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Posted: 5/10/2023 10:53:37 AM EST
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8-3-23 earnings call : (-10.5% revenue, -30% core profit, -40 billion value, -395 million loss) NOW that we have the earnings report, I will be trimming down the post a bit. I have been posting the OP stuff to the thread, so you can still find it all, if you really want to. ----------------------------------------------- Bud Light's Brilliant Marketing Move Ahhh. Fine weapons grade mockery! Quoted: Quoted: Dang- I didn't know Modello is AB. I guess Dos Ex for me. Keep up the pressure. View Quote Another list of inbev's product, from page 11 of the thread: Click To View Spoiler Bass Pale Ale From this link: https://www.tapintoyourbeer.com/guide-our-beersBeck's Beck's NA Beck's Oktoberfest Beck's Premier Light Boddington's Pub Ale BON V!V Spiked Seltzer Budweiser Bud Ice Bud Dry Bud Extra Bud Lime Budweiser Zero Budweiser Supreme Budweiser Select Budweiser Select 55 Budweiser Black Crown Bud Light Bud Light Chelada Bud Light Lime Bud Light Seltzer (various flavors) Bud Light Seltzer Platinum Bud Light Seltzer Sour Busch Busch Light Corona Corona Extra Corona Latte Estrella Modelo Especial Modelo Light Negra Modelo Pac fico Victoria Estrella Jalisco Estrella Tropical Chamoy Michelada Estrella Jalisco Classic Michelada Estrella Jalisco Tamarindo Chelada Estrella Jalisco Chelada Limon Y Sal Fireball X Apple/Lemonade Hoegaarden Hurricane Malt Liquor Hurricane High Gravity King Cobra Kirin Ichiban Kirin Light Kokanee La Jarra Paloma Landshark Lager Leffe Blond Leffe Brown Los Sundays Los Sundays Grapefruit Los Sundays Mango Los Sundays Pineapple Los Sundays Tropical Margaritaville Tropical Punch Margaritaville Tropical Punch Beach Breezy Margaritaville Tropical Punch Peach Paradise Margaritaville Tropical Punch Strawberry Daiquiri MD 20/20 Michelob Michelob Amber Bock Michelob Ultra Michelob Golden Draft Michelob Golden Draft Light Montejo Montejo Chelada Natural Light Natural Natural Ice Natty Daddy Natural Light Seltzer Neon Burst Hard Drink Neon Burst Hard Drink Grape Blowout Neon Burst Hard Drink Punch Blast Noonshine Hard Noonshine Hard Fruit Punch Noonshine Hard Lemon Ice N trl O'Douls Presidente RedBridge Ritas Rolling Rock Shock Top Belgian White Peeterman Artois Spaten St. Pauli Girl Stella Artois Stella Artois Bock Stella Artois Cidre Stella Artois Libert Stella Artois Midnight Lager Stella Artois Solstice Lager Ziegenbock ETA 6-30 https://www.sandiegouniontribune.com/business/economy/sd-fi-san-diego-cutwater-sold-anheuser-busch-20190220-story.html Cutwater Spirits, a Miramar-based craft distillery built by the founders of Ballast Point Brewing, has been sold to Anheuser-Busch. Cutwater's line of canned cocktails was "a wonderful fit" for the brewing behemoth's "Beyond Beer" portfolio, said Anheuser-Busch's Marina Hahn. "This is the time to really do our best to dominate a new category," said Hahn, vice president of new business. https://www.cutwaterspirits.com/locator https://archive.is/KapLl Anheuser-Busch is delighted to share that Cutwater Spirits, an award-winning spirits and canned cocktail company, is joining their growing Beyond Beer portfolio. Founded in 2016 by former Ballast Point executives, Cutwater Spirits has quickly become a leader in the premium ready-to-enjoy cocktail market with its high-quality ingredients, transparent packaging and innovative combinations. In total, Cutwater Spirits has seven premium mixers, 14 canned cocktails and 16 types of spirits encompassing variations of whiskey, vodka, gin and rum. They currently distribute to 34 states and have experienced double and triple-digit growth since inception. Click To View Spoiler --------------------------------------------------------------- IN THIS SPOILER: How AB are a bigoted workplace pushing anarchy. Click To View Spoiler Man. ---------------------------------------------------------------It's FAR worse than we thought! So, the Inbev guy trying to say this is just about one can and one stupid little thing ... welll .... Yeah, utterly not buying it. Here's the first tweet in frankly what should be just a web article, and I will just copy the text over so you can read it that way.
https://twitter.com/michaeljknowles/status/1655660155134943250 Click To View Spoiler Michael Knowles Wow, sounds like a WONDERFUL place to work at, really "light and inclusive and airy" - The following is from America First Legal: https://aflegal.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/04/EEOC-Complaint_Anheuser-Busch-AB-InBev-Corporation-Final-Letter.pdfClick To View Spoiler April 17, 2023 David Davis, Director (acting) Andrea Baran, Regional Attorney St. Louis District Office U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission Robert A. Young Federal Building Investigation Request: AB InBev Dear Mr. Davis and Ms. Baran: America First Legal Foundation ("AFL") is a national, nonprofit organization working to protect the rule of law, due process, and equal protection for all Americans. We write, pursuant to 29 C.F.R. 1601.6(a), seeking issuance of a Commissioner's charge for an inquiry into individual or systemic discrimination by AB InBev ("Anheuser- Busch").1 Anheuser-Busch is a publicly traded corporation with its North American subsidiary Anheuser-Busch Companies, LLC headquartered at One Busch Place, St. Louis, Missouri, 63118.2 Federal law forbids discrimination by an employer against an employee or potential employee "because of such individual's race, color, religion, sex, or national origin."3 Likewise, an employer cannot "limit, segregate, or classify his employees or applicants in any way which would deprive or tend to deprive any individual of employment opportunities or otherwise adversely affect his status as an employee, because of such individual's race, color, religion, sex, or national origin."4 Finally, it is an unlawful employment practice for any employer to discriminate against any individual because of his race, color, religion, sex, or national origin in admission to, or employment in, any program established to provide apprenticeship or other training.5 The evidence is that Anheuser-Busch is knowingly, intentionally, and unlawfully discriminating based on race, color, national origin, and sex with respect to employment and job training opportunities. For example, the Anheuser-Busch 2023 Leadership Accelerator Program provides "formal mentorship, executive interaction, and leadership development curriculum for those who identify with historically underrepresented groups as they join our organization in a full-time capacity."6 The program description states: "We encourage candidates who identify as Black, Latinx, and Native American to apply, as well as those who identify with a historically underrepresented group." This is not a regular corporate program rather, the company describes the role as focusing on "hiring the next generation of leaders within the North American Sustainability and Procurement department." In other words, it is a fast-track program to executive leadership positions at Anheuser- Busch and it is limited to candidates based on race. The proforma Equal Opportunity Employer language at the end of the posting does mask the company's discriminatory intent and purpose. The Anheuser-Busch 2022 Annual Report highlights its Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion ("DEI") initiative as a global priority for AB InBev's Senior Leadership Team and reports that it created a Global Diversity, Equity & Inclusion Council chaired by the company's chief executive officer. "The Council is dedicated to collaborating on impactful decisions and championing DEI at the highest levels of the organization." Anheuser-Busch's Annual Report notes that its DEI strategy has driven "results," including an increase in women in the Senior Leadership Team with "the overall representation of women in top leadership positions in our company" growing by "2 percentage points compared to the last reporting year."7 In fact, Anheuser-Busch's Annual Report has a Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion section almost entirely dedicated to the growth of only women in the workforce.8 The company's 2022 Environmental, Social, & Governance Report9 further reports sex-based hiring during the years 2017 to 2022,10 a job training program based on national origin launched by its Presidente brand in the United States and the Hispanic Scholarship Fund "for Hispanic students interested in a career in sports,"11 and an explicitly race-based scholarship and internship program launched by Budweiser and the United Negro College Fund to "support[] 25 Black college students" interested in the brewing industry, and to "provide[] five Black college students with real-world experience as interns in Anheuser-Busch's Brewery Trainee Program."12 A Commissioner's charge is particularly appropriate here because there is ample reason to believe that Anheuser-Busch has knowingly and intentionally violated federal law and will continue to do so. The corporation has chosen to promote and use employment practices that are both patently illegal and deeply harmful. Discrimination based on immutable characteristics such as race, color, national origin, or sex "generates a feeling of inferiority as to their status in the community that may affect their hearts and minds in a way unlikely to ever be undone."13 More broadly, Anheuser-Busch's employment practices foment contention and resentment they are "odious and destructive."14 It truly "is a sordid business, this divvying us up" by race or sex.15 Thank you in advance for your consideration. Please feel free to contact me if you have any questions. Sincerely, /s/ Nicholas R. Barry Nicholas R. Barry America First Legal Foundation Cc: The Honorable Charlotte A. Burrows, Commission Chair The Honorable Jocelyn Samuels, Commission Vice Chair The Honorable Keith E. Sonderling, Commissioner The Honorable Andrea R. Lucas, Commissioner "The evidence is that Anheuser-Busch is knowingly, intentionally, and unlawfully discriminating based on race, color, national origin, and sex with respect to employment and job training opportunities." 5-24-23 https://archive.md/rYELw In the video, one employee of Anheuser-Busch explains, "we're still 40 percent women, and 60 percent men, still predominantly white: so there's still work to be done." The "work" to be "done" is apparently replacing white male workers with alternatives. Failed To Load Title https://web.archive.org/web/20230521052258/https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TYUpsy2PPmo Kinda explains why that firm filed suit against them. -------------------------------------------------------------------- 5-27-23 In this spoiler: AB supports child abuse and mutilation. Click To View Spoiler AB chose to ... well: --------------------------------------------------------------------https://www.dailywire.com/news/bud-light-to-sponsor-pride-parades-despite-ongoing-boycott Bud Light and its parent company Anheuser-Busch are sponsoring at least three different upcoming Pride events despite backlash over the partnership with Dylan Mulvaney, a social media influencer who identifies as transgender. Summer is coming up which is reportedly a heavy season for them.Bud Light is listed as a sponsor on the Cincinnati Pride Parade website. Planned Parenthood and the Cincinnati Children's Hospital, which medically transitions minors, are both also listed. Meanwhile, in St. Louis, Missouri, where Anheuser-Busch is headquartered, the company is listed as the presenting sponsor of the St. Louis Pride Parade. A sponsorship packet explains that there are only four "presenting sponsor" slots available. The "Rainbow" sponsorship tier, located below the "presenting sponsor" tier, requires entities to pay $25,000. Bud Light is also listed as a "Diamond Sponsor" of Stonewall Columbus, which organizes and hosts the annual Columbus, Ohio, Pride Parade. The "diamond" sponsorship tier requires companies to donate $20,000, a document from the organization specifies. The document also adds, "All Stonewall Columbus sponsors must affirm Stonewall's diversity, equity, and inclusion policies AND agree to donate no less than 8 hours of volunteer time during a calendar year." Anheuser-Busch was also listed as a premier sponsor for the San Francisco Pride Parade in 2022. The 2023 sponsors of the San Francisco Pride Parade have not yet been released. Bud Light was listed as a sponsor of the Chicago Pride Parade on a page that has since been scrubbed. Bud Light boasted that "we have a clear role to play in bringing real change and creating an inclusive and equitable world where we cherish and celebrate one another." Corona and Corona Hard Seltzer, products of Anheuser-Busch, are listed as sponsors of the upcoming Los Angeles Pride Parade. Cutwater Spirits, another Anheuser-Busch product, is listed as a sponsor of the 2023 Chicago Pride Fest, which will occur one week before the Chicago Pride Parade. The Pride Fest is a two-day festival that will include a "best of Chicago drag performance" and "a Youth Pride Space for teens." Children as young as 12 will be allowed to attend the "youth pride space." They want that ESG credit line pretty bad, and are willing to risk taking a dump on their customers to get it. -------------------------------------------------------------------- https://www.westernjournal.com/bud-light-digs-deeper-hole-donates-200000-empower-lgbtq-owned-small-businesses/ Thus we get this from a company news release Tuesday: "Today, Bud Light and the National LGBT Chamber of Commerce (NGLCC), the exclusive certifying body for LGBT-owned businesses, announce they are extending their partnership to continue supporting economic opportunities and advancements for LGBTQ+ Americans and business owners across the country." They really ARE that stupid. "Oh pretty please, give us the ESG ratings back, we need more credit, we ticked off our customers, we want to be able to slap them in the face again, we're hurting.""Bud Light was brewed to be an 'Easy to Drink, Easy to Enjoy' beer for everyone 21+ and that still holds true today," the company said. "We look forward to extending our work with the NGLCC to continue making a positive impact on the LGBTQ+ businesses that play a critical role in bringing people everywhere, together." And not only is it pride-tastic, it's intersectional, too! "This year, Bud Light will donate $200,000 to the NGLCC in support of its Communities of Color Initiative (CoCi)," the release said. "This initiative is designed to support the growth and success of minority LGBTQ+-owned businesses through certification, scholarships and business development in an effort to create equal opportunities for the economic advancement of small businesses in the LGBTQ+ community." As the marketing publication Ad Age noted, the "donation to support LGBT Chamber of Commerce comes as AB InBev deals with criticism for failing to speak up for transgender rights in wake of Dylan Mulvaney controversy." Or maybe they'll try standing in the middle. Who knows? Perhaps we'll see a commercial with a pack of Clydesdales draped with the transgender pride flag galloping around the Indianapolis Motor Speedway as Sam Elliott provides a gravelly voiceover about how there's nothing more American than a Memorial Day barbecue with hot dogs, good friends and a very queer beer. It bears repeating: the only reason for the existence of ESG funds is to allow companies to abuse and ignore their customers. The only reason the CEI and ESG ratings exist is to provide easy lists to the radical leftists of who they should abuse for not being radical enough for the cause. The only way to win the game is to NOT play. 6-1 THIS is who AB is choosing to serve, instead of their customers:
