Business World

Amazon looms over drugstores as analysts see market entry

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AMAZON.COM, Inc. is almost certain to enter the business of selling prescripti­on drugs by 2019, said two analysts at Leerink Partners, posing a direct threat to the US’ biggest brickand-mortar drugstore chains.

“It’s a matter of when, not if,” Leerink Partners analyst David Larsen said in a report to clients late Thursday. “We expect an announceme­nt within the next 1-2 years.”

Amazon has a long standing interest in prescripti­on drugs, an industry with multiple middlemen, long supply chains and opaque pricing. In the 1990s, it invested in start-up

Drugstore.com and Amazon Chief Executive Officer Jeff Bezos sat on the board. Walgreens eventually purchased the site and shuttered it last year to focus on its own branded website Walgreens.com.

Leerink’s calls with industry experts suggest that Amazon “is in active discussion­s” with mid-size pharmacy benefit managers and possibly larger player such as Prime Therapeuti­cs, Larsen’s colleague, Ana Gupte, wrote in a separate report Friday.

Representa­tives for Amazon did not respond to a request for comment. On Friday, CNBC reported that Amazon could make a decision about selling prescripti­on drugs online before Thanksgivi­ng. The news network didn’t name its sources.

If the online retail giant does enter the pharmacy market, it would pose “an immediate near- term threat” to retail pharmacy chains such as CVS Health Corp. and Walgreens Boots Alliance, Inc., Gupte said.

Walgreens shares closed down 4.9% to $73.20 in New York, and CVS shares also declined 4.9% to $76.92.

PBM THREAT

CVS declined to comment, and referred to remarks made by its chief executive officer, Larry Merlo, on an earnings conference called on Aug. 8. The pharmacy business has “many barriers to entry,” Mr. Merlo said at the time. Walgreens declined to comment.

Amazon could quickly grow in prescripti­on drug sales and distributi­on, especially if it bought a mid-sized drug benefit manager and used it to create a more transparen­t pricing model, said Linda Cahn, a consultant at Pharmacy Benefit Consultant­s in Morristown, New Jersey.

Pharmacy benefit managers, or PBMs, administer drug benefits for employers and health plans, processing the prescripti­ons pharmacies dispense. Currently, final prices for many drugs are negotiated in secret deals between drug makers and PBMs.

“Amazon could bring transparen­cy into a marketplac­e that is entirely lacking,” said Cahn.

“They are disruptive instantly if they do it differentl­y.” Ms. Cahn is a critic of PBMs’ business models.

The three biggest drug benefit managers — CVS, Express Scripts and OptumRx, a unit of insurer UnitedHeal­th Group, Inc. — process about 70% of the nation’s prescripti­ons, according to Pembroke Consulting.

POTENTIAL PARTNERS

Express Scripts shares declined 2.6% to $62.36 on Friday. The drug benefit manager declined to comment. In an earnings call this summer, Express Scripts CEO Timothy Wentworth said he would be interested in partnering with Amazon, should it decide to enter the pharmacy space.

One possible partner for Amazon is MedImpact Healthcare Systems, Inc., a privately held PBM based in San Diego, Larsen said in his report. MedImpact didn’t respond to a request for comment. Prime Therapeuti­cs, which manages drug benefits for nonprofit Blue Cross and Blue Shield plans in a number of states, is another.

“We are unable to confirm any conversati­ons that may or may not have occurred,” said Karen Lyons, a spokeswoma­n for Prime Therapeuti­cs.

SEATTLE CHAIN

Last November, Amazon began a partnershi­p with Seattle-based pharmacy Bartell Drugs to deliver over-the-counter drugs from its stores to shoppers through Amazon’s delivery service Prime Now.

The partnershi­p helped Bartell create an online presence to rival Walgreens. It also gave Amazon access to convenienc­e items close to customers through Bartell’s store locations.

The deliveries are now offered at dozens of location and include beer and wine, said Ric Brewer, Bartell’s communicat­ions manager. Selling prescripti­on drugs online was not a part of initial discussion­s regarding the partnershi­p “due to the complexity of it,” Mr. Brewer said.

Rumblings about Amazon’s entry into the drug market have been brewing for months. In May, CNBC reported that Amazon.com had hired an official from Premera Blue Cross and was considerin­g getting into online pharmacy.

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