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E-Malt.com Flash 31a July 31 - August 02, 2017
Quote of the Week
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Currency Rates
Base Currency: Euro on August 02, 2017 |
Base Currency: US Dollar on August 02, 2017 |
|
1 EUR = 1.1812 USD
1 EUR = 0.8944 GBP
1 EUR = 1.4737 CAD
1 EUR = 1.4813 AUD
1 EUR = 130.5300 JPY
1 EUR = 3.6880 BRL
1 EUR = 70.7313 RUB
1 EUR = 7.9371 CNY
|
|
1 USD = 0.8463 EUR
1 USD = 0.7567 GBP
1 USD = 1.2504 CAD
1 USD = 1.2511 AUD
1 USD = 110.2800 JPY
1 USD = 3.1223 BRL
1 USD = 59.8454 RUB
1 USD = 6.7191 CNY
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Currency Rates Chart
Equities of the Largest Breweries
Average Market Prices Change Trend
August 02, 2017 |
French Barley/Malt Crop 2017 Bulk |
EUR/T |
% |
2RS Malting Barley (FOB Creil) |
189.50-191.50 | 1.06% |
6RW Malting Barley (FOB Creil) |
162.00-164.00 | |
2RS Malt (FOB Antwerp) |
386.00-388.00 | 0.64% |
6RW Malt (FOB Antwerp) |
352.50-354.50 | |
Feed Barley (FOB Creil) |
144.00-146.00 | 0.69% |
German Malting Barley Crop 2017 Bulk Ex Farm |
EUR/T |
% |
Average Malting Barley Price |
nq | |
Danish Malting Barley Crop 2017 Free on truck Ex Farm |
DKK/T |
% |
Malting Barley (East) |
1,354.00-1,356.00 | 4.63% |
Malting Barley (West) |
1,354.00-1,356.00 | 4.63% |
Danish Malting Barley Crop 2018 Free on truck Ex Farm |
DKK/T |
% |
Malting Barley (East) |
1,374.00-1,376.00 | 3.77% |
Malting Barley (West) |
1,374.00-1,376.00 | 3.77% |
Canadian Barley/Malt Crop 2016 |
CAD/T |
% |
2-Row Malting Barley, bulk, truck/railcar, Winnipeg |
nq |
|
2-Row Malting Barley, bulk in store, Vancouver |
nq |
|
6-Row Malting Barley, bulk, truck/railcar, Winnipeg |
nq |
|
2-Row Malt, bulk, truck/railcar, Winnipeg |
nq |
|
2-Row Malt, bulk in store, Vancouver |
nq |
|
6-Row Malt, bulk, truck/railcar, Winnipeg |
nq |
|
Feed Barley, basis Lethbridge |
207.00-209.00 |
9.47% |
Feed Barley, basis Winnipeg |
207.00-209.00 |
9.47% |
Feed Barley, bulk in store, Vancouver |
269.00-271.00 |
7.14% |
US Barley/Malt Crop 2016 |
USD/T |
% |
2-Row Malting Barley, bulk, railcar Great Falls, Montana |
159.00-161.00 |
|
6-Row Malting Barley, bulk, railcar Minneapolis, Minnesota |
nq |
|
6-Row Malt, bulk, railcar Minneapolis, Minnesota |
nq |
|
Feed Barley, basis Great Falls, Montana |
100.00-102.00 |
|
No change;
Price increase;
Price decrease versus last publication.
|
Click here to see our Market Prices History.
