Campari Benefits As US Drinkers Get Taste For Spirits

By Donna Ahern
Campari Benefits As US Drinkers Get Taste For Spirits

Italy's Campari said on Tuesday demand for its spirits was holding up well in the face of rising prices and the industry was seeing more American drinkers switching from beer.

Campari, the company behind the Aperol spritz cocktail, reported a 9.6% increase in fourth quarter like-for-like sales, thanks to strong pricing and despite glass supply constraints.

That growth rate was more contained compared to the previous quarters, with group net sales up organically 16.4% in 2022 as a whole, to €2.7 billion ($2.9 billion).

"Markets are normalising, they cannot always grow double digits... but we think we can outperform in all markets and in all categories," Bob Kunze-Concewitz, CEO Campari told Reuters.

Global Demand 

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The CEO said he sees global demand growing despite inflationary pressures, especially in the aperitifs segment.

As a response, the group was planning robust supply chain investments to double overall production capacity in key aperitifs, bourbon and tequila categories.

The United States, the biggest single market for Campari accounting for 28% of its revenues, outperformed at the end of the year.

"October and November were weaker but December was stronger. The American scenario is very positive, because the spirits industry is gaining market share at the expense of beer," Kunze-Concewitz said.

"The consumption of cocktails at home has now normalised ..but on-premise consumption is growing by double digits," he added.

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The group said that inflation remained a challenge despite some signs of easing, but it is confident it can preserve "the current operating margin on sales at the organic level".

Operating Profit

Adjusted operating profit in the last quarter was up 7.6% on a like-for-like basis, with input cost inflation almost fully offset by positive pricing initiatives. It was up 19% on the same basis over the year.

Shares in Campari closed down 1%. A Milan-based trader said that results were broadly in line with analyst consensus.

Jefferies analysts said the flattish margins expected for 2023 were a negative factor but already expected and pointed out the continued growth momentum as a positive element.

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Campari is proposing a full year dividend of €0.06 per share, unchanged compared with the previous year.

News by Reuters edited by Donna Ahern, Checkout. For more drinks stories click here. Click subscribe to sign up for the Checkout print edition.

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