The Peterborough Examiner

A sparkling Canadian success story

Hard seltzer craze has made multibilli­onaire of White Claw creator

- TOM MALONEY

Fresh out of college in the early 1970s, Anthony von Mandl opened a wine-importing business in his native Vancouver. He struggled to get Canada’s liquor boards to buy the foreign labels he was handling.

He had “a little office about the size of a cupboard in the back of a building downtown,” said Vancouver-based wine writer John Schreiner. “He was selling German wines, primarily, out of his car.”

Those lean days are over. Von Mandl has since made a fortune creating genre-defying alcoholic beverages. His latest is White Claw, the “hard seltzer” that was the hit of the summer among millennial­s, outselling every craft beer and even heavyweigh­ts like Budweiser in the U.S. for stretches at a time.

It was the latest in a string of successes that includes Mike’s Hard Lemonade and has given von Mandl, 69, a net worth of about $3.4 billion (U.S.), according to the Bloomberg Billionair­es Index.

He has poured a good bit of that money back into his first love: wine. Last year, von Mandl bought his fifth winery in British Columbia’s Okanagan Valley, where he’s spent millions attracting star winemakers and producing award-winning Chardonnay­s and Pinot Noirs.

“He’s been astonishin­gly good for the industry here,” Schreiner said.

But the engine behind his company, Mark Anthony Group, is White Claw and Mike’s Hard Lemonade, a sweet alcoholic brew that became a phenomenon in Canada when it was first sold in 1996, sparking fights in liquor stores as supplies ran short. In 1999, Mike’s was introduced to the U.S. and sold two million cases the first year. It’s still popular two decades later, with U.S. sales of about $1.6 billion, according to the company.

Mike’s success was recognizin­g that “25 per cent of guys didn’t particular­ly want to drink beer, but couldn’t be seen holding anything else in their hand,” von Mandl said in a 2006 interview. It was beer-like enough that you could bring it to a barbecue without feeling out of place.

In addition, Mike’s is brewed rather than being primarily spirit-based. As a result, it’s taxed at beer’s lower rate in the U.S. and can be sold in supermarke­ts and convenienc­e stores in states like New York that restrict the sale of wines and spirits to specialty shops.

White Claw updated the concept for 2019’s health-conscious drinkers by dropping the sweetness and calories. It has five per cent alcohol by volume, about the same as most beers.

“Alcohol drinkers are becoming more and more concerned about health and wellness, and are becoming more involved in mindful drinking,” said Danelle Kosmal, vice-president of Nielsen’s beverage alcohol practice. “Hard seltzers are meeting these consumer needs.”

Over the past 12 months, sales of hard seltzers almost tripled, even as Americans drank less alcohol for the third straight year. White Claw’s market share grew 11 percentage points from a year earlier, according to Nielsen data, and now hovers around 55 per cent.

“This summer Mark Anthony Brands became America’s fourth largest beer company,” Jamie Dammrich, a spokespers­on for the company, said in an email. “The U.S. business’ growth is 85 per cent this year and accelerati­ng and is estimated to deliver close to $4 billion in revenue in 2020.”

White Claw has benefited from a robust social media presence, with more than 100,000 tagged Instagram posts. A video made by comedian Trevor Wallace parodying White Claw drinkers has been viewed more than 3 million times on YouTube and spawned the meme “Ain’t no laws when you’re drinking Claws.” White Claw cans even made appearance­s as Halloween costumes.

The growth in hard seltzers is drawing the attention of market heavyweigh­ts. White Claw’s biggest competitor is Boston Beer Co.’s Truly, which has a 15 per cent market share. But Anheuser-Busch InBev SA, Molson Coors Brewing Co., Constellat­ion Brands Inc. and Diageo Plc all have spiked seltzers in developmen­t or in stores.

Competitio­n may “tap the brakes” on White Claw’s rapid gains, Bloomberg Intelligen­ce senior analyst Kenneth Shea said.

Von Mandl remains bullish, telling a beer wholesaler­s convention in September that “the consumers flocking to White Claw today are not going to magically return to the megabeer brands of yesterday.” His company is investing $250 million in new U.S. production facilities to keep up with demand.

If history repeats itself, a lot of that money will find its way into the Okanagan Valley, where von Mandl owns more than 1,000 acres of vineyards. He bought his first winery — Mission Hill Family Estate — in 1981 when the valley was still a fledgling viticultur­e region known for producing wines of little distinctio­n.

After buying the rundown property, von Mandel wondered “if I had made the biggest mistake of my life,” he told an audience in 2003.

Mission Hill now produces wines that go for as much as $250 a bottle, and hosted Prince William and Kate Middleton on their 2016 Commonweal­th tour. After undergoing a six-year, multimilli­on renovation, the winery boasts an amphitheat­re, a Chagall tapestry and a 12-storey tower with bells made by the French firm that crafted those in the Basilica of the Sacred Heart in Paris.

“To make a small fortune in the wine business,” he told the audience, “you have to start with a large one.”

 ?? RICHARD ADAMS MISSION HILL FAMILY ESTATE ?? Anthony von Mandl, the man behind Mike’s Hard Lemonade and White Claw, owns more than 1,000 acres of vineyards in B.C.
RICHARD ADAMS MISSION HILL FAMILY ESTATE Anthony von Mandl, the man behind Mike’s Hard Lemonade and White Claw, owns more than 1,000 acres of vineyards in B.C.

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