World: Beer output decline in 2016 less sharp than expected
...Click here
|
World: Heineken’s first-half results beat analysts’ expectations
...Click here
|
Italy: First-half beer sales up 10% in value and 11.5% in volume
...Click here
|
Vietnam: Foreign investors may not have the opportunity to get majority stakes in Sabeco and Habeco
...Click here
|
Germany: Drought leaves brewers and hop merchants on tenterhooks ahead of this year’s harvest
...Click here
|
Portugal: Beer consumption up 10% in January – June this year
...Click here
|
Nigeria: Guinness Nigeria to shift focus from premium to “lower end” volume market
...Click here
|
Australia: Small private equity firms and wealthy families expected to increase investments in craft beer
...Click here
|
Sri Lanka: Lion Brewery’s credit rating downgraded amid lower beer sales
...Click here
|
Australia: Schooner could resurface as malting variety of significance to craft brewing sector
...Click here
|
Japan: Beer enjoying strong sales thanks to high summer temperatures
...Click here
|
Nepal: Brewers will have to put excise duty stickers on beer bottles from now on
...Click here
|
Australia: Lion to stop brewing Knappstein Reserve Lager, close brewery in South Australia
...Click here
|
Thailand & Cambodia: Thailand’s craft beer revolution currently brewed abroad
...Click here
|
Burundi: Consumers complain of Amstel beer shortage
...Click here
|
Graph of the week
Table of the week
World Beer Production by Continent 2008 - 2016
Prices Evolution
Barley Prices
Theoretical Malt Prices
These Days in Business History
31 July
1790 - 1st US patent granted, to Samuel Hopkins for a potash process
1809 - 1st practical US railroad track (wooden, for horse-drawn cars), Philadelphia
1925 - Unemployment Insurance Act passed in England
01 August
1930 - Clarence Birdseye is awarded a U.S. patent for the invention of packaged frozen food
1950 - Steve Wozniak, future co-inventor of the Apple computer, is born
1981 - Pres. Ronald Reagan signs into law the Economic Recovery Tax Act of 1981, the biggest tax cut in American history, which streamlines the Federal income tax brackets, lowers the top rate to 36%, and creates the universally-deductible Individual Retirement Account
02 August
1858 - 1st street mailboxes-Boston, Mass
1890 - The BOVESPA (Bolsa de Valores de Sao Paulo, or Sao Paulo Stock Exchange), Brazil's central securities market, is founded
1984 - Euro Court condemns phone-tapping
2000 - The New York Stock Exchange begins trading in decimals, ending the two-century-old practice of pricing stocks in increments of 1/8th of a dollar
Agenda
August 2017:
04-06: The 21st International Berlin Beer Festival (Berlin, Germany)
08-12: The Great British Beer Festival 2017 (London, UK)
09-12: Vietfood & Beverage 2017 (Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam)
September 2017:
03-06: 18th Australian Barley Technical Symposium (Hobart, Tasmania)
07-09: Irish Craft Beer Festival 2017 (Dublin, Ireland)
11: International MicroBrew Symposium 2017 (Munich, Germany)
11-15: drinktec 2017 (Munich, Germany)
16-03 October: Oktoberfest (Munich, Germany)
23-24: Whisky Live Paris 2017 (Paris, France)
October 2017:
16-17: 104 VLB October Convention 2017 (Berlin, Germany)
23-25: 8th Ibero-American VLB Symposium 2017 in Guatemala (Guatemala City)
26-28: drink technology India 2017 (New Delhi, India)
November 2017:
22-23: Craft Beer Italy 2017 (Milan, Italy)
More events are available on site e-malt.com
Brewery News
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World: Beer output decline in 2016 less sharp than expected
|
As a result of information belatedly received from various countries and corrections made known to the Barth-Haas Group after last year’s report went to
...More info on site
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World: Molson Coors’ Q2 net sales decrease by 0.6%
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Molson Coors, the world’s second largest brewer, saw its net sales decrease by 0.6% in the second quarter as it comes under increased pressure
...More info on site
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World: Heineken’s first-half results beat analysts’ expectations
|
Heineken, the world’s second-largest brewer by sales, beat analysts’ expectations in the first half as it reported a rise in revenues and earnings in
...More info on site
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Italy: First-half beer sales up 10% in value and 11.5% in volume
|
Italian beer retail sales in the first six months of 2017 grew by 10% in value to €612 million and by 11.5% in volume,
...More info on site
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USA: Craft beer output up 5% in H1 2017
|
Small and independent craft brewers demonstrated continued, but slowed, growth, according to new mid-year metrics released by the Brewers Association (BA)—the not-for-profit trade association dedicated to small and independent American brewers. American craft beer production volume increased five percent during the first half of 2017.
