As health care giants including CVS Health Corp. and Cigna Corp. spend billions on acquisitions that will transform them into vertically integrated powerhouses, their rivals Walgreens Boots Alliance Inc. and Humana Inc. are reportedly responding with a deal of their own.
Instead of combining, the pair are discussing a looser arrangement, according to the Wall Street Journal: They may take sizable stakes in each other and expand their existing senior-focused health care partnership. This would be a less risky path than betting tens of billions of dollars on an outright deal. But it would also be something of a half-measure may not offer much protection in a rapidly evolving market.
Such a deal would theoretically offer some of the benefits of a merger on the cheap. But "some" is the key word here. The two firms could split the cost of opening new clinics in Walgreens stores that serve Humana members. But they would also have to figure out a way of dividing any revenue or cost-saving benefit. That won't be a problem for companies like CVS and Aetna Inc., which are set to close on their $69 billion megamerger soon.