By Doug Busch
Insurance stocks are quietly outperforming, delivering steady gains as volatility rattles much of the broader market. Nestled within the broader financial sector, the group is flexing its muscles.
Investors might want to take advantage of what technical signals suggest is a longer-term trend, before the rest of the market catches on.
Over the past three months, the iShares U.S. Insurance exchange-traded fund has gained 6%, compared with a 2% rise for the Financial Select Sector SPDR ETF. The outperformance raises a key question: Are investors simply seeking safety, or is something more structural at work?
A look at both technicals and the broader macroeconomic backdrop hint at the latter.
In my view, the market is sending a message of higher interest rates for longer -- precisely the outcome the current administration would prefer to avoid, but one the market appears to be signaling nonetheless. The 10-year Treasury yield has recently broken above a bullish inverse head and shoulders pattern, a move that could weigh on equities in the near term. While the link between higher rates and lower stock prices is far from perfect, as information value tends to decay over time, the insurance sector stands out as a clear beneficiary if rates continue to move higher.
Looking at the 15-year monthly chart of the iShares U.S. Insurance ETF, a bull flag has taken shape. Such patterns are typically viewed as continuation signals, implying a potential breakout in the direction of the prior trend, which in this case is higher. That uptrend has been well established, with the fund gaining 75% between the first quarter of 2023 and the end of 2024. The subsequent 15-month consolidation resembles a potential "beach ball held underwater" type breakout, suggesting the possibility for a powerful move if resistance gives way.
Beneath the surface, however, leadership within the fund is diverging. Top holding Chubb is trading just 1% below its most recent all-time highs, while Progressive sits 29% below its 52-week peak. Progressive is currently testing a potential triple bottom near the very round $200 level, and whether that support holds could prove important for the group's next move.
Given this context, here are two insurance stocks worth highlighting.
Travelers, a property and casualty insurance company, has risen 21% over the past year and offers a dividend yield of 1.4%. The stock has been a steady performer relative to its peers, maintaining a one-year uptrend against the iShares U.S. Insurance ETF. This week, the stock is up 6% so far to around $302, twice the gain of the broader insurance fund.
Looking at Travelers' daily chart, the 200-day simple moving average has provided consistent support over the past year, holding the stock four times. Each time, the stock used the line as a springboard rather than lingering, signaling ongoing upward momentum.
Round number theory may come into play near $300. A potential entry point could be around $297, if there's a pullback into the breakout above the Feb. 4 double bottom pivot at $295.20. From here, the stock could move toward $332 by mid-2026, representing an 11% gain from current levels. Maintain a bullish stance above $288.
Shares of Hamilton Insurance, a specialty reinsurance name, have gained 55% over the past year. The stock has emerged as a leader within the insurance sector, as shown by its ratio chart against the iShares U.S. Insurance ETF. Through Thursday's close, the stock is up 6% for the week, achieving its heaviest weekly volume in the past 10 months without even counting Friday's session.
Looking at its one-year daily chart, Hamilton Insurance stock has shown strong, consistent action, with multiple breakout patterns holding as it advanced. The first was a cup with handle breakout at $21.52 on May 29, followed by a cup base breakout through $22.43 on Aug. 11.
A double bottom base was cleared on Nov. 5, sending the stock up more than 10% on its fourth consecutive positive earnings reaction. This week, Hamilton broke above a $28.82 cup base pivot on Feb. 4, notably shrugging off back-to-back doji candles. One could consider entering here with a potential move toward $36 by mid-2026, roughly a 22% gain from current levels, while remaining bullish above $27.50.
Hamilton Insurance was trading around $30 Friday.
In an unsettled market, boring is starting to look like a winning strategy.
Write to Doug Busch at douglas.busch@barrons.com
Doug Busch is the senior technical analyst at Barron's Investor Circle . His technical view is added to stock picks, including those published exclusively for Investor Circle readers. A glossary of technical terms is updated regularly with new entries.
This content was created by Barron's, which is operated by Dow Jones & Co. Barron's is published independently from Dow Jones Newswires and The Wall Street Journal.
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
February 06, 2026 14:14 ET (19:14 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2026 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.