Side-by-side comparison of AI visibility scores, market position, and capabilities
Kroger-owned in-store pharmacy chain with 2,200 locations in supermarket banners; prescription services integrated with grocery loyalty program competing with CVS and Walgreens.
Kroger Pharmacy is the pharmacy division of The Kroger Co., operating approximately 2,200 in-store pharmacies within Kroger supermarkets and Kroger-owned banner stores (Fred Meyer, King Soopers, Ralphs, Harris Teeter, Smith's, and others) across the United States — making it one of the largest pharmacy chains in the country. Part of Kroger (NYSE: KR), the nation's largest pure-play supermarket chain with approximately $150 billion in annual revenue, Kroger Pharmacy benefits from the combination of convenient supermarket co-location and Kroger's pharmaceutical purchasing scale.\n\nKroger Pharmacy provides prescription filling, immunization services, medication therapy management, and specialty pharmacy for complex medications. The pharmacy integrates with Kroger's loyalty program (Kroger Plus Card) to provide fuel points for pharmacy purchases and to connect prescription refill reminders with grocery shopping behavior. Kroger's OptUP nutrition scoring and health programs connect pharmacy and grocery to support customer health goals.\n\nIn 2025, Kroger Pharmacy competes with CVS Health, Walgreens, Walmart Pharmacy, and mail-order pharmacies for prescription market share. The retail pharmacy sector faces significant pressure from PBM reimbursement cuts and the shift to 90-day mail-order supply, which has forced pharmacy closures across the industry. Kroger's merger with Albertsons (blocked by FTC in February 2024) would have significantly expanded Kroger's pharmacy network, but the blocked merger leaves Kroger competing at current scale. The 2025 strategy focuses on integrating pharmacy into Kroger's digital health ecosystem, expanding specialty pharmacy capabilities, and leveraging Kroger Health data analytics for population health management programs.
Cambridge MA neuroscience biopharma (NASDAQ: BIIB) at $9.7B 2024 revenue; LEQEMBI $87M Q4 (Alzheimer's first-in-class amyloid therapy), SKYCLARYS $102M Q4 (Friedreich's ataxia), MS franchise declining vs. Eli Lilly donanemab.
Biogen Inc. is a Cambridge, Massachusetts-based neuroscience biopharmaceutical company — publicly traded on NASDAQ (NASDAQ: BIIB) as an S&P 500 Health Care component — researching, developing, and commercializing therapies for neurological, neurodegenerative, and neurodevelopmental diseases including Alzheimer's disease, multiple sclerosis, spinal muscular atrophy, and rare neurological conditions through approximately 7,400 employees worldwide. In fiscal year 2024, Biogen reported total revenue of $9.7 billion (-2% year-over-year) and GAAP diluted EPS of $11.18 (+40%), reflecting significant cost-cutting that improved profitability despite modest revenue decline. Revenue decline was driven by continued erosion in the core multiple sclerosis franchise (TECFIDERA, AVONEX, TYSABRI facing generic and biosimilar competition) while new product revenue grew: LEQEMBI (lecanemab, Alzheimer's disease, partnered with Eisai) generated approximately $87 million in Q4 2024 global sales — reflecting the slow but building commercial trajectory of the first drug to slow Alzheimer's cognitive decline — and SKYCLARYS (omaveloxolone, Friedreich's ataxia) generated $102 million in Q4, nearly double the year-earlier period. CEO Christopher Viehbacher, who joined in 2022 from Genentech's parent Roche, has led a strategic restructuring that includes cost reduction, pipeline refocus on high-probability neurology programs, and the LEQEMBI commercial execution through a partnership model with Eisai.
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