KEY POINTS
  • Walgreens' same-store sales were up 26% in the first 21 days of March as people stocked up on prescriptions and other items, Global Chief Financial Officer James Kehoe said. Then, he said, they took a turn and in the last week of the month, they were down by the mid-teens. 
  • He said the sales declines could offset the company's initial gains, particularly as there's less foot traffic and fewer sales of discretionary items like beauty products.
  • The company said it can't provide a reliable outlook for investors about the effects of COVID-19.
  • Walgreens beat Wall Street expectations for the fiscal second quarter, which ended before the number of COVID-19 cases rose significantly in the U.S.
A pedestrian passes in front of a Walgreens Boots Alliance Inc. store in the Hollywood neighborhood of Los Angeles, California.

Walgreens Boots Alliance said it saw a surge in sales and then a drop-off in March as the coronavirus pandemic spread across the world and now keeps people indoors.

The international drugstore's same-store sales were up 26% in the first 21 days of the month as people stocked up on prescriptions and other items, Global Chief Financial Officer James Kehoe said Thursday on the company's fiscal second-quarter earnings call. Then, he said, they took a turn and in the last week of March, they dropped by a mid-teens percentage rate.