Barely a year after taking ownership of the British pharmacy and beauty chain, private equity firm Sycamore Partners has reportedly initiated divestiture discussions that could value Boots at approximately $10 billion, according to sources briefed on the matter. The June 9 report sent ripples through both the retail and beauty sectors, where Boots functions as a bellwether for high-street health-and-beauty consumption across the United Kingdom.
Sycamore acquired Boots from Walgreens Boots Alliance in early 2025 for a reported $6.5 billion, a price that at the time reflected the market’s tempered expectations for brick-and-mortar pharmacy retail. The potential doubling of that valuation in just over a year suggests that the turnaround plan executed under Sycamore’s stewardship has exceeded internal projections — or that the current macroeconomic climate has created a seller’s market for assets with Boots’s unique combination of pharmacy license, beauty concession partnerships, and private-label margin structure.
The beauty industry, in particular, is watching closely. Boots operates nearly 1,900 UK stores and holds an outsized influence over which beauty brands reach British consumers. A sale to a strategic buyer — rumours have circled around international pharmacy groups and even luxury conglomerates seeking a retail distribution channel — could reshape the competitive landscape for everything from mass-market skincare to premium fragrance.
A divestiture would also test the appetite for large-scale retail deals at a moment when private equity firms are sitting on record dry powder but facing elevated financing costs. If Sycamore succeeds in achieving a $10 billion valuation, it would validate a playbook that has become increasingly rare in fashion and beauty: buy a distressed high-street asset, streamline operations without sacrificing its cultural relevance, and exit at multiples that reward operational patience over financial engineering.


