Brandy chases whisky in South African spirit wars
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[October 13, 2017]
By TJ Strydom
JOHANNESBURG (Reuters) - Klippies and coke.
Ricky Louw. Karate Water.
These are the orders ringing out in bars across South Africa as thrifty
consumers switch from imported, big-brand whisky to various types of
locally produced brandy to quench their thirst.
The trend, fueled by a stagnant economy that is strangling spending, has
led to the first increase in brandy sales for more than a decade, and
falling sales of pricier whisky.
This is an unexpected reversal in a country that multinationals Pernod
Ricard and Diageo targeted as a lucrative growth market for their whisky
brands, and where they had enjoyed years of surging sales among an
emerging middle class. Pernod Ricard sells more Jameson in South Africa
than anywhere else apart from the United States.
Brandy still lags its rival in the contest to be the number one spirit
by some distance - about 32 million liters is sunk a year versus nearly
39 million of whisky - but the gap has almost halved since 2014, when
the economic slump set in.
Most brandies retail for around $8 (110 rand) for a 750 ml bottle,
compared with around $13 for Diageo's Johnnie Walker Red Label and $20
for Pernod Ricard's Jameson, the two most popular whiskies. A
significant price difference in a country where the minimum wage is less
than $2 an hour.
"At my local a double brandy is the same price as a single Jameson,"
says Fred Bester, 36, a sales consultant for technology startups in
Johannesburg. "That's why I now drink brandy."
The international companies, however, are fighting back. They are
shifting focus to more affordable whisky brands and dipping into their
war chests to step up marketing drives.
Pernod Ricard does not break down results by country, but acknowledged
brandy was taking market share in South Africa because of lower pricing.
The company's national sales director Werner Vosloo told Reuters it was
trying to avoid a "knee-jerk" reaction that could damage the long-term
potential and image of its brands and so was steering clear of price
cuts.
He said it was also increasing advertising and promotional spending. He
declined to provide figures, but the drive is evident on billboards, TVs
and social media across the country.
Hollywood actor Don Cheadle can be seen sipping Chivas Regal on a huge
billboard overlooking one of the country's busiest routes, on the way to
the Johannesburg business hub of Sandton - known as the richest square
mile in Africa.
Pernod Ricard has also had a marketing push for its more affordable
premium brand, Ballantine's, which costs about $15. It is trying to woo
customers with "gift packs", said Vosloo, typically a free whisky glass
or two when you buy a bottle.
Britain's Diageo, the number one player, has seen a 6 percent drop in
whisky sales volumes over the past year. But it said this year that it
was benefiting from the launch in the country of Johnnie Walker Green
Label - a more affordable gift option to its high-end Blue Label. A
bottle costs $47 versus $160.
The two companies dominate the market for whisky, which accounts for a
third of the South African spirits market. They are, however, somewhat
insulated from falling sales by solid demand for vodka, which they also
sell. It is the nation's No.3 spirit, with about 27 million liters
consumed last year.
WINE THAT BURNS
At the turn of the century, brandy - first distilled in South Africa on
a Dutch ship in Cape Town harbor in 1672 - was the number one spirit by
a stretch, with around 40 million liters consumed a year, almost twice
the amount of whisky.
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Blending manager Ilse du Toit pours brandy during a tasting at the
KWV distillery in Paarl near Cape Town, South Africa, September 20,
2017. REUTERS/Mike Hutchings
Over the following years, however, robust economic growth averaging nearly 5
percent gave rise to a burgeoning middle class with more disposable income.
Sales of more imported whisky rocketed while brandy demand shrunk.
Slowing economic growth over the past three years has hammered household
incomes. After a recession in the first two quarters of 2017, growth is forecast
by the central bank to reach 0.6 percent this year, not nearly enough to make a
dent in the unemployment rate of 27.7 percent.
Whisky consumption has dropped, falling from a high of 43.2 million liters in
2014 to 38.7 million in 2016, data from industry monitor SAWIS shows.
The consumption of brandy, or brandewyn - an Afrikaans word that means "the wine
that burns" - meanwhile increased for the first time since 2005 last year, to
32.1 million liters, from 31.6 million in 2015.
The recovery is driven by locally produced products - French Cognac and other
imported brandies account for only 1 percent of the market and are aimed at the
wealthiest consumers.
The surge in local brandy sales is also supporting the local wine industry
because South African regulations require brandy producers to use wine as their
base product. With every 1 percent rise in brandy sales volumes, the price of
distilling wine is lifted by 0.9 percent, according to industry players.
"Wine producers earmark grapes specifically for wine that goes to brandy
producers and they usually get paid quite quickly, which is good for cashflow
and supports thousands of jobs," said Christo Conradie of industry group Vinpro
which represents 3,500 wine producers.
'RENAISSANCE'
The chief executives of two of the largest three brandy producers - Distell and
KWV - told Reuters that the rising sales trend had continued since the latest
SAWIS figures were released, and that they had both seen a 5 percent increase in
volumes in the past year.
"Brandy sales have recovered and it has definitely been the weaker economy
playing a role," Distell's CEO Richard Rushton told Reuters. "Consumers are
cutting back and have been choosing brandy as good value for money."
Distell makes Klipdrift and Richelieu, nicknamed klippies and Ricky Louw (a
common name) by drinkers. But it's the cheaper Viceroy label - about $7 a bottle
- that has shown the strongest sales growth, Rushton said.
Boyce Lloyd, CEO of KWV, which makes brandy of various cask ages under the KWV
label, said the economic slump had fueled a "renaissance" for the spirit -
widely dubbed karate water because of its alcoholic kick.
"With brandy you can get a quality product for 50 percent cheaper than a whisky
or a vodka."
(Reporting by TJ Strydom; Editing by Pravin Char)
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