Will Hild@WillHild @BlackRock CEO Larry Fink: "You have to force behaviors and, at BlackRock, we're forcing behaviors." Learn more at: http://AboutBlackRock.com For those without twitter who can't see it: https://nitter.net/WillHild/status/1664013392460251136 Larry Fink: you have to force behaviors People like THAT. This is what ESG *means.* -------------------------------------------------------------------- How AB and ESG funds are screwing states and people that aren't supporting them Click To View Spoiler https://www.foxnews.com/media/woke-corporate-governance-often-stems-involved-investment-firms-former-anheuser-busch-exec Fox News Flash Published June 3, 2023 7:00am EDT "We'll ruin your state too!" - california.Woke corporate governance often stems from involved investment firms: Former Anheuser-Busch exec Engaging in woke politics has led to an endangerment of some firms' fiduciary responsibilities By Charles Creitz | Fox News Woke corporate governance, which recently led to the fiscal hemorrhaging of Anheuser-Busch and Target, often begins with investment firms pressuring them to behave in certain ways, a former executive at the beer conglomerate said. Anson Frericks told "Jesse Watters Primetime" a lot of the lead-up to decisions such as the one at his former firm involving transgender activist Dylan Mulvaney that led to a nationwide boycott of Bud Light stem from the politicking of firms like New York-based BlackRock and Pennsylvania-based Vanguard. Altogether, BlackRock, Vanguard and another firm, State Street, manage about $20 trillion in capital, Frericks said, noting it is not truly "their" money but that of the investments of Americans' mutual funds and state pension funds. Frericks said in the case of one of the firms, it manages California's pension fund the largest in the country and that therefore California politicians can also have a say in the corporate governance and politicking of the firms they invest so heavily in. "In California, for example, they recently have mandated those large pension funds that they divest from things like fossil fuels and oil and gas, and then when Bill de Blasio, [former] mayor of New York, was there, he did the same thing," he said. "But they also tell BlackRock, State Street and Vanguard if they're going to manage their money, they have to commit to things like ESG diversity, equity, inclusion and adopt firm-wide commitments that they therefore then force onto all the major companies in corporate America." -------------------------------------------------------------------- https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-12156085/Bud-Light-risks-losing-retail-shelf-space-competitors-warns-former-Anheuser-Busch-exec.html Bud Light is running out of time and could lose market share FOREVER: Brand will lose retail shelf space to Miller and Coors if they cannot reverse plunging sales, warns ex Anheuser-Bush exec Oooo.Anson Frericks says retailers will begin resetting shelf space in September If Bud Light sales continue to lag, they could lose shelf space, he claimed In the four weeks through May 20, Bud Light sales dropped 24.3% from last year By Keith Griffith For Dailymail.com Published: 17:06 EDT, 3 June 2023 | Updated: 17:14 EDT, 3 June 2023 Anson Frericks, the former US president of sales and distribution for St. Louis-based Anheuser-Busch, said that retailers such as Walmart and Kroger typically 'reset' their shelf space allocations in the spring and fall, based on sales data. For the fall reset in September, 'they generally take sales data from April, May, June, July, and then based off of that data in that time period, they will reallocate shelf space,' he told DailyMail.com in a phone interview on Saturday. If Bud Light sales continue to slump, 'that shelf space will be allocated to Miller Lite, Coors Light, Yuengling, and some of the other brands that have that have taken share from them,' he said. 'Those brands will have a better likelihood to succeed longer term, because they have more shelf space, they have more inventory, they have more back-stock, and they have more availability for consumers,' he argued. 'That almost permanently then locks in this as the new norm of where their sales will be, and what their share of the beer category will be,' Frericks predicted of the impact on Bud Light. Frericks said that the 'vast majority' of beer sales, some 80 to 90 percent, occur at traditional retail outlets, as opposed to sales at bars and restaurants. Nice to know. But Bump Williams, whose consultancy of the same name analyzes the alcohol industry, expressed skepticism that Bud Light faced an imminent reduction in shelf space at major retailers. So what willaims is saying ... is that the retailers would need some more convincing.He noted that, in 2023 year-to-date sales, Bud Light is still the top selling beer in the nation, though in recent individual weeks it has dipped below Modelo Especial. 'Bud Light COULD lose shelf space based upon lost sales, but I'd be hard pressed to believe that retailers would reduce shelf space on the #1 selling brand in the country today on a YTD basis,' Williams said in an email to DailyMail.com on Saturday. 'If at the end of 2023 we find that Bud Light dropped to the #2 selling brand, they'll more than likely maintain their fair share of space,' he added. Thanks for the tip (I mean that). Still, Anheuser-Busch InBev CEO Michel Doukeris has downplayed the impact of the backlash, saying Bud Light's US sales declines in the first three weeks of April represented only 1 percent of InBev's global volumes. He still likes rat fink (and others like him) who are using your pension found to bully you better than he does his customers and shareholders.'We believe we have the experience, the resources and the partners to manage this,' Doukeris said during a conference call with investors earlier this month. Color me shocked. -------------------------------------------------------------------- 6-7 Flagstaff all ages drag show group AB has been a sponsor of for years: Click To View Spoiler Well ... --------------------------------------------------------------------They have jumped face-first into the septic tank: Link to the event announcement site: https://archive.is/yQ8y7 Only click the spoiler if you are really sure you wanna see the event flyer. Click To View Spoiler Only click the spoiler if you are really sure you wanna see the event flyer. This is after some of their downstream people have been sending out girls to bars to try and sweet-talk dudes into buying bud light. They are trying to game *everyone* now. 6-9 Spinning hard to try and still support group that set it up without saying they supported them ... Click To View Spoiler Now the organizers of said all-ages drag show are saying ... https://archive.is/pELPe Flagstaff Pride As for AB:2d We put out an incorrect promotional poster which included Bud Light as a sponsor. Attached is the correct poster. https://dailycaller.com/2023/06/08/bud-light-drag-queen-event/ "Bud Light is not a sponsor of this event. The event organizers have issued a corrected version of the poster," an Anheuser-Busch spokesperson told the DCNF, only addressing whether Bud Light was currently sponsoring the event. The communications of AB for the last few days are suddenly a VERY interesting topic. I mean, if they pulled sponsorship, shouldn't they lose more CEI and ESG points? If they didn't, how can they not lose CEI and ESG points if they let this stand? This is a GREAT chance for them to show they really deserve the "screw your customers" credit line funding. Of course, nobody expects them to fight the protection scheme. After all, them coming out, saying they were wrong to do DEI and pursue the ESG via CEI ratings, that they were wrong in their hiring practices, firing the political inquisitors in their midst, and produce any (and all) goods on how they were pressured into doing what was wrong ... and financially stupid ... by these global thug-funds ... them coming out of the closet and doing that ... it has a real chance of earning their customers back, and better, they'd have the bullies by the short hairs and be able to dish some justice out to them for their behavior. Besides being the morally right thing to do, but who cares about that ... They'd never do that. Nope. Just shut up and pay the goods out to keep your store on this block open. Hide in your closet and pay people to burn your shop down with you in it. After all, you don't have to do anything that way. ----------------------------------------- ETA: LOL, OOPSIE! Hey, look who's still on flagstaff pride's sponsor page! https://archive.is/w464w <---8th https://archive.is/hwUoK <--9th Oh hey, BUD LIGHT! So ... off the flyer for the event. But STILL listed as a sponsor! ROFL. HURRY UP AB, get your errand boys on down there to force them to pull your sponsorship logo! You ought to have their contact info, you were listed as their sponsor in 2012 too! ETA and 2013 ... https://archive.is/hkTEV And BL is STILL listed as a sponsor for the organization putting on the all ages drag show:https://archive.is/lCELB ----------------------------------------------------------- 6-21 advertising award: Click To View Spoiler Cue the laugh track! -----------------------------------------------------------https://nypost.com/2023/06/20/anheuser-busch-wins-cannes-lions-despite-bud-light-and-dylan-mulvaney/ It's an award for advertising:Click To View Spoiler Anheuser-Busch exec wins Cannes Lions despite Bud Light's Dylan Mulvaney fiasco By Ariel Zilber June 20, 2023 11:29am Updated The top marketing executive for Bud Light parent Anheuser-Busch InBev received an award for "creative marketer of the year" at the "Oscars for the advertising industry" despite the beer brand's disastrous partnership with transgender influencer Dylan Mulvaney. Marcel Marcondes told advertising peers at the Cannes Lions marketing conference in France on Monday that the Mulvaney saga served as a "wake-up call" for the industry. But like fellow Anheuser-Busch brass, Marcondes stopped short of offering an apology for the Mulvaney partnership which the company has blamed on an unnamed third-party marketer. "In times like this, when things get divisive and controversial so easily, I think it's an important wake-up call to all of us marketers, for us to be very humble," Marcondes said. View Quote https://archive.is/HL6PK "It's tough to see the controversial and divisive debates that have been happening in the U.S. in the last couple of weeks involving lots of brands and companies, including and especially Bud Light," Marcel Marcondes, global chief marketing officer of AB InBev, said in a presentation at the Cannes Lions festival. "It's tough exactly because what we do is all about bringing people together." Marcondes said AB InBev's marketing team has been "learning a lot" from the situation and has reached two conclusions. First, he said, "companies and brands must be driven by their values. We are a beer company. Beer is for everyone." But he added that the company must also strive to understand all segments of its customer base, and must endeavor not to create marketing that is divisive. To translate, for anyone that is still blisfully able to have avoided bizarro world: "For everyone" means "only people who accept everything I do, and if you don't ... *cracking knuckles sound.