Healthcare Provider Update: Healthcare Provider for Air Products & Chemicals Air Products & Chemicals, a leading global industrial gas company, typically offers healthcare benefits through its corporate health insurance provider, which is often designated by a primary insurer like Cigna, UnitedHealthcare, or Aetna. However, details on the specific healthcare provider may vary based on employee location and plan selection, as companies often contract with multiple insurers to tailor their offerings. Potential Healthcare Cost Increases in 2026 In 2026, Air Products & Chemicals, like many employers, may face significant increases in healthcare costs due to a perfect storm of factors affecting the Affordable Care Act (ACA) marketplace. With projected premium hikes that could exceed 60% in some states and the potential expiration of federal premium subsidies, employees enrolled in corporate health plans may see a staggering rise in out-of-pocket costs. Consequently, the cumulative effect of these changes may lead companies to reevaluate their benefits strategy and assess how to absorb or pass on these rising expenses to employees, fundamentally altering the landscape of employer-sponsored health coverage. Click here to learn more
The world of investing is very subjective--the investment plan that’s right for you depends largely upon the level of comfort that you have when it comes to risk. We'd like our clients from Air Products & Chemicals to remember that you can’t completely avoid risk when it comes to investing, but it's possible for you to manage it.
There are two aspects of risk tolerance for Air Products & Chemicals employees to consider: (1) the capacity of your investment plan itself to absorb losses, and (2) how comfortable you are personally with risk. The first aspect can be quantified--the more flexibility your investment plan has when it comes to potential loss, the more risk your plan can tolerate. For example, as we’ve discussed, a long investment time horizon may allow you to take on more risk than a short time horizon.
'You can’t completely avoid risk when it comes to investing, but it is possible for you to manage it..' |
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The second aspect, how comfortable you are personally with risk, is more of an emotional measure, and depends on many factors, including your objectives, life stage, personality, and investment experience. Some investors are comfortable with a high degree of risk, while others can tolerate only minimal risk. Individual risk tolerance is an important factor for Air Products & Chemicals employees in deciding which individual investments are appropriate for them, as well as how their investment dollars should be allocated among different investment classes.
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Investors are typically grouped into three categories for purposes of discussing risk tolerance: aggressive (those who have a high degree of risk tolerance); moderate (those willing to accept some degree of risk), and conservative (those who are risk averse).