“The growth pace for small and independent brewers has stabilized at a rate that still reflects progress but in a more mature market. Although more difficult to realize, growth still exists,” said Bart Watson, chief economist, Brewers Association. “The beer world is highly competitive and there is certainly a mixed bag in terms of performance. Some breweries are continuing to grow, whereas others are having to evolve their position and nurture new opportunities to ensure they keep pace. Many brewers are benefiting from on-premises and taproom sales, and recent state-based reforms have the potential to help brewers in new regions capitalize on this growth.”
As of June 30, there were 5,562 operating breweries in the U.S., an increase of 906 from the same time period the previous year. Additionally, there were approximately 2,739 breweries in planning. Craft brewers currently employ an estimated 128,768 full-time and part-time workers in a variety of roles including numerous manufacturing jobs, all
...More info on site
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Vietnam: Foreign investors may not have the opportunity to get majority stakes in Sabeco and Habeco
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To date, two of Vietnam’s largest brewers Sabeco and Habeco have yet to publish their specific state divestment plans, however, foreign investors may not
...More info on site
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Portugal: Beer consumption up 10% in January – June this year
|
Beer consumption in Portugal has increased by 10% year-on-year during the first half of 2017, according to data from Nielsen.
If volume sales continue to increase at this pace, 2017 could be the year with the highest level of growth in the last decade, said Nielsen’s client development manager Tiago Aranha.
He added that both hospitality and retail channels registered double-digit growth during the first six months of the year. Around three million households consumed beer at home over the last year, which represents 76% of the total in Portugal.
After a period of declining consumption in recent years, "the penetration of beer in homes recovered in 2017, with significant increases in the frequency and quantity of consumption", said Aranha.
He pointed out that the three key factors to ensure further growth are the recovery of the economic situation, the increase in the number of consumers, and favourable weather conditions. The seasonality of the market is one of the barriers preventing increased consumption in Portugal, as almost half of the volumes are sold in the summer months
Beer is mostly consumed by individuals between the ages of 26 and 45, mainly men, although Nielsen says that an increase in beer consumption among women is evident.
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Nigeria: Guinness Nigeria to shift focus from premium to “lower end” volume market
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Brewer Guinness Nigeria is shifting its focus from premium brands to the "lower end" volume market in order to boost sales and revive profits, it said in its rights issue share offer prospectus, Reuters reported on August 2.
The Nigerian subsidiary of Diageo is looking to raise 39.7 billion naira ($109 mln) to help reduce its now expensive dollar-denominated debt and to support its volume growth strategy in the face of a recession in Africa's biggest economy.
Diageo, which owns 54 percent of the company, is supporting the cash call by converting into equity part of a dollar-denominated loan which it granted Guinness Nigeria at the peak of Nigeria's currency crisis.
The company said shareholders can buy five new shares for every 11 held at 58 naira a share, a 17 percent discount on August the 2nd’s market price of 69.87 naira.
"Given the economic recession in Nigeria ... the company plans to deepen its participation in the value beer segment and increase beer product offerings in the lower end of the market," Guinness Nigeria said in the share sale prospectus.
Africa's second largest beer market after South Africa is dominated by multinational brewers, with Guinness saying the market was growing at 7 percent a
...More info on site
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Australia: Small private equity firms and wealthy families expected to increase investments in craft beer
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Craft beer in Australia is about to transform from small business into big business, at least for some brewers, New Zealand Herald reported on July 28.
The sector has been growing strongly and some brewers are seeking external capital to expand, but they will need to be careful that their expansion doesn't cost them customers.
According to Deloitte, small private equity firms and wealthy families are likely to put more funds into the craft beer segment in the coming years as they try to benefit from the increased liking of Australian drinkers for more unusual beers.
Craft beer has grown exponentially in Australia, with about 420 craft beer companies around, up from just 30 brewers in 2006.
Even so, craft beer accounts for just 4 to 5 per cent of beer sales in Australia. Yet sales in the US point to the potential of the market. In America, craft beers hold a market share of about 12 per cent and account for 20 per cent of total beer sales because they sell for higher prices.
In fact, in the US, private equity firms are already very active in the craft beer sector.
