The Mercury News Weekend

Juul’s meltdown costs tobacco giant Altria $4.5 billion

- By Katie Robertson

The New York Times

The tobacco giant Altria Group said Thursday that it had devalued its investment in the vaping company Juul Labs by $4.5 billion, a move that reflects deepening turmoil in the electronic cigarette industry.

Altria, one of the world’s largest tobacco companies, invested $12.8 billion in Juul in December 2018, acquiring a 35% stake in the Silicon Valley startup.

The company pointed to recent bans on vaping, a $7 billion industry, across the United States and the “increased likelihood” that the Food and Drug Administra­tion would “remove flavored e-vapor products from the market.”

Still, Altria’s chairman and chief executive, Howard Willard, said on an earnings call that while the e-cigarette industry was at a critical juncture, the company remained “committed to Juul’s success.”

“We must address underage use while also preserving options for the more than 20 million adult smokers who are interested in less harmful tobacco products,” Willard said.

“We continue to believe that raising the legal minimum age to purchase all tobacco products to 21 at the federal and state levels is the most effective action to reverse the rise in youth vaping.” Juul declined to comment. The company, which has argued that ecigarette­s would save lives by helping people stop smoking, has come under intense scru

tiny in recent months amid mounting outrage over vaping among teenagers and a spate of mysterious lung illnesses that have been linked to e-cigarettes.

Juul is now facing multiple state and federal investigat­ions. The U.S. attorney’s office in San Francisco, the Food and Drug Administra­tion, the Federal Trade Commission and several state attorneys general have all opened investigat­ions into how the company marketed its products. Three school districts have filed a suit accusing Juul of endangerin­g students and getting them addicted to nicotine.

The e-cigarette maker announced this month that it would suspend online sales of most flavored products in anticipati­on of a ban by the Trump administra­tion.

Part of the appeal of Juul’s e-cigarettes was the array of flavors, like mango, cucumber and creme. A ban would not only hurt the company’s sales but those of the small business owners who are selling the products as part of a little-regulated $2.6 billion industry. Many vape shops rely on customized, flavored nicotine blends as the bulk of their sales.

The mint and menthol flavors, among Juul’s bestseller­s, are still being sold. The planned federal ban is expected to include them, despite lobbying from some trade groups to exempt them.

Vaping is a source of increasing concern for health officials. An outbreak of illnesses and deaths linked to the practice continues to rise, while the exact cause remains unknown. Many of those affected had vaped THC, some had used both THC and nicotine and others reported vaping only nicotine. In October, a 17-yearold New York City boy became the first teenager to die, according to federal and state data.

Altria, the U.S. maker of Marlboro, bought a stake in Juul last year, when the young company was exploding in popularity and valued at $38 billion. As part of the deal, Juul’s 1,500 employees shared in a bonus of $2 billion.

At the time, Altria, hurting from a decline in smoking, saw Juul as a way to shift its business away from traditiona­l cigarettes. Its own e- cigarette product, a “heat not burn” device called IQOS by Philip Morris Internatio­nal, was held up in regulatory approvals (the FDA approved IQOS in April and the company started selling it in Atlanta this month).

In September, Juul replaced its chief executive with an Altria executive, K.C. Crosthwait­e, who has sought to contain the damage. Crosthwait­e has suspended Juul’s advertisin­g and withdrawn its support for a San Francisco ballot measure that aimed to reverse the city’s ban on e-cigarette sales.

 ?? JASON HENRY — THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? E-cigarette maker Juul is now facing multiple state and federal investigat­ions.
JASON HENRY — THE NEW YORK TIMES E-cigarette maker Juul is now facing multiple state and federal investigat­ions.

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