• Re: Here's how Bud Light executives could finally answer for destroying

    From Transheuser-Busch@21:1/5 to All on Sun Jun 25 02:18:30 2023
    XPost: alt.business, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, misc.consumers
    XPost: talk.politics.guns

    On 08 Dec 2021, Rudy Canoza <RuCan@JK.net> posted some news:XnsADFAB014BB15FRuCanJKnet@5.199.143.50:

    "P. Coonan" <nospam@ix.netcom.com> wrote in news:XnsADF9ED6A87037002CE8@144.76.35.252:

    Fire the executive management because it's clear they have no idea
    what they did, and who their customer base actually is.

    Bud Light has been dethroned, relinquishing the crown after its two-decade reign as America’s best-selling beer came to an end last week.

    Its fall from grace is no surprise. The backlash from Bud Light’s
    controversial partnership with Dylan Mulvaney has been plaguing the
    company for months. Anheuser-Busch’s bungled response hasn’t helped.

    Initially, the company made a massive blunder with its CEO’s flat response
    that neither mentioned the controversy nor apologized for it. Since then,
    it’s effectively doubled down on its "nothing to see here" strategy,
    remaining virtually silent despite a persistent 25% drop in sales and
    billions of dollars in lost market value.

    But while the Clydesdales at Anheuser-Busch might be running from
    customers, they can’t hide from shareholders. Next month, Anheuser-Busch
    will be forced to answer shareholder concerns on its second quarter
    earnings call. To avoid another gaffe, it must prepare now.

    Company earnings calls are usually well-scripted affairs. CEOs highlight
    the company’s business plans and give updates on how much they think the company will earn.

    Shareholders and Wall Street analysts take notes so they can update their
    own predictions of how the company’s stock will perform. If projections go
    up, stock prices usually increase; if sales fail to meet expectations, or
    if expectations drop, stock prices typically decline.

    But that’s not all that happens. Participants also get to ask questions
    and ask questions they will. Shareholders can hold Bud Light accountable
    in a way that its customers can’t. And they have the chance to do so
    before Anheuser-Busch’s head-in-the-sand strategy causes more precipitous declines.

    There’s little doubt that the company is in jeopardy of failing to meet
    its projections. In 2021, CEO Michel Doukeris told shareholders to expect
    4-8% annual EBITDA (Earnings Before Interest Taxes Depreciation and Amortization) growth from 2022-2025.

    This was a relatively unambitious target, in line with the historical 6% earnings growth in the five years pre-COVID-19, now barely outpacing
    inflation. It should have been a layup.

    In 2022, it was. Anheuser-Busch grew earnings 7.1%. Its stock outperformed
    the S&P 500. Analysts expected 2023 to be even better, predicting 7.4%
    earnings growth.

    Anheuser-Busch was set to overdeliver again. In the first quarter of 2023, earnings increased 13.6% over the prior year. Emerging markets like South America, Africa, and Asia saw strong beer volume growth combined with
    decreased commodity prices and shipping costs, boosting profits.

    In the U.S., prices increased ahead of inflation, driving revenue and
    earnings gains. Shareholders were rewarded as Anheuser-Busch’s stock price
    grew 12% versus the S&P 500’s 7%.

    On April 1, a single Instagram post changed everything. U.S. sales tanked
    and haven’t recovered.

    Anheuser-Busch’s stock declined over 10%. By comparison, the S&P 500 is up
    7% and Molson Coors, Anheuser-Busch’s largest rival, is up almost 30%.

    During the company’s first quarter earnings call in May, Doukeris
    projected confidence that Anheuser-Busch could still deliver on its humble
    2023 earnings goal. He also downplayed the Bud Light controversy, claiming "[i]t’s too early to have a full view on the impact" and noted that the
    company has navigated prior challenges, including temporary beer sales
    bans in certain countries during COVID-19.

    Such handwaving is unlikely to satisfy shareholders come July. To the
    contrary, financial analysts will almost certainly demand more details on
    how 2023 earnings growth is shaping up, as well as what Anheuser-Busch is
    doing to right the ship.

    Participants also get to ask questions and ask questions they will. Shareholders can hold Bud Light accountable in a way that its customers
    can’t. And they have the chance to do so before Anheuser-Busch’s head-in- the-sand strategy causes more precipitous declines.

    Five analysts have already cut Anheuser-Busch’s ratings and the Wall
    Street consensus is that the company’s 2023 earnings growth will decrease
    from 7.4% to 6.5%. More ratings and projections cuts are likely.

    The only way to stop the bleeding is for Anheuser-Busch to disclose clear
    plans on how it intends to regain Bud Light sales. Bud Light represents
    30% of the company’s US earnings, which itself constitutes 30% of global
    sales. That means Bud Light alone represents around 9% of total sales.

    Those sales have been down around 30%, implying a 3% hit to earnings if
    the trend remains. If Bud Light can regain those sales, it can overdeliver
    the 6.5% consensus number and maybe even meet the 8% goal. If it can’t, it risks falling below the 4% floor.

    Analysts must be pointed: "What, specifically, is Bud Light doing to win consumers back?" So far, Anheuser-Busch has tried camouflage bottles, deep discounts and tripling media spending on less controversial Bud Light advertisements.

    John Rich says Bud Light made beer a ‘political issue’Video
    None of it is working. And it won’t work until Bud Light clearly addresses
    the issue. The question is whether, and how, it intends to do so.

    Analysts must also dig deeper: "What financial trade-offs is Anheuser-
    Busch making to fund the support for Bud Light?" Talk may be cheap, but
    the kind of damage control Anheuser-Busch is pursuing costs a pretty
    penny.

    The company is shelling out hundreds of millions of dollars it wasn’t
    planning to spend on rebates, advertising, sales rep compensation and
    freight reimbursements — all while sales are plummeting. This money is
    coming from somewhere.

    Did it come from marketing cuts in faster growing markets that will now
    slow? From cutting planned innovation? Were critical IT projects delayed?
    Is the company taking on additional debt when interest rates are at all-
    decade highs?

    Perhaps most important is for analysts to understand Anheuser-Busch’s
    long-term thinking: "If Bud Light doesn’t turn around, is this support sustainable, or are layoffs and austerity measures inevitable?"

    The answer is critical. Not just because cuts are always painful, but
    because just last week, Bud Light proudly announced it was "protect[ing]
    the jobs of our frontline employees" and "providing financial assistance
    to our wholesalers."

    Retaining idle workers is an expensive strategy, and one that can only
    last so long; staking a PR campaign on it is a risky endeavor. In the end, Anheuser-Busch’s latest PR move appears to be more of the same — try
    anything, so long as it doesn’t involve addressing the controversy
    directly — rather than part of a long-term strategic plan.

    Anheuser-Busch has a lot to answer for. If the company has not yet figured
    out how to respond, it needs to do so now, because come July 28, there
    will be no hiding from shareholders.

    AmericanBorn886
    20 June, 2023

    T-Mobile has now jumped on that same wagon as well..

    AmericanBorn886
    20 June, 2023
    Replying to gailannr

    Check out their adds during the NCAA World Series

    https://www.foxnews.com/opinion/heres-bud-light-executives-could-finally- answer-destroying-their-brand

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