Drinks

Constellation Brands Raises Profit Forecast After Beer-Driven Quarter

By Dave Simpson
Constellation Brands Raises Profit Forecast After Beer-Driven Quarter

Constellation Brands Inc has beaten Wall Street estimates for quarterly sales and profit as it sold more of its beers such as Corona Premier and Modelo Especial, prompting the company to raise its full-year earnings forecast.

The brewer has been bolstering its beer portfolio through launches of variants such as Modelo Chelada Limon y Sal and Corona Refresca to woo consumers switching to trendier alternatives such as Boston Beer's Truly and White Claw hard seltzers from high-calorie beers and spirits.

Constellation plans to add a hard seltzer to its Corona portfolio this year, looking to tap into the surging popularity of the alcoholic carbonated drink among millennials.

However, the company recorded another decrease in the fair value of its over $4 billion investment in Canadian cannabis producer Canopy Growth in the third quarter.

Constellation was one of the first major alcohol producers to enter the growing cannabis industry when it took the stake in 2017, but Canadian pot producers have struggled due to a slower rollout of legal cannabis.

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The company said that it wrote down the fair value of the investment by $534 million in the third quarter, after reducing it by $839 million in the prior quarter.

"This was a complicated/messy quarter so we think investors will need cleaner results and some input on the company's outlook for FY21 before they can get back on board with the story," SunTrust Robinson Humphrey analyst Bill Chappell said.

The brewer now expects to earn $9.45 to $9.55 per share for its fiscal 2020, excluding the impact from its investment in Canopy on a comparable basis, up from its prior forecast of $9 to $9.20.

Sales Statistics

Sales of beers, its biggest and more profitable unit, rose 8.3% to $1.31 billion in the three months that ended on November 30, 2019.

Operating margin in the unit rose 200 basis points to 39.3% as higher pricing countered a jump in marketing expenses.

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Sales in its struggling wines and spirits segment fell for the fourth consecutive quarter, dropping 9.7% to $688.8 million.

Net sales climbed 1.4% to $2 billion in the third quarter, beating the average analyst estimate of $1.95 billion, according to IBES data from Refinitiv.

Excluding one-time items, Constellation earned $2.14 per share, beating estimates of $1.83.

News by Reuters, edited by Hospitality Ireland. Click subscribe to sign up for the Hospitality Ireland print edition.