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RombBullet Market prices change trend
RombBullet Industry news
RombBullet Graph of the week
RombBullet Table of the week
RombBullet Prices evolution
RombBullet Barley prices
RombBullet Theoretical malt prices
RombBullet Scientific digest
RombBullet Business history
RombBullet Agenda
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E-Malt.com Flash 41a
October 06 - October 08, 2014

Quote of the Week

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Currency Rates


Base Currency: Euro
on October 08, 2014
Base Currency: US Dollar
on October 08, 2014
      1 EUR = 1.2634 USD
1 EUR = 0.7859 GBP
1 EUR = 1.4107 CAD
1 EUR = 1.4381 AUD
1 EUR = 137.1770 JPY
1 EUR = 3.0599 BRL
1 EUR = 50.3385 RUB
1 EUR = 7.7651 CNY
      1 USD = 0.7916 EUR
1 USD = 0.6221 GBP
1 USD = 1.1166 CAD
1 USD = 1.1383 AUD
1 USD = 108.5870 JPY
1 USD = 2.4220 BRL
1 USD = 39.8450 RUB
1 USD = 6.1464 CNY


Currency Rates Chart

Equities of the Largest Breweries

Breweries Equities

Average Market Prices Change Trend


October 08, 2014
Type Crop 2014 Crop 2015
EUR % EUR %
2rs Barley 174.00-176.00 - 190.00-192.00 -
6rw Barley 156.00-158.00 up0.64% 160.00-162.00 -
2rs Malt 363.50-365.50 - 383.00-385.00 -
6rw Malt 341.00-343.00 up0.36% 346.00-348.00 -
Feed Barley 145.00-147.00up0.69% nq 

Note: Just click here and you will be led to our Market Price History. These are average French barley market prices estimated on FOB Creil basis. The theoretical average malt prices are based FOB Antwerp being estimated on French malting barley. The changes are compared to last Newsletter's prices. Arrows indicate the direction of the change.


Top Industry News


Malt news Australia: Substandard malt supplied to customers ...Click here

Brewery news Japan: Asahi under pressure to step up acquisitions - CEO ...Click here
Brewery news World: SABMiller boss says attempt to buy Heineken was not a defensive move ...Click here
Brewery news Italy: Beer production declines by 0.3% in 2013 ...Click here
Brewery news South Korea: Oriental Brewery quickly losing market dominance after “disinfectant odor” scandal ...Click here
Brewery news Romania: First-half beer sales drop 9% because of excises increase ...Click here

Barley news USA: Maltsters concerned about supply of malting barley this year ...Click here
Barley news France: Wheat and barley exports increase in July 2014 ...Click here
Barley news Germany: Spring and winter barley production expected to increase this year ...Click here

Whisky news World: Global Scotch whisky sales down 0.8% last year ...Click here


More Industry News


Brewery news Japan: Asahi Group Holdings head optimistic about Japan’s alcohol industry ...Click here
Brewery news USA: Craft beer drinkers are more diverse than ever ...Click here
Brewery news Australia: Any takeover of Australia’s Coopers Brewery is now much harder to succeed ...Click here
Brewery news USA: TTB simplifies excise tax regulations for small brewers ...Click here
Brewery news Canada: New beer standard to support Canada's brewers ...Click here
Brewery news World: SABMiller convinced it has the right marketing brew to woo female consumers ...Click here
Barley news UK: Second set of AHDB/HGCA Cereal Quality Survey confirms lowest average nitrogen content of barley since 1977 ...Click here
Brewery news Australia: Australia’s beer industry being redefined by craft breweries ...Click here
Brewery news The Czech Republic: Microbreweries and craft brands reviving Czech beer industry ...Click here
Brewery news Germany: Beer consumption down at this year’s Oktoberfest ...Click here

Graph of the week



Table of the week

France Barley Supply and Distribution


Table of the week.
Prices Evolution

Prices evolution

Barley Prices



Theoretical Malt Prices


Scientific Digest


Why are dry hopped beers more bitter?


