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E-Malt.com Flash 26a June 27 - June 29, 2016
Quote of the Week
Anything becomes interesting if you look at it long enough.
Gustave Flaubert
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Currency Rates
Base Currency: Euro on June 29, 2016 |
Base Currency: US Dollar on June 29, 2016 |
|
1 EUR = 1.1073 USD
1 EUR = 0.8272 GBP
1 EUR = 1.4438 CAD
1 EUR = 1.4984 AUD
1 EUR = 113.4000 JPY
1 EUR = 3.7183 BRL
1 EUR = 71.7117 RUB
1 EUR = 7.3606 CNY
|
|
1 USD = 0.9046 EUR
1 USD = 0.7512 GBP
1 USD = 1.3036 CAD
1 USD = 1.3550 AUD
1 USD = 102.2600 JPY
1 USD = 3.3618 BRL
1 USD = 64.8095 RUB
1 USD = 6.6478 CNY
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Currency Rates Chart
Equities of the Largest Breweries
Average Market Prices Change Trend
June 29, 2016 |
Type |
Crop 2016 |
EUR |
% |
2rs Barley |
183.00-185.00 | 0.55% |
6rw Barley |
160.00-162.00 | |
2rs Malt |
379.50-381.50 | 1.67% |
6rw Malt |
351.00-353.00 | 1.44% |
Feed Barley |
137.00-139.00 | 1.43% |
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.
World: Malting industry remains divided as compared to beer industry’s rapid concentration
...Click here
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Vietnam: Interflour starts building its first malting plant in Vietnam
...Click here
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Australia: AB InBev, Kirin agree on compensation to Kirin for early termination of distribution agreement
...Click here
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USA: Molson Coors C$1 bln notes offering to close by July 7, proceeds to be used to partially fund MillerCoors stake acquisition
...Click here
|
UK: Brexit makes £44 a share offer for SABMiller by AB InBev significantly less attractive for shareholders
...Click here
|
India: Carlsberg India building one of its largest breweries in Karnataka
...Click here
|
Vietnam: Ministry of Industry and Trade delays transfer of Sabeco to State Capital Investment Corporation
...Click here
|
EU: Feed barley markets active, malting barley trade very small
...Click here
|
UK: Booming whisky, craft beer and real ale sectors boosting UK’s malting barley growing
...Click here
|
USA: Craft brewers remain worried about implications of AB InBev, SABMiller merger
...Click here
|
Australia: Coopers Brewery may be able to snag a few new brands thanks to AB InBev-SABMiller merger
...Click here
|
Azerbaijan: Baltika-Baku to suspend production for two months as from mid-August
...Click here
|
South Africa: Sharp differences on the last day of Competition Tribunal’s hearings over AB InBev’s acquisition of SABMiller
...Click here
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Sri Lanka: Carlsberg to brew and supply beer to Sri Lanka until Ceylon Beverage Holdings’ brewery is out of commission after floods
...Click here
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Graph of the week
Table of the week
EU Barley Malt Export
Prices Evolution
Barley Prices
Theoretical Malt Prices
Scientific Digest
PLAYING WITH EXTRACTION PARAMETERS TO GET THE RIGHT FLAVOR
ABSTRACT
CO2 is a very potent in extracting basically anything you need
from hops. This UK research team worked with different conditions
including liquid and supercritical CO2, as well as the addition of
other solvents, e.g. ethanol, to extract the many important aroma
fractions from hops. Each hop variety yields distinct oil fractions
and a combination of different varieties and fractions can of course
contribute to a wide portfolio of products. Also, the processing
of aged hops is feasible and possible undesirable flavours may be
eliminated in the process.
Marriott, R.: Fractionation of hop oils using CO2, oral presentation at the Trends in Brewing Conference, April 2016, Ghent.
