Business Day (Nigeria)

Beer drinkers to pay more as brewers mull price increase this month

- BUNMI BAILEY

Beer drinkers in Africa’s most populous country will soon be paying more for their cherished bottles or cans as major players in Nigeria’s beer industry have indicated plans to increase prices this November.

Analysts in the consumer goods space told BusinessDa­y that they had seen the increase in prices of beer coming but it was only a question of when.

Abiola Gbemisola, research analyst at Lagosbased Chapel Hill Denham, said Nigerian Breweries in mid- October told its distributo­rs that it would increase prices of its products by November 2019.

“And interestin­gly, two weeks ago I received a note from Guinness that they are also going to increase prices in same period. And then Internatio­nal Breweries said they were going to increase prices but they were giving their suppliers time before they implement it,” Gbemisola said.

Nigeria leads the pack of 10 biggest beer drinking countries in Africa. Beer brands make up 16 percent of alcohol consumptio­n in the country, while other drinks (spirits and locally brewed drinks) make up 84 percent.

Consumer analysts said the price increase was expected following recent increase in excise duty.

“If you have been following the consumer space, the major players in the brewery industry over the last one year have been pressured by the increase in excise duty that the government charges on them. So it is pressuring their margins and combined with weak consumer spending,” Gbemisola said.

The Federal Government had on June 4, 2018 announced the approval of an increase to the excise duties on tobacco and alcoholic beverages to address revenue shortfalls. The increase, it said, would be introduced in phases over a three-year period (2018-2020) to moderate the impact of the increment on the price of the products. On this basis, the excise duty increased from N0.2k per cl in 2017 to N0.3k per cl in 2018, and a further increase to N0.35k per cl for 2019 and 2020.

Excise duty is a levy placed on the manufactur­e

of locally produced goods.

In September 2019, the Nigerian government announced plans to raise Value Added Tax from 5 percent to 7.5 percent.

“With duty increases on beer as well (from N30 to N35 per litre) in June 2019, and without price increases, and given the inflation levels, the margin challenge is clear,” Guinness said in a note to companies.

In May, Nigeria Breweries said in its pre annual general meeting that it was considerin­g an increase in price of its products across board in order to remain sustainabl­e.

“We want to ensure our strategy to remain competitiv­e is paying off in terms of growth, although we need to increase prices to compensate for the inflationa­ry pressures that we are facing and probably excise duty,” Jordi Borrut Bel, CEO, Nigeria Breweries plc, said.

Eronmosele Aziba, consumer analyst at Tellimer Group, said the impact of the price increase would depend on the value of the products themselves.

“If prices of Heineken increase, it might not have a huge impact on consumers because the people that usually take it are the ones that can afford it. But if they increase prices of products that are cheaper, like Goldberg, they could suffer especially if their competitor­s don’t increase prices,” said Aziba.

The excise duty expense has impacted negatively on the revenues and profits of beer makers in country, their latest financial results show.

In the nine months to September 2019, Nigerian Breweries reported a further decline in earnings as profits fell by 17 percent to N12.3 billion from N14.8 billion in the previous year.

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