Global spirit makers face cocktail of challenges

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Global spirit makers face cocktail of challenges


Various whiskey bottles on shelves in a bar.

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Global spirit makers are staring down a sobering cocktail of challenges as tariffs and brand boycotts threaten to exacerbate wider shifts in drinking habits.

French cognac maker Rémy Cointreau on Wednesday became the latest spirits maker, following Diageo and Pernod Ricard, to withdraw its sales targets on increased economic and trade uncertainty.

“Given the continued lack of macroeconomic visibility, the geopolitical uncertainties surrounding U.S.-China tariff policies, and the absence to date of a recovery in the U.S. market … the conditions required to maintain [Remy Cointreau’s] 2029-2030 targets are no longer in place,” it said in a statement.

The move came as full-year sales at the group’s cognac business, which includes its namesake Remy Martin brand, fell 22% on an organic basis on slowing U.S. consumption and “complex market conditions” in China.

The popular brandy variety, which hails from the French region of Cognac, has been particularly caught in the crosshairs of ongoing U.S.-Sino tensions. LVMH similarly saw a 17% drop in its Hennessy cognac in the first quarter.

But the specialty drink is far from alone as trade barriers weaken already drying demand for spirits. LVMH’s wine and spirits remains the French luxury group’s worst performing division, while Diageo spirits including Tanqueray, Gordon’s and Smirnoff saw the steepest declines in the first quarter as sales of Irish stout Guinness rallied ahead.

“Distilled spirits in the U.S. are going through a correction, and U.S. tariffs add another layer of uncertainty,” Jefferies said in a note last month.

Tariffs dampen spirits

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Drinks makers

The same does not apply for beer, which relies on local production and has been flagged as an unlikely winner from brewing trade divisions. Notably, the world’s largest brewer AB InBev, as well as Dutch and Danish beermakers Heineken and Carlsberg all maintained their full-year guidance in the first quarter.

As a result, wines and spirits are potentially more exposed to brand boycotts too, with consumers more likely to swap out a particular product on political grounds in favor of a locally-made alternative.

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