Read more
Source: Barth Innovations
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These Days in Business History
27 June
1820 - 1st edition of newspaper "Courrier de la Meuse" published"
1922 - Alan Peacock is born, economist
2013 - NASA launches the Interface Region Imaging Spectrograph, a space probe to observe the Sun
28 June
1801 - Frederic Bastiat is born, French Economist
1894 - London Tower Bridge opens
29 June
1200 - In China, sunglasses are invented
1881 - 1st international telephone conversation, Calais, ME-St. Stephen, NB
1979 - The Wall Street Journal boot Chrysler from the Dow Jones Industrial Average and replace it with IBM
2007 - Apple Inc. releases its first mobile phone, the iPhone
Agenda
June 2016:
08-12: Mondial de la Biere 2016 (Montreal, Canada)
09-11: South Beer Cup 2016 (Curitiba, Brazil)
14-16: Shanghai International Brew & Beverage Manufacturing Technology and Equipment 2016 (Shanghai, China)
July 2016:
02: Beer Boot Camp 2016 (Johannesburg, South Africa)
07-10: Artbeerfest 2016 (Caminha, Portugal)
09: Beer Boot Camp 2016 (Cape Town, South Africa)
13-15: ProPack China 2016 (Shanghai, China)
August 2016:
05-07: The 20th International Berlin Beer Festival (Berlin, Germany)
09-13: The Great British Beer Festival 2016 (London, UK)
10-13: Vietfood & Beverage - ProPack 2016 (Ho Chi Minh, Vietnam)
13-17: World Brewing Congress 2016 (Denver, USA)
September 2016:
08-10: Irish Craft Beer Festival 2016 (Dublin, Ireland)
14-15: Food and Drink Technology Africa 2016 (Johannesburg, South Africa)
19-03 October: Oktoberfest 2016 (Munich, Germany)
24-25: Whisky Live Paris 2016 (Paris, France)
26-28: VLB Ibero-American VLB Symposium 2016 (Santiago de Chile, Chile)
28-30: Beer and Soft Drinks Industry - 2016 (Kyiv, Ukraine)
29-01 October: Stockholm Beer & Whisky Festival 2016 (Stockholm, Sweden)
October 2016:
06-08: Stockholm Beer & Whisky Festival 2016 (Stockholm, Sweden)
06-08: Great American Beer Festival 2016 (Denver, USA)
08-10: Brouwplus 2016 (Antwerp, Belgium)
11-14: China Brew, China Beverage 2016 (Shanghai, China)
21-23: The Finest Spirits & Beer Convention 2016 (Bochum, Germany)
November 2016:
08-10: Brau Beviale 2016 (Nuremberg, Germany)
09-12: Vietfood & Beverage - ProPack 2016 (Hanoi, Vietnam)
December 2016:
15-17: drink technology India 2016 (Mumbai, India)
More events are available on site e-malt.com
Malt News
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World: Malting industry remains divided as compared to beer industry’s rapid concentration
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Concentration of the beer industry has progressed rapidly in recent years and will continue in the future. The malting industry has seen quite a
...More info on site
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Vietnam: Interflour starts building its first malting plant in Vietnam
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Interflour, one of the largest flour millers in Asia, has started building its first malting plant in Vietnam to capitalise on the burgeoning middle
...More info on site
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Brewery News
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Australia: AB InBev, Kirin agree on compensation to Kirin for early termination of distribution agreement
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Australia’s biggest brewer, Lion will receive as much as $300 million in compensation for the early termination of its contract to distribute a portfolio
...More info on site
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USA: Molson Coors C$1 bln notes offering to close by July 7, proceeds to be used to partially fund MillerCoors stake acquisition
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Molson Coors Brewing Company’s wholly-owned indirect subsidiary Molson Coors International LP has recently priced its previously announced senior notes worth C$ 1 billion, consisting
...More info on site
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UK: Brexit makes £44 a share offer for SABMiller by AB InBev significantly less attractive for shareholders
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The £44 a share offer for SABMiller by Anheuser-Busch InBev (AB InBev) became significantly less attractive for shareholders after sterling was battered in the chaotic response to the UK voting to leave the EU, BDlive reported on June 27.
In London, the SABMiller share price was little changed on June 24, closing at £42.75, just 0.3% down on its opening level. On the JSE, SABMiller closed almost 5% lower at R871.88, reflecting the strengthening of the rand against sterling.
The slump in sterling against all currencies means the deal is now much less compelling than six months ago. Since the November 11 offer, sterling has slid 12% against the dollar. In dollar terms, the offer is now worth $95 bln compared with November’s $108.6 bln.
