Drinks

AB InBev Records 14.2% Like-For-Like-Basis EBITDA Increase For First Quarter Of 2021; CEO To Step Down

By Dave Simpson
AB InBev Records 14.2% Like-For-Like-Basis EBITDA Increase For First Quarter Of 2021; CEO To Step Down

Anheuser-Busch InBev (AB InBev) has recorded a 14.2% like-for-like-basis EBITDA increase for the first quarter of 2021.

The brewer of Budweiser, Corona and Stella Artois lagers recorded first-quarter earnings ahead of expectations, even with lockdowns closing hospitality in much of Europe and a one-month alcohol sales ban in South Africa.

Sales of beer surged 64% in Asia-Pacific, a year on from the initial coronavirus lockdown in China, a major AB InBev market.

They rose by more than 10% in Latin America, outperforming industry growth in two of its top markets, Brazil and Mexico. In Europe, sales of its own beers were flat.

Earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation (EBITDA) rose 14.2% on a like-for-like basis and removing the impact of currency translation to $4.27 billion, beating the 6.6% average forecast in a company-compiled poll.

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This figure should increase by between 8% and 12% in 2021, with revenue growth greater than that, based on higher beer sales, price hikes and a shift in consumer taste to premium brands, AB InBev said.

CEO To Step Down

In other AB InBev news, Carlos Brito, who built AB InBev into the world's biggest brewer during 15 years at the helm, will step down as CEO in July to be replaced by the group's North America boss as it shifts focus from acquisitions to boosting sales.

AB InBev has said that its board has unanimously elected Michel Doukeris, the former head of sales, to succeed fellow Brazilian Brito, from July 1.

Chairman Martin Barrington said that Doukeris' expertise in brands, consumers and innovation meant the 48-year-old was ideally suited for the company's next phase.

That phase could be more focussed on boosting sales of over 500 brands than on acquisitions in an already concentrated brewing market.

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"This should not come as a shock to investors....Michel was the clear lead internal candidate," beverage analyst at Bernstein Securities Trevor Stirling said, adding that Doukeris has an impressive track record, notably in China and Asia-Pacific.

Brito, 61 today, arrived when the brewer was called InBev, the result of a 2004 merger between Belgium's Interbrew and Brazil's AmBev, which he headed.

During his tenure, the company took over Anheuser-Busch in 2008, added Mexico's Grupo Modelo and, in 2016, spent over $100 billion on SABMiller, then the world's second largest brewer.

The acquisition brought more Latin American markets and saw it enter Africa for the first time.

However, the purchase also saw AB InBev's net debt jump to $82.7 billion as of the end of 2020, some 4.8 times core earnings (EBITDA).

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Its shares are now less than half their late 2015 peak, with craft beer eating into its US sales and difficulties in Brazil and South Africa.

"Brito was the architect who led and built AB InBev into the world’s leading beer company and a leading global consumer packaged goods company by masterfully integrating the many businesses that comprise AB InBev today," Barrington said.

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