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A mixed forecast for
beer
Importers and crafters bask in the sunny uplands
of the high-end, but the big brewers brace for more rough
weather.
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This is a strange time for the beer industry. For the past
two decades, the industry has advanced in a reasonably predictable
manner, backed by a clear narrative. The size of the overall
market remained basically static, but the pie was constantly
being redivided. Certain big brewers got bigger, while others
declined. Regional brewers dropped out, and craft brewers
came in. For statisticians, the most unpredictable development
was the rise of the imports, which came up from nothing,
to take 12% of the market.
That old and comfortable beer industry equation has now
been turned on its ear due to factors largely beyond the
control of brewers. Distillers and vintners are taking volume
share from the brewers, and the analysts see this trend
continuing in the coming year. In 2005, wine was up 4.8%
and spirits up 2.9%.
Beer shipments were down 1.2% in 2005, but this was not
a reflection on every domestic player. Yuengling, Boston
Beer and Sierra Nevada sold more beer, A-B, Miller and Coors
sold less (Note: Molson Coors now reports volume for the
combined companies. We estimate Coors slightly down without
volume effects of the merger).
Indeed, high-end beer thrived in 2005. Craft brewers were
up 9%, according to the Brewers Association, and imports
climbed 7.2%.
As industry vet and Modern Brewery Age columnist Bob Wilson
noted last year, Many of todays consumers are
drinking something other than lagers. The major brewers
are selling just vanilla, while the 21-34 year-olds are
looking for 28 flavors. This is one of the reasons the craft
brewers are doing well again.
In a speech in Cape Town, South Africa, in June, 1966,
Robert F. Kennedy said, "There is a Chinese curse which
says, May he live in interesting times. Like
it or not, we live in interesting times..."
Robert S. Weinberg, principal of the Office of R.S. Weinberg,
St. Louis, MO, characterized the contemporary brewing industry
in exactly the same way. These are interesting times,
he said.
The nature of competition in the industry has changed
radically in the last two years, Mr. Weinberg added.
And the big brewers dont know how to cope. There
is nothing surprising about distilled spirits picking up
and malt beverages dropping down. If you look at the last
four or five years, you see this embedded in the data. It
is cyclic. Distilled spirits and wine have an advantage
over beer in that they can build up huge inventories, and
live off them.
Like Mr. Wilson, Mr. Weinberg notes that consumer paradigms
are shifting. The young people of today are different
than the young people of ten or twenty years ago,
he says.
This is certainly reflected in the products that consumers
are drinking. Of the 30 brands doing best in supermarkets,
only 12 are offerings from the major brewers.
For brewers, the most terrifying table in this edition
of Modern Brewery Age may be another IRI table, the Top
10 New Beer Brands supermarket sales data chart on
page 19. Of these top 10 beer brands,
only three are recognizable as conventional beers.
Budweiser Select is number one, followed by Smirnoff Twisted
V Watermelon, Smirnoff Twisted V Black Cherry, Mikes
Hard Berry, Becks Premier Light, Bacardi Silver Watermelon,
Bacardi Silver Low Carb Green Apple, B to the E, Smirnoff
Twisted V Wild Grape, and Heineken Premium Light.
Anheuser-Busch is to be congratulated for getting Budweiser
Select to the top of that list, but Adolphus Busch wouldnt
recognize the other A-B entrants on that list as any kin
to beerBacardi Silver Watermelon? Bacardi Silver Low
Carb Green Apple? B to the E?
Some years ago, malternatives looked like a Trojan horse
come to slay the beer industry. That didnt happen,
but malternatives have certainly stolen a share of younger
and female consumers. Beyond that, these high-profile malternatives
have brought distilled spirits brands to the forefront of
these consumers brand sets.
This may be one factor in the growing per cap for spirits.
Indeed, per capita alcohol consumption is rebounding in
the U.S. market, but not for beer. According to Beer Institute
figures, per capita consumption for beer was at 30.6 gallons
per person in 2003, and now stands at 30.4.
"Beer per capitas are not growing," analysts Mark
Swartzberg and Mark Astrachan of Stifel Nicolaus note in
their recent beer report. "Imports and other high-priced
beers are growing in a fashion analogous to the above average
growth of higher-priced spirits and higher priced wines.
We consider two factors especially notableexcess growth
in marketing spending on all alcohol relative to inflation,
and faster spending growth for wine and spirits than for
beer."
The Stifel Nicolaus analysts do not see the beer trend
turning around. Our projections of per capita
consumption by segment imply a continued decline in beer's
share of alcohol mix in favor of wine and spirits,"
Swartzberg and Astrachan write. "We expect beer's share
to decline from approximately 57% in 1995, to approximately
52% in 2005 and 49% in 2010. We consider this the most likely
outcome because beer has a lot to lose as the distantly
largest alcohol segment, and, on balance, the noted drivers
of total consumption are weighted towards of exclusive to
wine and spirits."
