How CVS evolved from retail pharmacy into health care behemoth

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CVS Health Corporation (CVS) has emerged as a pioneer in the pharmaceutical industry in the 21st century.

With roughly 85% of Americans living within five miles of a CVS pharmacy, the company is the most profitable retail pharmacy in the U.S. While Rite Aid has a net worth of roughly $200 million and Walgreens is worth $30.52 billion, CVS's net worth is a whopping $104.57 billion as of March 3, 2023.

CVS came to dominate the retail pharmacy industry and beyond through ever-expanding operations fueled by acquisitions, mergers, and partnerships:

The first wave of acquisitions

The Consumer Value Store first began in 1963 as a health and beauty retailer in Lowell, Massachusetts, before changing its name to CVS in 1964.

Pharmacies within CVS stores were introduced later in 1967, and two years later the company was sold to Melville Corporation.

By 1988, the chain grew to 750 stores with sales reaching roughly $1.2 billion. But it wasn't until 1994 that CVS's health care and pharmaceuticals became the primary sources of revenue.

That's when CVS introduced PharmaCare, a pharmacy benefit management company (PBM), which serves as the middleman between insurance companies and pharmaceutical manufacturers.

Subsequently, as the internet boom swept across the country, CVS capitalized on the opportunity by acquiring Soma.com for $30 million. Soma was one of the first big digital drugstore startups, and the acquisition helped put CVS on the map digitally, giving the company leverage to launch its own website.

"The Internet is a logical extension of our business strategy of making life easier for our customers," CEO Tom Ryan said at the time.

PBM domination

Fast forward to 2006, CVS acquired Caremark, a PBM, and merged the company's operations with PharmaCare. This eventually became CVS Caremark, which is now one of the three biggest PBMs in the prescription drug market that dominate market share. As of 2022, CVS Caremark led the way with 34% market share while Express Scripts accounted for 24% and Optum Rx accounted for 21%.

The Caremark deal was unique in that health insurers, rather than pharmaceutical retailers, are typically the ones who buy PBMs through a strategy known as vertical integration — that is, when a company acquires another company in the supply chain or industry and uses it to its advantage.

Also in 2006, CVS acquired MinuteClinic for $170 million. The company's annual revenue that year stood at $44 billion, with 70% coming from pharmacy sales alone. The business buoyed CVS during the Great Financial Crisis, and the company's stock continued to outperform the broader S&P 500 for years to come.