Healthcare company CVS Health Corporation (NYSE: CVS) is all set to report earnings next week, with Wall Street expecting a mixed outcome. The company has been facing challenges in certain areas of the business for quite some time — the management slashed its full-year guidance multiple times, citing continued pressure on the healthcare benefits business.
2024 has not been a great year for CVS’ stock, which is struggling to recover after falling to a three-year low earlier this year. It has lost a dismal 28% since the beginning of the year. The stock has been trading sideways for over a week, hovering at a price nearly the same as it was four years ago. The market will be closely watching how the company performs under the new CEO, who took office recently amid growing investor concerns over the stock’s poor show.
The Rhode Island-headquartered pharmacy chain is preparing to release its third-quarter 2024 report on Wednesday, November 6, at 6:30 am ET. Market watchers forecast a decline in adjusted earnings to $1.53 per share from $2.21 per share last year. The consensus revenue estimate is $92.75 billion, compared to $89.8 billion in Q3 2023. In the preceding quarter, earnings came in above expectations while revenues missed.
In general, the retail pharmacy and health insurance industries are going through a rough patch, with higher costs eating into companies’ margins and e-commerce players like Amazon grabbing market share. CVS shut several stores in 2024 and is planning more closures before year-end. Last month, the company appointed David Joyner as its new chief executive officer, replacing Karen Lynch who has faced criticism for the lackluster performance of the business.
From CVS’ Q2 2024 earnings call:
“As we have previously discussed, we expect to see a decline in Medicare membership in 2025 driven by our margin recovery efforts. In our Commercial business, we expect membership growth in 2025 driven by new business wins and strong retention, both of which are running ahead of where we were at this time last year. Our return rate is in the high 90s with our National Accounts business. In our Pharmacy and Consumer Wellness business, we effectively navigated a changing consumer environment and delivered another strong quarter that exceeded our expectations.”
In the June quarter, adjusted profit decreased 17% year-over-year to $1.83 per share. On a reported basis, net income was $1.77 billion or $1.41 per share in Q2, compared to $1.90 billion or $1.48 per share in the prior-year quarter. Meanwhile, revenues rose 3% year-over-year to $91.2 billion. Total same-store sales rose 6.4% year-over-year during the three months.
In recent weeks, CVS shares mostly traded below their 12-month average. The stock traded slightly lower for most of Friday’s session.
The post What to look for when CVS Health (CVS) reports Q3 earnings first appeared on AlphaStreet.
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