The Star Late Edition

SAB calls on government to reconsider

The coronaviru­s (Covid-19) epidemic has crashed a strong performanc­e in the first two months of the year

- SANDILE MCHUNU sandile.mchunu@inl.co.za

SOUTH African Breweries (SAB) yesterday called for the government to reconsider the ban on the sale and local transporta­tion of alcohol as the coronaviru­s (Covid-19) epidemic crashed a strong performanc­e in the first two months of the year.

SAB warned that the continued sales ban and the prevention of transporti­ng the inventory to the warehouses would come at a huge cost for both the company and the government.

The brewer said that it currently has 132 million litres of beer – roughly the equivalent of 400 million bottles of beer – sitting in its tanks.

“If SAB is not able to resume transporti­ng inventory, it will be forced to discard this inventory at a loss of an estimated R150 million.

“The economic effects for the government would be even more severe. The immediate loss to the government in excise tax would be R500m as the government does not collect excise for unpacked beer,” SAB said.

The warning comes as internatio­nal beer consumptio­n plunged on the Covid-19 lockdown ban of alcohol sales.

SAB parent company, Anheuser-Busch InBev (AB InBev) yesterday said that its volumes tumbled 9.3 percent decline, slashing its revenue 5.8 percent and earnings before interest, tax, depreciati­on and amortisati­on falling 13.7 percent to $3.95 billion (R73.5bn) in the first quarter.

AB InBev said total sales volumes declined 9.3 percent percent with a 32 percent plunge in April.

The group reported a net loss of $2.25bn in its first quarter from profit of $3.57bn previously.

“We have exercised prudent financial discipline with several proactive measures, including optimising our cost base, revising our final 2019 dividend proposal and maintainin­g a strong liquidity position,” AB InBev said.

The company has already slashed more than 30 percent of its market capitalisa­tion this year.

SAB said it expected the reduction in capacity to lead to job losses if it is forced to discard its current inventory as it would be forced to operate at about 50 percent capacity for four months. It said 2 000 jobs – half of its workforce – could be lost internally and a further 75 000 in its domestic supply chain.

Jordan Weir, a trader at Citadel, said Covid-19 would lead to further losses in the alcohol beverages industry into the next year as many people would remain reluctant to return to public spaces such as restaurant­s and pubs.

“The company will probably also see worse second quarter numbers as the first quarter only accounted for the impact of some geographic lockdowns, while more countries only went into official lockdown towards the end of March,” Weir said.

He added that while India had just lifted the ban, it slapped an additional 70 percent “corona-tax” on to alcoholic beverages.

“It is not certain whether SA citizens will also see some form of alcoholic tax hikes, but it is something to keep in mind as the brewer will look to make up any losses where possible.”

AB InBev shares rose 0.94 percent on the JSE yesterday to close at R800.

 ?? | NADINE HUTTON Bloomberg ?? EMPLOYEES of South African Breweries walk through the company’s Alrode depot in Johannesbu­rg.
| NADINE HUTTON Bloomberg EMPLOYEES of South African Breweries walk through the company’s Alrode depot in Johannesbu­rg.

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