ABSTRACT
This is a popular questions, and though it was not really proven so far, the idea that additional alpha acids and polyphenols as well as a certain brain illusion is well accepted. But here are some facts: This US team analysed dry hopped beers for their content of alpha and beta acids, humulinones and polyphenols. The correlation testing with the sensory trials showed that the bitterness contributed by dry hopping is a combination of polyphenols and humulinones! Also a strong correlation of aroma intensity and bitterness intensity was proven. So it is a combination of actual bitter tasting compounds and a portion of a brain based illusion - cheers!
Read more

Source: Barth Innovations

These Days in Business History


October 06
1781 Benjamin Hanks patents self-winding clock
1889 Thomas Edison shows his 1st motion picture

October 07
1806 Carbon paper patented in London by inventor Ralph Wedgewood
1910 Henry Ford institutes moving assembly line
1930 1st infra-red photograph, Rochester, NY

October 08
1846 George Westinghouse, Jr., is born in Central Bridge, N.Y. He later invents the Westinghouse air brake, making train travel safe and comfortable, and founds the Westinghouse Electric Co.
1869 J Frank Duryea was born, inventor of 1st auto built & operated in USA
2003 Arnold Schwarzenegger is elected the governor of California

Agenda




MaltMalt News Malt


Malt newsAustralia: Substandard malt supplied to customers
Brewers have been routinely supplied with substandard malt by Australia’s biggest producer, Joe White Maltings, which covered up the deception by altering chemical analysis ...More info on site



BreweryBrewery News Brewery


Brewery newsJapan: Asahi under pressure to step up acquisitions - CEO
Asahi, Japan’s biggest brewer, is under pressure to step up acquisitions in an effort to double its overseas business and challenge the dominance of ...More info on site


Brewery newsWorld: SABMiller boss says attempt to buy Heineken was not a defensive move
SABMiller boss Alan Clark said on October 6 there was no truth in speculation the brewer's interest in buying Dutch rival Heineken was a ...More info on site


Brewery newsItaly: Beer production declines by 0.3% in 2013
Italy’s 16 industrial plants and approximately 500 microbreweries last year produced a total of 13,256,000 hl of beer, down 0.3% from the 13,293,000 hl ...More info on site


Brewery newsRomania: First-half beer sales drop 9% because of excises increase
Beer sales in Romania dropped by 9% in the first half of this year compared to the same period of 2013, to 7.3 million ...More info on site


Brewery newsSouth Korea: Oriental Brewery quickly losing market dominance after “disinfectant odor” scandal
Oriental Brewery (OB) is quickly losing its market dominance after a “disinfectant odor” scandal that began in June, The Korea Times reported on October ...More info on site


Brewery newsJapan: Asahi Group Holdings head optimistic about Japan’s alcohol industry
Naoki Izumiya, the busy chief executive of Japan’s largest beer company, does not look the kind of man who would spend his mornings in ...More info on site


Brewery news USA: Craft beer drinkers are more diverse than ever
A new report from Bart Watson, the US Brewers Association’s (BA) staff economist, found that an influx of female drinkers, greater engagement in the Hispanic market, and geographic diversity of brewery locations have played pivotal roles in shaping a more well-rounded craft consumer base, brewbound.com reported on October, 7.

Today’s drinkers look a bit differently than they did in 2001.

According to data from the University of Maryland’s survey research center, the typical craft beer drinker in 2001 was a few things, if not totally stereotypical: white, male, 39 years of age and bearded. That same 39-year old male drinker also boasted a higher education, a “relatively high income,” and was “geographically concentrated,” the survey found.

While no updated median has been provided, specific statistics support the claim of a new demographic.

Using Nielsen panel data and analyses from Esri, a supplier of geographic information software, Watson found that women between the ages of 21 and 34 now consume 15 percent of total craft volume. Citing a recent report from Technomic outlining invigorated interest both on and off-premise from Hispanic consumers, Watson concludes that today’s beer drinkers are much more ethnically diverse as well.

If craft is to reach the oft-stated goal of gaining 20 ...More info on site


Brewery news USA: TTB simplifies excise tax regulations for small brewers
The Beer Institute, the national trade association representing brewers and beer importers, praised the Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau’s (TTB) decision to simplify excise tax regulations for small brewers, brewbound.com reported on October, 2.

“The brewing industry appreciates the work that the TTB has done to refine their rules and regulations to reduce unnecessary bureaucracy,” said Jim McGreevy, Beer Institute president and CEO. “The beer industry is experiencing immense change right now, thanks to efforts like this that open pathways to the marketplace for small brewers.”

This rule is for the benefit of small brewers, essentially defined by TTB as those which produce less than 7,200 barrels. The TTB’s rule would institute a flat $1,000 penal sum for the brewer’s bond for these small brewers whose excise tax liability is expected to be less than $50,000 in a given calendar year and who were liable for no more than $50,000 in such taxes during the preceding calendar year.

