Today: 29 June 2026
Wesfarmers walks away from a $400m Priceline rescue — and now the Infinity pharmacies are up for grabs
20 January 2026
2 mins read

Wesfarmers walks away from a $400m Priceline rescue — and now the Infinity pharmacies are up for grabs

SYDNEY, Jan 20, 2026, 19:29 AEDT

  • Wesfarmers has abandoned its late-stage efforts to stabilise Infinity Pharmacy Group, a key Priceline franchisee carrying debts exceeding A$400 million.
  • Receivers and administrators have kept over 50 stores open as creditors consider their next moves.
  • The pharmacy deal space in Australia is on alert, as Chemist Warehouse and other investors emerge as possible bidders in the upcoming sale.

Wesfarmers Ltd has pulled out of a last-minute bid to rescue Infinity Pharmacy Group, the largest franchisee in its Priceline Pharmacy network. The move leaves dozens of stores caught up in insolvency proceedings, with creditors facing debts exceeding A$400 million.

The collapse hits just as major retailers ramp up their health and beauty offerings, with community pharmacies serving as key hubs for everyday care — from prescriptions and basic medicines to vaccinations and advice — especially in suburbs and regional areas. When a big player falters, the ripple effects quickly reach landlords, suppliers, and lenders.

This move puts a rare asset on the table: a nationwide chain of pharmacy locations controlled by a distressed owner. Receivers may keep stores operating temporarily, but they usually act fast to sell off the business or break it into parts.

Receivership occurs when an outside manager is appointed, typically after a secured creditor intervenes, to safeguard and liquidate assets. Voluntary administration, on the other hand, involves an external party stepping in to keep a company operating while it undergoes restructuring or is put up for sale.

Local outlets reported Wesfarmers was gearing up to inject equity into Infinity and restructure its debt, even planning a new management company. But in December, it scrapped that plan and pushed 54 Infinity-run stores into receivership. Richard Pearson, Wesfarmers Health’s chief customer officer, called the move “unavoidable,” blaming a buying spree funded by “high-interest rate debt” that left suppliers unpaid. Creditors are owed over A$400 million—about A$110 million to Wesfarmers-owned wholesaler Australian Pharmaceutical Industries, and roughly A$145 million to major banks like Westpac, NAB, and Commonwealth Bank. Meanwhile, receivers and administrators are keeping stores open and staff on payroll. Real Commercial

The West Australian says Wesfarmers points to Infinity’s downfall as a result of a debt-fueled buying binge.

The Australian Financial Review’s Street Talk column reports that Chemist Warehouse and Sydney-based private equity firm Genesis Capital have begun initial steps toward a possible auction of Infinity’s pharmacy network.

Chemist Warehouse looks like the natural strategic buyer, thanks to its size and aggressive store expansion plans. Yet, any offer must navigate a complex web of lease conditions, working capital demands, and pharmacy ownership regulations—factors that could limit who’s realistically able to bid.

The risk now is a drawn-out or fragmented sale. Some sites might still shut if landlords toughen terms, suppliers push for upfront cash, or buyers hesitate over squeezed margins—potentially forcing unsecured creditors to take bigger losses.

Wesfarmers snapped up Australian Pharmaceutical Industries in 2022 for A$774 million, gaining control of the Priceline brand and a nationwide pharmaceutical wholesale operation. Infinity’s stumble now casts doubt on the idea that pharmacy retail offers a reliable growth path alongside Wesfarmers’ well-established retail chains.

External managers are currently in charge of the pharmacies as they evaluate the business and negotiate with lenders. Whether the sale involves a single buyer or multiple parties will determine how much of Infinity remains on the high street—and how complicated the financial fallout will be for others involved.

Shan Ahmed Khan is a senior markets reporter at TS2.tech, specializing in stocks, technology and macroeconomic trends. A graduate of the Lahore University of Management Sciences (LUMS), he previously worked in investment research and market analysis. His coverage helps readers understand the key developments influencing global financial markets and emerging industries.

Stock Market Today

  • US Futures Rise as US-Iran Peace Talks Set to Resume
    June 28, 2026, 6:54 PM EDT. US equity futures rose following reports that the United States and Iran have eased tensions, averting potential conflict escalation. This development supports the fragile ceasefire integral to ongoing peace negotiations. Investors reacted positively, seeing reduced geopolitical risk ahead.

Latest articles

Trump-era loan caps could open door for private lenders in grad school market

Trump-era loan caps could open door for private lenders in grad school market

29 June 2026
July 1 federal loan caps slash Grad PLUS access, forcing many graduate and professional students to seek private loans; Sallie Mae projects up to 70% origination growth over several years, while SoFi reports record student-loan volume—investors now face a real-time test of how much demand shifts to private lenders as federal limits hit.
IREN Limited (NASDAQ:IREN) slides as Warriors badge faces AI revenue test

IREN Limited (NASDAQ:IREN) slides as Warriors badge faces AI revenue test

29 June 2026
IREN Limited (NASDAQ:IREN) plunged 21.3% to $47.21 over five straight down days despite announcing a record $50M+ annual Warriors jersey deal, as investors focused on the company’s not fully contracted $4.4B target ARR and high short interest at 19.74% of float, with Friday’s close near the lowest analyst target.
OpenAI CFO Sarah Friar lifts lid on $20B revenue run rate as 2026 shifts to “practical adoption”
Previous Story

OpenAI CFO Sarah Friar lifts lid on $20B revenue run rate as 2026 shifts to “practical adoption”

UPL share price slips as Advanta IPO papers hit SEBI: what the filing reveals
Next Story

UPL share price slips as Advanta IPO papers hit SEBI: what the filing reveals

Go toTop