Sunday, April 28, 2019

Constellation Brands Wants More Beer, Less Wine in 2019

By. Demitrios Kalogeropoulos

Constellation Brands (NYSE:STZ) has enjoyed a strong track record for buying premium alcoholic beverage franchises and boosting their value. The most consequential of these acquisitions was the 2012 purchase of imported Mexican beers including Corona and Modelo that sparked a five-year period of sharp sales and profit growth.
The company is taking a different approach to allocating capital as it enters 2019, choosing instead to pare back its portfolio by removing many of its wine and spirit brands. In a conference call with analysts, CEO Bill Newlands and his executive team explained why this sale fits with their broader strategic plans, and how it could lay the groundwork for improved results ahead. Let's look at some investor highlights from that presentation.
Friends drinking beer at a bar.
IMAGE SOURCE: GETTY IMAGES.

Fixing the wine and spirits segment

Our remaining wine and spirits business will primarily consist of wines at the greater than $11 price point and will include fast-growing, high-margin power brands like Kim Crawford, the number one sauvignon blanc in the U.S.; Meiomi, the number one U.S. pinot noir; and SVEDKA Vodka, the number one imported vodka in the U.S. -- Newlands
Far from exiting the wine and spirits business entirely, Constellation Brands' $1.7 billion brand sale represents a shoring up of this segment, which has struggled to grow for over a year. In the past few quarters, executives blamed brands at lower-end price points for pressuring results, and those are the franchises that management chose to sell to E. & J. Gallo Winery.
The remaining portfolio will be smaller, executives said, but faster growing and more profitable. Specifically, Constellation Brands is predicting consistent market share gains and operating margin of around 30% after the sale closes, compared to the 26% level it achieved over the last year.

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