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NOVEMBER 27, 2006
It's Miller Time In China SABMiller's Snowbeer is flooding the country's rural regions After SABMiller lost a bidding war for China's Harbin Brewery Group to Anheuser-Busch (BUD ) Cos. two years ago, it looked as if America's King of Beers would reign over the Middle Kingdom as well. Anheuser-Busch, after all, had already sealed a deal with China's leading brewery, Tsingtao, and with Harbin in its stable it looked unbeatable. But SABMiller had a Plan B that could well give it the throne after all. Since losing Harbin, London-based SAB has focused its energies on a 12-year-old joint venture, China Resources Snow Breweries Ltd., that is now thriving. In June, CR Snow, which includes 46 breweries across the country, surpassed longtime leader Tsingtao for the No. 1 spot. For the 12 months through June, CR Snow produced nearly 40 million barrels, vs. 37 million for Tsingtao. As a result, CR Snow boasts 14.9% of the Chinese market, compared with Tsingtao's 13.9%. "Our growth has been on the back of a very consistent and targeted strategy,"says Wayne Hall, SABMiller's finance director in China. Both companies want to be the toast of China. As beer sales in the U.S. and Western Europe have lost their fizz, they're growing at 8%-plus annually in China. That has helped China overtake the U.S. as the world's top beer market. SAB was early to see the promise of China, where it has been brewing since 1994. Yet instead of targeting big cities such as Shanghai and Beijing, as its competitors did, SABMiller scooped up breweries in less affluent areas, including the northeastern rust belt and the populous inland province of Sichuan. This contrarian strategy has allowed SABMiller to build up a national footprint at bargain prices. While Anheuser ponied up $700 million--as much as $62 per barrel of annual brewing capacity--for Harbin, SABMiller has typically paid $30-$40 per barrel for its breweries. "SABMiller has made a mint by purposely buying cheaper assets," says Bear, Stearns & Co. (BS ) analyst Anthony Bucalo. SABMiller has been smart in its positioning of the flagship Snow brand. To appeal to upwardly mobile youth, it slapped a shiny, modern label on the 50-year-old brew and launched a national ad campaign emphasizing the beer's freshness, complete with sweepstakes that reward winners with outdoorsy vacations. The marketing push is paying off as it presses into the big cities. China now accounts for nearly 20% of SABMiller's total beer volumes, and Snow has become China's No. 1 brand. Soon, it will probably surpass Miller Lite as the biggest seller in the company's cooler. BUD'S COMEBACK Anheuser remains a formidable foe. If you factor in Harbin and its own Budweiser, the brewer remains bigger than CR Snow in China. Its century-old Tsingtao is a big player in the premium segment, where profits are plumper, and it plans to go national with Harbin, currently concentrated in the northeast. "We have more of a premium portfolio, which at the end of the day is how you're going to make it in China," says Stephen J. Burrows, CEO of Anheuser-Busch International. Both companies, meanwhile, could be tripped up by China's fragmented market, where restaurants, not supermarkets or liquor stores, account for the lion's share of beer sales. A byzantine distribution system pinches profits and makes it tough even for international heavyweights to dictate pricing and influence how their beers are displayed. By Adrienne Carter, with Bruce Einhorn in Shanghai Get BusinessWeek directly on your desktop with our RSS feeds. ![]() Add BusinessWeek news to your Web site with our headline feed. Click to buy an e-print or reprint of a BusinessWeek or BusinessWeek Online story or video. To subscribe online to BusinessWeek magazine, please click here. Learn more, go to the BusinessWeekOnline home page | |