(Bloomberg)—Walgreens Boots Alliance Inc., led by Chief Executive Officer Stefano Pessina, has been reviewing a potential deal to take the company private in what could become the largest leveraged buyout in history, people familiar with the matter said.
The company has recently held informal talks with private equity firms including KKR & Co., the people said, asking not to be identified because the information is private. Pessina is Walgreens Boots’s largest shareholder with a stake of about 16%, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
Deerfield, Illinois-based Walgreens Boots has a market value of about $56 billion and $16.8 billion of debt. At that size, a take-private of the company would top the largest leveraged buyout in history: the 2007 sale of utility TXU Corp. to KKR & Co. and TPG, which was worth about $45 billion including debt, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
Some of the buyout firms have so far shown reluctance to participate in a transaction, the people said. It’s unclear how feasible the transaction would be, and the company could decide against pursuing the idea, the people said.
Representatives for Walgreens Boots and KKR declined to comment.
Walgreens Boots rose 4.2% to $62.14 at 2:37 p.m. in New York trading.
The talks come amid intense consolidation across the health-care space, as providers look to pair up to diversify and counter tepid growth. CVS Health Corp. closed its $70 billion purchase last year of health insurer Aetna Inc.
This wouldn’t be Pessina’s first ambitious private equity deal.
The native of Italy previously ran Alliance Boots, which he had acquired with KKR in 2007. The transaction came at the height of the buyout boom and underscored the challenges of financing jumbo take-privates, as banks struggled at the time to find buyers for the loans to pay for that deal.
Pessina, 78, took his current role after Walgreen Co. acquired the part of Alliance Boots that it didn’t already own for about $15.3 billion in 2014.
Walgreens Boots is the largest retail pharmacy in the U.S. and Europe, with more than 18,750 stores in 11 countries, according to its most recent annual report. Its wholesale arm has more than 400 distribution centers that deliver to more than 240,000 pharmacies, doctors health centers and hospitals annually. It operates Walgreens and Duane Reade stores in the U.S. and Boots stores in Europe and Asia.
The company had sought to buy rival Rite Aid Corp. In 2017, the companies scrapped the merger amid regulatory concerns that it would hurt competition in the U.S. drugstore market. Walgreens Boots instead bought roughly 2,000 stores from Rite Aid.
--With assistance from Aaron Kirchfeld, Robert Langreth and Dinesh Nair.
To contact the reporters on this story: Ed Hammond in New York at [email protected];
Kiel Porter in Chicago at [email protected]; Nabila Ahmed in New York at [email protected].
To contact the editors responsible for this story: Liana Baker at [email protected];
Ben Scent at [email protected] Matthew Monks, Michael Hytha
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