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CAMP HILL, Pa., Nov. 6 /PRNewswire/ -- In an effort to reduce the company's health care costs and to get employees more engaged in their own health care decisions, Highmark Inc. is opening two worksite health centers. The first center opens in its
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CHICAGO, Nov. 5 /PRNewswire/ -- Seven Summits Research issues PriceWatch Alerts for AAPL, MCD, WAG, CVH, and LFC. Seven Summits Strategic Investments' PriceWatch Alerts are available at http://www.iotogo.com/s/110509A (Note: You may have to copy this
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Matthew Kaufler, co-manager of the Federated Clover Value Fund, is "warming" to financials and shunning telecom stocks.
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Walgreens (NYSE, NASDAQ: WAG), the nation’s largest drugstore chain and industry leader with more than 17,000 certified or licensed immunizers, will begin offering H1N1 injectable vaccines at 18 pharmacies throughout Salt Lake County Thursday.
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Walgreens (NYSE:WAG) (NASDAQ:WAG) executive vice president and chief financial officer Wade Miquelon will present during the Credit Suisse Annual Healthcare Conference in Phoenix on Thursday, Nov. 12, 2009 at approximately 10 a.m. MST (noon EST). A
TheStreet.com  Nov 3  Comment 
Walgreen posts a 4.9% jump in October same-store sales, receiving a boost from flu shots.
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Vitamin Shoppe will begin trading today on the NYSE for $17 a share.
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WAG AT A GLANCE
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 


Walgreens (NYSE:WAG) is a U.S. drug retailer that sells both prescription and non-prescription drugs as well as retail merchandise (cosmetics, convenience foods, photo processing services, seasonal merchandise). In addition to its store offerings, Walgreens provides pharmacy services like prescription fulfillment through mail-order, telephone, and internet.[1] The company operated 6,443 retail locations in the U.S. in 2008, a 9.5% increase from 2007,[2] although CEO Greg Watson has stated that they will slow the pace of new store openings to 3% by 2011.[3]

Walgreens benefits from the aging baby boomer population. Seniors are an important demographic for retail pharmacies like Walgreens due to their greater spending on medical products and services. In addition, the increased use of generic drugs in place of branded pharmaceuticals both lowers costs for consumers (which increases demand) and generates higher gross margins for retail pharmacies.

However, several obstacles to growth exist for Walgreens and other retail pharmacies in the coming years. As is common in industries with strong growth prospects, pharmaceutical retail has attracted larger market-cap competitors from adjacent industries, the most notable being Wal-Mart. In 2006, the behemoth omni-retailer announced that it would undercut pricing on generic drugs by as much as 50% compared to Walgreens.[4] This ignited a price war,[5] which increased pressure on the company's drug margins and front-store sales (Walgreens makes higher margins on beauty products, snacks, etc. and depends heavily on cross-category sales from those who come in to fill prescriptions). In addition, the private-public Medicare Part D program, which went into effect in 2006, reduced reimbursements for prescription drugs supported by that program. Further cuts in Medicare spending would add to the margin squeeze for the company.

In FY2008, Walgreen's sales grew 10% from $53.8 billion to $59.0 billion. [6] This places the company behind CVS Caremark Corporation (CVS)'s $76.3 billion in FY2007 revenue, and this gap will likely grow with the 2008 CVS acquisition of Longs Drug Stores (LDG). [7]

Business Operations

 A Walgreens Pharmacy
A Walgreens Pharmacy

Started more than a century ago, Walgreens had revenues of $59.0 billion in 2008.[8] The company operates 6,443 pharmacies, in addition to 491 other operations locations and 183 "convenient care clinics" through its Take Care Health Systems subsidiary, in the U.S. and Puerto Rico as of June 2008. [9] [10]. In fiscal 2008 Walgreens added 561 retail locations to its operations, growing by 9.5%. However, Walgreens announced that it will slow its planned increases in 2009 and 2010 to 6% and 5% increases in stores, respectively.[11]

The company has grown mostly through organic efforts of opening freestanding stores, which comprised 84% of all stores in 2005 compared to only 31% in 1995. Its acquisition of the 76-store Happy Harry's chain has been the only significant acquisition in the past 15 years.

