Monday, October 3, 2011

Pharmacy Industry: Current Market Conditions in Maine

By Brad MacLiver
Authorship and profile at Google


Currently there are a number of factors that are impacting the current market conditions of the U.S. pharmacy industry in ME. These factors are affecting the pharmacy business valuations of pharmacies in Maine and drug stores all across the U.S. Any pharmacy owner considering either buying a pharmacy or selling the drug store should take the following points into consideration.

Local demographics:

The valuation process also includes local market conditions and local demographics. Smaller communities have less growth potential and with the declining profits a buyer will need to purchase at a lower value because they will have to service the debt from a business loan and still try to make a living. The same is true for communities that have lost population due to economic conditions, or have a high rate of unemployment. Fewer people, or fewer customers with the ability to purchase, will mean fewer sales and less chance of any substantial improvement in the near term. This results in a lower pharmacy business value.

Fewer Buyers:

There are also fewer corporate buyers. Some of the largest pharmacy chains have been purchased and consolidated in the pharmacy industry roll up. Many smaller chains have run into financial difficulties and have stopped their expansion. It is more difficult to drive a price higher when there are fewer willing, or capable, to purchase.


Current Market Conditions Requires Industry Roll-up:

The consolidation of the pharmacy industry is required to get more traffic into a single store.  Due to simple economics, when any business has a reduction in profits they are less attractive to a buyer and pharmacy business values drop. There are many factors contributing to the downward pressure of pharmacy values and there is not any expectation of a turn around. Pharmacy owners in Maine should not be fooled by inexperienced Brokers claiming grand outcomes and over stating pharmacy business values not based on realistic market conditions.

The consolidation of the pharmacy industry has been happening for several years, and many new brokers have entered the market to broker pharmacy acquisitions. Most brokers do not have any pharmacy experience and they do not rely on current market conditions when they value a pharmacy. Most use simple accounting formulas that hold no sound reasoning for value when faced with current Maine pharmacy market conditions. Because of this, many brokers will value pharmacies 2 to 3 times more than what the market is really willing to pay. Any inexperienced person can quote a high value to capture a listing, but that does not mean the over inflated asking price is what the business will actually sell for.

Mail Order:

Some insurance companies are designating a significant amount of pharmacy patients as “long-term medications” and will require that they purchase only medications from mail order pharmacy companies who provide products at lower prices. The result for local pharmacies is that they are not only missing out on prescription sales, but their front-end sales will also decline since the customer is not entering the store. Pharmacy mail order sales in ME have now surpassed sales from independent retail pharmacies.



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