The rule also allows these small brewers to move from monthly reports on operations and taxes to a quarterly report. The goal of this rule change is to reduce administrative costs for small brewers and create greater efficiency for TTB.

The new rules will ...More info on site


Brewery news Australia: Any takeover of Australia’s Coopers Brewery is now much harder to succeed
The family that controls South Australia’s Coopers Brewery, Australia’s biggest locally owned brewer, has quietly changed the beverage company’s century-old constitution, which could make it almost impregnable to a hostile takeover by one of the global multinationals that control Australia’s A$7 billion beer market, The Australian reported on October 8.

The changes will likely dampen any appetite the nation’s biggest brewer Lion might have to re-enter the bruising and sometimes heated battle it fought in 2005 to grab control of Coopers in its ultimately failed A$420 million bid for the brewer.

It also puts up the “not for sale” sign to any other interloper such as second biggest player Carlton & United Breweries, which is owned by global brewing behemoth SABMiller.

Documents obtained by The Australian show that at a closed-door meeting of its tight-knit 143 shareholders held at the Coopers’ brewery in Adelaide, a tiny amendment was made to its constitution, which governs the way fair value of Coopers’ shares is calculated against the backdrop of a takeover.

The Coopers constitution, a complex document created in the 1920s and which was instrumental in sinking the hostile bid by Lion, then known as Lion Nathan, has been strengthened even more to what is referred ...More info on site


Brewery news World: SABMiller convinced it has the right marketing brew to woo female consumers
Tapping the female market has long been the Holy Grail for beer marketers in an industry desperately in need of extending its consumer base. Despite many high profile failures, the world’s second largest brewer SABMiller is convinced it has the right marketing brew to woo women, Marketing Week reported on October 7.

The Peroni maker says shifting the image of beer among females could take up to 20 years but believes there is an untapped thirst that has been ignored to date. SABMiller sees female drinkers as a key beneficiary of its wider bid to attract more consumers on more occasions through a mix of innovation, packaging and advertising.

Future attempts will revolve around more flavoursome beers, which make use of the 86 per cent hops SABMiller claims are not used by the industry, alongside marketing that pushes six distinctive experiences; family occasions such as BBQs, mixed gender casual parties, mixed gender casual meals, mixed gender evening meals, colleagues socialising and men together in bars.

At an event for analysts in London this week, Nick Fell, marketing director at SABMiller, says unlocking those consumers and occasions will flow from distribution, packaging and tie-ups with local retailers and is not be “hidden in the ...More info on site


Brewery news Canada: New beer standard to support Canada's brewers
Pierre Lemieux, Parliamentary Secretary to Agriculture Minister Gerry Ritz and Member of Parliament for Glengarry-Prescott-Russell, announced on October, 3 that the Government of Canada is fulfilling its commitment made as part of Economic Action Plan 2014 to modernize Canada's beer standards.

Canada's compositional standard for beer outlines the specific requirements that must be met for a product to be labelled, packaged, sold or advertised as beer. Brewers have expressed concerns that the existing standard is outdated and can create barriers for the introduction of new products.

The new proposed standard, which was developed in collaboration with industry, would provide for clearer and more modern regulations that would enable the industry to take full advantage of innovation and market developments. For example, the new standard would expand the definition of beer to allow for non-traditional ingredients such as spices and fruit. These changes would lead to more choices for consumers.

The consultation period will run until November 16, 2014.

The brewing industry is an important contributor to the Canadian economy, representing more than C $14 bln in economic activity or 0.9 per cent of total gross domestic product.

"The brewing industry is an important contributor to the Canadian economy. Modernizing the compositional ...More info on site


Brewery news Australia: Australia’s beer industry being redefined by craft breweries
One enduring legacy of Bruce Beresford's 1972 hit film, The Adventures of Barry McKenzie, is that many people overseas think Australians all run around guzzling Fosters lager, goodfood.com.au reported on October 5.

In reality, of course, the stuff in the blue can is something of a rarity in its homeland. The idea that beer can help characterise a region, or a culture, however, is increasingly finding support.

Australia, it seems, is steadily being redefined, not by its iconic draughts, nor even its wines, but by its hand-made beers.