The bright side for beer, as the analysts note, has been
in the high-end. There, growth rates have met or exceeded
growth by wine and spirits.
Craft beer volume growth far exceeded that of large
brewers, wine and spirits in 2005, said Paul Gatza,
Director of the Brewers Association of Boulder, CO. And
even though imported beer grew nicely in 2005, craft beer
grew at a faster rate.
The Brewers Association estimates 2005 sales by craft brewers
at 7,112,886 31-gallon barrels up from an adjusted total
of 6,526,809 barrels in 2004, an increase of 586,077 barrels
or 8.1 million case-equivalents.
Those numbers are borne out in our annual brewery ranking,
which turns past convention on its head. In years past,
A-B would add a couple of million barrels without breathing
hard, but this time they dropped 1.9 million. The entire
top tier is down (Coors is an anomaly, as noted) and in
2005, it was the brewers of the third tier that chalked
up volume.
The increased craft barrelage is startling given the capacity
constraints on small brewers. Every added 20,000 barrels
must be planned years in advance. Many of the upper-echelon
crafters felt a freshening wind behind craft beer years
ago, and began adding capacity. Some brewers maintained
excess capacity from the previous micro boom. The existence
of this capacity, whenever it was built, is helping fuel
renewed craft growth.
Analyst Bob Weinberg applauds this craft growth, but puts
it in perspective. In the domestic specialty market,
he says, we see large percentage growth, but relatively
few barrels. It is hard to know what this means, but there
are obviously more adventuresome consumers out there willing
to try new things. The numeric results show that. As for
the imports, I think they continue to benefit from the lack
of a definable super premium segment in the domestic market.
Ephemeral of not, craft and import growth has put the big
brewers in the shade. (Fortunately for the big brewers,
domestic numbers only reflect part of the picture. Anheuser-Busch
dropped 1.8% in the U.S. market, but is up 50.8% percent
internationally. International volume jumped from 13,800,000
barrels to 20,800,00 barrels, and volume from A-Bs
international equity partners now stands at
26,400,000 barrels, an increase of 36%).
And, no matter how many barrels A-B sells in Shanghai,
a primary mission must be the stabilization and growth of
beer in the profitable U.S. market.
For the analysts, the prescription for future U.S. beer
growth is simplenew products and increased marketing
spending by brewers.
Analyst Weinberg has been a proponent of new products for
years, nay, decades. The answer is new products,
he says. No question. But it is important to play
off old and new products against each other in a fashion
to reinforce each other in a brand portfolio. You have to
examine interactions of new and existing products.There
are subtle and important distinctions and you have to be
careful when you do this. You dont want the consumer
getting the notion that the old products were bad; it has
to be part of an evolution of the whole portfolio.
New products in the high end may sell themselves to an
extent, but marketing specialists suggest that mainstream
beer will need to substantially increase their spend.
Messrs Swartzberg and Astrachan at Stifel Nicolaus say
the future depends on a virtuous cycle in marketing
spending, with alcohol producers and marketers acting on
the realization that spending in excess of inflation is
key to maintaining favorable per capita trends.
They say distillers and vintners are following this prescription,
but brewers are lagging. We are less convinced that
brewers are prepared to keep up the marketing pressure,
they write. If, indeed, the brewers are entering a
phase of slowing marketing spending, we would expect beer
to lose share to wine and spirits at a faster rate than
that which we have projected.
The bellweather for the U.S. beer market is always Anheuser-Busch.
A-B will be the leader in marketing spend, and the primary
contributor in the new products arena. So far this year,
the company has come on strong. St. Louis has delivered
a flood of new A-B products, a balance of craft-type beers
and alternative beverages. In addition, A-B is building
itself into a full-service importer. It has Groslch to take
on Heineken, and an Asian brand for those niche restaurants.
Now it just needs a good Mexican brand, a Canadian brand,
and a European or two...
Some analysts are watching for future merger and acquisition
activity, which could dramatically alter the landscape.
A-B has been making new international arrangements with
Heineken, sparking one waggish analyst to comment, They
are dating, and who knows, maybe they end up getting married.
The past year was a tough one for the mainstream beer business,
and distillers and vintners will be keeping the pressure
on. Price war continues to lurk, but anecdotal evidence
shows beer sales picking up and pricing conditions more
favorable.
Beer is not dead, says analyst Robert Weinberg.
There is a slowdown in demand for malt beverages that
is structural, and this has a demographic basis. The nature
of the market has not changed, but there have been changes
in the competitive structure, and this is worth examining.
Mr. Weinberg promises to share the results of that examination
with us. But in the interim, brewers can take solacebeer
is demonstrably not dead, but, in the form of craft beer
and imports, is in fact vibrant and growing. For brewers
that make interesting, differentiated, high-quality beers,
the sky may be the limit.
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