* Notice what he's contrasting "for everyone" with ... "not creating marketing that is divisive." They aren't sad about the marketing. They don't think it's wrong. They're probably not even mad that people got upset about it. They probably WANTED to tick off the "bitter clinging deplorables" and frat boys. I guess they just didn't count on being punished this hard for doing it. https://www.nationalreview.com/news/anheuser-busch-marketing-team-is-learning-a-lot-after-bud-light-dylan-mulvaney-controversy-cmo-says/ In an effort to appear both values-driven and not divisive, the brand can show that it stands for enjoyment and togetherness, rather than anything political, Marcondes suggested. Do they really think nobody knows what "values" they are trying to drive? Hello, discrimination lawsuit - actually racist and sexist "we have more work to do" (get rid of those undesireable people for racist reasons) ... ? Having the modern equivalent of blackface performers endorsed by your company and used for adverts? Willing to sponsor orgs that do drag shows (bad enough - normalizes that bilge to kids who are being pressured to get castrated, mutilated, and take destructive cross-sex hormones) ... etc. The cat's out of the bag, AB. "we won't change what we believe and how we behave but we'll try and schmooze you back into buying our products" isn't something you should be doing. Do you seriously have to be told what to do? -------------------- And they are STILL listed as sponsors on the all-ages drag show pride group's page: https://archive.ph/ZBiqK They are willing to SPONSOR the groups that do it, they just don't want the backlash that comes from doing so. 6-26 https://www.westernjournal.com/ratings-bud-lights-latest-ad-still-not-looking-good-company/ Click To View Spoiler On Thursday, the beer giant unveiled a new ad for Bud Light only to be bombarded with thousands of negative comments and tens of thousands of dislikes on YouTube. Failed To Load Title The "Easy to Summer" video which features people bumbling in a variety of seasonal activities got ratioed so badly that after garnering a staggering 28,000 dislikes compared with a paltry 662 likes as of Sunday, Bud Light apparently turned off the feature on its YouTube account that displays how many dislikes the post has received. As of this post on 6-26 it was 31,000 or so down to 681 likes. Comments are ... well: @polosangabriel1587 This ad is an obvious low key FU to all those who boycott Bud light. @keithboyd6288 just when you thought AB surely couldn't do anything more stupid than they already have, they said "hold my beer, watch this"! They further alienate what little hanging customer base of Bud Light they might have had by making an insulting parody ad of them. Way to go AB, keep hiring those woke marketing grads from today's woke colleges! View Quote As for what is BL and AB sponsoring, there have been a few threads. This is the ... tamest ... link I could find (at least for the top of the twitter thread) https://nitter.net/libsoftiktok/status/1673099249930608641 (nitter is a twitter mirroring site, and ... well, it's pride anything, so click at peril to your own sanity and you have been warned). ----------------------------------------------------- MEANWHILE, YEUNGLING: Yuengling Brewery (@yuenglingbeer) June 16, 2023 Click To View Spoiler Nitter, for ppl without twitter: https://nitter.net/yuenglingbeer/status/1669831570826338304 And if twitter nukes the pic: It would be better if they had just pulled the sponsorship, but it's still a win and I'll take it. ----------------------------------------------------------- Marketing Execs totally not fired, pinkie swear, just on permanent leave: https://dailycaller.com/2023/06/27/anheuser-busch-marketing-execs-bud-light-not-employed/ Click To View Spoiler EXCLUSIVE: SOURCE: Top Anheuser-Busch Marketing Executives Behind Boycott Are No Longer Employed Henry Rodgers Chief National Correspondent June 27, 2023 1:06 PM ET The two top Anheuser-Busch marketing executives who were placed on leave amid the company shakeup no longer work for the brand, a source inside Anheuser-Busch confirmed in texts obtained by the Daily Caller on Tuesday. Group Vice President for Marketing Daniel Blake and Bud Light Marketing Vice President Alissa Heinerscheid are "gone gone," according to obtained text messages with a current regional head of marketing. The Caller is granting anonymity to the source to discuss legally fraught internal company policy. "To my understanding if we publicly announced the word 'fire' it opens up the potential for them to sue us. Thats why we said leave of absence," the source said in a text message obtained by the Caller. "The wholesalers would have had an absolute HAY DAY with leadership if they didn't remove her," the source inside the company also said. "To be fair- Daniel Blake was actually awesome. I think he was just caught in cross fire. But also he did hire her so that's a fault," the source continued. "Wholesalers were told they are both gone for good by leadership during in person conversations. They already shifted all their direct reports to new people and the head of marketing," the source added in another text message obtained by the Caller. ... Update: 3:35pm ET: After the given deadline, Anheuser-Busch reached out with the following statement and did not address any of the questions asked by the Caller: "Given the circumstances, Alissa has decided to take a leave of absence which we support. In the interest of our employees' safety and privacy, we're not providing any additional information. Daniel is taking a leave of absence. In the interest of our employees' safety and privacy, we're not providing any additional information," an Anheuser-Busch spokesperson said. 6-28 https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-12242499/Anheuser-Busch-CEO-refuses-say-hed-allow-Bud-Light-partner-Dylan-Mulvaney-again.html Click To View Spoiler He still doesn't get it! Tone deaf Anheuser-Busch CEO won't rule out Bud Light working with Dylan Mulvaney AGAIN - and then says firm needs to 'appreciate' what the consumer wants - despite debacle costing firm $20 BILLION and counting US CEO Brendan Whitworth refused to say if the company would work with Mulvaney again after the backlash He admitted that the company was pouring 'three times' more investment into Bud Light this year It comes after claims that the company had fired two of their top marketing VP's - something which they deny By Emma James, Senior Reporter For Dailymail.Com Published: 08:07 EDT, 28 June 2023 | Updated: 10:05 EDT, 28 June 2023 ----------------------------------------------------------- 6-30 AB giving away money to try and get people to buy product: Click To View Spoiler Yep. They really ARE desperate: https://archive.is/BiXWn "Easy to Summer" will kick off with the brand's largest media spend to date - starting with the new commercial airing today. Bud Light is making this the biggest summer campaign ever by bringing all the summer backyard fun straight to fans by: - Offering lucky fans the chance to win tickets to the local shows on the Backyard Tour and experience your favorite artists - Giving away $10K weekly to make summer easy to enjoy and stock up for all the backyard parties - Covering the beer tab where consumers scan for a chance to win $100 toward their tab - Offering rebates over July 4th weekend to help keep summer easy HEY AB: wanna fix it? You now have no choice. Either choose the sith emperor and go fully to the dark side, and wind up living hated and loathed by everyone - side with blackrock, and sexual anarchy, and "we're coming for your kids" - or utterly disown the dark side, call it what it is, than prove to everyone you really believe it by consistently for the rest of your lives acting like someone who believes what they are saing. Even when nobody's looking. Or just keep sitting on the judas chair, praying the weight doesn't get to be too much. It's your choice. ----------------------------------------------------------- 7-1 https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-12252375/Anheuser-Busch-CEO-failed-fix-Bud-Light-crisis-quit-says-ex-president-sales.html Click To View Spoiler Anheuser-Busch's CEO has failed to fix the Bud Light crisis. He must quit NOW and let someone else right this sinking ship... for the sake of ordinary Americans' 401(k)s, says brand's ex-president of sales ANSON FRERICKS By Anson Frericks For Dailymail.Com Published: 08:48 EDT, 1 July 2023 | Updated: 09:05 EDT, 1 July 2023 ... Anheuser-Busch's response on Friday was predictably weak and indecisive: 'As we move forward, we will focus on what we do best brewing great beer for everyone and earning our place in moments that matter to our consumers.' What does that mean? Absolutely nothing. And it will only deepen the chasm between the brand and its customers. As such and I take no pleasure in passing this judgement it's clear to me that it's time for the shareholders and board of Anheuser-Busch to ask Whitworth to step down. Now, to be clear: I worked with Whitworth for many years at Anheuser-Busch. He personally promoted me twice and eventually made me President of Anheuser Busch Sales & Distribution Co in 2021. We had a good relationship and I left on my own terms to co-found an asset management company last year. So I write this with a heavy heart, not out of spite but because it's important for Americans to understand how and why corporate leaders can bungle the management of once-iconic American brands so badly, sacrificing countless jobs and invested assets in the process. More importantly, I write because those leaders must be seen to take responsibility when things go so badly wrong. Yes, he should leave, and no, that won't fix it, becuase they'd have to undo what they did, and they haven't got the sense or the guts to do it. ----------------------------------------------------------- 7-2 https://www.newsbusters.org/blogs/nb/clay-waters/2023/07/02/pbs-cries-over-right-wing-backlashfalse-information-big-biz Click To View Spoiler PBS Cries Over 'Right-Wing Backlash False Information' As Big Biz 'Rethinks' Pride Clay Waters July 2nd, 2023 12:16 PM June 26's edition of the tax-supported PBS NewsHour featured more of the unstinting, un-journalistic cheerleading of a segment of left-wing activists without a pretense of fairness. This time PBS's flagship news program was lamenting the "right-wing backlash" forcing companies to "rethink Pride." June was "Pride Month," a fact you'd been reminded of every time you turn on your television or open your laptop lately. It began as gay pride and now includes the entire LGBTQ+ alphabet (lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer, and a "plus" sign for anything they come up with next). Host Geoff Bennett fretted: Bennett: June is Pride Month, a time when Many companies show their support for in celebration of the LGBTQ+ community by launching Pride Month campaigns, displaying pride merchandise, and including LGBTQ+ people in ads and marketing. But, this year, after weeks of political attacks, right-wing backlash has forced some companies to rethink Pride. Reporter William Brangham set the scene through a woke prism of assumptions. Brangham: .In just the last few months, companies like Bud Light, Target, PetSmart, Nike, The North Face and Adidas have all faced right-wing protests over LGBTQ+ products and ads and partnerships. Activists have taken their criticism to social media and spread false information over Pride products targeting kids, like these at Target. They project so much that they could pull double duty in an IMAX dome: During his supposedly journalistic take on the matter, Brangham's sole source was a LGBTQ public relations person. Brangham: Boycotts, employee harassment and threats of violence have prompted companies, including Target, to pull back some Pride initiatives. For more on this backlash, we're joined by Bob Witeck. He is president of Witeck Communications, which is a firm specializing in LGBTQ+ marketing . Bob Witeck, President, Witeck Communications: I'd say two things. One, we are in a moment. But the backlash that we're witnessing is hardly spontaneous or authentic or organic. It's primarily instigated backlash. The feigned indignation, for example, against one beer was a calculated tactic. And it was used by anti-woke provocateurs, frankly, who had political agendas. I think Budweiser tripped a wire that offered some an invitation to exploit. Brangham: And is it your sense that this is -- again, I know you're arguing that this is a ginned-up and nonorganic movement. But you were telling us before that this has been going on in some fashion for many, many years .I know you're not a social scientist, but if you believe that this is not an organic movement, what do you attribute all these attacks to? Witeck: Well, I think the political moment tells us that we're in a -- the United States is driven by division, and the so-called anti-woke activists are trying to find every wedge possible. And they're wielding them in the hands of candidates to use it to attack drag shows, to attack books in schools, to attack trans kids. And they're taking on a variety of exploitable topics that do divide the American households. ----------------------------------------------------------- 7-3 AB ad mocking their customers: Click To View Spoiler Failed To Load Title @ZLATumor 17 minutes ago Bud Lights price has gone up since March. Now all it cost is: Your Dignity, Your Integrity, and Your Pride. (Real Pride ????) What's next, the blazing saddles fart scene for the 4th? ----------------------------------------------------------- 7-7 BL falls down popularity ratings Click To View Spoiler Bud light has fallen from the top ten slots in popularity in the yougov beer popularity poll to FIFTEENTH. It is only *four* slots above whiteclaw! https://today.yougov.com/ratings/consumer/popularity/beers Attached File ----------------------------------------------------------- 7-11 Advertisers at AB starting to show the signs of a mental break? Click To View Spoiler
Tweet Bud Light@budlight It's fine, this is fine 11:00 AM Jul 9, 2023 273K Views Yep. They're using the line from this: Low key admitting they are screwed. ------
Crazy Ass Moments in Beach Boys History @beachboysmoment Mike Love claims he is afraid to perform 'Surfer Girl' because it is "gender specific", implies that he fears retaliation from the FBI and the Budweiser corporation. (2023) 12:45 PM Jul 9, 2023 2.1M Views Video at link. Apparently this was in *may* Delivered in the tone of humor, and light mockery: "this next song, I'm a little concerned about doing, on account of (short pause) it's gender specific. (crowd laughs, cheers, and claps) Hope there's nobody from budwiser here. (crowd cheers and laughs and claps even more and louder) Or the fbi. (next part delivered tongue in cheek) Sorry, I apologize in advance for anything I might say or do, it's a family tradition, know what I'm saying? (back to normal light hearted but not mocking tone) Ok. This one is for all the ladies. (band strikes up surfer girl) ----------------------------------------------------------- 7-12 https://www.westernjournal.com/costco-appears-handed-bud-light-painful-death-star/ Click To View Spoiler Costco Appears to Have Handed Bud Light a Painful 'Death Star' By Jack Davis July 12, 2023 at 6:37am Social media reports indicate things could even get worse for the beer that is making boycotts famous. To the uninitiated, the little asterisk on the upper right-hand corner of the Bud Light price tags at a few Costco stores as seen in images now making the rounds of Twitter is just a little speck of type. But in the universe of the members-only warehouse retail chain, the asterisk is noted as the "death star," because when it appears on a label, it means the store does not plan to restock the product once its supply is sold out, according to Newsweek. Images show the "death star" on different can sizes and packaging, which could mean only certain Bud Light sizes are fading away at certain stores.
