The Zimbabwe Independent

Innscor takes on dominant Delta

-

AFTER spending US$70 million on new investment­s last year, Innscor is spending a further US$56 million for the coming year on new projects. One of these projects may make Delta Corporatio­n sit up.

It is already the country’s largest and most successful food producer, with profitable interests from poultry to maize meal and beverages. Now Innscor is looking to add another unit — beer.

Company executives told an analysts’ briefing recently that Innscor expects to launch a brewery, Buffalo Brewing Company, early in 2023. It will launch a beer brand, called Nyathi.

The first bottles of Nyathi beer have already rolled off the new line at ProBottler­s in Harare. The Buffalo brewery will be in Stapleford, near Harare, where the company has repurposed a factory shell.

Nyathi adds to Innscor’s wide array of successful brands

Can Innscor take on Delta, which has the Zimbabwe beer market in a chokehold? Delta controls 86% of the traditiona­l beer market and 95% of lager sales.

In the year to March 2022, Delta sold 372 million litres of traditiona­l beer, the highest amount in five years. So strong is the demand that Delta is investing in extra capacity.

“Chibuku Super is constraine­d by the limited production capacity. A new Chibuku Super plant is being installed at Harare brewery for commission­ing in early 2023,” according to Delta.

Delta has also introduced a new Chibuku variant, Chibuku Scud Plus, which has a longer shelf-life, and jazzed things up with a banana-flavoured Chibuku Super.

In terms of lagers, in 2021, Delta sold 190 million litres, the most since 2019. It has launched new beer brands, such as Sable, and loyalty to its brands remains strong.

A new competitor in the clear beer business would have to work overtime to break this strangleho­ld.

Rumours of a potential future partnershi­p with Heineken abound, which would be a twist given that Heineken recently bought Distell, which owns Afdis, a Delta associate.

Delta has already shown how aggressive it can be in fending off competitio­n. It has fought off competitio­n in the fizzy drinks market from Varun, which makes Pepsi, and Innscor itself, which produces the Fizzi brands.

Key for Innscor is the strategy that has made it a success for years; using its value chains and expansive distributi­on networks. Pricing and product quality will also be essential for market penetratio­n.

To take on Delta in the traditiona­l brew business, Innscor may have to step up its investment­s in cropping to increase sorghum supplies, possibly through its farming unit PHI Commoditie­s, which has three farms and is expanding.

Delta gets its supplies of barley and sorghum by contractin­g thousands of local farmers. In 2021, it bought 40,000 tonnes of barley from 47 contracted farmers. Delta also took in 13,500 tonnes of sorghum, grown by 10,000 communal farmers and 50 commercial farmers.

Innscor’s entry into the beer market will interest investors as it will diversify its products even further, according to stockbroke­rs IH Securities.

“US$56mn in additional investment into capacity has been planned for FY23 with the announced launch of the Sorghum beer line from Buffalo Brewing company going into deepening product offering,” IH says.

Analyst Yona Banda adds that Innscor’s entry into the brewery business will bring some competitio­n into the market.

He says, “The Buffalo Brewing Company stands out as an interestin­g propositio­n, given the absence of competitio­n in the local commercial beer market.” — NewzWire.

 ?? ?? Nyathi adds to Innscor’s wide array of successful brands.
Nyathi adds to Innscor’s wide array of successful brands.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Zimbabwe