At the 5 June 2026 close of $64.67, GE HealthCare trades below the selected fair value of $93.33; the selected fair value is about 44% above the market price, the downside marker of $78.14 is still about 21% above the price, and the upside marker of $128.06 is about 98% above the price. That valuation gap is constructive, but it is not a free pass: the business still has to prove that hospital equipment demand, installed-base service, PDx supply reliability and software-enabled workflow can convert into durable free cash flow after capex.
Latest Proof Snapshot
The stock is not being asked to justify an extreme valuation today. The investment test is whether the 2026 profit reset from tariffs, Patient Care Solutions weakness and a PDx supplier issue is temporary while orders, backlog, service attachment and free cash flow remain strong enough to lift the selected fair value.
The key macro issue is not hospital-capex cyclicality in isolation, but whether equipment orders convert through GE HealthCare's backlog into segment margin and post-capex cash: if tariff, inflation and supplier pressure fade, the installed-base model can recover; if placements slow while cash leakage persists, the constructive valuation gap remains unearned.