The Western Journal reached out to Costco for comment but did not immediately receive a response. Marie Clark, editor of the shopping site CostContessa, offered confirmation that the mark shown on the Bud Light price tag is indeed called the "death star" by Costco customers. "On Costco price tags, if you see an asterisk in the upper right-hand corner, this indicates an item won't be restocked," Clark said in a September 2022 interview on the food-centered website TheKitchn. "The item might be full price or it might be discounted an asterisk alone doesn't tell you more than that. But if it's something you want and you were thinking, 'Oh, I'll come back and get it next week instead,' you might want to think twice and purchase it now," she said. Newsweek noted that according to figures from industry consultant Bump Williams Consulting, over the four weeks that ended July 1, Bud Light's revenue dropped 28 percent compared with the same time a year ago. Quick, rush to costco and ... DON'T BUY anything AB. 7-15 Well, the leader of AB has previously decided that everyone stuck with him are going to have to be torn in two from the middle up ... riding the fence, all the way. Now media are trying to position us all to accept it (their intransigence) as invetable. Click To View Spoiler First, what AB said, a month ago: https://archive.is/5UhKr We recognize that over the last two months, the discussion surrounding our company and Bud Light has moved away from beer, and this has impacted our consumers, our business partners, and our employees. To translate the underlined emphaisized phrase from the coded unclear nonsense it is:We are a beer company, and beer is for everyone. ... Brendan Whitworth CEO, Anheuser-Busch "I don't think we did anything wrong at all, we will continue to support the transgender revolution" (inherent in which is literal surgical and chemical child mutilation and abuse along with mental and emotional abuse) and sexual anarchy. Well. Now we are starting to see media do this: https://seekingalpha.com/article/4617250-anheuser-busch-inbev-unlikely-to-deviate-from-inclusive-strategies Anheuser-Busch InBev Likely Won't End 'Woke' ESG Strategies Translation: grrr, we aren't backing down, grrrrrr, this is your cue to be scared and quit it...Jul. 15, 2023 1:51 AM ETAnheuser-Busch InBev SA/NV (BUD), BUDFFFOX, FOXA40 Comments EBITs And Pieces 707 Followers Summary Fox News has doubled its negative coverage of Bud Light in just 10 days. Despite the prolonged & continued attack, AB InBev has remained silent. YouGov poll suggested Bud Light was no longer a top 10 favorite beer in the US. Yet the beer remains a top 5 selling beer in the US in May. Positive quarterly reporting suggests the AB InBev is not feeling a hit to its bottom line, most likely due to its larger portfolio of brands. ESG strategies are unlikely to change at AB InBev, as the debate remains focused on the Bud Light brand and has not spread. Anheuser-Busch InBev (BUD) is showing no sign of backtracking from its commitments to ESG, including gender inclusivity which saw the brand face consumer backlash over its marketing campaign featuring trans activist Dylan Mulvaney. ... Boycott? What Boycott? No really, it's just a flesh wound, you haven't done anything to me, I'm not hurt at all.A YouGov poll (of a statistically insignificant 1,468 consumers) is being pushed by some media outlets suggesting that Bud Light has fallen "...outside top 10 favorite beers in the US". Despite this, Circana reports that the top-selling brands in the US for May were: Modelo Especial ($333.1 million) Bud Light ($297.3 million) Owned by AB InBev Michelob Ultra ($267.6 million) Owned by AB InBev Coors Light ($241 million) Miller Lite ($216.4 million) While sales are no doubt down for Bud Light, the brand is still a top seller, and other brands owned by AB InBev (including Corona, Stella Artois (a major 2023 Wimbledon sponsor) & Becks) will no doubt see a trickle-down lift in sales. Investors: Nothing To Worry About Here See, you stupid plebs, you can't punish us! We're not hurting at all, it's IMPOSSIBLE for you to touch us! Despite breaking the golden rules of crisis management, an aggressive and continued campaign by a major news outlet, a 30% slump in sales, and burying the lead on a response to angry consumers, AB InBev looks to be weathering the storm extremely well. Posting some excellent quarterly figures has certainly helped the case for the brand, and the vast majority of critics will eventually lose interest in the boycott campaign and move along. I believe investors can, and should, remain bullish on AB InBev and see market jitters about a boycott as little to be concerned about. Looking forward, US Elections are coming in November, and these will dominate the news cycle as Joe Biden looks to be re-elected, while Donald Trump will continue to be unpredictable and newsworthy as he fights off Republican nominee contender Ron DeSantis. This will give Fox plenty to play with, and AB InBev can take a drinks break. ... Of course, though, they also said: And despite the noise from right-wing voices, AB InBev's portfolio of brands has delivered on continued growth, despite reports that Bud Light sales had fallen as much as 30%. Note that bolded bit there. That's a soft underbelly. Begging to be shot full of arrows.--------------- This was never about "beer isn't for everyone" even though uh ... oops, it really isn't ... hello minors and the small little problem some people have with drinking too much... it's always been about them pushing delusion in everyone's faces and in this case a particular delusion that has now normalized abuse and mutilation as part of it's cornerstone, without which it cannot exist. ----------------------------------------------------------- 7-19 https://www.westernjournal.com/lone-member-splits-beer-compliance-board-says-bud-light-violated-code-marketing-minors/ Click To View Spoiler Lone Member Splits with Beer Compliance Board, Says Bud Light Violated Code by Marketing to Minors Now, a dissenting vote in a review board that monitors beer industry marketing has accused it of doing something even worse and Texas Sen. Ted Cruz on Wednesday was making sure Americans know it. First, the good news for the beleaguered beer brand. According to Newsweek, a 2-1 vote of the Beer Instittute's Code Compliance Review Board found that Bud Light had not violated marketing codes through its partnership with the now-notorious "transgender" influencer Dylan Mulvaney. The bad news is, that one vote against Bud Light could hurt. ... But the losing vote cast by former Tennessee state Judge Paul Summers ... As Summers wrote, according to the committee's news release: "The entertainer enjoyed being accepted by young children. The actor celebrated the 365 days of 'Girlhood.' An actor, entertainer, or social media influencer, Mulvaney appeals to persons below the legal drinking age with a 'special attractiveness.' Mulvaney is especially attractive to young teens and girls; is often recognized as preadolescent; and caters to very young people. [Anheuser-Busch] knew all this, or the company's leadership should have known." Please note the ... (ellipses). This article is not easy to TL : DR shorten. See and read the original. I have given a very truncated summary. Here is the senate discussion of the finding: https://www.commerce.senate.gov/2023/7/former-state-judge-and-ag-sides-with-sen-cruz-on-bud-light-s-controversial-dylan-mulvaney-campaign Here is the board's finding, with the judge's dissent: https://www.beerinstitute.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/CCRB-Dylan-Mulvaney-Complaint-Packet-with-Decisions-7.18.23.pdf From the linked board paperwork and finding: Context- Nature of Complaint: Senators Cruz and Blackburn allege that by affiliating with Dylan Mulvaney, a social media influencer, Anheuser-Busch Companies violated the Beer Institute Advertising and Marketing Code Section 3(c)(i) and Buying Guidelines prohibiting marketing to individuals younger than the legal drinking age. Dissenting member's full statement in the fold: Click To View Spoiler Dissenting Decision and Conclusion Dylan Mulvaney has a persona wherein the actor looks and acts like a little girl. Mulvaney appeals to little children and often behaves like one. As Guidelines 3 and 3a direct, it is not simply the advertisement or marketing that matters; it is the larger context that matters. The entertainer enjoyed being accepted by young children. The actor celebrated the 365 days of "Girlhood." An actor, entertainer, or social media influencer, Mulvaney appeals to persons below the legal drinking age with a "special attractiveness." Mulvaney is especially attractive to young teens and girls; is often recognized as preadolescent; and caters to very young people. AB knew all this, or the company's leadership should have known. If a company sends a social media influencer a beer with his / her picture on the can, one can expect that the recipient will act on it. That is common sense. It is rational thinking of an adult. If AB had sent Mulvaney a beer can while the latter's persona was that of a 51 year-old woman, then there probably would be no violation. However, suppose that Mulvaney was an actor posing as Santa Claus, an elderly man clearly of legal drinking age. If this "Santa Claus" appeared in any beer advertisement or marketing, that would certainly be a real problem for the brewer. Whether AB has a formal partnership or a loose agreement with Mulvaney is of no concern to the CCRB. The brewer knew, or should have known, the consequences of sending the can of beer to Mulvaney or in some other way partnering with the actor. The consequences to the company, employees, and its shareholders have been incalculable. Those are not the issues to be decided by the CCRB. Our concern is whether the brewer violated the Code by a preponderance of the evidence. This writer, a CCRB board member, finds that the brewer has violated the Code as to advertising and marketing to people below the legal drinking age. The complainant/s have met the burden of proof by a preponderance of the evidence. The CCRB does not need to delve into the other causes of action in the complaint. Complainant/s have proven a violation of the Code. It is academic since, to this board member's knowledge, AB failed to provide the reasonable documentation requested in the joint May 17th letter and June 14th formal complaint. They are reasonable requests by the complainant/s. Responses from AB would have been elucidating. This writer can assume that the complaint's positions as to these documents or admissions are more likely true than not, and are verified. At any rate, the respondent AB cannot rely on them in defense. Anheuser-Busch's actions are inconsistent with the guidelines in the Code. The company has violated the Beer Institute's Code. The complainant or complainants should prevail. I respectfully dissent from the majority of my colleagues on the CCRB. PAUL G. SUMMERS BOARD MEMBER CODE COMPLIANCE REVIEW BOARD ----------------------------------------------------------- 7-20 Desantis is going after AB for putting funds at risk. Click To View Spoiler https://www.dailywire.com/news/desantis-instructs-state-board-of-administration-to-launch-inquiry-of-anheuser-busch-assets Florida Governor Ron DeSantis instructed the State Board of Administration (SBA) to launch a inquiry of the global equity assets that it holds with Anheuser-Busch InBev following the fallout the company has faced after one of its top brands, Bud Light, engaged in paid marketing engagement with a controversial transgender influencer. DeSantis sent a letter to SBA Interim Executive Director Lamar Taylor highlighting the nearly 30 percent loss in sales the company saw during the month of June. The SBA is an asset management organization responsible for investing Florida's state and local government assets. "As sales of AB InBev products within the U.S. continue to precipitously decline, reports are now emerging that large American mainstays like Costco will be pulling Bud Light from the shelves," the 44-year-old Republican presidential candidate wrote. "Clearly, the Board's mismanagement as well as its failure to remediate the problem and repair its relationship with millions of disaffected American consumers has led to this impasse and will continue to financially harm the SBA and other shareholders." DeSantis said it was critical that the SBA remain committed to its legal obligations to "prudently manage the funds of Florida's hardworking law enforcement officers, teachers, firefighters, and first responders in a manner that focuses on growing returns, not subsidizing an ideological agenda through woke virtue signaling." "I therefore request that you immediately initiate a review to examine how AB InBev's conduct has impacted and continues to impact the value of SBA's AB InBev holdings," the governor said. "It appears to me that AB InBev may have breached legal duties owed to its shareholders, and that a shareholder action may be both appropriate and necessary. To protect SBA and the retirees of Florida from losses attributable to AB InBev's disregard of those duties, all options are on the table." ----------------------------------------------------------- 7-21 https://nypost.com/2023/07/21/canned-cocktail-gay-water-aims-to-cash-in-on-bud-lights-mistakes/ Click To View Spoiler July 21, 2023 9:36am Updated An entrepreneur launched a canned cocktail this week called "Gay Water" that's aimed at LGBTQ drinkers and said he's looking to capitalize on Bud Light's mistakes. Tell us again, AB, why you think you can satisfy our leftist revolutionaries? The mere fact that you weren't supportive enough of the dude who engages in womanface that kicked this all off got you smacked down by them. How long till this guy is found to not be properly