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AB InBev shares tumble as sales slide in China and Brazil

Result adds to investor worries over beer volumes

Signal Hill Products has a licence to produce and distribute Miller and Bavaria, and other small local brands. Stock photo.
Signal Hill Products has a licence to produce and distribute Miller and Bavaria, and other small local brands. Stock photo. (123RF/VLADISLAVS GORNIKS )

Brewer AB InBev said on Thursday its second-quarter sales volumes fell more than expected due to weak demand in Brazil and China, adding to investor worries over industry growth and sending its shares to a five-month low.

Shares in AB InBev, owner of SA Breweries and maker of brands including Corona and Stella Artois, were down 11.2% by 2.07pm, hitting their lowest since February and heading for their biggest single-day decline since 2020.

Volumes at the world's largest brewer by sales fell 1.9% in the three months through June, vs analyst expectations for a 0.3% decline, with a sharp 9% drop in Brazil a particular negative.

In China, where AB InBev has been struggling to keep pace with growth at rivals, its volumes fell 7.4%.

The company did, however, report revenue and profit growth, with the latter ahead of forecasts at 6.5%.

CEO Michel Doukeris told Reuters by phone that Brazil had been hit by poor weather, which had extended throughout the beginning of July.

“Our brands remain healthy. We had very good growth for premium brands,” he said, adding the company could deliver both in Brazil and across South America in the second half.

Some investors, such as Daniel Isaacs, equity analyst at AB InBev shareholder 36 ONE, said they were also disappointed that AB InBev had not announced any new share buyback, despite its old programme coming to a close.

AB InBev has in recent quarters consistently outperformed expectations on profits and increased revenues by getting drinkers to pay more for its beers. But it, and other top brewers, have struggled to get volumes growing.

Rival Heineken also sounded cautious about volumes on Monday, citing tariff uncertainties, sending its shares more than 8% lower.

Heineken said US tariff threats had hit consumer confidence and dented beer sales both in the US and elsewhere in the Americas — key regions for AB InBev. But AB InBev did not cite this as a factor.

For AB InBev, analysts pointed to bright spots, including in North America, where the company performed better than expected.

But problems in Brazil, where AB InBev had underperformed the wider industry, overshadowed this, according to Siphelele Mdudu, investment analyst at Matrix Fund Managers, an AB InBev investor.

Mdudu noted, however, that Heineken had grown market share in Brazil, and was planning to up competition there including via a new brewery opening this year.

“In your own backyard, Brazil, you've lost volumes,” he said, adding AB InBev “cannot afford to disappoint” in such key markets.

Reuters


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