The company said Monday that it will close 150
Walgreens-run clinics by the end of the year.
Author:
Tom Murphy, Associated Press Published: 1:03 PM CDT October 28, 2019 Updated: 1:03 PM CDT October
28, 2019
Walgreens will shutter nearly 40% of the clinics
in its stores as the drugstore chain cuts costs and shifts to other businesses
it believes will draw more people through its doors.
The company said Monday that it will close 150
Walgreens-run clinics by the end of the year, but it will keep open more than
200 that are run in partnership with health care providers.
Drugstore chains like Walgreens started adding
small clinics that dole out flu shots and handle relatively minor health issues
like sinus infections years ago. But analysts say the chains have struggled to
make any money off these clinics, which face growing competition from
telemedicine services that allow customers to get care through their
smartphones.
Walgreens has been focusing more on testing
primary care clinics, which offer more extensive care, connected to some of its
stores in Kansas City and Houston.
The chain also is working on other partnerships
with companies like the grocer Kroger Co. to improve its food offerings.
Walgreens said Monday that it will open 100 locations for the weight-loss
company Jenny Craig at stores nationwide, starting in January.
Edward Jones analyst John Boylan said the
closing of the clinics is immaterial to the company financially, and he expects
the services Walgreens offers at its stores to shift over time.
Walgreens runs more than 18,750 stores
internationally but has been trimming its total as part of a plan to cut costs.
Walgreens has been hit by challenges including reimbursement cuts and lower
price increases for branded drugs.
Drugstores also face competition in areas
outside their pharmacies from online options like Amazon.com.
Walgreens said Monday that it has raised its
annual savings target from its cost cutting program to $1.8 billion by fiscal
2022, up from a previous goal to exceed $1.5 billion.
In the final quarter of fiscal 2019, Walgreens
earnings tumbled 55 percent to $677 million, due in part to charges from its
cost-cutting program. Adjusted results totaled $1.43 per share.
Revenue climbed 1.5 percent to $33.95 billion.
The results surpassed Wall Street expectations.
Analysts exceed, on average, earnings of $1.41 per share on $33.86 billion in
revenue, according to Zacks Investment Research.
Boylan termed the quarter good but not great. He
said in a research note that Walgreens sales turned out better than expected,
and that should continue.
The analyst said he expects Walgreens to grow
its business as health plans narrow the network of pharmacies they cover in
exchange for a break on pharmacy costs.
Shares of Deerfield, Illinois-based Walgreens
Boots Alliance Inc. edged up 82 cents to $56.24 in late-morning trading Monday.
The stock had dropped 19% since the beginning of
the year as of Friday's close. Meanwhile, the Dow Jones industrial average, of
which Walgreens is a component, has climbed nearly 16 percent.
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