Local beer players face foreign firms

December 11, 2015 | 10:20
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The local beer market is set to face tough competition due to a rising number of foreign brewers moving into the market after Viet Nam joins the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP), experts said.
Sabeco is the biggest Vietnamese beer maker, with a 46-per-cent market share. The Hanoi Beer Alcohol and Beverage Joint Stock Corporation (Habeco) accounts for 17.3 per cent of the market. - File Photo

Under the TPP agreement, Viet Nam's imported beer tax from member countries will be reduced from 35 per cent to 0 per cent. As a result, imported beer will flood Viet Nam.

Both international and local players are expected to step up marketing activities, new product developments as well as expanding distribution networks.

Sabeco is the biggest Vietnamese beer maker, with a 46-per-cent market share. The Hanoi Beer Alcohol and Beverage Joint Stock Corporation (Habeco) accounts for 17.3 per cent of the market. And Vietnam Brewery Limited (VBL), a joint venture business between Saigon Trading Group (Satra) and Asia Pacific Breweries Ltd. (APBL) which is now Heineken Asia Pacific Pte Ltd, accounts for an 18.2 per cent market share, according to Euromonitor's market report.

Sabeco holds 100 per cent of the charter capital in three member businesses and long-term investments in 19 associated companies. It reported total sales of nearly VND29.8 trillion (US$1.4 billion) and a pre-tax profit of VND3.672 trillion ($171.6 million) in 2014.

According to Euromonitor, in 2014, Sabeco reached the highest market share with a revenue of VND30 trillion ($1.3 billion) but had profit of VND4 trillion ($177 million) only. Profit of both Sabeco and Habeco reached VND5.4 trillion ($240 million) but is still lagging behind that of VBL with VND6.2 trillion ($275 million).

An industry insider said despite the high revenue of Sabeco and Habeco their products are still focused on the medium market segment thus leading to low profit while foreign players have used good marketing and a reasonable price strategy to bring higher profit.

According to Mikio Masawaki, the new general director of Sapporo company, the difficulty in building its brand name and advertising products was solved after its Japanese-backed beer maker Sapporo entered deeper into Viet Nam by taking control of a local brewery venture with hopes of increasing its share in this lucrative market.

Sapporo International has concluded a contract to buy 29 per cent of Vietnam National Tobacco Corp (Vinataba) in its Vietnamese beer venture. After the transaction, Sapporo Vietnam became a wholly-owned subsidiary of the Japanese beer maker.

Currently there are 4,000 retailers selling Sapporo products, mostly in central HCM City. The figure is expected to climb to 7,000 in February next year.

In May this year, Belgium-based brewer Anheuser-Busch InBev opened its first brewery in Viet Nam. The plant, covering 100,000 square meters in the southern province of Binh Duong, will produce 50 million liters of beer a year. It said capacity will be doubled in the future. The plant will initially produce the company's global brands, including Budweiser and Beck's. The facility will help serve more than 90 million consumers in Viet Nam, according to Anheuser-Busch InBev.

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