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Walgreens Will Go Private in $10 Billion Deal With Sycamore

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(Bloomberg) -- Walgreens Boots Alliance Inc. agreed to be purchased by Sycamore Partners for $10 billion, turning one of the oldest, most recognizable US drugstore chains into a private company.

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Sycamore will pay $11.45 a share in cash for Walgreens, according to a statement Thursday. The offer represents a roughly 8% premium to Walgreens’ closing price in New York. The shares rose 5.7% after US markets closed.

The purchase price is a stunning decline from Walgreens’ value a decade ago, when it soared above $90 billion. The stock has fallen steadily over the past 10 years amid increasing competition from online retailers and big-box stores, along with stingier payments from health insurers. The shares have lost about half their value over the past 12 months.

The deal is expected to close in the fourth quarter of 2025. It also includes a “go-shop” period, initially set for 35 days, when Walgreens will solicit and potentially evaluate other offers.

“It actually happened,” Leerink Partners analyst Michael Cherny wrote in a note to clients. “We don’t expect a competing bid to come over the top” due to the size of the deal and various moving parts involved, he said.

The Wall Street Journal reported the news earlier.

Over the past few months, Walgreens’ stock swung wildly on tidbits of deal news. Investors and analysts had been skeptical that the company would be able to sell itself given its roughly $8 billion in debt and $22 billion in lease obligations. Under private ownership, it will be more free to make long-term changes with less concern for their impact on the day-to-day stock price or quarterly earnings.

Closing Stores

CEO Tim Wentworth has been closing stores and selling investments to cut costs and raise money. Walgreens earlier suspended its quarterly dividend after paying it for 92 years.

Walgreens’ transformation into a private equity unit is a retreat from the vision Executive Chairman Stefano Pessina pursued for more than 10 years of making it a powerful health-care conglomerate. The company expanded its footprint by purchasing health clinics, but they weren’t as profitable as anticipated.

Pessina, who owns about 17% of the company, will keep a significant equity interest in the businesses, reinvesting his cash from the deal into the acquiring company.