Workers check bottled liquor at Shui Jing Fang Group in Chengdu, Sichuan province. The group saw a loss of 85 million yuan ($13.7 million)in the first three months of 2014 and is forecast to report a loss for the full year. XINHUA |
Slumping economy, austerity drive both help dry up revenue
China's leading liquor producers continue to feel the effects of the ongoing austerity and anti-corruption campaigns, according to reports showing that first-quarter revenues and profits were hard-hit.
Baijiu maker Shui Jing Fang Group, acquired in 2006 by London-based Diageo, saw a loss of 85 million yuan ($13.7 million) in the first three months of 2014 and is forecast to report a net loss this year.
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Last year was the first loss Shui Jing Fang posted since being acquired by Diageo, a British multinational that sells spirits including Johnnie Walker Scotch whisky and Smirnoff vodka.
Medium- and high-end products make up about 90 percent of its portfolio. Its new low-end products, which entered the market only in the latter part of last year, saw declining revenue of 31.89 percent. The liquor maker has set a sales target of 335 million yuan in 2014, down 30 percent from 2013.
As for Wuliangye Group, another top baijiu brand, its first-quarter financial results showed net profits down by 27.8 percent to 2.61 billion yuan and revenue of 6.71 billion yuan, down 22.5 percent, the first decline of the first quarter since 2003.
Jiugui Liquor Co Ltd recorded revenue of 81.3 million yuan, down 58.94 percent. Its net profits declined 83.92 percent to 1.62 million yuan. Kweichow Moutai Co Ltd, the flagship brand in the industry, saw slight growth at 2.96 percent in terms of net profits, but it still was its lowest growth in net profits in the first quarter since going public in 2001.