The sinfully bullish case for Anheuser-Busch - Top Stocks Blog - MSN Money
 
Search Top Stocks:

The sinfully bullish case for Anheuser-Busch

Posted Apr 07 2008, 12:38 PM by Anthony Mirhaydari
Rating:
Filed under: ,

Sin stocks have been getting a lot of attention lately. Shares of breweries, casino operators, tobacco growers, and weapons makers are once again being recognized for their recession-proof qualities. Normally dull Kiplinger’s Personal Finance ran a big piece on the sector recently, while BusinessWeek pointed out that a vice fund has outperformed a leading socially-responsible fund. After all, no matter what's happening to the stock market, the housing market, or the jobs market, people will continue their wanton ways.

This brings us to beer, America's alcoholic beverage of choice. Shunned for years by a public crazed by fancy wines, imported beers, and micro-brews, plain domestic beer looks ready for a renaissance as consumers retrench and get back to basics. Instead of $45 pinot noirs with accents of spice, berries, and rose petals, budget-conscious shoppers will opt for the cheap 12-pack. This bodes well for Anheuser-Busch, the largest brewer in the United States and the fourth-largest worldwide.

Lester Jones, chief economist of the Beer Institute, an industry group, sheds some light on this trend in his latest industry update. Using data from a survey of consumer expenditures by the Bureau of Labor Statistics, he found that while U.S. households spend about $426 on alcoholic beverages per year on average, there is a definite shift towards beer as income falls. For households with more than $50,000 in income, 41% of their "alcohol budget" is spent on beer. In comparison, this share is nearly 60% for lower income households. So, as consumers continue to feel poorer through declines in real income and home equity, look for beer sales to grow at the expense of fancier grape-based avenues to inebriation.   

A freshly completed annual survey of U.S. beer consumers by Morgan Stanley analyst William Pecoriello provides empirical evidence. A full 41% of respondents said they now have less money to spend on booze versus a few months ago. Of these, 60% are reducing visits to bars and restaurants, 50% are reducing the number of drinks they consume when they do venture out, and 15% are trading down to cheaper drinks.

It's worth noting that while bar and restaurant sales of alcohol represent only 25% of total sales, the vast majority of craft beers and a large chunk of imported beers are sold there. Not surprisingly, the analysts are cutting back their sales growth forecast for high-end brews. Meanwhile, cheap beers have nothing to fear: 92% of sub-premium beers are consumed at home.

Anheuser-Busch is well positioned to take advantage of the upcoming shift. It already commands a 49% share of the U.S. beer market, with its flagship Budweiser and Bud Light brands alone comprising a 32% share. Economies of scale and brand recognition have allowed the company to capture three-quarters of its industry's operating profits. Flush with cash, the brewer is free to reinvest in new products, new acquisitions, and new marketing initiatives -- perpetuating its dominance. Bottles of brand-new Bud Light Lime and Budweiser American Ale are already on the way, while a new business unit is being created to boost Michelob's fortunes.

William is looking for Anheuser-Busch to report lukewarm first-quarter results on April 23, driving expectations down just as the season of backyard barbeques and ballgames gets started. The warmer summer months should accelerate the trade-down trend and push shares higher as the country’s economic woes continue to drive haggard investors into the sin sector.

Assuming moderate volume growth and stable margins -- which won’t be easy given rising input prices -- William is looking for earnings of $3.26 per share next year. If the price-earnings multiple returns to its five-year average of 18.3, shares could be trading right around $60 by this time next year -- a 24% increase from here.
 
(Disclosure: I don't own any shares of the companies mentioned in this post.)

Comments

 

While everything in the article rings true, there are those who simply will not lower their standards. I will continue drinking the brews I enjoy such as Guiness and Sam Adams...I'll just drink less rather than drinking swill such as Bud.

As a beer/wine drinker, home brewer, and investor I don't buy some of what the author is saying.  Its's true as inflation has been hurting my income, I have cut back aggresively on buying higher priced wines.  However, the price of wine has been stable due to a relative glut of grapes due to increasing plantings over the past decade.  The only inflation in wine is due to currency conversion from foreign countries and shipping costs.  Beer on the other hand is a different story.  The combination of crop disasters and corn/rice/wheat competition has driven up the price of hops and barley.  The price of some hops have gone up 5x in one year.  So wait till this summer as breweries work through their inventories of hops/barley coupled with increasing energy costs (don't boil must but you definitely boil wort) means higher beer prices and less profit margin for brewers.  Breweries won't go bankrupt but I don't see a big year of profits for them.  As for me, its 2 buck chuck and some homebrew belgian ale at $2.50 a six pack.  Why would I want to drink a rice lager for $7 a six pack?  But I guess Joe six-pack will just downgrade his six-pack, not buy more, just buy the same of a cheaper product of the same company...I don't see how that will conflagrate the profits of a macrobrewery.  A pinot noir drinker will probably not stoop to the Beast, probably stoop to a $5 bottle of Australian shiraz etc

I pay $2.99 for a bottle of golden gate cabernet suvignon in my local supermarket and thats a good price for wine.$11.99 for my genesee cream ale 30 pack is also a steal.......love sam adams and guinness too but too expensive i'm afraid..!!..

I wouldn't drink Bud at any price. The stuff is worse than swill!

Don't underestimate AB...they are powerful and cash rich.  Look for a big initiative from them in the North American market that has the potential to "blow off the roof".  They are just now getting gutsy, planning some innovative strategic marketing moves utilizing their strengths that they would never have considered just 3 or 4 years ago.

There are "affordable luxuries" like coffee, wine etc that I am going to consume regardless of what the economy is doing.  So while I may not buy a house or go to Europe this year, I will drink wine.  What I won't do is drink Bud Light - ever!

It doesn't matter how bad the economy gets, a real beer drinker will save $$ on something else before settling for Bud.

Goes to show you how stupid Americans have become. They fall for advertising, Bud is worse than swill. People just see whats on TV or the RADIO and think it must be good. Bring on the Micro Brew's and Sam Adams, thats what REAL BEER is suppose to taste like!

While very, very true that probably close to nobody who doesn't already like cheap beer will "trade down" to Budweiser products, where I think the value of the article's concept lies is that out of all things in the budget, beer is probably one of the last things to go.  Personally, I myself have been concerned (like everyone else reading this site) about the economy and trying to cut down on spending...I haven't bought many clothes in the last six months, and fancy restaurants, nope, not in the budget! But I will pay $5 a pint for Stella or Sam Adams at my local pub while I'm watching a baseball game, and I will continue to pick up Becks to drink at home a couple of nights a week @ $7 a six pack...my golly I'm economizing not suiciding! :)  And I don't smoke cigarettes but I'm betting that people who do aren't going to cut those out of the budget until a last resort, either...

I am always amazed by the folks who write about how "Bud" is a lesser beer. They speak of the taste profile in words like swill and crap etc. To those people my response is: If you have in fact tasted swill and crap and can legitematly compare the taste to a product enjoyed by millions of Americans, then bully for you. However if it is the fact of Anheuser-Buschs' size that offends you then you should probably park your Volvo, or Volkswagon micro bus, cut your hair, save your tatoo money, get a job and lead the same life your father did.

Send a Comment

Comments must be directly related to the blog entry. Comments with offensive language will be deleted. Your e-mail address won't be displayed.

(please, no HTML tags. Web addresses will be hyperlinked):