revolutinary? ----------------------------------------------------------- 7-23 AB has managed to politicise their product so much that is viewed as a controversial political statement... instead of as a beer. It is now following the political split - we knew this at the gut level, but now we are starting to get numbers. Note the state divide: Click To View Spoiler https://www.thestockdork.com/bud-light-sales-decline-in-the-carolinas/ Bud Light Sales Decline In The Carolinas By Malik Graystone Jul 23, 2023 The hospitality consumption data platform Union reported a significant decline in Bud Light's sales share in the Carolinas. From April through June 30, the brand's sales share dropped by 6.9 points, falling from 19.4% to 12.5%. ... During the same three-month period, Miller Lite's sales share saw a notable increase of nearly three points, reaching 16.4%. This shift in market share further highlights the impact of the boycott on Bud Light's sales in the Carolinas. ... Local bar owners in the Carolinas have also reported a significant impact on Bud Light's sales. For instance, Chris Dimattia, the owner of Recovery Room Tavern in Charleston, SC, mentioned that he used to sell 10 cases of Bud Light each week, but now only sells one to three cases of the boycott brew, resulting in a 70% to 90% drop in sales. At Blind Tiger Pub, another Charleston bar, Bud Light sales are described as "almost non-existent" by general manager Clayton Dukes. Dukes expressed his concern that the boycott may persist for an extended period, prompting him to replace Bud Light draft with Michelob Ultra due to the low sales. ... The negative impact on Bud Light's sales was not limited to the Carolinas. In New York and New Jersey, the brand also lost ground to its rival, Miller Lite. The combined sales share of Bud Light in these states fell by 5.1 points, while Miller Lite's sales share increased by about two points. ... Surprisingly, the boycott's impact on Bud Light sales was negligible in California, where Mulvaney hails from. Union reported only minor changes in market dominance in the state. Bud Light's sales share in California slid by 0.8 points to 6.6%, while Miller Lite's sales share increased by 1.7 points to 12%. ... Union's "OnPrem Insights" report revealed that Bud Light has dropped from its top spot among Union-affiliated venues. The brand now ranks fourth among Union's customers, while Miller Lite, Michelob Ultra, and Coors Light occupy the top three positions. ... Bud Light's significant sales slide by 34.2% over the past six months has put the brand in a challenging position. The fallout from Mulvaney's controversial posts and the subsequent partnership has evidently had a negative impact on the brand's sales and reputation. This is one of those man on the street style videos. The first bit is not why I'm posting it - instead, look at people's more honest reactions of how they view BL, and what the less tribal political responses were to "what could they do to win you back." Will Conservatives Drink Bud Light? The only thing this can do for AB is lose them customers. They should have sat their beancounters down - the ones who were involved with screwing the company into using the ESG/CEI nonsense to get that sweet sweet "screw your customers, be a wild politicized leftist" funds - with some real marketing experts and explained to them how this was inveitable. ----------------------------------------------------------- 7-27 BL to lays off hundreds of workers Click To View Spoiler Hat tip @DamascusKnifemaker here: https://www.ar15.com/forums/general/Bud-Light-lays-off-hundreds/5-2661514/? https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/bud-light-lay-hundreds-employees-wake-disastrous-woke-pro-trans-marketing Bud Light To Lay Off Hundreds Of Employees In Wake Of Disastrous Pro-Trans Marketing by Tyler Durden Thursday, Jul 27, 2023 - 11:45 AM Bud Light's self-destruction after its botched TikTok promotion with clownish, male-to-female trans influencer Dylan Mulvaney, resulting in what Deutsche Bank analyst Mitch Collett recently said is a permanent loss of nearly 25% of its business and Mexican lager Modelo Especial securing the spot as America's top-selling beer, has likely forced Anheuser-Busch InBev to lay off hundreds of workers. The Wall Street Journal reported Wednesday night that Anheuser-Busch, which sells Budweiser and Stella Artois, will slash 2% of its 18,000 US workforce. The company said the layoffs wouldn't impact front-line workers such as brewery and warehouse staff. "While we never take these decisions lightly, we want to ensure that our organization continues to be set for future long-term success," Anheuser-Busch Chief Executive Brendan Whitworth said in a statement. Whitworth continued, "These corporate structure changes will enable our teams to focus on what we do best brewing great beer for everyone." The restructuring will affect corporate and marketing roles at New York, St. Louis, and Los Angeles offices. Two percent of the total workforce is roughly 380 positions. ----------------------------------------------------------- 7-28 Bars dumping BL Click To View Spoiler
KEEM ??@KEEMSTAR Jul 27 My local bar finally gave up & is removing Bud Light completely from the bar permanently. Jul 27, 2023 2:36 AM UTC Video @ link. "really, nobody's ordering bud anymore?" "No" ----------------------------------------------------------- 7-31 https://nypost.com/2023/07/31/bud-light-distributors-no-longer-expect-sales-to-recover-from-dylan-mulvaney-disaster/ Click To View Spoiler Bud Light distributors no longer expect sales to recover from Dylan Mulvaney disaster By Lisa Fickenscher July 31, 2023 1:24pm Updated Many Anheuser-Busch distributors say they are resigned to their painful Bud Light losses and that they have given up on luring back disaffected customers following the Dylan Mulvaney fiasco, The Post has learned. After four months of hiring freezes and layoffs with some beer truck drivers getting heckled and harassed even as Bud Light sales have dropped by more than 25% Anheuser-Busch wholesalers have accepted that they have lost a chunk of their customers for good and need to focus on a new crop of drinkers. "Consumers have made a choice," said an executive at a Texas-based beer distributor who did not want to be identified. "They have left [Bud Light] and that's how it's going to be. I don't envision a big percentage of them coming back." Sales of other Anheuser-Busch beers including Budweiser, Michelob Ultra and Busch Light also have been in decline since Bud Light's marketing tie-up with transgender influencer Mulvaney. What's more, those lost customers have likely found that Bud Light's competitors, including Coors Light and Miller Lite, "are a very similar product." Winning the beer wars comes down to "whoever is best at marketing," the executive said. "There is an increasing feeling that this [Bud Light] decline rate could last for a while and the distributors are worried about losing those drinkers to other similar brands," David Steinmann, executive editor of Beer Marketer's Insights, told The Post. 8-1 https://nypost.com/2023/08/01/kevin-oleary-to-teach-college-students-about-bud-lights-losses/ Click To View Spoiler Kevin O'Leary: This is an extraordinary case, and one I'll be teaching in business schools across America this fall. In the history of beer, in the history from when it was marketed, because remember, you're dealing with a commodity. Beer is essentially the same. What differentiates it is brand. So you spend hundreds of millions of dollars a year building up a brand, and then you have to ask yourself on a campaign that really brings you into a discussion around gender identity, 'is that the right thing for my beer brand?' Well, apparently not, because if you spend $200 million a year, the biggest moves in the beer market were measured by 1 to 5% in a year. That's an extraordinary volatility. To lose 25% market share has never been achieved, and it's impossible to even dream it. So what have you learned? Social media a widely held view amongst my CEOs is that if you get a bad social media story, it's going to go away in 24 to 48 hours. But that didn't happen here. We're still talking about this situation months later, and they continue to lose share. That, number one, is an issue. Number two, you've really got to understand who your constituency is. What they did there was very damaging. --------- https://nypost.com/2023/08/01/miller-lite-coors-light-sales-crush-bud-light-in-wake-of-dylan-mulvaney-fiasco/ Click To View Spoiler Bud Light's loss is Miller Lite's gain. Molson Coors, parent company of Miller Lite and Coors Light, boasted its single best quarter of revenue since the 2005 merger of Canadian giant Molson and the US-based Miller Brewing Company buoyed by the backlash against Bud Light sparked by its partnership with trans influencer Dylan Mulvaney. The conglomerate said its two key brands outsold Bud Light by 50% in the second quarter. Combined sales of Miller Lite and Coors Light also outpaced the nation's No. 2 selling beer Modelo Especial by 30% according to Molson Coors. The Modelo brand is expected to overtake Bud Light as the nation's top-selling beer by the end of August, The Post reported on Monday. Molson Coors, meanwhile, reported $342 million in net income for the second quarter up $47 million from the same period a year ago. Sales also increased by 11.8% to $3.3 billion which did not meet analyst expectations. Shares of Molson Coors were down by nearly 6% in early trading on Wall Street on Tuesday, though the stock is up more than 33% in the last 12 months. 8-3 https://nypost.com/2023/08/03/anheuser-busch-profit-in-us-sinks-nearly-30-loses-37b-in-value-after-bud-lights-dylan-mulvaney-fiasco/Click To View Spoiler August 3, 2023 9:44am Updated Anheuser-Busch InBev felt the sting of the Bud Light boycott, reporting a 10.5% drop in revenue and a nearly 30% plunge in core profit in the US during the second quarter and has lost nearly $40 billion in value. ... The fury spilled over to Anheuser-Busch's other popular brands like Budweiser and Busch Light causing the company to suffer a revenue hit of $395 million in North America for the quarter 28.2% plunge compared to the same time a year ago. The largest beer company in the world blamed its whopping loss in core profit which accounts for earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization on "the volume decline of Bud Light" as well as "increased sales and marketing investments." Sales to retailers declined by 14% in the US, the company reported. Bud Light was overtaken by Modelo Especial as the top selling beer in May, The Post previously reported. In the wake of Bud Light's "woke" advert, Anheuser-Busch has lost nearly $37 in market value. On March 31 the day before Mulvaney's disastrous social media campaign AB InBev had a market cap of $134.5 billion. As of Thursday, that figure plummeted to $97.74 billion. ... Despite the gloomy US outlook, the company reported a 7.2% increase in revenue during Q2, with profits after EBITDA increasing 5%. AB InBev said net revenue in the three months to June 30 climbed to $15.12 billion from $14.79 billion in the same period last year. Net profit dropped to $339 million from $1.6 billion after taking a hit tied to shares issues. The company was boosted by soaring sales in Brazil, China and Colombia, where earnings gained more than 20% in the second quarter. https://www.westernjournal.com/bud-light-parent-company-reports-plunge-us-revenue-2nd-quarter-uses-china-offset/ Click To View Spoiler AB InBev announced that its second-quarter sales to U.S. wholesalers dropped 15 percent, while sales to retailers fell 14 percent. North American revenue fell $395 million compared to the same period in 2022, according to CNN. CNN noted that that figure included Canada, where revenue rose, "suggesting the slump was isolated to the United States." Sales in China also rose, according to Reuters. The company sold 11 percent more beer by volume there and achieved a more than 20 percent increase in sales of higher-priced beers. As a result, AB InBev's second-quarter profits rose 5 percent year-over-year, well outpacing expectations of a 0.4 percent increase. RBC analyst James Edwardes Jones called the outcome "an impressive demonstration of AB InBev's resilience and diversification," according to the Journal. However, analysts at Morgan Stanley warned that the "full hit" of the Bud Light boycott would not appear until the next quarterly report, The New York Times reported. In the four-week period ending July 22, retail Bud Light sales dropped over 40 percent in some metro areas. Sales of Bud Light at bars and restaurants went down 34 percent in the second quarter. Beer Business Daily publisher Harry Schuhmacher told Fox News that Bud Light's wounds were self-inflicted. "In my 30 years of doing this, I've never seen anything like it. I've never seen such a shift in market share this quickly, and I've never seen it so prolonged," he said. "I think it's kind of a wake-up call for marketers that wading into the culture wars can have pretty serious consequences and it's probably best just to stay clear." Now we get to have the fun of watching people try to say that this is nothing, it's fine, you didn't do anything, you don't matter, we're doubling down again! ------------------------------- Direct link to the PDF of the earnings report, it's 22 pages: https://cdn.builder.io/o/assets%2F2e5c7fb020194c1a8ee80f743d0b923e%2Fe51be4fadde94a06bda8af48c11802d8?alt=media&token=66c51853-89a3-4cf4-a946-adfcbfdd26d7&apiKey=2e5c7fb020194c1a8ee80f743d0b923e Grab it, before they make it harder to find. Click To View Spoiler ------------------- AND here it is, the transcript of the earnings call: https://www.fool.com/earnings/call-transcripts/2023/05/04/anheuser-busch-inbevnv-bud-q1-2023-earnings-call-t/ Click To View Spoiler It's not short. If you are wading in, grab a bag of chips and 64 oz of water and a comfy seat. Preferably not the throne, your legs will be dead if you try that .. Anheuser-Busch InBev/NV (BUD -0.86%) Q1 2023 Earnings Call May 04, 2023, 9:00 a.m. ET Contents: Prepared Remarks Questions and Answers Call Participants Prepared Remarks: Operator Welcome to Anheuser-Busch InBev's first quarter 2023 earnings conference call and webcast. Hosting the call today from AB InBev are Mr. Michel Doukeris, chief executive officer; and Mr. Fernando Tennenbaum, chief financial officer. To access the slides accompanying today's call, please visit AB InBev's website at www.ab-inbev.com and click on the Investors tab and the Reports and Results Center page. Today's webcast will be available for on-demand playback later today. [Operator instructions] Some of the information provided during the conference call may contain statements of future expectations and other forward-looking statements. These expectations are based on management's current views and assumptions and involve known and unknown risks and uncertainties. It is possible that AB InBev's actual results and financial condition may differ, possibly materially, from the anticipated results and financial condition indicated in these forward-looking statements. For a discussion of some of the risks and important factors that could affect AB InBev's future results, see risk factors in the company's latest annual report on Form 20-F filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on March 17, 2023. AB InBev assumes no obligation to update or revise any forward-looking information provided during the conference call and shall not be liable for any action taken in reliance upon such information. It is now my pleasure to turn the floor over to Mr. Michel Doukeris. Sir, you may begin. Michel Doukeris -- Chief Executive Officer Thank you, Jesse, and welcome, everyone, to our first quarter 2023 earnings call. It is a great pleasure to be speaking with you all today. Today, Fernando and I will take you through our first quarter operating highlights and provide you with an update on the progress we've made in executing our strategic priorities. After that, we will be happy to answer your questions. Let me start with our operating performance. Our business momentum continued this quarter, and we are very pleased with our strong performance to start the year. We delivered revenue growth of 13.2%, with volumes up by 0.9%. Revenue per hectoliter increased by 12.4% driven by price actions across our markets, other revenue management initiatives, and ongoing premiumization. We grew EBITDA by 13.6% with a margin expansion of 13 basis points despite continued commodity cost headwinds and while increasing sales and marketing investments in our brands. Underlying EPS was USD 0.65, an 8.7% increase versus last year. Our focus on disciplined resource allocation and everyday efficiency continues to enable us to invest for the long term while delivering consistent profitable growth. We delivered broad-based growth this quarter with both top and bottom-line increases in all five of our regions. Revenue increased in 80% of our markets, with volume growth in over 60%. Our diverse geographic footprint provides a unique combination of growth and reliable cash flow generation, positioning us well to deliver superior long-term value creation. Now, I'll take a few minutes to walk you through the operational highlights for the quarter from our key regions, starting with North America. In the U.S., the beer industry remains resilient with industry volume trends improving sequentially and U.S. dollar sales up 3%. Our business delivered another quarter of top-line growth and stable EBITDA despite delivery cost environment. Our above core beer portfolio continued to gain share of segment, growing volumes by mid-single digits. Since we are talking about the U.S., let me share some thoughts on the Bud Light situation and put it in the context of our global company. Let me start by clarifying a few facts. This was the result of one camp. It was not made for production or sales to general public. It was one post, not a formal campaign or advertisement. Bud Light campaign is easy to drink, easy to enjoy. We should address the situation through the lens of three areas that are very important: Our people; our consumers; and beer. Let's start with our people. This situation has impacted our people and especially our frontline workers: The delivery drivers; sales representatives; our wholesalers; Bud owners; and servers. These people are the fabric of our business. They are our neighbors, family members, and friends. They are in every community in America. We've been doing everything we can to support our teams and ensure that safety while continuing to brew, package, and together for wholesalers deliver great beer to the market. We are providing direct financial support to the frontline teams that work for us and our wholesalers. As to Bud Light, we have significantly increased our investments behind the brands in the U.S., including tripling our medium spend over the summer. Now let's talk about our consumers. We continue to be committed to the programs and partnerships that we have forged over decades with our consumers and with organizations that represent a wide range of communities where we operate. We work every day to delight our consumers and bring people together. When we do this well, our brands perform. Finally, let's talk beer. Everything we do should be about beer and should promote beer. Beer is an essential part of life's meaningful moments, whether in sports, music, or celebrations. These are moments that bring people together, and this is why I love beer. While beer will always be at the table when important topics are debated, the beer itself should not be the focus of the debate. But life is about being easy to drink and easy to enjoy. That's what consumers want, and that's what we are focused on delivering. We stand behind Bud Light, and we'll continue to invest in the brand to drive it forward. As CEO, I'm accountable for our results, this company and our shareholders and stakeholders, and my team. But life is very important to our U.S. business, and I would never minimize the situation. However, seeing the context of our global company provides perspective. Over the years, our global footprint has enabled us to successfully navigate different types of challenges, such as temporary ban on beer sales in certain countries and the most long shutdown of bars and restaurants across the globe. With respect to the current situation and the impact of Bud Light sales, it is too early to have a full view. The Bud Light volume decline in the U.S. over the first three weeks of April, as publicly reported, would represent around 1% of our overall global volumes for that period. With this perspective, and in the context of our global business, we believe we have the experience, the resources, and the partners to manage this. And our full-year EBITDA growth outlook is unchanged. In summary, we are focused on our people, our consumers, and beer. We want to reiterate our support for our wholesaler partners and everyone who brings our great beers to the market. I can tell you that we have the agility, resources, and people to support the U.S. team and move forward. We will continue to learn with the moment and come out stronger. And we'll work tireless to do what we do best: Bring people together over a beer and creating a future of more cheers. Now moving on to our largest region, Middle Americas, which continues to deliver strong results. In Mexico, we continue to outperform the industry and grow top line and bottom line by double digits. Our volume growth was broad-based, led by our both core beer brands, which grew by low teens. Our digital direct-to-consumer platform, TaDa, is now operating in over 50 cities and fulfilling on average, over 300,000 orders per month enabling us to build closer connections with our consumers. In Colombia, our business delivered top-line growth with our beer portfolio continue to gain share of total alcohol despite inflationary pressures impacting consumer demand. EBITDA declined low single digits, driven by anticipated cost pressures. Our leading mainstream portfolio drove our performance, delivering mid-single-digit revenue growth. In South America, our business in Brazil delivered double-digit top and bottom-line growth, with 235 basis points of margin expansion. Our beer volumes grew by 0.9%, with stable market share despite lapping a strong comparable. Our premium and super-premium brands led our growth, delivering a volume increase in the mid-30s. Now let's talk about EMEA. in Europe, we grew top line by double digits with flat volumes despite the softer industry. EBITDA grew by high single digits. We continue to penalize our portfolio with our global brands and super-premium portfolio delivering low teens revenue growth, led by Budweiser and Corona. In South Africa, we delivered record-high volumes for the first quarter and grew revenue by high single digits. EBITDA declined by low single digits, impacted by anticipated commodity cost headwinds. Our performance was led by Carling Black Label, the No. 1 beer brand in the country. Our premium, super premium, and bold beer portfolios, all delivered double-digit increases in revenue. And finally, APAC. In China, our business delivered double-digit top and bottom-line growth as channel traffic continued to normalize and consumer demand for our portfolio accelerates. We delivered volume growth across all segments of our portfolio, led by our premium and super premium brands, which grew by approximately 10%. Now I would like to share with you a few sustainability highlights. We continue to work in collaboration with our suppliers to drive decarbonization across our supply chain. In March this year, we were recognized by CDP as being a top supplier engagement leader in 2022. In circular packaging, our team's on awards for our innovations using up-cycle barley straw in majority recycled marine waste for Corona 6-packs and crates. Now let's move on to our strategic pillars. Let's start with pillar one of our strategy, lead and grow the category. We continue to execute on our five levers to drive category expansion and delivered a strong quarter of consistent and profitable top-line growth. We are leading and growing the category by offering superior core propositions, developing new consumption occasions, and expanding our premium and Beyond Beer portfolios. Our global brands continue to scale and drive premiumization across our markets. The combined revenues of Corona, Stella Artois, and Budweiser grew by 15.4% outside of the brands' home markets, led by Budweiser, which grew by 17.8%. Now let's turn to our second strategic pillar, digitize, and monetize our ecosystem. This continues to accelerate usage and reach, capturing USD 8.2 billion in gross merchandising value this quarter, a 32% increase year over year in reaching 3.1 million monthly active users. Customer satisfaction continued to improve with our weighted average Net Promoter Score improving to positive 59, up 11 points since last year. In 15 of the 20 markets where business lie, our customers are also able to purchase third-party products through this marketplace. Customer adoption is increasing with 59% of these customers now also BEES-marketplace biased. In the first quarter, BEES marketplace generated approximately USD 295 million in GMV, representing USD 1.2 billion on an annualized basis. Now let's talk about how we are strengthening our direct relationship with our consumers. Our digital DTC products, Z Delivery, TaDa, and PerfectDraft are now available in 20 markets. and generated over 16 million orders and USD 100 million in revenues this quarter. With that, I would like to hand it over to Fernando to discuss the third pillar of our strategy, optimize our business. Fernando, over to you. Fernando Tennenbaum -- Chief Financial Officer Thank you, Michel. Good morning. Good afternoon, everyone. We aim to maximize value by focusing on three areas: optimize resource allocation; robust risk management; and efficient capital structure. With respect to capital allocation, we are focused on maximizing long-term value creation by dynamically balancing our priorities. We continue to invest in organic growth to support our strategy to lead and grow the category and digitize and monetize our ecosystem. The excess cash generated by our business is then dynamically allocated to our three capital allocation priorities: Deleveraging; selective M&A and return of capital to shareholders. Our debt maturity profile remains well distributed with no bond maturity in 2023 and no relevant medium-term refinancing needs. If you look at our debt maturity profile, we have USD 3 billion worth of bonds maturing through 2025. Our bond portfolio has an average pre-tax coupon of around 4% and a weighted average maturity of 14.5 years. In addition, our debt portfolio does not have any financial covenants, and it is comprised of a variety of currencies, diversifying our FX risk. 95% of our bonds have a fixed rate, insulated from interest rate volatility and inflation. As a result of our deleveraging progress, strong free cash flow generation, and robust risk management practice, both Moody's and S&P recently upgraded our credit rating to A3 and A-, respectively. And now let me take you through the drivers of our underlying EPS this quarter. We grew underlying EPS by 8.7% versus last year, delivering EUR 0.65 per share. This increase was primarily driven by nominal EBITDA growth, which accounted for a $0.13 per share increase. As we continue to deleverage, our net interest expense has reduced, contributing a $0.01 improvement. Higher-income