CVS Health Corporation

CVS
NYSEFree primer · Steps 1–3 of 21Updated May 12, 2026Coverage as of 2026-Q2
TTM ROIC
4.2%FY2024
Moat
Narrow
Latest Q Revenue
$94.6B+7% YoYQ1 2025
Top Holder
Vanguard10%
Bull Case
If Medicare Advantage normalizes and the PBM survives regulatory scrutiny, CVS's integrated platform could unlock substantial earnings recovery well above current depressed levels.
Bear Case
CVS is a structurally challenged conglomerate where Amazon erodes pharmacy, PBM faces existential regulatory disruption, and MA economics are permanently impaired, with integration friction destroying capital allocation.

Business Model


ticker: CVS step: 01 generated: 2026-05-12 source: quick-research

CVS Health Corporation (CVS) — Business Overview

Business Description

CVS Health is the world's largest integrated healthcare company by revenue, operating across three vertically connected segments: Aetna health insurance ($130B+ revenue), CVS Caremark pharmacy benefits manager ($185B+), and CVS Pharmacy retail + Oak Street + Signify Health ($90B+ retail health). The company is mid-turnaround under CEO David Joyner (took over October 2024 replacing Karen Lynch). Focus: (1) Aetna Medicare Advantage turnaround (medical loss ratio improving from 87.3% Q1 2024 to 84.6% Q1 2026); (2) $2B+ cost-cutting program; (3) closing ~900 underperforming pharmacy stores; (4) revamping Oak Street Health primary-care strategy after a $5.7B impairment charge.

Revenue Model

Three reportable segments:

  • Health Care Benefits (Aetna) — ~$130B revenue; commercial + Medicare + Medicaid + dental/vision/behavioral health. Q1 2026 medical loss ratio improved to 84.6%.
  • Health Services — ~$190B revenue; CVS Caremark PBM + Oak Street Health (primary care for Medicare seniors) + Signify Health (in-home assessments) + MinuteClinic.
  • Pharmacy and Consumer Wellness — ~$130B revenue; CVS retail pharmacies (~9,000 stores after closures); front-of-store retail; long-term care pharmacy.

Revenue mix is the largest in healthcare; intersegment eliminations are significant (~$80B+) as CVS Caremark fills prescriptions for Aetna members at CVS Pharmacy stores.

Products & Services

  • Aetna Health Plans: Commercial group employer, individual ACA exchanges, Medicare Advantage (top-tier 4+ Star ratings for 2026), Medicaid managed care, Medicare Supplemental.
  • CVS Caremark PBM: Drug pricing negotiation, formulary management, specialty pharmacy (CVS Specialty), pharmacy network management; serves Aetna + 3rd-party plans.
  • Oak Street Health: Primary care for Medicare/Medicaid; ~225+ centers (being restructured post-impairment).
  • Signify Health: In-home health assessments for Medicare Advantage plans (acquired 2023).
  • CVS Pharmacy retail: ~9,000 stores (down from ~9,700 pre-closures); prescriptions, OTC, front-of-store retail.
  • MinuteClinic: Walk-in clinics inside CVS stores; basic primary care.
  • CVS Specialty: Specialty drug fulfillment.

Customer Base & Go-to-Market

  • Aetna members: ~26M+ medical members across commercial + Medicare + Medicaid.
  • Caremark PBM members: ~107M+ lives covered.
  • CVS Pharmacy customers: ~5M+ daily customers across 9,000+ stores.
  • Oak Street + Signify Health patients: Medicare/Medicaid seniors and at-risk populations.
  • Employers: Self-funded employer customers for both Caremark PBM and Aetna ASO plans.

Distribution: Direct retail (CVS Pharmacy stores), online (cvs.com), B2B sales force (Aetna + Caremark for employers + government), in-home (Signify), value-based care centers (Oak Street).

Competitive Position

CVS Health competes across multiple healthcare verticals:

Health Insurance (Aetna):

  • UnitedHealth (UnitedHealthcare) — Larger; better-positioned MA leader.
  • Humana — Pure-play MA leader.
  • Elevance (Anthem BCBS) — Diversified BCBS franchise.
  • Cigna — Smaller competitor, plus PBM via Express Scripts.

PBM (Caremark):

  • Express Scripts (Cigna) — Direct competitor.
  • OptumRx (UnitedHealth) — Direct competitor.
  • Together these "Big 3" PBMs cover ~80% of US prescription volume.

Retail Pharmacy:

  • Walgreens — Direct competitor; in severe distress.
  • Amazon Pharmacy — Emerging digital-first threat.
  • Walmart + Costco pharmacy — Lower-priced models.
  • Independent / supermarket pharmacies — Fragmented.

Primary Care (Oak Street):

  • UnitedHealth Optum (much larger primary care footprint).
  • Privia, ChenMed, Walmart Health, Amazon Clinic.

