CVS To Stop Selling Tobacco Products by October

Serious

Veteran
Supporter
Joined
Apr 30, 2012
Messages
80,212
Reputation
14,329
Daps
191,024
Reppin
1st Round Playoff Exits
Feb 5 (Reuters) - CVS Caremark Corp said on Wednesday that it would stop selling tobacco products at its 7,600 stores by October, becoming the first U.S. drugstore chain to take cigarettes off the shelf.

Public health experts called the decision by the No. 2 U.S. drugstore chain a precedent-setting step that could pressure other stores to follow suit.

CVS, whose Caremark unit is a major pharmacy benefits manager for corporations and the government Medicare program, believes the decision will strengthen its position as a healthcare provider.

"I think it will put pressure on other retailers who want to be in healthcare," said CVS Caremark Chief Medical Officer Dr. Troyen Brennan.

Although some U.S. cities, including Boston and San Francisco, already ban the sale of tobacco products in pharmacies, advocates hope CVS' voluntary decision will have a ripple effect among other pharmacy chains.

Some retailers stopped selling cigarettes years ago: Target Corp decided to drop them in 1996, while East Coast supermarket chain Wegmans Food Markets did so in 2008.

Matthew Myers, president of the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids, which advocates for tobacco control, said that CVS's announcement could drive momentum for declining tobacco use.

Dr. Risa Lavizzo-Mourey, chief executive officer of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, which focuses on public health, called CVS' decision "a bold, precedent-setting move because it acknowledges that pharmacies have become healthcare settings."

While headline grabbing, CVS said the move will not make a big dent in its profits.

CVS said it will lose about $2 billion in annual sales and between 6 and 9 cents of profit per share this year. Analysts expect the company to report 2014 revenue of $132.9 billion and a profit of $4.47 per share, according to Thomson Reuters.

U.S. cigarette sales have fallen 31.3 percent between 2003 and 2013, according to Euromonitor International.

The falling smoking rates, along with new competition in the last two years from the low-cost Family Dollar Stores Inc and Dollar General Corp chains, suggest shrinking prospects for tobacco product sales at CVS. Dollar stores have far more locations and offer goods at lower prices.

Although adult smoking rates have fallen from 43 percent of Americans in 1965 to the current 18 percent, smoking remains the leading cause of preventable death in the United States, killing more than 480,000 people each year.

Last month, the American Lung Association and other advocacy organizations called on political leaders to commit to cutting smoking rates to less than 10 percent of the population in a decade and to protect all Americans from secondhand smoke within five years.

FOCUS ON HEALTHCARE

The CVS decision comes on the heels of several recent deals bolstering CVS Caremark's position in the healthcare market.

CVS in December said it expected its pharmacy benefit manager revenues to rise between 7.25 percent and 8.5 percent in 2014, easily outpacing growth of 2 percent to 3.25 percent in its retail business.

In December, CVS and pharmaceutical distributor Cardinal Health Inc announced a 10-year agreement to form the largest generic drug sourcing operation in the United States. A month earlier it said it was buying Coram LLC, Apria Healthcare Group Inc's specialty infusion services business unit.

CVS executives said the company will replace some of lost cigarette sales through smoking cessation programs at its pharmacies and will offer more programs to Caremark members. CVS said the programs will be also be a key selling point as it tries to land more corporate contracts this year.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/02/05/cvs-tobacco-products_n_4729217.html

@DEAD7 There goes the market regulating itself again.
FDA :umad:
 

mannyrs13

Compound Kingpin
Supporter
Joined
May 8, 2012
Messages
40,245
Reputation
15,783
Daps
88,555
Reppin
Focusville, USA
even tho smoking has decreased lately, it's still making money. at my job there are customers coming in just for cigarettes. and it's gonna be even more when cvs stops selling. it's not like 35mm film that people rarely use anymore, there is still plenty of profit. I understand they being in healthcare field and all but it's also basically a convenience store. can't alienate some of your customers. don't know what profit margin is on cigarettes tho. more cigarette sales for the competition.
 

