Walgreens Announces Plan to Close 1,200 Stores Amid Financial Turmoil
Walgreens plans to close approximately 1,200 locations in the United States over the next three years as part of a strategy to revitalize its struggling business. The company announced that around 500 of these closures will occur within the current fiscal year, aiming to enhance adjusted earnings and free cash flow. Walgreens, which operates about 8,500 stores in the U.S., has been facing financial challenges, including tight prescription reimbursement and rising operational costs.
The chain’s leadership is finalizing a turnaround plan that involves shutting down hundreds of underperforming stores, including 300 already approved for closure under an earlier cost-cutting initiative. Walgreens CEO Tim Wentworth emphasized that the fiscal year 2025 will be crucial for the company’s recovery efforts, which could lead to long-term financial and consumer benefits.
Moreover, Walgreens is reevaluating its U.S. healthcare business and may consider selling its VillageMD clinic operations after initially planning significant expansions. Following a substantial net loss of over $3 billion in the last quarter of 2024, the company anticipates adjusted earnings to decline in the upcoming fiscal year. Despite these challenges, Walgreens’ stock saw a slight increase after the announcement, and analysts project modest earnings growth in the future.
Walgreens plans to close about 1,200 locations over the next three years as the drugstore chain seeks to turnaround its struggling U.S. business.
The company said Tuesday that about 500 store closures will come in the current fiscal year and should immediately support adjusted earnings and free cash flow. Walgreens didn’t say where the store closings would take place.
Walgreens operates about 8,500 stores in the United States and a few thousand overseas. All of the stores that will be closed are in the United States.
Walgreens Boots Alliance Inc. leaders said in late June that they were finalizing a turnaround plan for its U.S. business, and that push could result in the closing of hundreds of underperforming stores.
The plan announced Tuesday includes the closing of 300 stores that had been approved under a previous cost-cutting plan.
Walgreens CEO Tim Wentworth said in a statement that fiscal 2025, which began last month, will be an important “rebasing year” for the drugstore chain.
“This turnaround will take time, but we are confident it will yield significant financial and consumer benefits over the long term,” he said.
Walgreens, like its competitors, has been struggling for years with tight reimbursement for the prescriptions it sells, as well as other challenges like rising costs to operate its stores.
The Deerfield, Illinois, company also has been backing away from a plan to add primary care clinics next to some if its stores after launching an aggressive expansion under previous CEO Rosalind Brewer.
Walgreens said in August that it was reviewing its U.S. healthcare business, 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 the business.
The company started 2024 by cutting the dividend it pays holders to get more cash to grow its business. The drugstore chain then slashed its forecast for fiscal year 2024 in June.
Walgreens said Tuesday that its net loss swelled to more than $3 billion in the final quarter of 2024. Adjusted earnings totaled 39 cents per , and sales grew 6 percent in the quarter to $37.5 billion.
That topped Wall Street expectations. Analysts expect, on average, earnings of 36 cents per on $35.75 billion in revenue in the fiscal fourth quarter, according to FactSet.
The company also said it expects adjusted earnings in the new fiscal year to fall between $1.40 and $1.80 per , with growth in its U.S. healthcare and international businesses countering the U.S. retail pharmacy decline.
For the fiscal 2025, analysts expect adjusted earnings of $1.72 per .
Walgreens s jumped 5 percent Tuesday in early morning trading.
The Western Journal has reviewed this Associated Press story and may have altered it prior to publication to ensure that it meets our editorial standards.
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