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Nigeria Food and Drink Report Q4 2009
Business Monitor International, Oct 2009, Pages: 36
Nigeria Food and Drink Report provides industry professionals and strategists, corporate analysts, food and drink associations, government departments and regulatory bodies with independent forecasts and competitive intelligence on Nigeria's food and drink industry.
The enigmatic Nigerian market remains a source of great promise for its leading brewers. A depressingly poor regulatory environment notwithstanding, Nigeria’s beer industry is rapidly emerging as the continent’s most promising. As Western beer-drinkers continue to tighten their belts, forcing a stuttering in beer volumes, Nigeria’s industry is assuming greater importance to its multinational cast as discussed in the recently published Nigeria Food & Drink Report for Q409.
The reprieve currently provided by Nigeria was laid out by the Q209 (through to June 30) performance of Heineken’s Nigerian Breweries unit. Accounting for about 65% of formal beer volumes in the 160mn strong country, Nigerian Breweries reported a 37% year-on-year (y-o-y) increase in second quarter net income to NGN16.85bn (US$113.7mn). Heineken has invested over US$500mn in Nigeria over the past five years and with a brewing capacity of about 10mn hectolitres, Nigerian Breweries makes up more than half of Dutch giants beer producing capacity for the entire Middle East and Africa region. Through to 2013, its Nigerian unit is best placed among Nigeria’s leading brewers to capitalise on the forecast that beer volume sales will increase by 35.8% and reach NGN582.5bn.
Trailing in second place with about 25% of the volume market is the Diageo subsidiary Guinness Nigeria. Nigeria has overtaken Ireland to become Guinness’ second largest market behind the UK. Such has been the prowess of the brewer’s marketing campaign that most Nigerians consider Guinness to be a Nigerian rather than Irish brand. Bearing in mind that per capita consumption of formal beer currently stands at a measly 10 litres per annum, Guinness Nigeria has only scratched the surface of Nigeria’s potential.
Eyeing the country’s underdeveloped low-cost segment, Anglo-South African behemoth SABMiller threw its hat into the ring earlier this quarter. Although its acquisition of the 30,000 hectolitre capacity Pabod Breweries is unlikely to alarm either Nigerian Breweries or Guinness Nigeria, significant capacity upgrades and a focus on producing beer using locally sourced inputs (this could bring down the cost of producing lagers by 30-40%) could plausibly smoothen access to Nigeria’s vast informal beer industry, which has hitherto thrived as most consumers have been unable to trade up to the mainstream and premium brands brewed by the market leaders.
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