What went wrong at CVS? Departing CEO Karen Lynch’s reign started brilliantly, then unraveled fast

Karen Lynch had a grand strategic vision for CVS, but seemingly ran out of time. · Fortune · Jessica Chou for Fortune

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Karen Lynch, a superstar CEO championing the biggest of big ideas, is out.

As chief of corner drug store and health insurance colossus CVS, Lynch headed the largest Fortune 500 enterprise, measured by sales, of any female CEO, and for years reigned as the most powerful woman in American business. In her first two years after being chosen for the top job in late 2020, Lynch seemed on the road to glory. By late 2022, she'd lifted CVS's share price from $70 to roughly $110. Investors were buying her daring new strategy: Making CVS a one-stop shop for and basic care, right in their own neighborhoods, augmented by hands-on, data-driven management from their in-house insurer that reminded folks to refill prescriptions and get their annual physical.

Lynch pledged to "revolutionize healthcare as we know it" by repurposing thousands of CVS's more than 9,000 stores into either fully-dedicated providers of such services as diabetic retinopathy and cholesterol screening, and mental health counseling, or hybrid retail and PC centers called HealthHUBs. CVS would then store tons of data on the patients' condition at its Aetna insurance arm, whose costs would fall because seniors were getting preventive care that curbed heart disease and other chronic conditions that account for the bulk of our health care spending. Rival insurers would also reward CVS with part of the savings they achieved from the spread of primary care from far-away doctors' offices requiring long waits, to the CVS just around the block, where you could also pick up your pills and buy shampoo and candy bars.

It was an intriguing vision that targeted our hugely expensive, largely consumer-unfriendly healthcare system. But Lynch couldn't fully deliver on the paradigm that's already starting to upend the current regime, and where CVS will continue playing a pivotal role going forward––one that will likely determine whether it rebounds from its current tailspin.

At press time, CVS hadn't responded to a Fortune email requesting comment.

CVS underperforms already low expectations

On October 18, CVS disclosed that its heretofore weak financial performance was even worse the low expectations that already pushed big investors, including activist Glenview Capital, to demand changes in the C-suite. The board pre-announced that earnings for Q3 would prove far lower than both the company's forecast, and Wall Street's predictions. CVS posited EPS at $1.05 to $1.10, well below the FactSet consensus of $1.69. Accounting for most of the shortfall: Extremely tight margins in the health benefits business at Aetna, and especially in its giant Medicare Advantage franchise. CVS disclosed that its medal cost ratio of premiums to expenses had soared from an estimated 91% to over 95%. "That represents some combination of providing benefits that are too rich and underpricing premiums," says Michael Ha of Robert W. Baird.