Bud Brewer Taps U.S. Chief as New CEO -- Update
May 06 2021 - 5:21AM
Dow Jones News
By Nick Kostov and Jennifer Maloney
Budweiser brewer Anheuser-Busch InBev SA appointed the head of
its North American business as its new chief executive, tapping a
company veteran as it seeks to reinvigorate slumping beer sales in
the U.S.
The beer giant said Thursday that Michel Doukeris would take the
helm on July 1, replacing longtime CEO Carlos Brito, who built the
company into the world's largest brewer during his more than 15
years in the job.
Mr. Brito's departure signals the end of an era for the beer
industry in which the world's largest brewers embarked on buying
sprees that spanned the globe, squeezing more profit out of
sluggish developed markets and pushing deeper into faster-growing
emerging economies. AB InBev now sells more than a quarter of the
world's beer.
However, that business model is now being challenged as
consumers in the U.S. and elsewhere switch from mainstream lagers
to craft beers, wine and spirits. AB InBev is also contending with
uncertainty from the pandemic and a huge debt pile from its $100
billion-plus acquisition of rival SABMiller in 2016.
AB InBev Chairman Martin Barrington said Mr. Doukeris's record
in innovation, consumer insights and brand building in various
markets made him the right man for the job.
Mr. Doukeris joined the company in 1996 and ran the company's
soft-drinks business in Latin America and headed up its
Asia-Pacific operations. The Brazilian was AB InBev's chief sales
officer before taking over in 2018 as the CEO of its U.S.
subsidiary, Anheuser-Busch.
In the U.S., Mr. Doukeris has shifted the brewer's drinks
portfolio toward premium offerings and expanded into hard seltzers,
essentially flavored alcoholic sparkling water. Sales growth in
seltzers and in Michelob Ultra, a higher-priced, low-calorie beer,
have partly offset a yearslong slump in sales of Budweiser and Bud
Light and contributed to the company's global profits. He also
invested in data and analytics for more targeted local and regional
marketing.
Mr. Doukeris now faces the task of reinvigorating a
globe-spanning business built by Mr. Brito, who was elevated to the
CEO role at then InBev in 2005.
Mr. Brito helped mastermind an acquisition spree that
transformed what was then a Brazilian beer maker into a giant that
swallowed up rivals from Anheuser-Busch to Corona Extra brewer
Grupo Modelo. For more than a decade, shares and profit margins
soared as Mr. Brito focused on cost cutting in a sector where sales
growth was difficult to come by.
However, recent years have proved tougher going. Shares are now
trading at about half of the highs they reached in 2015, months
before the megamerger with SABMiller was completed. That purchase
allowed the company to expand into Africa but saddled the business
with a huge debt load that it has struggled to pay down. The brewer
has since retrenched, selling its Australian unit for $11.3 billion
in 2019 and spinning off its Asian business as a stand-alone
company shortly thereafter.
James Edwardes Jones, an analyst at RBC, said Mr. Brito had been
"amongst the best CEOs we have encountered in 30 years" but that
the company now needed a different set of leadership skills given
few opportunities for deal making and an urgent need to
deleverage.
"Time will tell if Michel is the person to provide them," he
said.
On Thursday, AB InBev reported first-quarter profit and sales
that beat market expectations, sending its shares up 4% in early
trading. First-quarter revenue rose 17% to $12.29 billion, while
net profit was $595 million, up from a loss of $2.25 billion in the
same period last year. A year on from the first Covid-19-related
lockdowns, revenue rose 5% in North America, almost 62% in
Asia-Pacific and 29% in South America.
Mr. Doukeris said in an interview last month that he expects
beer sales to benefit from a post-pandemic celebration akin to the
one in Europe after World War II.
"During the war, you were hiding in your house, afraid of
dying," he said, citing stories from his father, who lived in
postwar Greece. After the war, Mr. Doukeris said, everyone wanted
to travel, to meet friends "and celebrate small moments."
"I think we're going to live some post-Covid euphoria," he
said.
Write to Nick Kostov at Nick.Kostov@wsj.com and Jennifer Maloney
at jennifer.maloney@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
May 06, 2021 05:06 ET (09:06 GMT)
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