ch15x

Mountaineer
Joined
Feb 13, 2013
Messages
1,577
Reputation
230
Daps
1,347
Reppin
TN (east)
I haven't been to a CVS in a while, since I don't have prescriptions and the prices they charge for stuff (including tobacco) are way higher than you can get elsewhere...:whoo:
 

Kritic

Banned
Joined
Jul 17, 2013
Messages
8,937
Reputation
500
Daps
5,891
Reppin
NULL
You can still get cigs from the corner store. who cares...:yeshrug:
most of who buy some fake chinese made cigs made with feaces from alibaba online. great...

arabs laughing at you headed to the bank...
 
Joined
Feb 3, 2014
Messages
31
Reputation
0
Daps
16
Guys here is the deal:

CVS makes very very little money from tobacco. Profit margins are naturally small because of the taxes the government takes from damn near everybody involved in the purchase.

the 2 billion a year figure is total sales, not gross profit. Therefore, it is 2 billion - cost of inventory/taxes/etc. HUGE difference. CVS will lose very little money and probably more than make up for it in the temporary sales being made right now from people who actually believe CVS is doing this out of the good of their heart.
 

Kritic

Banned
Joined
Jul 17, 2013
Messages
8,937
Reputation
500
Daps
5,891
Reppin
NULL
Guys here is the deal:

CVS makes very very little money from tobacco. Profit margins are naturally small because of the taxes the government takes from damn near everybody involved in the purchase.

the 2 billion a year figure is total sales, not gross profit. Therefore, it is 2 billion - cost of inventory/taxes/etc. HUGE difference. CVS will lose very little money and probably more than make up for it in the temporary sales being made right now from people who actually believe CVS is doing this out of the good of their heart.
but remember if someone's gonna go to buy a smoke they might be buying other legit products. drinks, gum etc...

alcohol too should be banned. but the alcohol industry is gonna be almost impossible to beat cause it's more embedded into popular culture and business than smoking.

The alcohol industry is the commercial industry involved in the manufacturing, distribution, and sale of alcoholic beverages. The industry has been criticised in the 1990s for deflecting attention away from the problems associated with alcohol use.[1] The alcohol industry has also been criticised for being unhelpful in reducing the harm of alcohol.[2] The World Bank works with and invests in alcohol industry projects when positive effects with regard to public health concerns and social policy are demonstrated.[3] Alcohol industry sponsored education to reduce the harm of alcohol actually results in an increase in the harm of alcohol. As a result it has been recommended that the alcohol industry does not become involved in alcohol policy or educational programs.[4] In the UK the New Labour government took the view that working with the alcohol industry to reduce harm was the most effective strategy. However, alcohol-related harm and alcohol abuse increased.[5] The alcohol industry has been accused of using similar tactics as the pharmaceutical industry to exaggerate the health benefits of alcohol which is regarded as a potentially dangerous recreational drug with potentially serious adverse effects on health.[6]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alcohol_industry
 

Kang Deezy

Overall Nice Guy
Joined
May 6, 2012
Messages
20,460
Reputation
-7,879
Daps
19,825
Reppin
The stoop with dat dope fanny padding
Guys here is the deal:

CVS makes very very little money from tobacco. Profit margins are naturally small because of the taxes the government takes from damn near everybody involved in the purchase.

the 2 billion a year figure is total sales, not gross profit. Therefore, it is 2 billion - cost of inventory/taxes/etc. HUGE difference. CVS will lose very little money and probably more than make up for it in the temporary sales being made right now from people who actually believe CVS is doing this out of the good of their heart.

Glad you told us!

I work for CVS, you're wrong. I've worked for a store that sells cigarettes, and now work for one that doesn't. To say that CVS is sacrificing "very little money" by refusing to sell cigarettes is an idiotic statement.

They are going to take a loss on this, but hopefully the good press will even that out. I always found it hypocritical for a company that prides itself on healthy living to sell cigarettes.

It's a great decision, and first time I'm proud of my company.
 
Top