CVS Health topped second-quarter expectations, but the health care giant’s profit sank as pricing pressure hurt its drugstores and a jump in care use hit the insurance side
CVS Health topped second-quarter expectations, but the health care giant's profit sank as pricing pressure hurt its drugstores and a jump in care use hit the insurance side.
The company also booked a $496 million, pretax restructuring charge to cut costs and improve efficiency. CEO Karen Lynch told analysts Wednesday that charge was tied partly to eliminating about 5,000 jobs that don't involve dealing with customers.
The Wall Street Journal reported the cuts earlier this week. CVS Health says it employs more than 300,000 people. About 73% are full-time.
CVS Health runs prescription drug plans through one of the nation’s largest pharmacy benefits managers. Its Aetna insurance arm covers more than 25 million people, and the company has nearly 10,000 drugstores.
The cuts make sense because the business has grown complex and unwieldy, said Neil Saunders, who follows CVS Health as managing director of GlobalData.
“Our sense is that the business could be leaner and better organized,” Saunders said in an email.
CVS Health also is shifting its focus more to delivering care and managing customer health. It's digesting a couple of multibillion-dollar acquisitions geared toward that. The company plans to use its roughly $10.6 billion acquisition of Oak Street Health to open clinics in some of its stores.
Lynch said Wednesday the company expects to build 50 to 60 clinics next year. Oak Street specializes in serving people with Medicare Advantage plans. Those are privately run versions of the government's Medicare program and a growth focus for CVS Health.
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