In many ways the private equity trend is at odds with the fiercely independent
...More info on site
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Sri Lanka: Lion Brewery’s credit rating downgraded amid lower beer sales
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Fitch Ratings on July 31 downgraded the credit rating of Sri Lanka’s largest brewer, Lion Brewery (Ceylon) PLC, amid lower beer sales as a result of the higher taxes imposed by the authorities over the last 18 months, the Daily Mirror reported.
Accordingly, Lion’s national long-term rating and long-term rating on its outstanding senior unsecured debentures were downgraded to ‘A+(lka)’ from ‘AA-(lka)’. The outlook is negative.
“The downgrade reflects Fitch’s expectations that Lion’s net leverage, defined as lease-adjusted debt net of cash/operating EBITDAR, is unlikely to fall below 2.0x over the next three years due to lower beer sales from the higher taxes imposed over the last 18 months.
We do not expect Lion’s EBITDA to recover to historical levels over the same period. The negative outlook reflects the potential for further downgrades should Lion’s sales volume not recover enough in the next 18 months to reduce leverage to less than 3.0x,” Fitch said.
Lion’s net leverage worsened to 6.3x during the financial year ended-March 2017 (FY17), from 1.9x at end-FY16, as the beer volume dropped by more than 50 percent due to successive tax increases and a six-month halt in domestic production due to floods in 2016.
The beer industry volumes saw a
...More info on site
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Japan: Beer enjoying strong sales thanks to high summer temperatures
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With high summer temperatures affecting many parts of Japan, beer and other beverages are enjoying strong sales — along with heat-reduction products from air conditioners to cans of cooling spray, The Japan Times reported on July 31.
While manufacturers step up production, retailers are reinforcing sales campaigns to make the most of the business opportunity.
Asahi Breweries Ltd. saw sales of its Clear Asahi third-segment beer-like beverage grow 6 percent year-over-year in the July 1-20 period. For the whole of July and August, the company projects a 5 percent output increase for the product.
At Sapporo Breweries Ltd., beer sales in June increased 5 percent and stayed solid in July. In August, Sapporo will raise beer production by 5 percent.
Shipments of Kirin Beverage Co.’s Salty Litchi soft drink rose 20 percent in the first 25 days of July, becoming popular due to the perception that it prevents dehydration and heatstroke. Kirin plans to boost the output of the product 2.8-fold in August.
Akagi Nyugyo Co. enjoyed a 50 percent sales increase for the soda flavor variety of its staple Garigarikun popsicle in the July 11-20 period.
“The product sold well for this period,” a marketing official at the company said. Industry insiders say popsicles start
...More info on site
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Nepal: Brewers will have to put excise duty stickers on beer bottles from now on
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Beer producers in Nepal will be required to put excise duty stickers on beer bottles from now on, according to a recent amendment in the Excise Duty Rules 2002. Currently, they put the stickers on the cartons only, Republica reported on July 29.
Inland Revenue Department (IRD) will soon publish a notice to all beer producers asking them to implement the new arrangement about excise duty. They will, however, be given some time to prepare for this. Producers will have to put the sticker on the bottle caps at the time of manufacturing.
Deputy director general of the department, Chandra Kala Paudel, said that the new arrangement is for ensuring excise duty compliance on all beer bottles. It is also aimed at controlling possible attempt of tax evasion, she said.
"This will eliminate chances of a single bottle coming out of the cartoon knowingly or unknowingly," said Paudel. "It will control revenue leakage."
The beer producers will have to put stickers during manufacturing, Paudel added.
The department will provide them the excise duty stickers. The rate of excise duty for a litre of beer is Rs 115.
There are half a dozen beer producers in the country producing different brands. However, the beer market is dominated
...More info on site
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Australia: Lion to stop brewing Knappstein Reserve Lager, close brewery in South Australia
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Lion has decided to stop brewing Knappstein Reserve Lager and will close the Enterprise Brewery in Clare, South Australia, the Australian Brews News reported on August 2.
Lion said in a statement that production of Knappstein will cease on August 11. This reportedly followed a review of the business after Knappstein brewer Mel Fettke announced plans to leave for a winemaking role.
“As a result, the Enterprise Brewery in Clare, South Australia (where Knappstein Reserve Lager is brewed) will also cease brewing beer until a future use for the brewery site and brewery kit is decided,” said Lion.
