Karen Lynch, who was with Aetna at the time of the acquisition
in 2018, will succeed Merlo in February, CVS said on Friday.
Lynch, 57, has been with Aetna for eight years and was
previously president of Magellan Health Services.
The CVS-Aetna merger was sixty-four-year-old Merlo's vision who
wanted to bring more medical services and testing into CVS'
HealthHub stores nationwide. The leading pharmacy operator aims
to have 600 of those stores by the end of the year and 1,500
next year.
"Investors will likely view this transition positively as Karen
Lynch is well respected by the investor community," Evercore ISI
analysts said in a client note.
Shares of the company, which raised its full-year profit
forecast on Friday after beating analysts' estimates for
quarterly earnings, rose 4.1%.
The company said it has administered more than 6 million
COVID-19 tests since March, and expects to play an "important
role" in COVID-19 vaccinations, once vaccines are available; a
handful are in late-stage testing.
CVS and rival Walgreens have partnered with the U.S. government
to offer on-site vaccinations for residents of care home and
assisted living facilities. CVS is also expected to provide
vaccinations in its pharmacies.
In the third quarter, the company saw same-store pharmacy sales
rise 6.7%, helping it beat Wall Street estimates for profit.
CVS earned $1.66 per share on an adjusted basis, beating
analysts' average estimate of $1.33 per share, according to IBES
data from Refinitiv.
CVS raised its 2020 adjusted earnings per share forecast to
$7.35 to $7.45 from $7.14 to $7.27 previously.
(Reporting by Manas Mishra in Bengaluru; Editing by Shinjini
Ganguli)
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