tax reduced EPS by $0.04 driven by country mix. With that, I would like to hand it back to Michel for some final comments before we start our Q&A session. Michel? Michel Doukeris -- Chief Executive Officer Thanks, Fernando. Before opening for Q&A, I would like to take a moment to recap my key takeaways for the quarter. We continue to make progress in executing across each of our three strategic pillars. Our business momentum continued this quarter. Driven by the strength of our leading brand portfolio, we grew volumes in 60% of our markets. We made important strategic choices in pricing and other revenue management initiatives, which drove continued strong net revenue per hectoliter growth of 12.4%. We progressed our digital transformation, generating USD 8.2 billion in [indiscernible], with 59% of these customers now also base marketplace buyers. EBITDA grew organically by 13.6%, and our margins expanded even in the context of continued elevated cost environment. And, as a result of our deleveraging progress and strong free cash flow generation. Our credit rating was upgraded one notch by both Moody's and S&P. We are investing to drive long-term value creation, and our results this quarter are another proof point of the effectiveness of our strategy. With that, I will hand it back to Jesse for Q&A. Questions & Answers: Operator Thank you. The floor is now open for questions. [Operator instructions] Our first question is coming from the line of Priya Ohri-Gupta with Barclays. Please proceed with your question. Priya Ohri-Gupta -- Barclays -- Analyst Good morning, and thank you so much for taking the question. Firstly, congratulations on the upgrade from both Moody's and S&P. Fernando, I'd love to start with you. Now that you've achieved those low single A ratings, how should we think about your focus on getting to three times net leverage as a near-term target? And is there any potential desire to move toward mid-single A ratings over time, given that that could lift you to tier 1 commercial labor access? Fernando Tennenbaum -- Chief Financial Officer Thanks for your question. I -- the best way to frame it is to go back to our resource allocation priorities. The objective, at the end of the day, is to maximize the value creation. We always invest behind the organic growth of our business. And with the remaining cash, we balance the leveraging shareholder payouts and selective M&A. When you think about deleveraging, we said a few times that we maximize the value of our business at two times, but 90% of these benefits we will be capturing around three times. So our goal is to do the right thing for the business. And by doing the right things for the business, the rating will be a consequence. In a nutshell, for the time, we still see a meaningful amount of value on deleveraging. We increased the dividend last quarter. But in the grand scheme of things, most of the cash is still going toward deleveraging. But as we start moving closer to three times, then start defense in three times, moving closer to two times. More and more, we can have other priorities, but always with the mindset of doing the right thing for the business and rating will be a consequence. Priya Ohri-Gupta -- Barclays -- Analyst Great. And just as a follow-up, you highlighted that you have only about $3 billion of maturities coming due through '25. So as you think about further debt reduction, would you prioritize looking at those or maximizing deleveraging by perhaps looking further out the curve, given some of those months are still trading below par? Fernando Tennenbaum -- Chief Financial Officer It changes a lot depending on the interest rate environment. And we -- whenever we are in a position to start redeeming more debt, we always look at different trade-offs. If you recall correctly, in early 2020, given all the services, we focus a lot on the short term. And because interest rates were low, it made more sense for you to ride short-term debt. As we see interest rates rising it made more sense for us to redeem long-term debt because it was much more attractive. And we are in a position, given all the risk -- the risk management initiatives that we had in 2020, that we don't have any near-term so we can really make sure that we focus on whatever is maximizing value because the risk profile is in a very good place. Priya Ohri-Gupta -- Barclays -- Analyst Great. Thank you so much. Fernando Tennenbaum -- Chief Financial Officer Thank you, Priya. Operator Thank you. Our next question will be coming from the line of Rob Ottenstein with Evercore ISI. Please proceed with your question. Rob Ottenstein -- Evercore ISI -- Analyst Great. Thank you very much. So, Michel, as you clarified in your comments in terms of Bud Light, this is all about one can, one social media post, one influencer. And yet somehow it's just become something a whole lot bigger than that. There continues to be a lot of misinformation out there, a lot of confusion. Can you offer any thoughts, reflections on how this happened, what you've learned, and what -- now that we're here, what are you going to do about it? Thank you. Michel Doukeris -- Chief Executive Officer Good morning, Robert. Thanks for the question. So I think that, to start, we need to understand the current environment and especially social media landscape. And how consumer brands, especially big brands with significant reach, can be pulled into a discussion like this one. And we know that ours, Bud Light, is certainly not the first brand that was pulled in a situation like that. And as I said, while beer will always be at the table when important topics are debated, the beer itself should not be the focus of the debate. And to me, this is the key learning. So moving forward, I agree with you. One challenge is what you call the misinformation and confusion that still exists. We will need to continue to clarify the fact that this was one can, one influencer, one post, and not a campaign, and repeat this message for some time. But as we do that, we are more focused on leveraging our global experience and mobilizing our global resources to support the U.S. team as we move forward. We have adjusted and streamlined our marketing structure, so the most senior market peers are more closely connected to every aspect of our brands. In addition, we are supporting our frontline teams. We are investing behind Bud Light tripling our need investment for the summer, and we are investing more together with our wholesalers in our local markets. Just getting like last week, Bud Light was on the stage at the NFL Draft. We released a new TV commercial that continues our campaign. The current campaign easy to drink, easy to enjoy. We have strong presence in the Stagecoach Country Music Festival in California, and there is much more to come. And as I said, it's too early to have a full view on the impact, but I know that we have the people, the partners to learn from that, to continue to move forward, and to come out stronger. Rob Ottenstein -- Evercore ISI -- Analyst Very clear. Thank you. Operator Our next question is coming from the line of Mitch Collett with Deutsche Bank. Please proceed with your question. Mitch Collett -- Deutsche Bank -- Analyst Thank you. I've got two questions, please. The first is, given the strong start to the year from an organic EBITDA perspective, can you give some color on why you didn't raise or refine the F '23 guidance? And in particular, I'd be interested in the puts and takes from volume, pricing, COGS, and SG&A perspective, as we pass through the quarters. And then secondly, Colombia has been a really strong performer for a couple of years now, but it seems to have hit some challenges in Q1. Do you expect to be able to take enough price to offset input cost pressures in Colombia? And do you think the consumer is in the right place to accept it? Fernando Tennenbaum -- Chief Financial Officer Mitch, Fernando here. Let me take the first question. In terms of guidance, I always refer back to the reason why we started giving guidance. We give guidance, our medium-term outlook at the end of 2021 because we are moving from an inorganic strategy to an organic strategy. And when we look at the middle term, that's the growth that our business can sustain and can deliver. With that in mind, every quarter is going to be different. There are going to be better quarter, worst quarters and there will be puts and takes in different regions of the world performing in different ways. With regard to this year specifically, we just had the first quarter. It's too early. We had a good quarter. And of course, there are always puts and takes. That's why, for the moment, we are maintaining -- because the main objective of the guidance is to give certain of the medium-term potential performance of the business. In terms of commodities, the question that you asked, we said about 2023, that we would have some commodity pressures, of course, to a lesser extent than 2022. We have most of our commodities hedged, but there is always a portion of your cost of goods sold that is not hedged. A good example is cost of freight. And to some extent, this is moving in our favor, this is moving favorite, it's somewhat healthy. You also have the different geographies corporates. We said before that you have some regions like Brazil where the cost of goods sold should be in a better place. You could actually see that the Brazilian operation having gross margin expansion already this quarter. And this is their commodity scenario. On the other hand, you have regions like Europe, which is still somewhat under pressure on the commodity front and will continue to be for this year because energy prices, although they are improving, they are is still very high compared to previous levels. So a lot of puts and takes. We just had the first quarter. We continue to be confident on the business. But I think it's too early for us to talk about changing the guidance on upon way or another. And the second question, I will pass to Michel. Michel Doukeris -- Chief Executive Officer Mitch, thanks for the question. I think that when we talk about Colombia, if you allow me just to step back for a second, I think that we need to look at this developing markets and how inflation cost of goods sold, and consumer purchase power is playing a different role in each of these countries. And the fact that, as I said before and I keep repeating, we've been balancing our revenue management strategy, aligned with category, consumer purchase power, and the inflation and cost of goods sold. So Colombia is coming from a very good performance for the industry. The last year was a great year for the industry. And this year, in Quarter 1, we saw volumes declining by low single digits. And we have good share. Beer is gaining share of growth. What we saw in the industry overall was an impact from a softer macroeconomic. We need to remember that Colombia imports a lot of goods, and you have two impacts there. One is the inflation itself, the other one is FX. The country is moving. So you see that salary is already moving up as well. And the demand for our brands remain strong. We grew well gaining share of total alcohol. Our brands, core brands performing well, premium brands performing well as well. And under this macro background, we need to keep watching how the industry will behave while we continue to invest in our brands and they have good underlying demand. So the business is great. The macroenvironment was a little bit soft, but we continue to watch deals across the globe very carefully as we continue to push forward on our -- both category strategy but also revenue management strategy. Thanks for the question. Mitch Collett -- Deutsche Bank -- Analyst Thank you. Operator Thank you. Our next question is coming from Trevor Stirling with Bernstein. Please proceed with your question. Trevor Stirling -- AllianceBernstein -- Analyst Hi. Michel, just one question from me and following up, and thank you very much for your perspectives on the Bud Light feeding frenzy. We're looking, I suppose, trying to judge things based on the scanner data, which is one channel and several weeks in advance. I know you have more closer to real-time data across many channels. Is there any sign that the pressure is starting to ease, or it's still very too early to say? Michel Doukeris -- Chief Executive Officer Trevor, good morning. think that's still too early for us to understand the duration and the total impact. We look at the same public data that you look and we see the data. There's a lot of information on the week basis, but we also see day after day. We can see on the days that there is some stabilization, and this Bud Light volume in the first three weeks, as I said, they would account for like 1% of our global volume in this period, because there is still a lot of confusion there and misinformation as I was telling Robert. So we need to continue to clarify these information as we move forward. We need to continue to invest as we have done last week. And together with our wholesalers continue to drive both the business forward, the focus on beer, which is what we do best, and make sure that the right information is clarified to everybody. Because when we do beer, our brands perform well. Trevor Stirling -- AllianceBernstein -- Analyst Thank you, Michel. Michel Doukeris -- Chief Executive Officer Thank you. Operator Thank you. Our next question is coming from the line of Jeff Stent with BNP. Please proceed with your question. Jeff Stent -- Exane BNP Paribas -- Analyst Can you hear me? Michel Doukeris -- Chief Executive Officer Yes. Jeff Stent -- Exane BNP Paribas -- Analyst Hello? Hello? Michel Doukeris -- Chief Executive Officer Yes, we can hear you. Jeff Stent -- Exane BNP Paribas -- Analyst Hi. Great. Thanks Two questions. The first of which, would the 4% to 