CVS profits top estimates in 3Q

CVS CAREMARK reported third quarter net income of $1.01 billion, or 79 per share, up 16 percent from $868 million, or 65 cents a share, during the third quarter 2011. / BLOOMBERG FILE PHOTO/DAVID PAUL MORRIS
CVS CAREMARK reported third quarter net income of $1.01 billion, or 79 per share, up 16 percent from $868 million, or 65 cents a share, during the third quarter 2011. / BLOOMBERG FILE PHOTO/DAVID PAUL MORRIS

(Updated, 10:30 a.m.)
WOONSOCKET – CVS Caremark Corp., the largest provider of prescription drugs in the U.S., posted third-quarter profit that exceeded analysts’ estimates and raised its earnings forecast for the year after winning customers from Walgreen Co.

Net income rose 16 percent to $1.01 billion, or 79 cents a share, from $868 million, or 65 cents, a year earlier, Woonsocket-based CVS said today in a statement. Excluding some items, profit was 85 cents a share, topping the 84-cent average estimate of 19 analysts surveyed by Bloomberg.

CVS boosted revenue 13 percent to $30.2 billion after winning shoppers from Walgreen, which last year ended a contract to sell prescriptions to customers of employee-benefits manager Express Scripts Holding Co. CVS stepped up marketing and promotions to retain those customers after Walgreen and Express Scripts renewed their contract in September.

“CVS is retaining more Walgreen scripts than we originally expected,” John Heinbockel, an analyst at Guggenheim Securities in New York, wrote today in a note. He rates the shares a buy. The “retail segment results remained robust.”

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CVS rose 1.9 percent to $47.50 at 8:39 a.m. in New York. The shares advanced 14 percent this year through yesterday.

The company said today it expects to keep at least 60 percent of the prescriptions it gained from Walgreen’s dispute with Express Scripts. The company previously said it expected to keep at least 50 percent of those prescriptions in the fourth quarter.

Pharmacy sales

Retail pharmacy same-store sales increased 4.3 percent, helped by a “significant” benefit from former Walgreen customers, CVS said.

“The retail pharmacy business continued to capitalize on the market disruption resulting from the impasse between two of our competitors, and our retention of the prescriptions we gained during that impasse has been strong since their dispute was resolved,” CVS Chief Executive Officer Larry Merlo said in the statement.

Adjusted profit this year will be as much as $3.41, CVS said today. That’s higher than a previous forecast of a maximum of $3.38. Analysts estimated $3.37, on average.

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