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I think that was mostly debunked, including from statements from Walgreens itself. This isn't super recent, and perhaps things got worse after this, but in 2023 both they and 3rd party sources basically admitted that the theft story was overblown. https://www.nytimes.com/2023/01/06/business/walgreens-shopli... > A Walgreens executive said this week that the company, which cited “organized” shoplifting as a reason to close five stores in San Francisco in October 2021, might have overstated the effect of theft on its business. > “Maybe we cried too much last year,” James Kehoe, the company’s chief financial officer, said during a Walgreens earnings call with investors. > Walgreens received national attention in October 2021 when it announced that it was closing five stores in San Francisco, citing shoplifting as the reason for the closures. In June 2021, a video of someone shoplifting from a San Francisco Walgreens on his bicycle and, with a garbage bag filled with stolen merchandise, riding past a television news reporter and security guard, drew millions of views. > The San Francisco Police Department’s data on shoplifting did not support Walgreen’s explanation for the store closings, according to an October 2021 analysis by The San Francisco Chronicle. The analysis said that while not all shoplifting incidents were reported to the police, one of the stores that closed had only seven reported shoplifting incidents in 2021 and a total of 23 since 2018. However, I do think some neighborhoods that might have seemed like good places to put a store years ago but which today are less likely to attract casual shoppers. If you're worried your car will be broken into while you're in the store, you're less likely to go there, you'll get out quicker, you won't make that impulse purchase, etc. So there can be crime-related financial impacts even if Walgreens itself isn't stolen from all that much. |
Of course their inventory shrink isn’t rising if they increasingly lock stuff up