Beer sales growth still seen elusive in Russia as World
Cup looms
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[April 06, 2018]
By Maria Kiselyova and Martinne Geller
MOSCOW/LONDON (Reuters) - The prospect of
thousands of thirsty soccer fans flocking to Russia for this summer's
World Cup should offer a big boost for the country's beer market, yet
brewers see little reason to be optimistic.
Beer sales in Russia have fallen by around a third over the past decade
on the back of rising duties and tougher rules on sales and advertising,
and brewers don't expect a major reversal of the trend this year.
Even recent government concessions for the World Cup, including a
relaxation of regulations to allow the sale of beer at stadiums and fan
zones, as well as an unrelated decision to keep duties flat, have done
little to lift the outlook.
If any company stands to benefit from an upsurge in beer demand for the
World Cup, which kicks off in Moscow on June 14 when the hosts take on
Saudi Arabia, it is Anheuser-Busch InBev <ABI.BR>, the world's biggest
brewer.
AB Inbev's sponsorship of the event gives the group, whose brands range
from Budweiser, Stella Artois and Hoegaarden to local brews such as
Sibirskaya Korona and Klinskoye, exclusive rights to advertise and sell
its beverages at and near tournament venues.
But Oraz Durdyev, legal and corporate affairs director at the group's
Russian unit, said last year's Confederations Cup contest - featuring
the champions of world soccer's six regions plus the World Cup holders
and hosts Russia - had not set a strong precedent.
"We had a very positive view on 2017 because the Confederations Cup
should have become a trigger for beer, but restrictions on ... (plastic
beer bottles) offset all the positives," Durdyev told a news conference
this week.
A law passed in 2016 limited the size of plastic beer bottles to no more
than 1.5 liters, dealing a blow to a segment accounting for more than 20
percent of all beer sold in Russia. Previously beer had been sold in
bottles of up to 2.5 liters.
The Russian beer market was the world's fifth largest after China, the
United States, Brazil and Germany in 2016, according to market research
provider Euromonitor International.
Sales volume shrank around 5 percent in 2017, according to the Russian
Brewers' Union, despite forecasts for growth of 3 to 5 percent.
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Bottles of beer are seen on display at a new outlet of French
grocery retailer Auchan on the day of its opening in Moscow,
November 28, 2014. REUTERS/Sergei Karpukhin/File Photo
FURTHER TO FALL
"In 2016 we thought we had bottomed out, but it turned out we still had further
to fall," Durdyev told Reuters. "When you envisage growth of 3 to 5 percent, and
in the end you get a 5 percent contraction - what's the point in forecasts?"
In 2018, Durdyev added, an "aggressive" regulatory environment and weak consumer
purchasing power could again offset any positive impact from the World Cup.
All of which isn't to say there won't be any benefit.
"This year, the Russian beer market should see a boost to its otherwise
floundering volumes, though a lukewarm performance by the national team is
likely to limit these gains," Bernstein analysts said. In Brazil four years ago,
Russia failed to progress from the group stage having not registered a win.
Bernstein analysts predicted the tournament would boost Russian beer sales
volume by between 2.5 and 3 percent this year, depending on the team's
performance, with gains likely to be reversed in 2019.
Alexei Kedrin, vice president for cooperation with government agencies and
corporate relations at Danish brewer Carlsberg's <CARLb.CO> Russian unit Baltika,
Russia's top brewer, said that while the World Cup was a positive factor, its
impact should not be overestimated amid market restrictions and sluggish broader
consumption.
"We believe that in general there will be no major shocks this year," Kedrin
told Reuters.
Dutch brewer Heineken <HEIO.AS> is equally sanguine and an expectation of no
further shrinkage is as positive as it gets. It expects the Russian market to be
broadly flat this year, supported by economic recovery, a lack of new
restrictions and stable duties.
"The market will probably be more or less flat this year," said Kirill Bolmatov,
corporate relations director at Heineken's Russian unit. "We don't expect a
contraction".
(Reporting by Maria Kiselyova and Martinne Geller; Editing by David Holmes)
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