Otago Daily Times

DB paid $30.5m to gain Tuatara

- PAUL MCBETH

AUCKLAND: DB Breweries paid $30.5 million for Kapiti boutique beer maker Tuatara Brewing Co last year as the country’s major liquor companies beef up their craft beer credibilit­y to reach consumers with a taste for highend brews.

The Aucklandba­sed brewer paid cash for the boutique firm in January last year in a deal attributin­g $16.5 million to the Tuatara brand and $12.8 million to goodwill, DB’s 2017 financial statements show.

That trumps the potential $25.1 million price rival Lion — Beer, Spirits & Wine (NZ) put on Upper Hutt brewer Panhead Custom Ales, of which $15.1 million was up front and a further $10 million based on hitting earning targets.

Tuatara was set up in 2000 by the Vasta family, who stayed on through Rangatira Investment­s’ stake in the brewer and have carried on under DB’s ownership.

The former shareholde­rs rejected an offer of $16.6 million from a large player in the industry, but are now in dispute with Rangatira on whether the sale to DB triggered earnouts.

Craft beer consumptio­n has been on the rise in recent years, even as total beer drunk has dropped, with 194 small breweries operating at the end of 2016, and selling beer faster than they can make it, according to an industry report by ANZ Bank New Zealand.

Government figures show those consumptio­n trends remain intact, with consumptio­n of beer with an alcohol content of 5%plus rising 9% to 27.8 million litres in the year ended March 31, while total beer consumptio­n shrank 1.3%.

That dynamic showed up in DB’s accounts, with the brewer’s sales rising 2.7% to $513.5 million, lagging behind a 3.3% increase in the cost of duty, raw materials and packaging to $294.1 million.

Gross margin shrank to 42.7% from 43%.

Still, DB’s profit rose 12% to $30.4 million, with the brewer trimming its advertisin­g spend 1.1% to $31.6 million and registerin­g a gain on foreign exchange contracts of $613,000, having posted a loss on FX of $1.2 million a year earlier.

Writing off bad debts edged up to $40.6 million and the brewer’s wage bill rose 7.1% to $48.4 million.

It’s not plain sailing for all boutique brewers, with Moa Group reposition­ing itself several times since going public in 2012, and last week reported a 2% increase in annual sales to $10.5 million while widening its loss to $2.5 million spending more on distributi­on.

Moa is raising $1.9 million through a placement and will follow that up with a share purchase plan on the same terms, having $987,000 in cash at the March 31 balance date, about half its operating cash outflow in the year of $1.8 million. Moa shares last traded at 52 cents. — BusinessDe­sk

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