Structural moats: (1) vertical integration — Aetna + Caremark + CVS Pharmacy + Oak Street create cross-segment economics no competitor matches at scale; (2) member captive flow — Aetna members fill prescriptions at CVS Pharmacy via Caremark; (3) MinuteClinic + Signify Health primary care reach.

Active risks: (1) PBM regulation pressure on rebate retention; (2) Medicare Advantage rate-cycle pressure from CMS; (3) Walgreens distress could create competitive opportunity OR price war; (4) Amazon Pharmacy + transparent pricing competition.

Key Facts

  • Founded: 1963 (as Consumer Value Stores)
  • Headquarters: Woonsocket, Rhode Island
  • Employees: ~300,000+
  • Exchange: NYSE
  • Sector / Industry: Health Care / Healthcare Plans + Retail Pharmacy
  • Market Cap: ~$95B
  • FY2024 Revenue: $372.8B
  • FY2025 Revenue: ~$385B (estimated based on guide)
  • FY2026 Revenue Guide: $400B+ (raised to $405B+ after Q1 2026)
  • FY2026 Adjusted EPS Guide: $7.30–7.50 (raised from $7.00–7.20)
  • Aetna Medical Members: ~26M+
  • CVS Caremark PBM Lives: ~107M
  • CVS Pharmacy Stores: ~9,000 (after closing ~900)
  • CEO: David Joyner (since October 2024)
  • Dividend Yield: ~4.5%
  • Major Recent Events: Oak Street Health $5.7B impairment Q3 2025; ongoing cost-cutting $2B+ program; pharmacy closures

Financial Snapshot


ticker: CVS step: 04 generated: 2026-05-12 source: quick-research

CVS Health Corporation (CVS) — Financial Snapshot

Income Statement Summary

Metric FY2023 FY2024 FY2025 YoY (FY25)
Total Revenue $357.8B $372.8B ~$390B +4–5%
GAAP EPS $6.47 $3.40 (impairment-impacted) ~$5.50 (rebound) recovery
Adjusted EPS $8.74 $5.94 ~$6.50 recovering

Q1 2026 Beat + Raised Guidance

Metric Q1 2026
Revenue $100.4B (+6.2% YoY)
GAAP EPS $2.30 (vs. $1.41)
Adjusted EPS $2.57 (vs. $2.25)
Aetna Medical Loss Ratio 84.6% (vs. 87.3% prior year)
Operating Cash Flow $4.2B

FY2026 Raised Guidance (post Q1)

Metric 2026 Guide
Revenue At least $405B (raised from $400B)
Adjusted EPS $7.30–7.50 (raised from $7.00–7.20)
GAAP EPS $6.24–6.44
Operating Cash Flow At least $9.5B
Capital Returned to Shareholders Quarterly dividends maintained

Cash Flow & Capital Allocation (FY2025)

Metric Value
Operating Cash Flow ~$8B (constrained by working capital)
Capital Expenditures ~$3.5B
Free Cash Flow ~$4.5B
Quarterly Dividend $0.665
Annual Dividend $2.66
Dividend Yield ~4.5%
Cash & Investments ~$8B
Total Debt ~$60B (Aetna + Signify + Oak Street acquisitions)
Net Debt / EBITDA ~3.0x

Segment Performance Trends

Segment FY2025 Trends
Health Care Benefits (Aetna) MLR improving 84.6% (Q1 26) vs. 87.3% (Q1 25); Medicare Advantage stars top-tier for 2026
Health Services (Caremark + Oak Street + Signify) Caremark stable; Oak Street restructured post $5.7B impairment Q3 25
Pharmacy & Consumer Wellness Pharmacy script volume up; ~900 underperforming stores closed

Key Ratios (approximate)

  • P/E: ~10x (FY26E EPS midpoint) | EV/EBITDA: ~9x | FCF Yield: ~5%
  • Revenue Growth (FY25): +4–5%
  • Aetna MLR (Q1 26): 84.6% (vs. 87.3% Q1 25)
  • Dividend Yield: ~4.5%
  • Net Debt / EBITDA: ~3.0x

Growth Profile

2025 was the trough year for Aetna — Medicare Advantage cost pressures + Inflation Reduction Act + medical-cost inflation drove FY24 GAAP EPS down to $3.40 ($5.7B Oak Street impairment in Q3 2025). FY25 began the recovery; Q1 2026 confirmed the turnaround:

  • Aetna MLR improved 270 bps YoY to 84.6%
  • Aetna 2026 Medicare Advantage star ratings top-tier among national payers
  • Caremark PBM stable
  • Pharmacy + consumer wellness benefiting from closure of underperforming stores ($2B+ cost-cut program)
  • FY26 EPS guide raised from $7.00–7.20 to $7.30–7.50

The defining 2026 narrative: Aetna MA recovery + cost discipline + revamped Oak Street strategy.

