The Jerusalem Post

Come for your drugs, leave with more shopping: Is this Walmart’s new growth strategy?

- • By NANDITA BOSE and CHRIS PRENTICE (Mike Blake/Reuters)

Walmart Inc.’s efforts to develop closer ties with health insurer Humana Inc, which came to light on Thursday, point to a brave new world of retail where superstore­s become healthcare centers offering basic medical care.

They are also aimed at boosting Walmart’s slowing growth in brickand-mortar store sales as it faces increasing pressure online from Amazon.com Inc.

Deepening its existing partnershi­p with Humana, or even acquiring the company outright, could be a step toward turning its 4,700 or so US stores into healthcare centers that aim to attract more shoppers over 65.

“The end goal here is to get more people in their stores, get them to buy drugs and make an additional purchase while they are in the store,” said Charles Sizemore, founder of Sizemore Capital Management LLC, who owns shares of Walmart.

If Walmart can offer “competitiv­e rates” on primary care and other health services, he said, it “can grow traffic and push store visits.”

Walmart approached Humana this month, and the companies began to discuss closer ties focused on new partnershi­ps, two people familiar with the matter told Reuters on Thursday. An acquisitio­n of Humana by Walmart is also being discussed, the sources said.

Walmart declined comment Friday. Humana could not immediatel­y be reached for comment.

Closer ties between the two could enable the retailer to tap into Humana’s patient roster and possibly put some of its physician clinics in stores to offer medical care to customers.

Walmart is the largest retailer to hit upon the combinatio­n of retail and health insurance, but it is not the first.

CVS Health Corp has struck a $69 billion deal to acquire Aetna Inc. Separately, insurer Cigna Corp has a $54b. deal to buy pharmacy benefits company Express Scripts Holding Co. The two deals, if approved, will put pressure on the entire health care supply chain.

AMAZON CHECKMATE?

Humana could provide Walmart with “one more way to checkmate Amazon and equal and eclipse the CVS/Target partnershi­p and equal and eclipse the CVS/Aetna partnershi­p,” said Burt Flickinger at marketing consulting firm Strategic Resource Group.

“It allows them to get ahead of everybody from warehouse club operators like Costco, Target and other retailers, who run chain drugstores as well as food and drug combo operators like Kroger and Wegmans.”

Bentonvill­e, Arkansas-based Walmart already has pharmacies at many store locations and has a co-branded drug plan with Humana that caters to patients using Medicare, the federal health insurance program for people over 65. That plan steers patients to Walmart stores for their pharmacy needs, offering customers an opportunit­y to save up to 20% on drug costs, analysts said.

Louisville, Kentucky-based Humana is one of the country’s largest providers of Medicare Advantage plans – a type of coverage offered by a private company that contracts with Medicare.

Humana has 5.1 million seniors on prescripti­on drug benefits and another 3.5 million on full medical benefits, according to Ana Gupte, senior health care analyst with Leerink Partners in New York.

Walmart superstore­s “could be a one-stop shop for seniors,” said Gupte, adding that Humana already has about 50 pharmacies sharing locations with doctors’ clinics, and could expand that model using Walmart’s real estate and pharmacies.

DATA ANALYSIS

There is also a potential for Walmart and Humana to benefit from their mass of customer data, said Neil Saunders, managing director of GlobalData Retail.

“One thing retailers have is a very good understand­ing of customers. They know their eating habits and other consumptio­n patterns and that is quite useful in forming insurance decisions,” he said. “That is certainly something that Walmart would be able to leverage.”

Humana patients are most likely already heavy shoppers at Walmart, according to David Friend at the BDO Center for Healthcare Excellence and Innovation.

“If you know that somebody is on a certain medicine you can sell them other products and services and that will help keep customer loyalty,” he said. (Reuters)

 ??  ?? A WALMART branch is seen in Encinitas, California.
A WALMART branch is seen in Encinitas, California.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel