Health Savings Account Stocks List

Related ETFs - A few ETFs which own one or more of the above listed Health Savings Account stocks.

Health Savings Account Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
Jul 11 WFC Bank earnings, June PPI, Biden conference: What to Watch
Jul 11 WFC JPMorgan, Citigroup In Buy Zone With Bank Earnings On Tap
Jul 11 WFC Big banks Q2 earnings expected to show rebounding IB, soft loan growth
Jul 11 WFC Citigroup (C) Faces 136M Penalty for Failing to Fix Data Issues
Jul 11 WFC Should You Buy JPM, C & Other Big Bank Stocks Before Q2 Earnings?
Jul 10 WFC Pre Q2 Earnings: How Should You Play Wells Fargo (WFC)?
Jul 10 WFC Big Tech in focus as Q2 earnings season kicks off this week
Jul 10 WFC A big bank rally is about to be put to the test
Jul 9 WFC Chipotle, S&P record close, Big Bank earnings preview: Market Domination Overtime
Jul 9 WFC Bank earnings start this week: What Wall Street is watching
Jul 9 WBS Webster Financial Corporation Announces Q2 2024 Earnings Release and Conference Call
Jul 9 WFC US Federal Reserve Considers Rule Change To Save Largest Banks Billions In Capital: Report
Jul 9 WFC Wells Fargo Unusual Options Activity For July 09
Jul 9 WFC Federal Reserve considers tweaking GSIB surcharge for U.S.'s biggest banks - report
Jul 8 RNST Renasant Announces 2024 Second Quarter Webcast and Conference Call Information
Jul 8 WFC Why big banks are 'chugging along': Portfolio manager
Jul 8 WFC June CPI, Big Bank earnings in focus this week: Top stories
Jul 8 WFC Banks’ Hedges Are Cheap Before the Start of the Earnings Season
Jul 7 WFC Inflation data, Powell speaks, and big banks report earnings: What to know this week
Jul 7 WFC 5 Things To Consider Ahead Of Wells Fargo's Q2 2024 Earnings
Health Savings Account

A health savings account (HSA) is a tax-advantaged medical savings account available to taxpayers in the United States who are enrolled in a high-deductible health plan (HDHP). The funds contributed to an account are not subject to federal income tax at the time of deposit. Unlike a flexible spending account (FSA), HSA funds roll over and accumulate year to year if they are not spent. HSAs are owned by the individual, which differentiates them from company-owned Health Reimbursement Arrangements (HRA) that are an alternate tax-deductible source of funds paired with either high-deductible health plans or standard health plans.
HSA funds may currently be used to pay for qualified medical expenses at any time without federal tax liability or penalty. Beginning in early 2011 over-the-counter medications cannot be paid with an HSA without a doctor's prescription. Withdrawals for non-medical expenses are treated very similarly to those in an individual retirement account (IRA) in that they may provide tax advantages if taken after retirement age, and they incur penalties if taken earlier. The accounts are a component of consumer-driven health care.
Proponents of HSAs believe that they are an important reform that will help reduce the growth of health care costs and increase the efficiency of the health care system. According to proponents, HSAs encourage saving for future health care expenses, allow the patient to receive needed care without a gatekeeper to determine what benefits are allowed, and make consumers more responsible for their own health care choices through the required High-Deductible Health Plan.Opponents of HSAs say they may worsen, rather than improve, health care in the United States because people may hold back the healthcare spending that would be covered, or may spend it unnecessarily just because it has accumulated to avoid the penalty taxes for withdrawing it, but people who have health problems that have predictable annual costs will avoid HSAs to have the costs paid by insurance. There is also debate about consumer satisfaction with these plans.

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