Viewing entries tagged
brewed-under-licence

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Fosters to lose Corona?

Interesting speculation in The Age that Fosters could lose the Corona and Stella licences. To me the most important part of this article is this, tucked away right at the very end:

When Foster's releases its interim results next month it will show that the margins and profits of its beer business have held up, while volume has fallen. The question for the company is, how long can it keep letting market share go before it has to start buying volume?

In beer economics, less production volume means less recovery of production fixed costs. It's all to do with losing or winning scale economies.

It pretty much sums up the big brewing industry - it's a unit cost game. I just hope that the quest for volume doesn't see the business pressuring Matilda Bay to tinker with beers like Dogbolter or Alpha Pale Ale as they have in the past with Redback. Big Helga, which I enjoyed when it was launched, was obviously a style selected to appeal to a wide audience but was still a pretty good, if undemanding, beer. Their competition in the 'big craft' market, Lion Nathan's James Squire, has seemingly toned down the flavour of its major brews - the Amber and Golden Ales - in the search for market share and the beers have suffered greatly - though their popularity has grown...the commodity paradox.

The other interesting element to this speculation is what will happen to XXXX's intended 'Corona killer' Summer Bright Lager if Lion does get the Corona licence in Australia? While the brewery officially denied that SBL was going after Corona when it launched, it looks, quacks and waddles like a duck. Many Lion Nathan affiliated pubs in Brisbane have SBL on the same hig value shelf, right next to Corona in their bar fridge facings and that wouldn't happen without the brewery's  blessing.  They are going head to head. With two beers looking exactly the same and tasting almost identical but one selling  as low as $4 a bottle compared to Corona's $7+, there is only so far exotic goes before the beer "from where you'd rather be" changes to "I'll holiday at home and save my money." Or in the case of these beers, drink the local and get more value for my money - which, means drink more for the same amount.

I've seen nothing official yet but the reports I'm hearing from pubs is that the Summer Bright Lager is kicking goals, and doing a straw poll myself at pubs that had both - the market share was close to 50-50, although the XXXX was still being heavily promoted. I wonder whether Grupo Modelo would give Lion Nathan the Corona licence while they were competing directly against it, or would Lion kill off what seems to be a successful launch in order to get the "jewel in the crown in the foreign premium beer category."

No matter what, interesting times ahead in the world of uninteresting beer.

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No Heineken, no sense of humour

It's probably because they "develop their portfolio of brands" rather than "brew beer" that makes the multinational malt-derived alcohol companies such a humourless bunch, but this is pretty heavy-handed and petty even by their standards.

Heineken cracks down on tiny Swiss "Keineken"

(AP) – 10 hours ago

AMSTERDAM — Swiss police have seized 1,000 bottles of locally made "Keineken" beer after the Dutch beer giant Heineken NV complained its brand was being infringed.

The name "Keineken" appears to be a pun in German meaning "No Heineken."

Heineken spokesman Jeroen Breuer said Tuesday a judge in the Swiss canton of Obwalden ordered police to seize the brew after agreeing Keineken infringed the Heineken brand.

Breuer said Heineken doesn't consider the size of its opponents when its brand is being misused.

"Whether the name is a joke or a way of getting publicity — those are questions for them to answer," he said.

A note on Keineken's Web site complains that foreign companies have "swallowed" all Switzerland's independent brewers.

"Our name says it all: Keineken."

While I'm at it with Heineken, what is it with this ad:

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l-NfrBgYIEQ]

Apart from creeping me out, I'm not quite sure what it says about their beer...or about women. I'm gratified to see that I'm not alone.

At least Fosters do make truly great ads.

And before I finish with Heineken, these are an interesting read too...

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The famous new (Australian brewed) beer of Russia is here

Baltika #3I received a sample of the new Baltika No. 3 this week. Baltika is the former Russian State-owned brewery, part of the Carlsberg Group since April 2008. It takes the unusual branding route of numbering its beers rather than giving them a more distinctive name or style reference. Baltika No.3 Classic is a pale Euro lager. It is brewed under licence at Independent Breweries Australia. While the label clearly indicates its local provenance, the marketing information is seems confused, referring to it as an international premium beer. I don’t mean to raise the import/brewed-under-licence debate (pasteurised lagers of this type don’t travel well; when brewed here the ingredients and techniques are high quality; given the processes it goes through, source water barely matters anymore – and if you enjoy it it really doesn’t matter where it comes from) but just because a brand is international, doesn’t make the beer international. No one would claim McDonalds an international dining experience. Still watch for it to join Stella, Becks, Heineken, Carlsberg and Kirin under “imported beers” on the beer list at any pub or restaurant that stocks it. So far as taste goes, it is as you would expect of a reasonable quality Euro lager of the type. Nicely balanced, if a little thin (“refreshing and sessionable” in the marketing speak) this is certainly a good beer to drink thoughtlessly around a barbeque or watching the footy. Though, with nothing particularly distinctive about it apart from its label, I’m not sure what would make it stand out on bottleshop shelves groaning under the weight of similar Euro-style lagers…but that is the skill of the marketers.

MEDIA RELEASE

The Famous Beer of Russia is here

Monday 22nd June

Russia’s number one beer brand, Baltika, is being launched in Australia with the introduction of Baltika Classic 3.

A product of the new emerging Russia, Baltika is modern, sophisticated and internationally recognised on the global beer stage. Virtually unheard of in Australia, Baltika is the number one beer brand in Russia and has recently overtaken Heineken as the number one beer brand in Europe°. It is also the 15th most valuable beer brand globally*.

Baltika 3 Classic, a traditional European lager, is the most famous of the Baltika range of which there are ten. Baltika is the largest brewer in Eastern Europe and is headquartered in St Petersburg, Russia.

The decision to launch Baltika in Australia comes at an opportune time for the Russian beer company – the interest and subsequent sales in international premium beers continues to increase in the Australian market. Additionally, much of this growth is contingent upon new, interesting and clearly differentiated entrants for consumers to discover.

The launch will be supported by an investment of $200,000. A suite of marketing activity will include print and radio advertising, sponsorship of the Russian Film Festival in major cities, a national public relations campaign, seeding activity as well as trade engagement and point of sale materials.

Pale straw in colour, it has a creamy white head characteristic of lager style of beer. Gentle hop aromas are followed on the palate by pleasant malt characters and temperate bitterness. A refreshing and sessionable beer, it pairs well with spicy Asian foods, cuts through rich creamy pasta sauces or complements a quality steak, making it an incredibly versatile accompaniment to a variety of dishes.

Baltika 3 Classic is being produced under licence by Independent Breweries.

Baltika Classic 3 is being made under license by Independent Breweries and is available from select retailers and bars nationally. RRP $54.99 per case; $15.99 per 6 pack. ABV: 4.8% Standard drinks: 1.2 per 330 ml bottle.

° Canadean, Wisdom, October 2008, including WE & EU

*2008 Millward Brown Optimer Report

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