"All of the craft breweries are doing well," said Doug Brooke, eponymous owner of Bendigo-based Brooke's Beer and board member of the peak Craft Beer Industry Association.

"Precise figures are difficult, but we estimate the sector is growing by around 10 per cent each year, with some individual breweries growing by as much as 100 per cent a year."

Definitions of what exactly comprises a craft beer can be tricky, but industry commentators concur that domestically produced posh squirt is going through the roof. Business analysts Ibis World describe the craft beer sector as "robust" – at a time when over-all beer consumption is at its lowest per capita level for almost seven decades.

There are about ...More info on site


Brewery news The Czech Republic: Microbreweries and craft brands reviving Czech beer industry
Only in the Czech Republic – where the population leads the world in beer consumption at an annual 144 litres per capita – can a brewer become a media star, The Financial Times reported on October 7.

Stanislav Bernard, a flamboyant, 59-year-old former electrical engineer, has become a household name with his eye-catching advertisements. A recent campaign depicted the tousled haired entrepreneur in uniform by a sentry box, replete with the slogan: “Be on your guard against Eurobeer”.

Intended to stress Mr Bernard’s commitment to ‘genuine’ Czech brews made according to traditional methods – as opposed to mass-produced industrial lager – the hoardings send an important marketing message, raise a chuckle from passing motorists and, most importantly, increase sales.

Buying a near-derelict, state-owned brewery in the small town of Humpolec after the Velvet Revolution, his small team sold 107,000 hectolitres in 1992 – four times the previous year’s volume.

“The beer they had been making lacked character,” Mr Bernard says. “We decided to have our own Pilsner-taste, but full-bodied and bitter, from Czech ingredients, and with no short cuts. It remains one of our core beliefs.”

This year, sales from the Bernard Family Brewery are expected to top 250,000 hectolitres.

While this is but 1.5 per ...More info on site


Brewery news Germany: Beer consumption down at this year’s Oktoberfest
Visitors to Munich's 181th Oktoberfest, which came to an end on October 5, drank substantially less beer than last year, ioL News reported.

About 6.3 million visitors consumed a total of 6.5 million litres of beer while in 2013, 6.4 million guests were served 7.7 million litres.

Munich Mayor Dieter Reiter called this year's festival “unbelievably pleasant,” and police and rescue services also were generally pleased.

Poor weather at the start of the festival resulted in fewer visitors, it is reported.



BarleyBarley News Barley


Barley newsUSA: Maltsters concerned about supply of malting barley this year
With the barley harvest wrapped up in most US areas, the maltsters are finally able to assess the total crop and there is concern ...More info on site


Barley newsFrance: Wheat and barley exports increase in July 2014
According to the French government, France exported 996,000 tonnes of wheat (excluding durum) in July 2014, which is up from the 829,000 tonnes exported ...More info on site


Barley newsGermany: Spring and winter barley production expected to increase this year
According to the agricultural ministry, Germany’s grain production is likely to total 52.0 mln tonnes this year which would be an increase by 8% ...More info on site


Barley news UK: Second set of AHDB/HGCA Cereal Quality Survey confirms lowest average nitrogen content of barley since 1977
The second set of results from the AHDB/HGCA Cereal Quality Survey have confirmed the average nitrogen content of UK barley is the lowest since records began in 1977, Farmers Guardian reported on October 7.

The final set of results is still to be collated, and the concluding report will be released at the end of October/early November.

The survey, which analysed 26,513 barley samples from across the UK, showed average nitrogen content was 1.53 per cent, which is lower than the three-year average of 1.68 per cent and the lowest recorded result since 1977.

The larger sample size gives a better regional representation than the August results, says HGCA.

Screening grades have improved from the first set of results and indicate grain size is currently above the three-year average says HGCA. Results from harvest 2012 are not included in the three-year average due to adverse harvest conditions leading to particularly poor results.

However, despite the increase in grain size, the average specific weight is lower than seen in the results collated in August.

AHDB/HGCA senior cereals and oilseeds analyst, Dr Amandeep Kaur Purewal, says: “Overall GB barley quality is reasonable in terms of specific weight and grain size, and the low average nitrogen levels ...More info on site



WhiskyWhisky News Whisky


Whisky newsWorld: Global Scotch whisky sales down 0.8% last year
Global Scotch whisky sales fell last year by 0.8% to 96 mln cases, according to data in a new just-drinks/The IWSR report, with 14 ...More info on site


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