
Cochlear Ltd (ASX: COH) shares have been hit hard this week, with one of the biggest sell-offs seen in the ASX healthcare sector in recent years.
At Friday’s close, Cochlear shares finished at $97.35, down roughly 43% over the past week. That move has pulled the stock back to levels last seen in early 2016.
The question now is whether this is a reset that creates opportunity, or a signal that something more fundamental has changed.
Here’s what investors are weighing up.
What triggered the sell-off
The decline follows a major downgrade to its FY26 earnings guidance.
Cochlear now expects underlying net profit to be $290 million to $330 million. That is well below its previous guidance range of $435 million to $460 million.
The downgrade reflects weaker conditions across developed markets.
Management flagged softer demand for cochlear implants, driven by hospital capacity constraints and lower referral activity. Consumer sentiment has also weakened, particularly in key markets like the United States.
There are also operational pressures. Industrial action in parts of Europe has delayed procedures, while some regions are seeing longer waiting lists for surgery.
Is this a short-term issue or something deeper?
This is where the debate sits.
On one hand, many of these pressures look cyclical rather than structural. Hospital capacity and referral volumes can recover over time. Consumer sentiment also tends to move in cycles.
Cochlear’s long-term drivers are still in place. The business operates in a global market supported by ageing populations and increasing diagnosis rates. It also has a strong competitive position, with high switching costs and a large installed base that generates recurring revenue over time.
That is why, even after the recent volatility, the company is still widely viewed as a high-quality healthcare name.
But on the other hand, the latest update challenges one key area.
Demand in developed markets now appears more sensitive to economic conditions than previously thought. That adds uncertainty to earnings and makes forecasting harder.
It also raises questions about how much of Cochlear’s premium valuation can be justified if growth remains uneven.
What the market is pricing in now
The speed of the sell-off suggests investors have moved quickly to price in weaker growth and lower confidence.
At current levels, the valuation has shrunk significantly from where it sat earlier this year.
That changes the risk-reward profile.
After a sharp correction, the balance is no longer about paying up for quality. It is about whether earnings stabilise and recover from here.
We have seen similar setups across the market recently, where heavy selling has created potential opportunities even as the underlying businesses remain strong.
Foolish takeaway
Cochlear’s share price fall shows a clear change in earnings expectations and confidence.
The long-term drivers remain, but near-term visibility is weaker, and demand looks more cyclical than before.
At these levels, the stock may start to attract interest from long-term investors.
But much of the next move will depend on whether conditions in key markets can begin to stabilise.
The post After falling 43% in a week, are Cochlear shares now a buy? appeared first on The Motley Fool Australia.
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More reading
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Motley Fool contributor Aaron Teboneras has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool Australia’s parent company Motley Fool Holdings Inc. has positions in and has recommended Cochlear. The Motley Fool Australia has recommended Cochlear. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. This article contains general investment advice only (under AFSL 400691). Authorised by Scott Phillips.