Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Report: pharmaceutical distributors saw total sales grow 6.6% in 2020

But sector says gross margins decreased to 1.9% due to rising costs of IT, returns, and wages.

vaccine-photo-pharma.png

Despite pandemic challenges, pharmaceutical distributors maintained logistics efficiencies in 2020 to deliver millions of vaccines and medicines to providers and patients, according to a report released yesterday by the Healthcare Distribution Alliance (HDA) Research Foundation.

By the numbers, 93% of all pharmaceutical sales in 2020 continued to move through distributors, with 10.5 million units picked per day. Total sales grew at a rate of 6.6% to reach $570 billion, while distributors’ gross margins decreased to 1.9%, the lowest-ever reported, the group said in the “92nd Edition HDA Factbook: The Facts, Figures & Trends in Healthcare.”


The report is based on surveys collected at the corporate level of HDA traditional distributor member companies with annual sales greater than $1 billion, with secondary data included from healthcare and governmental organizations. Data reflect distribution industry performance metrics and overall supply chain management trends for the U.S. pharmaceutical supply chain.

For context, the report found that prescription medicines represented 75% of total SKUs picked, with the remainder being non-prescription drugs such as health and personal care products, general merchandise, durable medical equipment, and home healthcare. That inventory shrank in 2020, with the average total number of SKUs that distributors held in inventory hitting 41,397, marking a 9.3% decrease from 2019.

To move those goods, distribution centers handled an average of 4,234 orders per day, with an average of 11 lines per order. Sixty-five percent of distributors used automated picking methods.

Looking at costs, the report found that the industry’s information technology (IT) investments in 2020 accounted for half of their total capital expenditures. And the total annual costs associated with returned good averaged $5.6 million per company in 2020, an increase from $5.1 million in 2019. The reasons those items were sent back included “overstocked,” “damaged,” or “outdated” products.

In another cost increase, the report found that wages rose during 2020, with the typical healthcare distributor employee receiving $69,000 in compensation, compared with $64,000 in 2019.

“Despite the operational challenges brought on by the pandemic, the data show the distribution industry demonstrated resilience as they continued to deliver millions of products on a daily basis,” Perry Fri, HDA’s executive vice president of industry relations, membership and education, and the HDA Research Foundation’s COO, said in a release.

The report was funded by donations from Apotex Corp., Real Value Rx (dba Hospital Pharmaceutical Consulting), Ascend Laboratories LLC, IQVIA, Johnson & Johnson Health Care Systems Inc., Pharmacy First, and Teva Pharmaceuticals.

Recent

More Stories

photos of grocery supply chain workers

ReposiTrak and Upshop link platforms to enable food traceability

ReposiTrak, a global food traceability network operator, will partner with Upshop, a provider of store operations technology for food retailers, to create an end-to-end grocery traceability solution that reaches from the supply chain to the retail store, the firms said today.

The partnership creates a data connection between suppliers and the retail store. It works by integrating Salt Lake City-based ReposiTrak’s network of thousands of suppliers and their traceability shipment data with Austin, Texas-based Upshop’s network of more than 450 retailers and their retail stores.

Keep ReadingShow less

Featured

minority woman with charts of business progress

Study: Inclusive procurement can fuel economic growth

Inclusive procurement practices can fuel economic growth and create jobs worldwide through increased partnerships with small and diverse suppliers, according to a study from the Illinois firm Supplier.io.

The firm’s “2024 Supplier Diversity Economic Impact Report” found that $168 billion spent directly with those suppliers generated a total economic impact of $303 billion. That analysis can help supplier diversity managers and chief procurement officers implement programs that grow diversity spend, improve supply chain competitiveness, and increase brand value, the firm said.

Keep ReadingShow less
Logistics industry growth slowed in December
Logistics Managers' Index

Logistics industry growth slowed in December

Logistics industry growth slowed in December due to a seasonal wind-down of inventory and following one of the busiest holiday shopping seasons on record, according to the latest Logistics Managers’ Index (LMI) report, released this week.

The monthly LMI was 57.3 in December, down more than a percentage point from November’s reading of 58.4. Despite the slowdown, economic activity across the industry continued to expand, as an LMI reading above 50 indicates growth and a reading below 50 indicates contraction.

Keep ReadingShow less
pie chart of business challenges in 2025

DHL: small businesses wary of uncertain times in 2025

As U.S. small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) face an uncertain business landscape in 2025, a substantial majority (67%) expect positive growth in the new year compared to 2024, according to a survey from DHL.

However, the survey also showed that businesses could face a rocky road to reach that goal, as they navigate a complex environment of regulatory/policy shifts and global market volatility. Both those issues were cited as top challenges by 36% of respondents, followed by staffing/talent retention (11%) and digital threats and cyber attacks (2%).

Keep ReadingShow less
women shopping and checking out at store

Study: Over 15% of all retail returns in 2024 were fraudulent

As retailers enter 2025, they continue struggling to slow the flood of returns fraud, which represented 15.14%--or nearly one-sixth—of all product returns in 2024, according to a report from Appriss Retail and Deloitte.

That percentage is even greater than the 13.21% of total retail sales that were returned. Measured in dollars, returns (including both legitimate and fraudulent) last year reached $685 billion out of the $5.19 trillion in total retail sales.

Keep ReadingShow less