There has been recent speculation that Pernod Ricard is weighing an acquisition of Treasury Wine Estates, which has been caught in the crossfire of an Austral-Chinese trade spat.
In recent years Treasury has adopted a growth strategy
that’s focussed on flagship brands leading growth in China, which has dragged
them out of the dog days a decade ago, narrowly escaping bids from KKR and TPG in 2014.
Of the company’s $1.0 billion revenue growth since FY12,
more than half has come from Asia and accounting for a little under a quarter
of total sales in FY20.
However, the revenues from Asia have operating margins that
are three times higher than other geographies, giving it an outsized portion of
operating profit. So, it’s no wonder the stock has been punished as the company
seems to have lost their golden goose.
Management has been scrambling to reallocate Penfolds ‘Bin’
and ‘Icon’ range into other markets (around 600,000 cases) while redirecting
contracted fruit supply from the less desirable end of the China portfolio (Particularly
Max’s blend and Rawsons Retreat – around 2 million cases) to other brands in
the portfolio that they claim is supply-constrained.
Given the premium they were commanding in China, it’s
unlikely they can attractively reallocate this volume elsewhere.
Conversely, global drinks and spirits businesses are
marketing and distribution machines of products that are often differentiated
by just a brand alone. Pernod Ricard is a €9bn pa business (trailing only
Diageo) of which almost half lies in Asia. However, the company’s wine offering
is meagre compared to its spirits portfolio, with reported revenue of just $500m from Jacob’s Creek and Spain’s Campo Viejo the only notable wines brands
beyond the Champagnes of Mumm and Perrier-Jouët.
Since wines make up such a small portion of total sales,
there are presumably immediate opportunities for cross-selling across all of
their markets without meaningful additional marketing spend. The local
distributors could move the ‘masstige’ Penfolds and
premium brands through the bar and restaurant channel with conceivably little effort.
In the longer-term, it is likely that China will return as a
market for Treasury and the Penfolds brands. Either the snap tariffs will be reversed
or they will ultimately find another way to market, like developing a suite of Napa products which makes me cringe but is already in the works. Making the
most of either would surely be easier for Pernod, who describes China as a
"must-win" market for them and has current hopes pinned on cognac, whiskey and
vodka.
One can assume their investment in Chinese distribution and
advertising would dwarf that of Treasury. As a point of comparison, Pernod has
684 employees in China compared to 126 to Treasury according to Linkedin.
Beyond the near-term flexibility, Pernod’s platform could
afford Treasury’s hamstrung business, the most attractive part of the deal from
the acquirers perspective would be the potential to cut corporate and marketing
costs.
Treasury themselves are targeting $85m pa of corporate and supply-chain savings over the next two years through the restructuring of their US business alone. The $50m of those savings that are expected to be recurring represent less than 10% of the group total SG&A spend of $583m in FY20.
While Treasury’s fruit sourcing and wine-making capabilities
will be of a high strategic value to Pernod who have failed to grow their Australian wine business since acquiring Orlando in 1989, I doubt that they will look
equally favourably on the in-country marketing teams and support functions that
would have a large overlap with their existing operations. Could further third of
SG&A costs - around $200m - be saved there?
So, that leaves investors to ponder how much Pernod might be willing to pay for a company of strategic value that would swiftly add A$800-900m in EBITDA (including estimated synergies)...