Walgreens suspends dividend, breaking 90-plus year streak of shareholder
payouts
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[February 01, 2025] By
TOM MURPHY
Walgreens shares sank Friday, a day after the drugstore chain said it
was suspending its dividend, breaking a streak of quarterly shareholder
payouts that stretches back more than 90 years.
The drugstore chain said late Thursday that it made the decision in an
effort to strengthen its balance sheet and improve free cash flow as
company leaders try to turn around the struggling business.
Walgreens has been dealing with thin prescription reimbursement, rising
costs, persistent theft and inflation-sensitive shoppers who are looking
for bargains elsewhere. The company is in the early stages of a plan to
close 1,200 of its roughly 8,500 U.S. locations.
The company said in a brief statement Thursday that its cash needs over
the next several years for things like litigation and debt refinancing
were big parts of the decision to suspend the dividend.
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Earlier this month, the U.S. Justice Department filed a lawsuit in
federal court accusing the drugstore chain of filling millions of
prescriptions without a legitimate purpose, including some for dangerous
amounts of opioids.
In September, the company said it would pay $106 million to settle
separate litigation over false payment claims.
Walgreens started last year by cutting the quarterly dividend nearly in
half. The company slashed the payout to 25 cents from 48 cents after
spending about $1.7 billion on cash dividends in fiscal 2023.
Chief Financial Officer Manmohan Mahajan told analysts earlier this
month that Walgreens still was evaluating “the appropriateness and size
of our dividend as part of our capital allocation policy.”
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 The suspension was “prudent and
somewhat overdue,” Leerink Partners analyst Michael Cherny said
Thursday in a research note. He added that the divided had “become
out of whack” in terms of its yield and the cash it required.
There were only two dividend suspensions last year
in the S&P 500, including one from the chipmaker Intel. There
generally are only a few each year.
A dividend suspension “is sending a signal to the whole world that I
have a problem, and it’s cash flow and it’s not short term,” said
Howard Silverblatt, senior index analyst at S&P Dow Jones Indices.
But he added that markets frequently see a dividend suspension as a
positive sign initially because the company recognizes it has a
problem and is taking a step to correct it.
Gabelli Funds portfolio manager Jeff Jonas said last fall that
another dividend cut was likely for Walgreens.
“The balance sheet is slowly improving, but that still needs to
improve further,” he said.
The company says it has paid cash dividends every quarter since
1933, a streak stretching more than 90 years or nearly 370 straight
quarters.
Shares of Walgreens Boots Alliance Inc., based in Deerfield,
Illinois, tumbled more than 15% to $9.66 after markets opened
Friday. Broader indexes were up slightly.
The drop wiped out a brief rally the shares had after Walgreens
reported better than expected earnings earlier this month. The stock
has now shed more than half its value since last spring, and company
shares have been on a steady decline for a decade.
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