The conditions to the deal are likely to be completed within the next month. At that stage, the SABMiller board will recommend to shareholders whether they should accept the AB InBev offer.
Ahead of the June 23 Brexit referendum results, a positive recommendation had been an inevitability. The next four to six weeks in currency and equity markets are likely to be the most volatile in recent history. A positive recommendation is no longer inevitable.
Despite the turbulence, there was
...More info on site
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India: Carlsberg India building one of its largest breweries in Karnataka
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Carlsberg India is setting up one of its largest beer manufacturing facilities in Mysuru district of Karnataka. Under construction, it will have annual production
...More info on site
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Vietnam: Ministry of Industry and Trade delays transfer of Sabeco to State Capital Investment Corporation
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Vietnam’s Sabeco brewery was equitized eight years ago, but the Ministry of Industry and Trade (MOIT) still has not transferred the brewery to the
...More info on site
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Brazil: Heineken closes its brewery in Bahia
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Dutch brewer Heineken has shut down its brewery in Feira de Santana (the state of Bahia) in the north-eastern part of Brazil, G1 reported
...More info on site
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USA: Craft brewers remain worried about implications of AB InBev, SABMiller merger
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As the combination of the world’s two biggest beermakers moves closer to completion, craft brewers remain worried about the implications of competing against an even larger rival, St. Louis Post-Dispatch reported on June 26.
The merger of Anheuser-Busch InBev and SABMiller, announced last fall, has already gained antitrust approval from the European Union, Australia and other countries. Regulatory approval in the United States is drawing near, according to Reuters. If the sale is finalized, Belgium-based AB InBev would control about 29 percent of beer sold worldwide.
In the U.S., AB InBev contends the merger won’t have an impact. AB InBev plans to sell Miller brands in the U.S. that are partly owned by SABMiller to its joint venture partner, Molson Coors, to address antitrust concerns. With this sale, Bud Light would have separate ownership in the U.S. and still compete with Miller Lite domestically.
Buying SABMiller, according to AB InBev, is a means to boost sales in emerging markets including Africa.
In his testimony before a Senate Judiciary subcommittee hearing in December, AB InBev’s CEO Carlos Brito said SABMiller’s stake in MillerCoors would mean AB InBev’s U.S. market share would not change as a result of the combination. Divesting SABMiller’s stake in MillerCoors will
...More info on site
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Australia: Coopers Brewery may be able to snag a few new brands thanks to AB InBev-SABMiller merger
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Glenn Cooper, the chairman of Australia’s largest locally owned brewer, South Australia’s Coopers Brewery, believes the family-owned firm might be able to snag a few new brands that could fall out of the newly merged AB InBev-SABMiller beer colossus, helping to boost its market share in the midst of a continued downturn in the sector, The Australian reported on June 29.
Mr Cooper told The Australian Coopers was perfectly placed thanks to its national spread and distribution to team up with foreign beer brands seeking an independent local partner.
“As always when these takeovers occur globally, what’s quite good for us, and has occurred in the past, is that up comes a brand that doesn’t want to be part of that global coming together. An example of this was Carlsberg when we ended up brewing Carlsberg locally,’’ Mr Cooper said.
On June 27 there was a realigning of beer brands in Australia in the wake of this year’s $US107.7 billion (A$145.4 bln) takeover of SABMiller by AB InBev, with a portfolio of brands including Corona, Australia’s fourth-biggest selling beer, shifting from Lion back to AB InBev. Lion also lost local control of Budweiser, Stella Artois, Beck’s and Hoegaarden as they rejoined the AB
...More info on site
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Azerbaijan: Baltika-Baku to suspend production for two months as from mid-August
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Baltika-Baku, part of one of the world’s largest beer producer Carlsberg Group and leader in the brewing industry in Azerbaijan with a market share of over 75%, has announced a decision to suspend temporarily production and bottling of beer at the Baltika-Baku factory since 15 August 2016 for two months, Azerbaijan Business Center reported on June 29.
