Bangkok Post

Walgreens will survive threat from Amazon.com, says CEO

- ROBERT LANGRETH BLOOMBERG

NEW YORK: Walgreens Boots Alliance Inc chief executive Stefano Pessina said on Tuesday that it would be easier for his company to move online than it would be for Amazon.com Inc to copy its massive store network, predicting a long future for the pharmacy chain as it strikes new partnershi­ps in health and retail.

“Reports that Amazon.com may open up thousands of physical stores is a acknowledg­ment that a brick-and-mortar presence is still important in some retail markets,’’ Pessina said in a wide-ranging interview at Bloomberg’s headquarte­rs in New York.

“It shows that they have understood that you cannot just be online,” he said. “The customer of the future will not be happy to sit at home to talk to an Alexa.”

Investors haven’t completely agreed. Since Pessina took over Walgreens through a merger with Alliance Boots at the end of 2014, his company’s shares are down 1.9%. Its biggest strategic move has been the acquisitio­n of 1,932 stores from Rite Aid Corp.

Amazon shares, meanwhile, have gained 467% over that period and the company has expanded its offerings with groceries, online services, video, consumer electronic­s and dozens of other industries.

Bloomberg News last month reported that Amazon.com is considerin­g opening up as many as 3,000 new AmazonGo cashier less stores in the next few years to sell things like food items and other convenienc­e goods, according to people familiar with the matter. Amazon has not publicly confirmed the plans.

“I don’t believe it is a big threat,” Pessina said of Amazon. “It will be another competitor, but I don’t think we’ll disappear because of Amazon. We’ll adapt.”

He predicted that Amazon “will find it more difficult to create the physical infrastruc­ture than we will find it difficult to digitalise our company,” citing an ongoing overhaul of the company’s software and digital operations.

Pessina predicted t hat people “will still want to interact with other human in store, or to have the reassuranc­e of a pharmacist to answer questions about a prescripti­on.’’

Walgreens is also trying to keep pace with its existing competitor­s such as CVS Health Corp, which by the end of the year plans to close its acquisitio­n of Aetna Inc, a deal designed to push more of the insurer’s customers into its drugstores. Cigna Corp, another insurer, is swallowing up pharmacy-benefits manager Express Scripts Holding Co.

“We should have bought an insurance company four years ago when our multiple was was higher than their multiple,” Pessina said. “At the time, we were engaged with Rite Aid.”

Walgreens, so far, has focused on partnershi­ps and joint ventures. This month it announced plans to open at least 600 medical testing locations run by Laboratory Corp of America Holdings in its drugstores.

Earlier this month, it teamed up with subscripti­on service Birchbox Inc to test beauty spaces in 11 stores. It also has a pilot project with grocery giant Kroger Co.

“Are we against a big deal? No, of course not, provided we can see the financial logic,” Pessina said.

Walgreens currently owns 26% of drug distributo­r Amerisourc­eBergen Corp, and The Wall Street Journal reported earlier this year that it had held talks to buy the portion of Amerisourc­eBergen that it doesn’t already own.

Pessina didn’t rule out this possibilit­y of a deal between the two, at the right price, saying it would make sense.

“It is something that could happen at a certain point, maybe yes, maybe no,” he said. “There was no rush to do so, however, because we control them strategica­lly.”

 ??  ?? Pessina: ‘You cannot just be online’
Pessina: ‘You cannot just be online’

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