
NYSE:CVS
A solid company. The #2 drug store in the US, as well as being involved in the pharmacy benefits management business, which has been a super profitable business over time, but is now under pressure. Feels the whole PBM business could be under a bit of profit pressure for the next several years. He would prefer a health insurer.
This has struggled on 2 fronts. They lost a big pharmacy benefit contract to Walgreens (WBA-Q), which cost them about 40 million prescriptions. Secondly, these are drugstores that are brick-and-mortar. A lot of retailers are starting to struggle because of Amazon (AMZN-Q). If he owned this, he would probably sell it.
Had a fairly large set back from the last year or so, and is kind of consolidating at about 2X BV. It has nice upside potential of 51%. The downside risk is to about $74, and that is where he would love to be a buyer. It has fairly easy upside to about $92. He wouldn’t worry about this one in the slightest.
A unique company, because it is not only a drugstore, but it is also a health company. Has a free cash flow yield of about 7.5%. Nice dividend yield. Same-store sales over the last little while have not been good, but are stabilizing. Big growth is going to come from the health part of their business. The stock is undervalued and can be up another 30%-40% from where it is today.
Somewhat of a unique company. It is not just a pharmacy. It is a long-term care facility and a consulting firm. The stock has fallen a fair bit. It has a great cash flow yield of about 7%. On the pharmacy side, they had a few issues where same-store sales had gone down a fair bit. The long-term care thing is starting to grow and he can see very good growth there. Dividend yield of 2.5%. (Analysts’ price target is $88.)
One reason he likes this is that it is out of favour. We always have to gravitate to things that will do well in the future as opposed to what has done well in the past. This is a combination of CVS the drugstore and Caremark, a pharmacy benefits manager. They sell over 1 billion prescriptions a year and have over 10,000 locations in the US. As it stays out of favour, it gets more and more compelling from a valuation standpoint. Based on next year’s expectations of earnings, it is trading at a little over 12X earnings, well below the market multiple. Dividend yield of 2.5%. (Analysts’ price target is $88.)
He likes this a lot. Trading at 13X earnings, a discount to its major competitor Walgreens (WBA-Q) at 16X. Trading at a big discount to the market. You get a really nice dividend. The company buys back a lot of stock. Also, has Caremark, the pharmacy management business, which is under a bit of pressure because of drug prices. You really have a diversified business model between the PBM side and the store side. Long-term fundamentals on the healthcare business are very favourable, where you have an aging and growing population. This is very attractive.