Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Nixed deal pushes Rite Aid into uncertaint­y

- By Tom Murphy

Rite Aid shares plunged Thursday as the company headed into an uncertain future after calling off its merger with the grocer Albertsons.

Analysts and retail insiders questioned the drugstore chain’s prospects after it ended a planned takeover by Albertsons before Rite Aid shareholde­rs could vote on it. That vote also faced shaky prospects due to opposition from shareholde­rs and influentia­l proxy advisory firms.

Rite Aid Chairman and CEO John Standley said in a prepared statement that his company would continue to “build momentum” for big parts of its business like its renovated stores, expanded pharmacy services and its customer loyalty program. Rite Aid also said its board will consider governance changes, although it did not elaborate.

The company also has a pharmacy benefit management, or PBM, operation that runs prescripti­on drug coverage and diversifie­s its business. But Rite Aid is down to around 2,500 stores mostly on the East and West coasts after selling nearly 2,000 to bigger rival Walgreens Boots Alliance Inc. And it doesn’t operate one of the nation’s largest PBMs like another competitor, CVS Health Corp.

Rite Aid Corp. has neither “the scale nor the balance sheet to compete with much larger and well-capitalize­d rivals,” Moody’s Vice President Mickey Chadha said in an email.

The Camp Hill, Pennsylvan­ia-based company has struggled with high debt levels and tough competitio­n, as narrowing drugstore networks have pushed customers away from its stores. Earlier this week, it chopped its fiscal 2019 forecast because generic drug pricing also wasn’t shaping up how it expected in April, when it first laid out expectatio­ns.

A deal with the owner of Safeway and other grocery brands would have helped Rite Aid by creating food and drugstore combinatio­ns, and it would have given the chain better access to financial markets for things like opening new stores or improving existing ones, said Burt P. Flickinger III, managing director of the retail consultant Strategic Resource Group. Flickinger has worked with both companies.

He said Rite Aid needs a large investment to help shift its store inventory toward more health and beauty products, like Walgreens and CVS have done, and away from low-margin items like cigarettes that also are prime shopliftin­g targets.

Flickinger said the Albertsons deal may have been “the last, best, and final opportunit­y for Rite Aid’s longer term viability.”

Privately held Albertsons Cos., based in Boise, Idaho, was offering either a share of its stock and $1.83 in cash or slightly more than one Albertsons share for every 10 Rite Aid shares. But that offer attracted widespread opposition.

One of Rite Aid’s biggest

shareholde­rs, Highfields Capital Management, said that deal was “in the best interests of Albertsons and Rite Aid management, but not Rite Aid shareholde­rs.” The investment firm said in June that it would vote its roughly 47 million shares against the deal.

Two prominent shareholde­r advisory firms — Glass Lewis & Co. and Institutio­nal Shareholde­r Services — also recommende­d no votes. Glass Lewis said the deal was “not critical to Rite Aid’s viability” and provided no meaningful premium to investors.

ISS, meanwhile, said it was concerned that the deal would introduce a new set of risks from the grocery business.

Walgreens also had tried unsuccessf­ully to buy all of Rite Aid in a deal that fell apart last year after encounteri­ng regulatory resistance. The Deerfield, Illinois, company then settled for buying a portion of Rite Aid’s stores for about $4.38 billion.

Shares of Rite Aid fell nearly 12 percent to $1.54 Thursday afternoon, the stock’s worst sell-off in a year.

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 ?? RICHARD DREW — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The logo for Rite Aid is displayed Thursday above a trading post on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange. Rite Aid and the grocer Albertsons called off an agreement to become a single company with the deal facing shaky prospects in a shareholde­r vote.
RICHARD DREW — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The logo for Rite Aid is displayed Thursday above a trading post on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange. Rite Aid and the grocer Albertsons called off an agreement to become a single company with the deal facing shaky prospects in a shareholde­r vote.
 ?? MATT ROURKE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Drugstore chain Rite Aid and grocer Albertsons say they have called off their merger deal.
MATT ROURKE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Drugstore chain Rite Aid and grocer Albertsons say they have called off their merger deal.

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