Small-time brewers are fighting to stop the birth of a potential monopoly.
The Justice Department is reportedly close to approving
Anheuser-Busch InBev's acquisition of SABMiller.
AB InBev and SABMiller are currently the world's
No. 1 and
No. 2 leading brewers, respectively. Some reports suggest their $107 billion merger could be OK'd before the end of June.
But the
Brewers Association, which represents 2,800 craft brewers, argues the merger threatens other brewers' ability to compete in a fair market.
At a
Senate hearing last December, the group's
CEO Bob Pease said: "If you want to get your beer into a chain store, if you want to get your beer into the stadium, you need to use the Anheuser-Busch distributor or the MillerCoors distributor
. ... Those are the only two options in most markets."
In most states, brewers aren't allowed to sell their own products. They have to rely on distributors that then sell to the retailers we buy from — bars, restaurants and liquor stores.
The thing that really makes the competition nervous is AB InBev is also
America's largest beer distributor, thanks to some state laws that allow brewers to also be a distributor for their own products. AB InBev already has ahold of almost half of the domestic market, including brands like
Budweiser, Busch and
Corona.
Local brewers argue the conflict of interest allows AB InBev to ice them out of distribution opportunities. Mainly because AB InBev has the resources to incentivize distributors who agree to pick up their brands over others.
One incentive, introduced last November, reimburses distributors up to $1.5 million if 98 percent of their beers come from AB InBev. Another incentive rewards cooperative distributors with extra marketing support.
In December, the president of a
St. Louis brewer said he recently dropped a craft brewer because he "had to make a choice to go with the incentive program or stay with craft."
The Brewers Association wants lawmakers to force AB InBev to divest the wholesalers it owns and create new distributor incentives that encourage the sale of competing beers.
To appease anti-trust laws, AB InBev offered to sell SABMiller's stake in the MillerCoors joint venture. The proposed sale would keep AB InBev's position in the
U.S. brewing market virtually unchanged despite the merger.
According to
The Wall Street Journal, shipments of craft beers are up nearly 174 percent since
2005. Shipments for AB InBev have fallen by almost 6 percent in the same timespan.
This video contains clips from Videoblocks and images from
Getty Images, The Brewers Association and
The Wall Street Journal.
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- published: 05 Jun 2016
- views: 104