“This is due to declining volume of the brand over the last few years and the brewery operating significantly below capacity.
“None of our people are impacted by this decision, as they will continue to work throughout our brewing network.”
Lion no longer owns the Enterprise Brewery site, having sold Knappstein and all its other wine brands to Accolade Wines in November last year.
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Thailand & Cambodia: Thailand’s craft beer revolution currently brewed abroad
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From a small, unassuming factory in the Cambodian outpost town of Koh Kong, a couple of rebel Thai brewers are leading a craft beer revolution, Channel NewsAsia reported on July 30.
Nestled strategically close to the Thailand border, Stone Head is a company in a unique form of exile with beer being brewed by mavericks.
With small-scale beer production prohibited in their home country, this is ostensibly a beer start-up taken across international borders for the purpose of survival.
On site, there is a distinct earthy aroma of boiling malt and hops in the air and a dozen or so polished silver fermenting tanks are slowly transforming raw ingredients into a variety of first-class craft creations.
The modest set-up looks similar to other boutique breweries growing in abundance around the world, but here each drop is being forged out of defiance.
On the final product, the words “First Thai legal craft beer” are emblazoned. It is clear that these brewers are the obstinate type. “The name Stone Head, it means we are stubborn,” explains one of the group’s founders, Dusadee Thummarat.
The slogans on his t-shirt further explain the attitudes of the Stone Head crew.
“They tried to bury us – They didn’t know we were seed,”
...More info on site
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Burundi: Consumers complain of Amstel beer shortage
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A shortage of Amstel beer 65 cl in Burundi is making consumers complain and suspect its withdrawal from the market. However, Brarudi, the Burundi brewery company, says the scarcity of that beer is due to its high consumption these days, All Africa reported on August 2.
"We were told to give back the empty bottles of Amstel 65cl and only sell the 50cl Amstel beer", says a Brarudi Strategic sale depot owner in Nyakabiga area, centre of the capital Bujumbura.
Some suspect that Brarudi wants to prioritize exportation. "There has been Amstel 65 cl shortage since last week. We receive other drinks except that beer. It's said that Brarudi wants to withdraw this alcoholic drink on the local market and sell it outside the country. This is a very big loss as some of our customers who cannot find this type of drink go elsewhere to look for it", says a bar owner in Bujumbura city.
This lack of this particular drink does not go down well with some people. "It is the only drink I was accustomed to taking. I will be obliged to drink water. I beg the brewery company to bring it back," says a man met in Nyakabiga.
In a
...More info on site
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Barley News
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Australia: Schooner could resurface as malting variety of significance to craft brewing sector
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Schooner barley could resurface as a malting variety of significance to the craft brewing sector, based on its flavour characteristics, making it the Australian equivalent of the prized English variety, Maris Otter, Grain Central reported on August 1.
That hypothesis was posed by Coopers maltings manager, Doug Stewart, who in his keynote address at last week’s Australian Craft Brewers Conference in Adelaide, said heritage varieties like Schooner could well supply the market with the kind of malt craft brewers were chasing to produce a balanced beer.
Bred in England in the 1960s, Maris Otter was a leading malting variety in the UK until the mid-1980s, when farmers, maltsters and brewers turned to other varieties with higher yields and preferred fermentation results.
Australia’s own heritage variety, Schooner, is also known for its flavour and helps produce a balanced beer, though over time Schooner met the same fate.
Maris Otter’s popularity waned until the late 1990s, when its flavour brought it back into demand.
“Brewers of real ale in the UK came to believe that beer brewed from Maris Otter malts were generally superior in flavour,” Dr Stewart said.
While hops have continued to be crucial in determining a beer’s flavour, Dr Stewart said barley should not be
...More info on site
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Hops News
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Germany: Drought leaves brewers and hop merchants on tenterhooks ahead of this year’s harvest
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Drought in Germany, the world’s top producer and exporter of bittering hops, has left brewers and hops merchants on tenterhooks ahead of this year’s
...More info on site
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UK: British hop growers in for a bumper year
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A dry spell in Germany and a rising thirst for craft beer look set to provide a bumper year for British hop growers, The
...More info on site
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