Soaring French spirits taxes rock Pernod Ricard

By Ben Bouckley

- Last updated on GMT

Soaring French spirits taxes rock Pernod Ricard
Pernod Ricard admits that the effects of a hefty 2012 French VAT hike on spirits has ‘severely affected’ the fortunes of key brand Ricard and other aniseed spirits with 45%+ ABV.

Sales of the spirit fell 3%, but it was the only brand within Paris-based Pernod Ricard’s ‘Top 14’ portfolio to suffer a value decline, as the firm reported full-year 2011/12 results in the year to June 30 today.

Overall, French sales fell one per cent due to a decrease in spirits consumption following the excise duty hike of January 1 2012 (14% on average), which had a particularly adverse effect on the aniseed category, Pernod Ricard reported.

Aniseed-based spirits had been hit especially hard hit by the excise tax hike since they were 45% proof or more, and thus penalized on social welfare grounds, CEO Pierre Pringuet told journalists this morning.

“The increase on a bottle of Pastis or Ricard is approximately €2 per bottle, which is a substantial increase,”​ he explained.

“Consumption is down, and we believe this will continue, certainly until the end of the calendar year,” ​he added, since it took consumers 12-18 months to get used to price hikes.

Bipolar Europe

Pernod Ricard has reported its best full-year results since the 2008 financial crisis, with top and bottom line growth boosted by record branded sales in ‘growth driver’ Asia.

Turnover rose 8% to €8.215bn – driven by 17% growth in emerging markets – while net profit from recurring operations rose to €509m versus €469m 12 months ago.

Pernod Ricard said that Asia/Rest of World was the group growth driver with sales up 15%, primarily due to China, India, Vietnam and Taiwan; Africa/Middle East also performed well.

US sales grew 5% driven by Jameson, which CEO Pierre Pringuet told journalists had developed there in “spectacular fashion”,​ while Europe (excluding France) grew 2%; albeit with a “pronounced bipolarisation”​ – sales up 16% in Eastern Europe, down 1% in the West.

The wine and spirits giant also cut its net debt – which has been a concern for some analysts – by €385m to €9.363bn.

Star spirits brands

The firm said premium brands now accounted for 73% of group sales, up 2% on last year, which boosted gross margin, while advertising and promotions liked to the most profitable Top 14 brands bore fruit.

Hailing an ‘all-time record’ for its Top 14 (volume sales up 3% to 47.2m 9-litre cases), Pernod Ricard said they accounted for 60% of group sales.

Absolut sales rose 3%, Chivas 7%, Jameson 16%, Malibu 8%, Beefeater 8%, while Martell 10%, The Glenlivet (16%) and Royal Salute (20%) were the standout performers.

Crucially, an improved price/mix effect meant that Pernod Ricard’s top 14 brands grew 10% by value overall: Martell rose 25%, Royal Salute 23%, The Glenlivet  and Jameson both 18%.

Pringuet said his firm’s strong results were due to a “clear and consistent strategy” ​involving substantial brand investment, premiumisation and geographic expansion.

Three key executive appointments were also announced by Pernod Ricard today​ after the death of former chair Patrick Ricard, with Daniele Ricard taking his place, and his nephew Alexandre Ricard confirmed as CEO in waiting from 2015.

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