  • Pharmacy Retail (75% of sales): Walgreens is one of the largest U.S. chain drugstores by sales and profits, and the company depends on its retail pharmacies to bring in a large percentage of revenues. In fiscal year 2008, Walgreens derived about 65% of its sales from prescription drugs and 10% of its sales from non-prescription drugs, unchanged from 2007. [12]
  • Front Store Operations (25% of sales): This segment includes general merchandise such as cosmetics, toiletries, household items, food, beverages, and photofinishing.[13] The typical Walgreens retail outlet devotes more square footage to its front-end compared to rivals such as CVS/Caremark and Rite Aid (RAD).[citation needed] With a higher mix of consumables than its competitors, Walgreen’s front store serves as a convenient alternative to supermarkets. Additionally, Walgreens private brand now comprise approximately 20% of front-end merchandise by sales, up from 12% in 2000 [14]

Business Growth

Walgreen's revenues increased 10% in FY2008 to $59.0 billion. Prescription drugs comprise 65% of this revenue, with the rest coming from generic drugs (10%) and front-end sales (25%). Net earnings increased 5.7% to $2.16 billion. This increase was driven by approximately equal increases in all three sales categories, whose fractions of revenue remain virtually unchanged between 2007 and 2008. [15]

In October 2008, Walgreens announced a three-pronged strategy to achieve double-digit growth by 2011. The three strategies are: Leveraging the Best Community-Based Store Network in America, Enhancing the Customer Experience for Shoppers, Patients and Payers, and Targeting $1 Billion in Annual Cost Reductions by Fiscal 2011.[16] Walgreens expects that following these strategies will enable it to improve revenue and return its EPS growth to the strong double-digits.

Walgreens Sales by Category
Walgreens Sales by Category[17]

Quarterly Business Financials

In the third quarter of 2009 (ending 5-31-09), Walgreens achieved sales of $16.2 billion, representing a growth of 8% from the same quarter of the previous year. Walgreens posted earnings of $522 million, a decrease of 8.8% from the previous year. Thus far in 2009, Walgreens has posted net earnings of $1.57 billion, an 8.4% decrease from the previous year, from 47.6 billion in sales, a 7.2% growth from the previous year.

The biggest driver of growth was in prescription sales, which grew 8.2%, compared to 3.2% in competing stores. By the end of the third quarter, Walgreens had opened or acquired 40 stores and installed its CCR initiatives into 35 pilot stores. [18]

Trends and Forces

Customer-Centric Retailing

Customer-centric retailing (CCR) refers one of Walgreens' initiatives to enhance the customer experience, one of the three strategies by which the company plans to return to double-digit growth. CCR focuses on enhancing store formats, pricing, promotions, and vendor relationships to provide a better experience for the customer. In Q3 of 2009, Walgreens rolled out its CCR strategy in 35 pilot stores and saw immediate improvements in cleanliness and shopping efficiency.[19] Walgreens' ability to scale CCR into the rest of its franchises will be key to its ability to improve margins and market share.

Aging Population

An aging American segment, known as baby boomers, continues to fuel an increase in demand for prescription drug sales. The American Association of Retired Persons (AARP), reports that while people in the 25-54 age group fill between 5 and 12 prescriptions each year, people over the age of 55 fill between 19 and 24 prescriptions and spend much more of their disposable income on drugs. [20] As this generation of boomers gets older, chain drugstores will experience an increase in prescription sales for the next 10+ years.

Medicare Part D and Medicaid

2007 government cuts in Medicaid and the introduction of Medicare Part D in January of 2006 affect pharmacies like Walgreens a lot. While Medicare Part D has 22 million enrollees (many of whom who were previously uninsured)[21], many of these used to be Medicaid patients. Medicaid reimburses more for drugs than Medicare, so cuts in the former and increases in the latter have resulted in two competing effects on pharmacies: more customers but lower margins. While revenues have continued to increase, Walgreens did report in 2008 a decline in pharmacy margins for senior prescriptions as millions of cash payors continue to enroll in Medicare Part D.[22]

Generic Prescription Drugs

The retail drugstore industry will benefit from accelerated generic prescription drug sales, as a significant number of branded drugs will come off patent between 2006-2009. While generic drugs have a lower price points, margins for these products tend to be higher for drug retailers. [23]

Threat of Mail-Order Pharmacies

Mail-order pharmacies pose a threat to physical drugstores, due to the lower consumer prices for prescription drugs. Mail-order pharmacies is the the fastest growing retail pharmacy business, and currently comprise about 19-20% of total U.S. prescription sales. [24] Walgreens does have their own pharmacy benefit management (PBM) services, allowing the company to offer their large customer the option of migrating towards mail order pharmacy.

