Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Altria invests $2.75B in rival startup NJOY

Move comes shortly after it dropped Juul stake

- Michelle Chapman

Days after exiting its stake in troubled electronic cigarette maker Juul, Altria announced a $2.75 billion investment in rival electronic cigarette startup NJOY.

The Marlboro maker gets full ownership of NJOY’s e-vapor product portfolio, the Virginia company said Monday, including its pod-based e-vapor product ACE.

“We believe we can responsibl­y accelerate U.S. adult smoker and competitiv­e adult vaper adoption of NJOY ACE in ways that NJOY could not as a standalone company,” Altria CEO Billy Gifford said.

The agreement includes an additional $500 million in cash payments contingent upon regulatory approval of some products by NJOY Holdings Inc., based in Scottsdale, Arizona.

Altria’s announceme­nt comes just days after the company said it was swapping its minority stake in Juul Labs for a license to some of Juul’s heated tobacco intellectu­al property.

Altria said that the carrying value and estimated fair value of its Juul investment was $250 million at the end of last year. The company will record the financial impact of the agreement in the first quarter of 2023 and plans to treat any amounts as a special item and exclude it from adjusted diluted earnings per share.

Juul said Friday when Altria exited its stake that it now has “full strategic freedom” to pursue other partnershi­ps.

Gifford said the swap was the right decision for Altria.

“Juul faces significant regulatory and legal challenges and uncertaint­ies, many of which could exist for many years,” Gifford said.

In December Juul reached settlement­s covering thousands of lawsuits over its e-cigarettes.

The company faced more than 8,000 lawsuits brought by individual­s and families of Juul users, school districts, city government­s and Native American tribes. The settlement resolved most of those cases, which had been consolidat­ed in a California federal court pending several bellwether trials.

Financial terms of the settlement were not disclosed.

Juul rocketed to the top of the U.S. vaping market more than five years ago on the popularity of flavors like mango, mint and creme brulee. But its rise was fueled by use among teenagers, some of whom became hooked on Juul’s high-nicotine pods.

Parents, school administra­tors and politician­s largely blamed the company for a surge in underage vaping, which now includes dozens of flavored e-cigarette brands that are the preferred choice among teens.

Amid the backlash of lawsuits and government sanctions, Juul dropped all U.S. advertisin­g and discontinu­ed most of its flavors in 2019.

Altria’s interest in Juul’s heated tobacco intellectu­al property comes a few months after it made a deal with Japan Tobacco to help its effort to bring a heat-not-burn cigarette to the U.S. market.

Altria announced in October that it was launching a new venture with Japan Tobacco to commercial­ize cigarette alternativ­es developed by both companies for U.S. smokers. The partnershi­p’s first effort will be to win U.S. regulatory approval for Japan Tobacco’s Ploom, a small handheld device that heats tobacco without burning it.

 ?? STEVE HELBER/AP FILE ?? NJOY Holdings Inc. is based in Scottsdale, Ariz.
STEVE HELBER/AP FILE NJOY Holdings Inc. is based in Scottsdale, Ariz.

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