Can Integration Save CVS or Sink It?CVS Health confronts a dangerous convergence of risks that threatens its vertically integrated business model. The company's Pharmacy Benefit Manager (PBM) subsidiary, Caremark, faces intensifying regulatory scrutiny as lawmakers target the opaque rebate structures and spread pricing mechanisms that underpin PBM profitability. Simultaneously, the explosive growth of high-cost GLP-1 weight-loss drugs has created unprecedented formulary pressure. CVS's decision to exclude Eli Lilly's Zepbound in favor of Novo Nordisk's Wegovy, based purely on price, backfired spectacularly. Lilly publicly pulled its employees from CVS's PBM plan and shifted to competitor Rightway Healthcare, signaling deep market skepticism about CVS's ability to balance cost control with clinical outcomes. This defection validates concerns that major employers are increasingly willing to abandon the "Big Three" PBMs for transparent alternatives.
The company's acquisition strategy has proven economically disastrous, with CVS recording a staggering $5.7 billion goodwill impairment charge on Oak Street Health in Q3 2025, effectively admitting the primary care assets were dramatically overvalued. This massive write-down undermines the core thesis that vertical integration of insurance (Aetna), PBM (Caremark), and care delivery creates synergistic value. Meanwhile, operational margins erode from multiple directions: $833 million in litigation charges from past business practices, declining generic dispensing rates as expensive branded GLP-1 drugs displace generics, and the structural reality that robust patent protection on GLP-1 drugs extending into the 2040s eliminates the PBM's traditional leverage of threatening generic competition.
CVS faces additional systemic vulnerabilities across geopolitical, technological, and scientific domains. The company's reliance on Active Pharmaceutical Ingredients sourced from China and India exposes it to supply chain disruptions, tariffs, and mandatory but expensive domestic manufacturing mandates. Its vast integrated infrastructure creates an attractive single point of failure for cyberattacks, heightened by the $20 billion technology investment to further interconnect all segments. Most critically, pharmaceutical manufacturers hold unprecedented leverage due to the extended patent exclusivity of breakthrough GLP-1 therapies, with no meaningful generic relief for 15-20 years, forcing CVS into a perpetual choice between excluding superior drugs and losing clients, or accepting coverage that severely erodes margins.
Until CVS demonstrates sustainable PBM client retention among major employers, successful integration of its healthcare delivery assets without further impairments, and a viable strategy to navigate the regulatory assault on traditional PBM economics, the investment profile remains fundamentally challenged. The Lilly defection represents more than a single client loss; it exposes structural fragility in a business model increasingly misaligned with market demands for transparency, clinical appropriateness, and technological innovation.
Cvshealth
CVS Health Corp | CVS | Long at $43Not much to write about here except the stock has reentered the "crash" simple moving average area (see green lines). Often, this signals an overall bottom, but it doesn't mean a further dip below $40 isn't possible in the near-term. Personally, I can't ignore this reentry and thus have started a position at $43 (after closing out a previous position in October in the $60's). The company has a lot of headwinds, but if Walgreens NASDAQ:WBA is also in trouble, is NYSE:CVS too big to fail in the short-term?
Target #1 = $53.00
Target #2 = $60.00
Target #3 = $65.00
Target #4 = $68.00
CVS Health Corp | CVS | Long at $61.00NYSE:CVS Health Corp will need a revision to its business model in order to survive an ever-changing retail/pharmacy environment. However, with a P/E of 10x, debt-to-equity of less than 1x, growing cash flow, and dividend yield of 4.3%, the stock seems quite undervalued. Perhaps activist investors will soon step in, but if history repeats, there may be a nice bounce ahead as the price consolidates in the GETTEX:50S and low $60s. Thus, near its current price of $61, NYSE:CVS is in a personal buy zone.
Target #1 = $66.00
Target #2 = $68.00
Target #3 = $75.00
Target #4 = $79.00
CVS Health Corporation Options Ahead of EarningsAnalyzing the options chain and the chart patterns of CVS Health Corporation prior to the earnings report this week,
I would consider purchasing the 75usd strike price Calls with
an expiration date of 2024-2-9,
for a premium of approximately $1.00.
If these options prove to be profitable prior to the earnings release, I would sell at least half of them.
CVS Health Corporation Options Ahead of EarningsAnalyzing the options chain and the chart patterns of CVS Health Corporation prior to the earnings report this week,
I would consider purchasing the 75usd strike price Calls with
an expiration date of 2023-9-15,
for a premium of approximately $2.55.
If these options prove to be profitable prior to the earnings release, I would sell at least half of them.
Looking forward to read your opinion about it.