The company’s statement says that in 2015 the market volume decreased by 20% and in Q1 2016 it fell by another 35% compared to the same period last year. The negative trend is linked to macroeconomic factors and the effects of two devaluations of the national currency, which have a critical impact on the purchasing power of the population.
Suspending production will make it possible for the company to minimize its production costs and will give it the chance to maintain its business profitability in Azerbaijan by the end of 2016, Baltika’s statement says.
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South Africa: Sharp differences on the last day of Competition Tribunal’s hearings over AB InBev’s acquisition of SABMiller
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Sharp differences over the definition of “outlet” emerged on the last day of Competition Tribunal hearings over Anheuser-Busch (AB) InBev’s acquisition of SABMiller, Independent Online reported on June 27.
The commission had proposed that outlet referred to “retail outlets and taverns”.
But Heineken suggested a definition that included off-trade outlets such as grocery stores and on-trade outlets such as taverns, hotels, restaurants and nightclubs.
Distell legal representative Jeremy Gauntlett, on the other hand, called Heineken’s proposal a “partial laundry list”.
An agreement on what constitutes an outlet is significant given possible contractual relationships between liquor companies and sports stadiums where liquor is sold.
The tribunal, however, did not deal with the apparent disagreement over the definition. Chairman Norman Manoim on June 24 said the tribunal would consider the matter if a complaint was lodged.
Meanwhile, appearing on behalf of Minister of Economic Development Ebrahim Patel, Paul Coetser on June 24 urged the tribunal not to tamper with the conditions that came out as a result of the agreement between the department and the merging companies. He said the tribunal should not re-negotiate the “sacrosanct” conditions. These relate to public interest elements of the transaction.
“It is not the job of the tribunal to craft an agreement for
...More info on site
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Sri Lanka: Carlsberg to brew and supply beer to Sri Lanka until Ceylon Beverage Holdings’ brewery is out of commission after floods
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Sri Lanka's Ceylon Beverage Holdings Plc said its partner Carlsberg will brew and supply its brand with their factory expected to be out of commission for three months, after floods, EconomyNext reported on June 27.
The firm, which sells Lion and Carlsberg brands in Sri Lanka said it carried only about 15 days of finished product.
Beer demand has fallen after tax increases last year, driving more people to toddy and hard alcohol.
Demand has also fallen due to heavy rains.
Carlsberg Asia will brew the beer at four locations and ship the products to Sri Lanka.
"..Since the brewing process itself takes 15 days, raw materials need to be sourced & brands shipped to Sri Lanka, it will take some time before products start flowing back into the market on a regular basis," Chief Executive Suresh Shah told shareholders.
Though floods were an annual occurrence, this year the water levels had been higher and it had damaged the factory and its electronic circuitry.
These are custom made and took time to produce and arrive in Sri Lanka. The company said damage is still being assessed but it had flood cover and also business interruption insurance which would protect cashflows.
Lion said it had carried out relief
...More info on site
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Barley News
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EU: Feed barley markets active, malting barley trade very small
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Feed barley export markets were active in France, Germany and the Baltic countries in May, H. M. Gauger GmbH said in their report published
...More info on site
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UK: Booming whisky, craft beer and real ale sectors boosting UK’s malting barley growing
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With a strong beer drinking tradition and vibrant real ale and craft beer industries complementing the mainstream brewing sector, along with a booming whisky market, malting barley is big business in the United Kingdom, Farm Weekly reported on June 29.
Data from the Maltsters’ Association of Great Britain (MAGB) shows the UK uses nearly two million tonnes of malting barley each year.
Claire Strachan, of Simpson’s Malt, said malt for distillers was the major market segment.
“The whisky industry is really important and continues to grow,” she said.
While mainstream brewing is feeling the impacts of lower overall beer consumption, the real ale and craft brewing sectors are also performing strongly.
Barley production in the United Kingdom is centred on three major areas, Scotland, northern England and southern and eastern England.
Due to freight advantages, barley from Scotland and Northumbria in northern English is the first choice for the whisky industry.
Ms Strachan said the different types of malt required for whisky production and for different styles of beer meant there was a wide range of malt products created in the UK.
There is also a diverse selection of barley varieties grown although the most popular five lines account for a large majority of total tonnage.
The maltsters
...More info on site
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