Forward Estimates

FY2026 Guide (raised post Q1):

  • Revenue: ≥$405B
  • Adjusted EPS: $7.30–7.50 (~$2 above FY25)
  • FCF: ≥$9.5B operating cash flow

Bull case: Aetna MA returns to historical 86%+ MLR profitability (FY26-27); Caremark PBM regulatory pressure manageable; pharmacy closure benefits flow through margin; EPS reaches $9+ by FY28; multiple expands to 13x. Bear case: Medicare Advantage rate cycle remains unfavorable (CMS rate cuts); PBM rebate retention regulation passes; pharmacy front-store retail weakness; EPS stuck at $7. Consensus targets ~$90–105 vs. trading ~$74–84 (~15–30% implied upside).

Recent Catalysts


ticker: CVS step: 12 generated: 2026-05-12 source: quick-research

CVS Health Corporation (CVS) — Investment Catalysts & Risks

Bull Case Drivers

  1. Aetna Medicare Advantage turnaround — MLR improving 270 bps to 84.6% — Q1 2026 confirmed Aetna's recovery story. MLR of 84.6% (vs. 87.3% prior year) signals materially improved underwriting; FY26 EPS guide raised from $7.00–7.20 to $7.30–7.50.
  2. Aetna 2026 Medicare Advantage Stars top-tier — Even with CMS tightening cut points, Aetna maintained top-tier 4+ Star ratings among national payers. Critical to MA bonus payments + member retention.
  3. $2B+ cost-cutting program executing — Closed ~900 underperforming pharmacy stores; corporate cost reduction; revamping Oak Street primary care after $5.7B impairment. CEO Joyner driving operational discipline.
  4. Q1 2026 revenue $100B + EPS $2.57 — Solid operational momentum; revenue +6.2%; raised guidance confirms execution.
  5. Vertical integration moat — Aetna + Caremark + CVS Pharmacy create cross-segment economics no competitor matches (UNH being the only comparable). Aetna members fill prescriptions at CVS via Caremark.
  6. 4.5% dividend yield — Among the highest in mega-cap healthcare; supports income investor demand.
  7. Walgreens distress creates opportunity — Walgreens going private + cutting stores reduces competitive intensity in retail pharmacy.
  8. Caremark PBM stability — Despite political pressure, Big 3 PBM oligopoly is structurally entrenched.

Bear Case Risks

  1. PBM regulation tail risk — Bipartisan congressional pressure on PBM rebate retention; potential structural reform could reduce Caremark profitability by 20-30%. Multi-year tail risk.
  2. Medicare Advantage rate cycle pressure — CMS proposed essentially flat 2027 MA payments + IRA effects + medical cost inflation continue to compress MA economics. Even with improved Aetna MLR, the rate cycle is the binding constraint.
  3. Oak Street Health $5.7B impairment + revamp execution — Primary care strategy materially impaired; future returns uncertain. Oak Street is consuming capital without clear ROIC.
  4. Pharmacy retail closures continue — Closing stores is necessary but reflects underlying retail pharmacy challenge; e-commerce + Amazon Pharmacy + Walmart pressure on front-of-store retail.
  5. High debt ($60B; ~3x net debt/EBITDA) — Constrains M&A flexibility; sensitive to credit conditions.
  6. Amazon Pharmacy + transparent pricing competition — Long-term threat to retail pharmacy margins.
  7. Adverse drug pricing legislation — Mark Cuban Cost Plus pharmacy + transparent pricing movement creates structural pressure on PBM economics.
  8. Operational complexity from acquisitions — Aetna ($69B), Signify ($8B), Oak Street ($10.6B) — integration challenges persist.

Upcoming Events

  • Q2 2026 earnings (early August 2026): Mid-year guide check + Aetna MLR trajectory.
  • Q3 2026 earnings (early November 2026): Medicare Advantage open enrollment results.
  • CMS 2027 MA rate finalization (April 2027): Multi-year impact on Aetna profitability.
  • Medicare Advantage open enrollment (October–December 2026): 2027 plan year member additions.
  • PBM regulation Senate/House votes: Ongoing through 2026–27 Congress.
  • Oak Street restructuring milestones: Quarterly progress on revamped strategy.
  • Pharmacy closure completion: ~900 stores closing through 2026.

Analyst Sentiment

Consensus rating is Hold / Mixed (~45% Buy, 50% Hold, 5% Sell). Price targets cluster $90–105 vs. trading ~$74–84 (~15–30% implied upside). Bull case targets ~$120 on Aetna MA recovery + Caremark stability; bear case ~$60 on MA rate cycle + PBM regulation. Morgan Stanley, BofA, Wells Fargo Buy/Overweight on turnaround thesis; UBS at Neutral; Goldman at Buy with target $105; Cowen at Buy.

Research Date

Generated: 2026-05-12

Full Research Available

This primer covers steps 1–3 of 21. The full deep dive includes moat analysis, DCF valuation, bull/bear scenarios, management quality, earnings transcript analysis, competitive positioning, returns on capital, institutional/insider activity, and an investment memo.

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CVS Health Corporation (CVS) — Equity Research | Margin of Insight