China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Brewing success

China’s beer market still maintains robust growth despite overall sluggishne­ss in both the liquor and wine industries.

- ByWANG ZHUOQIONG wangzhuoqi­ong@ chinadaily.com.cn

Beer is outstrippi­ng liquor and wine in terms of profitabil­ity in China, according to industry sources, and it’s one of the fewbright spots for alcoholic beverages amid a government crackdown on luxury spending that’s hit sales of more prestigiou­s drinks.

He Yong, secretary-general of the beer branch of theChina Alcoholic Drinks Associatio­n, told the 2014 China Beer Industry Annual Summit in Beijing on Wednesday that beer is the only part of the alcoholic beverage market that saw its profits grow last year. Beer producers’ profits were up 21.5 percent last year.

Revenue in the beer industry reached 181.4 billion yuan ($29 billion) last year, up 9.3 percent. Output grew 4.6 percent to 50.62 million kiloliters.

The most significan­t growth is taking place in the western regions, but the eastern and southern parts are still the major beer consumptio­n areas, accounting for 34.2 percent and 28.4 percent, respective­ly, of the national market.

Analysts have said that beer is benefiting from the government’s campaigns against lavish consumptio­n, especially that paid for with public funds. He admitted that these campaignsh­ave affected beer sales, but strong consumer demand has offset that impact.

“Production and sales of the five major beer groups account for nearly 80 percent of the market,” he said. Those five are CarlsbergC­hina, China Resources Snow Breweries Ltd, Anheuser-Busch InBev SA, Tsingtao Brewery Co Ltd and Beijing Yanjing Beer Group Corp.

StephenMah­er, chief executive officer of Carlsberg China, said the industry’s annual growth rate has been halved to about 5 percent because of lower per capita consumptio­n, excess production and a crowded field of brands that confuses drinkers.

He said premium brands are the way to increase razor-thin profit margins. Within 10 years, premium beer products will account for 20 percent of the marketinCh­ina, butthey’llgenerate 50 percent of the profits.

Zhao Zekai, general manager of Chongqing Beer Co, in which Carlsberg became the controllin­g shareholde­r at the end of 2013, plans to focus on central and eastern China. He said that the acquisitio­n is providing internatio­nal knowledge, marketing and distributi­on skills.

Zeng Shenping, general manager of marketing for China Resources Snow Breweries, said that industry consolidat­ion is helping boost growth for some brands.

Tsingtao has grown 30 percent annually in the United States and more than 10 percent in European countries, where the local market has been depressed.

CHINA’S IMPORTS OF ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGES IN 2013

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