{"id":3904,"date":"2015-10-13T15:02:16","date_gmt":"2015-10-13T21:02:16","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/brutalhammer.com\/?p=3904"},"modified":"2015-10-13T15:04:26","modified_gmt":"2015-10-13T21:04:26","slug":"one-beer-company-to-rule-them-all","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/brutalhammer.com\/one-beer-company-to-rule-them-all\/","title":{"rendered":"One Beer Company to Rule Them All"},"content":{"rendered":"
The Lord of the Brews is now A-B-InBev-SABMIiller, or whatever name this hybrid half-orc of a company decides to call itself. The Anheuser-Busch InBev\/South African Breweries merger<\/a> is historic. One company will now make a third of the world’s beer, leaving second-place Heineken far behind.<\/p>\n Anheuser-Busch InBev – 20.8%<\/p>\n SABMiller – 9.7%<\/p>\n Heineken – 9.1%<\/p>\n Carlsberg – 6.1%<\/p>\n China Resources Enterprise – 6%<\/p>\n Source: Euromonitor, based on 2014 figures<\/p><\/blockquote>\n But a union of the Two Towers — Budweiser and Miller — isn’t likely. The new company will probably have to sell its share in the MillerCoors<\/a> joint venture to satisfy U.S. antitrust laws. The obvious buyer is Molson Coors, already the largest brewer based in North America (A-B InBev is headquartered in Belgium; St. Louis is merely its branch office).<\/p>\n This is a price A-B InBev is perfectly willing to pay, according to the experts. Macrobrew sales have been flat in the U.S. for a while, and show no signs of turning around in the face of the craft beer revolution. The emerging market is Africa<\/a>. Budweiser and Stella Artois don’t have much of a presence there, but SAB’s roots go back to the 1890s when it started out selling beer to South African gold miners. On the continent of poison homebrew, it seems that drinking a famous brand has become a status symbol — a sign that you’ve made it in life, and don’t have to score dubious hooch on the sly from a bootlegger.<\/p>\n With something close to a global monopoly, the merged companies might be tempted to raise prices. But at least one analyst doesn’t think they will<\/a>:<\/p>\n Neil Saunders, a retail analyst at consultancy Conlumino, said that while the company might like to increase its prices it would be a risky business decision.<\/p>\n That risk is in part due to the growing popularity of craft and independent brewers which have contributed to an increasingly competitive drinks market.<\/p>\n “I think they will hope to put prices up but the thing that makes it very difficult for them is there’s very genuine competition from the niche brewers, western Europe and America.<\/p>\n “If they put prices up it could lead consumers away,” Mr Saunders said.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n\n
Global market share of five biggest beer companies<\/h2>\n