Walgreens Downside Potential From Wal-Mart’s Pharmacy Prescription Plan
What’s the deal with the 30-day and 90-day prescription plans? No, we’re not selling you another of those Super Saving Prescription Plans you can’t do without. We are wondering about that plans offered by Walgreens (NYSE:WAG), Rite Aid (NYSE:RAD), CVS (NYSE:CVS) and Wal-Mart’s (NYSE:WMT) pharmacy that offer 30-day and 90-day prescription plans to both insured and uninsured Americans.
What could these possibly mean to the pharmacies? Let’s first take a look at some of the popular plans available in the market and the common features they offer the consumers…
Most Popular Pharmacy Prescription Plans
Walgreens Prescription Savings Club covers over 400 generics at $12 for a 90-day supply along with a $20 per year enrollment fee. CVS Health Savings Pass offers same coverage of generics at a generous discount of 1 cent to Walgreens, i.e. at $11.99 for a 90-day supply, but it comes with a 10% discount on MinuteClinic services (clinics located at CVS retail pharmacies providing convenient and quality care for common illnesses and vaccinations) along with a $15 annual enrollment fee.
Rite Aid customers have a choice of a 30-day supply of more than 500 generics for $8.99 or a 90-day supply for $15.99 for each prescription along with 10% discount on Rite Aid’s own branded products and a 20% discount on other (uncovered) generics and branded drugs but with no annual enrollment fee. Wal-Mart leads the pack with its characteristically most price competitive offering, a $4 plan for a 30-day supply covering over 300 generics and without any membership fee.
The common features of all these prescription plans convey their very intent, which extends beyond providing affordable health care to Americans. Offering a prescription plan, in a subtle way binds the consumer to that pharmacy chain. An annual enrollment fee not only provides a significant incremental stream of revenues to the pharmacy chain but also ensures consumer loyalty for the duration of the plan.
While pharmacies offer plan members, prescription drugs at seemingly high discounts, often to the tune of 40% and above over the entire period, the consumers often purchase other drugs uncovered by the plans and other personal care products such as soaps, shampoos, etc. on their visits to the pharmacies which brings in additional sales.
Wal-Mart’s Plan
So, while these plans serve as a medium for attracting traffic in pharmacy retail outlets, we believe the most significant component of the prescription plans is that it focuses solely on generics. Generics are lower-priced substitutes of branded drugs that are often rolled out after the expiration of their patents. While these cost much lower to the consumer, they also offer higher margins to the pharmacies and are a more profitable product for the pharmacy chains to sell.
What raises our concerns for Walgreens is the Wal-Mart’s $4 for a 30-day prescription plan and that too with no membership fee!
The absence of membership fee for Wal-Mart’s plan means that any Walgreens plan member can migrate to Wal-Mart even before the termination of current prescription plan. Not only does a shorter prescription period give the consumer more flexibility but we also believe that most common ailments are completely cured in that period, making longer prescription periods redundant for the cured consumer. Besides, losing prescription plan members and with that the sale of high-margin generics, pharmacies like Walgreens stand to lose sales of other products such as cosmetics, foods etc.
Impact to Walgreens
1) We currently estimate Walgreens’ share of retail prescriptions filled to grow from 19% in 2010 to almost 20% in 2012. Wal-Mart’s $4 for a 30-day prescription plan can however lead to Walgreens’ share to drop to 19% by the end of the forecast period vs. 20.% as we estimate lopping off 6% from our price estimate.
2) Market share of prescriptions filled is not the only parameter that could be impacted. With declines in the relative proportion of generics in Walgreens’ total sales of drugs, gross profit margins could be impacted. We expect that if gross profit margins remained around 28% from 2012 onward rather than grow to 28.5%, this leads to a 7% potential downside — and it shows the sensitivity of CVS stock to this segment.
In the unlikely event of Walgreens does not come out with an equally attractive offer, we expect the net impact of Wal-Mart’s prescription plan on Walgreens’ stock to be a 13% potential downside to our current $42 Trefis price estimate of its stock.
You can see our detailed $42 Trefis price estimate of Walgreens’ stock here.