Competition

Market Share: Prescription Drugs and Front Store Sales
Market Share: Prescription Drugs and Front Store Sales[25][26]

Drugstore competitors to Walgreens include:

  • CVS/Caremark (CVS) generated $86 billion in combined sales for 2008. CVS is the largest drugstore retailer, CVS also has its own PBM business. Walgreens lags CVS in terms of market capitalization but has historically led in revenue and operating margins until 2007. However, CVS's sales and profits grew significantly when CVS completed its merger with Caremark, a leading PBM provider, in March 2007 as a part of its recent acceleration of its physical and geographical expansion. The company continued to aggressively expand in 2008 with the acquisition of Longs Drug Stores (LDG), which will raise revenue further. In 2008, CVS reported a net income of $3.34 billion, for an EPS of $2.27.
  • Rite Aid (RAD) generated $26.3 billion in 2008 revenue, but totaled a net loss of $2.9 billion. Rite Aid recently acquired Brooks/Eckerd on the East coast, but both companies are currently struggling. Walgreens could stand to benefit from their decline.

In addition to other drugstore retailers, Walgreens also competes for market share with supermarkets, convenience stores, mass merchants, Internet drugstores, and PBMs. Of late, supermarkets and mass merchants have lost considerable market share (currently at 12%) in the retail prescription business leaving a potential market share to be filled by Walgreens and its competitors.

In particular, Wal-Mart (WMT) has grown its retail pharmacy business at its retail mega-stores. Wal-Mart is the third largest domestic retailer in terms of pharmacy sales, and it has continued to increase the number of total pharmacies in its installed store base. Wal-Mart’s also announced a strategy to aggressively undercut prices of generic drugs compared to traditional drugstores such as Walgreens. Such actions may catalyze pricing wars, which would put significant pressure on drugstore retailer margins.

Retail Pharmacy Industry — Competitive Operating Metrics (2008) Walgreen Company (WAG) Rite Aid (RAD) CVS Caremark Corporation (CVS) Wal-Mart (WMT) MedcoHealth Solutions (MHS)
Revenue (billions of USD)
Total Revenue59.03426.28986.472401.251.258
Gross Margin28.1926.7620.9123.77.27
Revenue Growth from 20079.8%8.1%14.6%7.2%15.2%
Income
Net Income2.157-2.9123.34413.7531.103
Net Profit Margin3.65-11.083.823.392.15
Income Growth from 20075.7%-171%21.8%5.3%20.9%
Other
Earnings per Share2.03-3.352.273.362.22
Stores Open6,4434,9006,3007,873NA



References

  1. Walgreens 10-K 2008. Section 1 - Business. pg 1
  2. Walgreens 10-K 2008. Section 1 - Properties. pg 4
  3. Walgreens F3Q09 (Qtr End 5/31/09) Earnings Call Transcript
  4. Wal-Mart to Cut Prices for Generic Drugs
  5. CVS slashes generic drug costs, escalates price war
  6. Walgreens 10-K 2008. Section 2 - Five-Year Summary of Selected Consolidated Financial Data. pg 1
  7. CVS Caremark 10-K 2007. Section 2 - Financial Statements and Supplementary Data. pg 32
  8. Walgreens 10-K 2008. Section 2 - Five-Year Summary of Selected Consolidated Financial Data. pg 1
  9. Walgreens 10-K 2008. Section 1 - Properties. pg 4
  10. Walgreen Co. (WAG) Press Release, June Sales Release 2008
  11. The Wall Street Journal Online, "Walgreen to Slow Expansion"
  12. Walgreens 10-K 2008. Section 1 - Business. pg 1
  13. Walgreens 10-K 2008. Section 1 - Business. pg 1
  14. [http://archives.chicagotribune.com/2008/mar/17/business/chi-mon-walgreen-wag-clothes-mar17| Chicago Tribune. "Walgreens shifts self-promotion, Private-label line grows, includes clothing. 17 March 2008."
  15. Walgreens 10-K 2008. Section 2 - Five-Year Summary of Selected Consolidated Financial Data. pg 1
  16. Walgreen Co. Outlines Strategic Growth and Value Creation Initiatives at Analyst Meeting
  17. Walgreens 10-K 2008. Section 2 - Five-Year Summary of Selected Consolidated Financial Data. pg 1
  18. Walgreen Co. Reports Third Quarter 2009 Earnings
  19. Walgreens F3Q09 (Qtr End 5/31/09) Earnings Call Transcript
  20. AARP report on Prescription Spending by People Age 65+"
  21. HHS Monthly Summary on Medicare Part D Enrollment. November 2008.
  22. Walgreens 10-K 2008. Section 2 - Results of Operations. pg 13
  23. Drug Channels. "The Attack on Generic Profits in Drug Channels." 21 November 2001.
  24. Nu-Retail.com "Exclusionary Practices in the Mail Order Pharmacy Market." 21 Sept 2005
  25. CVS Caremark 10-K 2007. Section 1 - Business. pg 4
  26. Market Wire. "BIGresearch Retail Ratings: CVS Closes Prescription Drug Gap With Walgreens." October 2008.
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