Walgreen 3Q Profit Jumps, But Misses Expectations

(AP) —

Walgreen’s fiscal third-quarter earnings jumped 16 percent compared with last year, aided in part by a lower income-tax rate, but the drugstore chain’s performance again fell short of Wall Street’s expectations.

The Deerfield, Illinois, company also left investors and analysts hanging after announcing quarterly results Tuesday. Walgreen executives said they are considering their option to complete a takeover of Swiss health-and-beauty retailer Alliance Boots — a move that could involve an overseas reincorporation — but they won’t be ready to discuss their next step until late July or early August.

For the fiscal third quarter, Walgreen said an increase in foreign income helped knock its tax rate down to 31.5 percent, compared with 38.7 percent last year. As a result, the company’s income-tax provision dropped $43 million in the quarter.

The lower-than-expected tax rate contributed a benefit of at least 8 cents per share toward the company’s bottom line, Cantor Fitzgerald analyst Ajay Jain said in a research note that described Walgreen’s overall earnings as weak.

Walgreen Co. earned $722 million, or 75 cents per share, in the quarter that ended May 31. That’s up from $624 million, or 65 cents per share, a year ago.

Adjusted earnings excluding one-time items totaled 91 cents per share, which was two cents below average analyst expectations. The drugstore chain also fell short in its fiscal second quarter.

Walgreen’s revenue climbed 6 percent to $19.4 billion. Analysts had expected $19.44 billion in revenue, according to FactSet.

Walgreen is feeling pressure from both drugmakers who are raising prices and payers like health insurers that are reducing what they will pay for prescriptions, said Vishnu Lekraj, who covers the company for Morningstar.

“They’re getting squeezed from both sides, both from the supplier and the customer,” he said.

Walgreen acquired an initial 45 percent stake in Alliance Boots in 2012, and it has an option to buy the rest of the company next year. Alliance Boots runs the largest drugstore chain in the United Kingdom.

Company executives told analysts on Tuesday that they have to consider a host of variables, like the deal’s capital structure and what it could do for Walgreen’s tax rate, before they discuss their decision later this summer.

“We are working around the clock to try to understand all the above so that we are able to make the right decision for the company,” CEO Greg Wasson said.

Several large U.S. companies have used mergers recently to reincorporate overseas in countries with lower tax rates. These moves are raising concerns among some U.S. lawmakers, since they can cost the federal government billions in tax revenues.

Earlier this month, U.S. medical-device maker Medtronic Inc. said that it agreed to buy Ireland-based competitor Covidien for $42.9 billion in cash and stock. The combined company would have its executive offices in Ireland, which has a 12.5 percent corporate-income-tax rate.

Another Deerfield company, Horizon Pharma Inc., said in March it would buy the privately held Vidara Therapeutics International Ltd. in a deal that also creates an Ireland-based company.

 

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