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Walgreens agrees to be acquired by private equity firm for almost $10 billion

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HB King
Feb 11, 2013
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We were loyal Walgreens customers for the last 15 years until recently, place has gone way downhill

NEW YORK (AP) — Walgreens Boots Alliance says it has agreed to be acquired by private equity firm Sycamore Partners as the struggling retailer looks to turn itself around after years of losing money.

Walgreens said Thursday that Sycamore will pay $11.45 per share, giving the deal an equity value just under $10 billion. Shareholders could eventually receive up to another $3 per share under certain conditions.

A buyout to take the drugstore chain private would give it more flexibility to make changes to improve its business without worrying about Wall Street’s reaction. The company has already been making some big changes as it seeks to turn around its business. Walgreens has been a public company since 1927.

Walgreens, founded in 1901, has been dealing with thin prescription reimbursement, rising costs, persistent theft and inflation-sensitive shoppers who are looking for bargains elsewhere. Walgreens is in the early stages of a plan to close 1,200 of its roughly 8,500 U.S. locations.


The Deerfield, Illinois, company had already shed about a thousand U.S. stores since it grew to nearly 9,500 after buying some Rite Aid locations in 2018.

The company also said last August that it was reviewing a U.S. health care operation it had expanded aggressively, and it might sell all or part of its VillageMD clinic business. That announcement came less than two years after the company said it would spend billions to expand it.

Shares of Walgreens shed nearly two thirds of their value last year. Walgreens said the transaction price represents a nearly 30% premium to the share price in December when reports of a deal first surfaced. Walgreens CEO Tim Wentworth confirmed in January that a sale process for the business was underway. Including debt, the value of the deal is just under $24 billion, the company said.

Walgreens said earlier this year it was making progress improving prescription reimbursement.


Walgreens has also taken steps to preserve cash. It said in January that it was suspending a quarterly dividend it has offered for more than 90 years, and it’s been reducing its stake in the drug distributor Cencora this year to get cash in part to pay down debt.

Ultimately, the company has to improve its cash flow, whether it remains publicly traded or goes private, Leerink Partners analyst Michael Cherny said in a Feb. 23 research note.

“Management has not been shy about its push to improve the cash flow generation profile as part of the turnaround plan,” the analyst wrote. “Without cash flow, none of the value cases work.”

Walgreens Boots Alliance Inc. also runs nearly 3,700 international stores, with locations in the United Kingdom, Mexico, Thailand and Ireland.

The Walgreens buyout comes after competitor Rite Aid emerged last September as a private company from a Chapter 11 bankruptcy reorganization. Remaining publicly traded drugstore operators include the nation’s largest, CVS Health Corp., and retailers like Walmart and the grocer Kroger that run pharmacies at many of their locations.

 
What’s crazy is that KKR made a pitch to acquire Walgreens in 2019 - with a value of market cap and debt ~$73B.

$73B to $10B in 6 years. It’s been a stunning slide. Sad as Walgreens stock essentially covered the down payment on my house and paid for 2 kids’ college tuition (family member who is a pharmacist for them, and we sold high).
 
We were loyal Walgreens customers for the last 15 years until recently, place has gone way downhill

NEW YORK (AP) — Walgreens Boots Alliance says it has agreed to be acquired by private equity firm Sycamore Partners as the struggling retailer looks to turn itself around after years of losing money.

Walgreens said Thursday that Sycamore will pay $11.45 per share, giving the deal an equity value just under $10 billion. Shareholders could eventually receive up to another $3 per share under certain conditions.

A buyout to take the drugstore chain private would give it more flexibility to make changes to improve its business without worrying about Wall Street’s reaction. The company has already been making some big changes as it seeks to turn around its business. Walgreens has been a public company since 1927.

Walgreens, founded in 1901, has been dealing with thin prescription reimbursement, rising costs, persistent theft and inflation-sensitive shoppers who are looking for bargains elsewhere. Walgreens is in the early stages of a plan to close 1,200 of its roughly 8,500 U.S. locations.


The Deerfield, Illinois, company had already shed about a thousand U.S. stores since it grew to nearly 9,500 after buying some Rite Aid locations in 2018.

The company also said last August that it was reviewing a U.S. health care operation it had expanded aggressively, and it might sell all or part of its VillageMD clinic business. That announcement came less than two years after the company said it would spend billions to expand it.

Shares of Walgreens shed nearly two thirds of their value last year. Walgreens said the transaction price represents a nearly 30% premium to the share price in December when reports of a deal first surfaced. Walgreens CEO Tim Wentworth confirmed in January that a sale process for the business was underway. Including debt, the value of the deal is just under $24 billion, the company said.

Walgreens said earlier this year it was making progress improving prescription reimbursement.


Walgreens has also taken steps to preserve cash. It said in January that it was suspending a quarterly dividend it has offered for more than 90 years, and it’s been reducing its stake in the drug distributor Cencora this year to get cash in part to pay down debt.

Ultimately, the company has to improve its cash flow, whether it remains publicly traded or goes private, Leerink Partners analyst Michael Cherny said in a Feb. 23 research note.

“Management has not been shy about its push to improve the cash flow generation profile as part of the turnaround plan,” the analyst wrote. “Without cash flow, none of the value cases work.”

Walgreens Boots Alliance Inc. also runs nearly 3,700 international stores, with locations in the United Kingdom, Mexico, Thailand and Ireland.

The Walgreens buyout comes after competitor Rite Aid emerged last September as a private company from a Chapter 11 bankruptcy reorganization. Remaining publicly traded drugstore operators include the nation’s largest, CVS Health Corp., and retailers like Walmart and the grocer Kroger that run pharmacies at many of their locations.

I have a buddy who has lost his ass in walgreen stock the last 5 years.
Bloody.
 
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Reactions: mnole03
Walgreens’s is the evils empire of corporate pharmacies. They made a deal with Nixon during his first term to run the nations independent drug stores out of business and thus lead directly to today’s skyrocketing provinces of RX medicines in America. Walgreens gave Big Pharmacy to stage to name their prices as they actively endorsed “RX insurance” as proposed by Big Pharmacy and endorsed by Nixon.
Before “corporate pharmacies” the local independent had much more control of RX prices as he controlled the retail end of the business.
My first lesson of realizing my dad was a smart man came about from this era. My day, a Roosevelt Democrat and a pharmacist was always dead against RX insurance. His reason was “corporate RX insurance” would encourage RX prices to raise so much that many customers would not be able to afford their RX co-pays. He was right. So, to hell with Walgreen’s.. and Osco as these two were the first to drive the independent drug stores out of business.
 
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Reactions: ericram
we now use CVS because they are the new primary pharmacy for my new health insurance

we've been very happy with the switch

CVS is much better overall than Walgreens recently in my opinion. Costco was my favorite pharmacy because there is never a line there when I went. I feel bad for the cars backed up at Walgreens because 10 cars deep can easily be over an hour wait.
 
Had he not been to a Walgreens recently? They’re somehow dirtier, older, and more expensive than CVS or Albertson pharmacies.
The ones near me are beautiful stores. Well stocked and clean.

The problem is they’re pricier than Target, Kroger, etc, and almost always pretty empty.
 
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Reactions: mnole03
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