HCA Healthcare and Encompass Health are positioned to capitalize on growing hospital, outpatient, and rehabilitation volumes.
- Special Report: The $15 Gold Fund That Pays Up to $1,152/Month

The May jobs report told a familiar story for investors in healthcare stocks. The sector added 35,200 positions last month, led by ambulatory health services with 25,700 and hospitals with 6,000. What makes this number meaningful is the consistency behind it. Healthcare has averaged roughly 38,000 new jobs per month over the past year, a pace that signals sustained demand for services rather than a seasonal blip. That demand has a direct translation to revenue for the right companies. Ambulatory services are growing because patients are being treated outside hospital walls more often. That benefits outpatient clinics, rehabilitation centers, and home care settings. Hospital hiring reflects a steadily rising inpatient census and procedure volume.
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It’s another reminder that when it comes to macroeconomic data, the real story is almost always in the details. Follow where the jobs are being created, and you find the revenue growth. These three names sit at the intersection of where that growth is actually occurring. UnitedHealth Group: Leveraging Growth in Healthcare UtilizationMore ambulatory visits and more managed care utilization mean more Optum touchpoints. That's the direct equation for UnitedHealth Group as healthcare employment—and, by extension, insured patient volume—continues to expand. UnitedHealth Group (NYSE: UNH) sits at the center of the U.S. healthcare system as both its largest private insurer and one of its largest care delivery platforms. Rising demand for healthcare services flows through the business from multiple directions. The operational narrative at UNH right now is a turnaround, and the healthcare jobs data provides a secular tailwind. That turnaround showed up in the company’s Q1 2026 results, which marked a period of stabilization after a difficult stretch. Revenue reached $111.7 billion, up 2% year over year, with UnitedHealthcare generating $86.3 billion and Optum contributing the remainder. The medical benefit ratio improved to 83.9% from 84.8% a year ago, reflecting better cost management and reserve development. It’s further evidence that the medical cost pressures that plagued the managed care sector are beginning to normalize. To support that idea, management raised its full-year 2026 adjusted earnings per share (EPS) guidance to above $18.25 per share. Optum Health, which runs value-based care practices and home health operations, including the Amedisys platform it acquired in 2025, directly benefits as the ambulatory workforce expands. More clinicians in the field means more capacity to serve more patients under value-based contracts, where utilization efficiency drives margins. At 22x forward earnings, UNH is still trading at a slight premium to its historic average, but the valuation is improving. Several analysts have raised their consensus price target well above the consensus price target of $407.17. HCA Healthcare: A Direct Play on Rising Hospital DemandWhen hospitals add jobs, they're adding capacity, which gets filled by patients. HCA Healthcare (NYSE: HCA), the largest hospital operator in the United States, is about as direct a connection between healthcare employment trends and revenue as it gets. HCA's network currently spans 189 hospitals and approximately 2,600 ambulatory sites, giving it direct exposure to both inpatient and ambulatory demand. The company’s Q1 2026 earnings report confirmed the volume picture remains intact. Revenue reached $19.1 billion, up 4.3% year over year. Same-facility admissions grew 0.9%, and same-facility equivalent admissions, which include outpatient procedures, increased 1.3%. Revenue per equivalent admission rose 3.1%, driven by a favorable payer mix and negotiated commercial rate increases. Operating cash flow strengthened to $2 billion, a 22% jump from the prior-year quarter. HCA Healthcare continues to invest in capacity, deploying $1.1 billion in capital expenditures during Q1 while simultaneously repurchasing $1.6 billion in shares. Yet HCA is down over 16% in 2026 and well off its all-time high from February. Analysts have a consensus price target of $506.14, which represents a gain of about 30% from its price as of this writing. Encompass Health (EHC): The Post-Acute Play on the Outpatient ShiftThe 25,700 ambulatory jobs added in May aren't just showing up at urgent care clinics. A significant portion reflects the growing demand for post-acute and rehabilitation care—patients discharged from hospitals who need structured recovery before returning home. That's the core business of Encompass Health (NYSE: EHC), the largest owner and operator of inpatient rehabilitation hospitals in the United States. The company’s Q1 2026 earnings report was among the best in its recent history. Revenue grew 9% year over year to $1.59 billion. Adjusted EBITDA climbed 11.2%, and adjusted EPS surged 16.8%. Management raised full-year 2026 revenue guidance to a range of $6.375 billion to $6.47 billion. The discharge-to-community rate improved 50 basis points to 84.5%, and nurse turnover hit its lowest level since 2012. That's a tangible labor cost benefit in a sector where staffing has been a persistent headwind. The demand backdrop is structural. The U.S. population continues to age; inpatient rehabilitation services remain undersupplied relative to demand. Plus, the shift away from skilled nursing facilities toward higher-quality rehabilitation settings creates a direct tailwind for EHC's model. The company is actively expanding, opening seven new hospitals in 2026 and adding 100 to 150 beds to existing facilities. As of June 11, EHC is down about 4% in 2026. However, analysts give the stock a consensus Buy rating with a $143.86 price target that would imply a gain of over 40%. |