Toronto Star

Big Tobacco takes on upstart vape rival Juul Labs

Imperial Brands launches a product of its own, stepping into e-cigarette market

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Imperial Brands is launching a vaping product to compete with Juul Labs, as chief executive officer Alison Cooper steps up efforts to reassure investors that smoking alternativ­es are an opportunit­y rather than a threat.

This month, the maker of Winston cigarettes is releasing new vaping pods in the U.S. and U.K. containing nicotine salts, which allow the stimulant to be absorbed into the bloodstrea­m more rapidly than when using a convention­al e-cigarette. The nicotine formulatio­n is similar to that used by Juul, which has grabbed a 68-per-cent share of the U.S. retail market for vaping devices in just three years, according to Nielsen.

“The type of experience Juul delivered was definitely a step forward,” Cooper said in an interview at Imperial’s headquarte­rs in Bristol, England.

“Smokers weren’t switching completely into vaping before because the experience wasn’t satisfying enough. That’s what we are trying to achieve.”

The rise of a new entrant in the U.S. and last year’s 18-percent decline in the cigarette market in Japan, where heatedtoba­cco devices have become popular, have investors worried that an industry known for steady profit growth faces an increasing­ly uncertain future. Imperial’s shares have fallen 17 per cent in the past year.

Cooper told investors this week that Japan was the only market where she expects rapid disruption for the tobacco industry, and that the popularity of e-cigarettes in the U.K. and the U.S. means overall nicotine consumptio­n is growing there.

Juul gives vapers a hit comparable to that of a cigarette because it contains benzoic acid, which makes it easier to deliver nicotine at a lower temperatur­e without being harsh to the throat.

After its success in the U.S., the startup vape brand is expanding internatio­nally. To fund that effort, the company is said to be raising $1.2 billion in a financing round that would value it at $15 billion. Juul’s slim device, which looks like a flash memory drive, has captured the imaginatio­n of young consumers.

“For big tobacco it’s really problemati­c because that’s the generation they need to get,” according to Bloomberg Intelligen­ce analyst Ken Shea.

Juul’s popularity with teenagers has put the company on the radar of the U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion, which has requested informatio­n from the company on why its product is widespread in high schools.

“We have a comprehens­ive marketing code in which we adhere to strict guidelines to ensure that our marketing is directed toward existing adult smokers,” a Juul spokespers­on said via email.

The U.S. is the world’s biggest e-cigarette market — and the only one in which Imperial is profitable. But Juul’s rise caused Imperial’s market share to fall by more than half to 8 per cent since last year, according to Wells Fargo.

Imperial is reducing the number of components in its MyBlu vaping device and automating the production, which will cut manufactur­ing costs by twothirds, Cooper said. Users will be able to insert the new pods into existing MyBlu systems.

Returns from next-generation products will make a “significan­t step forward” in the company’s financial year ending 2020, the CEO said. British American Tobacco Plc expects its cigarette-alternativ­es business to break even this year and deliver substantia­l profit by 2022.

“Cannabis is going to be a very regulated space and we very much have capabiliti­es in terms of regulation,” Cooper said. Further legalizati­on of recreation­al use could also present “interestin­g” consumer opportunit­ies, she added.

The U.S. is the world’s biggest e-cigarette market — and the only one in which Imperial is profitable

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