New tariffs risk turning U.S. whiskey sour
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[June 08, 2018]
By Martinne Geller
(Reuters) - American craft distiller Adam
Spiegel is bracing for a double shot of pain.
An escalating international trade spat is driving up his equipment costs
and threatens to cut into his profit from the bottles he exports to
Europe, just as business is booming.
U.S. President Donald Trump on June 1 imposed tariffs for aluminum
imports from Mexico, Canada and the European Union. As a result, Spiegel
expects his bill for recently-ordered steel fermentation tanks, worth
several hundred thousand dollars, to be $50,000 to $60,000 higher.
Spiegel will also get squeezed by the tariffs the EU announced in
retaliation on U.S. goods, including whiskey, earlier this week. They
could put his roughly 58 pounds ($77.83) per bottle of Sonoma Rye and
West of Kentucky Bourbon out of reach for some European drinkers unless
he swallows some of the cost.
With nearly a quarter of his sales coming in Europe, lowering his prices
enough to offset the entire tariff would be too stiff a drink for
Spiegel given total revenue only amounts to a few million dollars a
year.
"We are not a big company who can absorb such frivolous fluctuations,"
he said, predicting: "American whiskey will get more expensive."
For a graphic, click https://tmsnrt.rs/2xXDFx8
To be sure, Spiegel's business Sonoma Distilling Co of California is a
tiny fish in the world of spirits. But the multinationals that dominate
the American whiskey industry - worth some $5 billion a year to
suppliers and triple that at retail - are facing similar questions about
an uncertain business climate with proposed tariffs from the EU, Canada,
China and Turkey, and Mexico's own tax on U.S. whiskey imports that
kicked in earlier this week.
In a letter Thursday to U.S. Secretary of Commerce Wilbur Ross arguing
these tariffs "will seriously harm producers," the industry trade group
Distilled Spirits Council noted that 46 percent of global U.S. spirits
and 65 percent of global U.S. whiskey exports are either currently
facing - or are at risk of facing - retaliatory tariffs.
It requested a meeting with Secretary Ross to discuss the matter
further.
Brown-Forman <BFb.N>, the Louisville-based home to market leader Jack
Daniel's and higher-end Woodford Reserve, already started shipping more
whiskey to its warehouses overseas ahead of the tariffs, CEO Paul Varga
told analysts on Wednesday.
Brown-Forman, which also sells tequila and other drinks, generates about
half its revenue domestically, a quarter in Europe and a quarter
elsewhere.
Beam Suntory [BSI.UL], home to bourbons including Jim Beam, Maker's Mark
and Knob Creek, is also "making contingency plans to manage through all
potential scenarios," spokeswoman Emily York said. "We will continue to
make our case on both sides of the Atlantic because no one wins in a
trade war where consumers, distillery workers, farmers, bartenders and
wait staff are among the innocent victims," she said.
Those two companies make about 62 percent of all American whiskey,
according to researchers IWSR. Other big players include Heaven Hill,
Diageo <DGE.L> and Campari <CPRI.MI>.
Ninety-five percent of bourbon, a major American whiskey style, comes
from Kentucky. The Southern state, which helped Donald Trump win the
2016 presidential election, is also the home state of prominent
Republican politicians Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell and
Senator Rand Paul. McConnell has publicly stated his opposition to
tariffs.
Kentucky's largest city, Louisville, has benefited from what its mayor
Greg Fischer has called "bourbonism", or the convergence of bourbon
making and tourism.
Bourbon, which can only come from the United States and is often sweeter
than Scotch, has been growing beyond its home state, due in large part
to a resurgence of cocktail culture.
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A bottle of Jack Daniels is shown for sale among other brands in the
liquor section of a food market in Encinitas, California, U.S., June
6, 2018. Picture taken June 6, 2018. REUTERS/Mike Blake
Exports grew 43 percent to $1 billion over the past decade, according to the
Distilled Spirits Council. About 59 percent of exports went to the EU last year.
To meet rising demand and interest, many whiskey producers are expanding, with
the help of last year's massive U.S. tax cut that lowered federal excise tax on
distillers from $13.50 to $2.70 per gallon for the first 100,000 gallons - but
only for two years.
HIGHER PRICES FOR CONSUMERS?
Once the tariffs come into effect, suppliers can choose to swallow the extra
cost themselves or they can pass it on to customers. Protecting margins is
always a priority, but in this case they risk losing hard-earned market share if
drinkers pick cheaper brands.
Generally, if the price of a distilled spirit increases 10 percent, sales volume
of that spirit falls by about 5 percent, according to Henry Saffer, a researcher
with the National Bureau of Economic Research in New York.
Therefore, if bourbon prices rise in the EU, he says people would just "buy
cheaper versions of something very similar."
With a recent boom in whiskey, there are more choices than ever - from classic
places like Scotland and Ireland, as well as newcomers like Sweden and
Australia.
Yet Euromonitor analyst Spiros Malandrakis predicted those alternatives will not
see a boost until it becomes obvious that the tariffs are here to stay because
suppliers will likely suck it up if the duties are short-lived.
Because the U.S. has shifted positions in the past, several whiskey executives
Reuters spoke with displayed a "wait-and-see" attitude, hoping that the tension
will die down and any tariffs would be temporary.
"It's very hard to predict what will transpire," said Mark Brown, chief
executive of Sazerac Co, owner of Kentucky's Buffalo Trace distillery. "There
isn't going to be any certainty over whether it's going to be a one-week spat or
a two-year spat."
The tariff may be shared all along the supply chain, from producers to importers
and distributors to retailers.
But producers such as Brown-Forman, whose Jack Daniel's sells for about 23
pounds ($30.86) per liter in British supermarkets, tend to have fat profit
margins. Its operating margin was 32 percent last year, versus only 16.5 percent
for Unilever and 12 percent for Cadbury chocolate maker Mondelez International.
Joseph Magliocco, president of Michter's Distillery, sees the premium price of
his bourbon as insulation. The cheapest version can be found in Britain for
around 53 pounds ($67.10).
That puts him in prime position to weather the tariff storm, and keep his plans
to expand with a new distillery set to open the public in downtown Louisville in
September.
"In general if taxes go up, I would think the super-premium products will be
affected less," Magliocco said. Even though Michter's is available in some 40
countries, international markets are only about 15 percent of sales.
($1 = 0.7452 pounds)
(Additional reporting by Melissa Fares in New York; editing by Vanessa O'Connell
and Edward Tobin)
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