The headaches facing aged spirits brands as industry enters 2025

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On Friday, CNBC investment pundit and former hedge fund manager Jim Cramer turned his gaze – briefly – on beverage alcohol. Having advised viewers to steer clear of drinks company stocks earlier in the year, was he about to change his mind? Nope.

Citing a number of factors, including the moderation trend among Gen Z consumers and suggestions that GLP-1 weight loss medication might lead people to drink less, Cramer said: “I’m too concerned about the long-term challenges to pound the table on any of these names, especially Brown-Forman or Diageo.”

However, he added: “But I’m also open to the idea that we’ve simply gotten too negative on the group … If we see some signs that younger people are drinking more or the GLP-1s aren’t having as much of an effect or impact on alcohol, then I’ll happily change my mind on both Brown-Forman and Diageo.”

That’s quite an adept bit of fence-sitting, but you can hardly blame Cramer for being downbeat about alcohol’s prospects heading into 2025. And falling consumption among Gen Z and the impact of weight loss drugs aren’t the only major challenges facing the industry right now. Continued economic fragility in a host of major markets – and the threat of punitive tariffs as global trade wars escalate – pose an even more serious and immediate threat to growth.

Tequila and mezcal sales remain a much-needed bright spot amid the gloom of the stuttering spirits market in the US, but the fat double-digit gains of yesteryear have moderated into softer consumption increases during 2023 and 2024.

Inevitably, that increases competition in the category, meaning that not everyone’s a winner in Tequila right now. Witness Brown-Forman’s recently-announced second-quarter results and a 17% revenue decline for its Tequila brands, including Herradura and El Jimador.

If US Tequila sales are plateauing, the threat of President-elect Trump to impose a blanket 25% import tariff on Mexican imports could well send the category into reverse. In that scenario, internationalising Tequila’s appeal in high-potential markets such as the UK, Australia, Japan and Spain becomes even more important.

Herradura Tequila, part of the Brown-Forman portfolio. Credit: Leonel Calara / Shutterstock.com

For a while, it seemed that the secondary market for rare Scotch whisky was unstoppable, but the events of the past two years have firmly put that theory to bed. According to investment bank Noble & Co, the market for bottles of Scotch priced above £1,000 ($1,277) declined 34% by volume and 40% by value in the year to 1 October. The words “bubble” and “burst” are being bandied around.

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