8% like-for-like EBITDA guidance still hold if Argentina was to be excluded? That's the first one. And the second one is -- you've talked a lot about Bud Light. But has there been any sort of spillover impact beyond Bud Light? And also, what are you doing to ensure that the market peers don't sort of enter a state of paralysis and become very fearful of sort of embracing any creativity? Fernando Tennenbaum -- Chief Financial Officer Hi, Jeff. Fernando here. Let me take the first one. I'll go back to the reason why we provided an outlook, and we did that the medium-term outlook at the end of 2021. What is the potential for our business over the medium term now that we move from an inorganic to an organic strategy. And that includes our whole portfolio. But of course, there is one very important KPI, but there are other KPIs that we should be looking at. From first quarter, for example, for the first quarter, we ended up growing more than our outlook. We ended up growing 13.6%. But this is the organic growth. If you look from a business standpoint, we grew more -- on a nominal basis, we grew more than $270 million. So it was a very strong growth. If you look from an EPS standpoint, we grew like 8.5%. So at the end of the day, this is our food business, and we need to make sure that we manage all the different variables, all the different KPIs. And the goal at the end of the day is to create value, and that's what we are aiming for. So the guidance is for -- the outlook is for our full business. And the second question, I'll pass it to Michel. Michel Doukeris -- Chief Executive Officer Yes, Jeff. Thanks for the question. I think that similarly to what we just discussed on the Bud Light volume, the public available data shows some spillover effect across the other brands, while the majority of the impact is still on Bud Light. And this is happening, I think, that on the same direction, given the information that's out there, the confusion and the noise and of course, more localized on Bud Light, and we continue to drive our programs forward for all brands. And I think that one of the key points that I was highlighting before is that we continue to be committed to the programs, partnerships, investments that we have in place, our key programs and campaigns for the brands, they remain in place. And one key thing in the U.S. was quickly adjust and streamline our structure. So in this situation and given the current environment, especially for the social media landscape, that we have senior marketers running the programs. We have a strong plan for the year. The brands are performing very well in the Quarter 1. The programs we know they impact correct consumers and they move the brands in the right direction. And I think that as we do what beer needs to do: Focus on sports, focus on music, focus on connecting with our consumers, our brands perform well as we know, right? So we will continue to invest. We are having healthy investments now during the summer across all brands as original part of our plans. But also, we are having up the investments on Bud Light as we reallocate global resources and we invest more on Bud Light. So I think that we feel good about the plans that we have moving forward. And while it's still too early to understand again, all the numbers and the duration of this impact, we need to keep moving the business forward. And that as CEO, I think that my role is to really get the learnings, mobilize resources support the team, and work together with our partners as we move forward. Jeff Stent -- Exane BNP Paribas -- Analyst Thank you. Operator Thank you. Our next question is coming from Laurence Whyatt with Barclays. Please proceed with your question. Laurence Whyatt -- Barclays -- Analyst Hi, Michel, Fernando. Two for me, please. Firstly, on margins, they've come out a lot better this quarter than perhaps the Street was expecting. And I seem to remember, previously, you said that Q1 was probably going to be the toughest quarter for COGS. Do you see the COGS environment getting a little bit easier from here? And how would you split the impact from COGS from both commodities and transactional FX? And then the second question on China. Could you give us any more color on the exit rate or sort of March number? I think you previously mentioned that Bud eight-pack was up around 20% in February. Can we assume that March was significantly stronger than that? Thank you. Fernando Tennenbaum -- Chief Financial Officer Laurence, Fernando here. Let me take the first one on margins. Definitely, we talked a lot about COGS. And I want to talk about COGS, COGS probably we still have some pressures this year. Probably the pressure is a little bit higher in the first half of the year, a little bit smaller in the second half of the year. Of course, there are some portions that we cannot hedge. And I mentioned a while ago, freights, and this is something that came in our favor. Every market is different. If you say about transactional effects, it's better in Brazil than it was the year before, and you are seeing that reflecting through the Brazilian beer margins or the gross [indiscernible] being positive, increasing year on year. It's a little bit more of a pressure when you think about Europe, so every market is different. But you have to bear in mind that the EBITDA margin is not only about cost of goods sold. It's the main driver of our last year's cost of goods sold. But you also have overhead and overhead was an important component. And of course, overhead you have seasonality. So it's going to be slightly different quarter on quarter. We're still maintaining our outlook where revenues are growing ahead of costs. and continue to manage an opportunity to improve an opportunity to better, we continue to leverage on that. Probably a number that you should continue to look is how commodity and FX evolve. For 2023 is more or less set. A few open items like trade, but more or less set. And for 2024, at least too early to say, but we are not seeing any major swings in commodities like we see in the last couple of years. And if that's the case, that should be positive news, also going forward. But it's too early to have a final view on that. Michel Doukeris -- Chief Executive Officer Yes. And with China, I think that the way that we see the Quarter 1 is like a transition quarter. You remember, all the restrictions being lifted at the end of last year. There was an earlier Chinese New Year. So January was a little bit dislocated. And therefore, we see continued recovery that accelerated throughout the quarter. If you look at some of the leading indicators, let me share one, for example, the on-trade, night life, Chinese restaurant reopening. Beginning of the year, January, they were around like 70%, 75%. And as you look at the same indicator in March, we were pretty much like close to 100% of the COGS operating we've normalized operating environment, in-store, traffic. And that happened from middle of February toward March. We, of course, we put our plans in place. We are getting our fair share in premium and super premium. And as the channels reopened the long-term trends of premiumization, they continue to impact the industry and our business in China, which benefits from that. So we have strong innovation, and we see that the industry is recovering. The premium opportunity continues to be huge in China, and we have disproportional or asymmetric market share in this segment. And as the channel reopens, this is a tailwind for the business. The prospects for the long term do not change. We think that in the short term, that is this good opportunity and the industry so far is performing well. Laurence Whyatt -- Barclays -- Analyst Thank you very much. Operator Thank you. The next question is coming from the line of Edward Mundy with Jefferies. Please proceed with your question. Edward Mundy -- Jefferies -- Analyst Morning, guys. Thanks for taking the question. I'm sorry to come back to Bud Light, but I've got -- I just want to pick up on some of your opening comments, Michel, around having experienced the resource and the partners to manage through. If we take experience, could you talk about some of the prior experience ABI has a brand turnaround of this nature? I mean Stella Artois, for many decades in the U.K. had a pretty bad name, and those previous negative associations have been eliminated. What are the two or three things you've got to get right as you think about taking things forward from here? And then on resource, I think you mentioned you're going to mobilize global resource to support the U.S. team. I think Bud Light is about a $5 billion revenue business at supply level, probably spend 10% on A&P, maybe a fraction of that, maybe half of that is media so call it, $250 million. If you're going to triple that that's about $500 million and that's about 2% to group EBITDA. Are those numbers directionally OK, or have I missed something there? Michel Doukeris -- Chief Executive Officer Ed, I think I got all your topics here, then I'll try to cover one by one. So the first point around experience and how we deal with different situations globally. And of course, starting from the point that each and every situation is unique in itself. And given the current environment, especially social media landscape, and how brands have been pulled into these situations, that is a big learning from this situation that can help the company also on the other way around globally. But we have faced, as you know, just to think about COVID from alcohol ban in some countries. And then we had to adapt to the situation, keep a very agile mindset, rethink the way that we go to market and how we organize our operations, to the other [indiscernible] in the very big footprint that we have. You remember, for example, the U.K. for that time was an issue. We had issues before in Korea. We had issues in Brazil. And the way that our brands got attacked for some time there. And we redesigned the portfolio, rethought the way that we communicate to our brands. And we always stay true to what we do best, which is brew high-quality products, make sure that we keep connected with our partners investing to the long term, and keep reading and learning from consumers and see how we adjust our path forward. We know that easy to drink, easy to enjoy, it's a powerful message for Bud light. We know that the Bud Light lane is around, quality beer is to drink, is to enjoy, is about sports. That's why we came back strong with the NFL Draft. It's about music and it's about everyday enjoyment. So when we do that, our brand performs very well. As we mobilize resources, so that is people resources, time, that is knowledge, resources, that is partners that we have, and that is money. So our plan for the summer in the U.S. was already a very strong plan. And the triple the mad idea is versus what we had last year. And traditionally, Bud Light invest very heavily in the shoulder season because of football, NFL. This year, we built a plan to be more connected with the summer season, because this is very important for mainstream brands, therefore, very important for Bud Light, there was already a heavy at investment there. And now we are using resources that we have that we are using for other brands and other priorities to further increase the investments that we have in the U.S. And because we have many lines in the P&L, right, not only sales and marketing, we are mobilizing lines across the P&L as well. And media doesn't make 100% of the sales and marketing investments of any of our brands anywhere globally. So the match is not really like as you triple media, you triple the entire marketing budget. There are other lines within the sales and marketing package as there are other lines on the P&L that we can work, as we always do, in a very agile way. And because of that, we reiterated our EBITDA growth. So as we did during COVID, we are scrambling, moving very fast, getting this agile mindset to work as we support and increased investments. In leading the U.S. we are working the other muscles that we have from the global company, the size and the scale that we have, while the EBITDA outlook is unchanged. Edward Mundy -- Jefferies -- Analyst If I could just follow up. I appreciate you don't run your business on a four to eight. That's really a framework for us essentially and some years ahead, some years below. But I guess you face the choice of either looking to protect the bottom line in the U.S., or perhaps you could use a windfall from the rest of the group, from a COGS rollover or trying to bounce back to double down in the U.S. Is the message that, look, you're running the business for the long term, and you're going to really double down on the U.S. And you can allocate global resources to really go behind Bud Light? Michel Doukeris -- Chief Executive Officer So all markets are important for us. We do not minimize this situation on the U.S. Fully committed to get our plants and our brands and our portfolio to rebalance in the U.S., and we are investing to make it happen. And this all falls into our outlook. We always have an issue to deal with every quarter, every year in every geography, and it's very important that at global level, we keep this agile mindset to use the resources. And definitely, urgency creates opportunities as well. So as we invest, focus, mobilize in the U.S., we think that this situation is manageable globally. We never minimize any issues for our brands, our consumers. But we are confident that we have the team and the resources to continue to invest, to move forward in the U.S., and to support our team there to get out of this stronger. Edward Mundy -- Jefferies -- Analyst Thanks, Michel. Operator Thank you. Our next question is coming from the line of Sanjeet Aujla with Credit Suisse. Please proceed with your question. Sanjeet Aujla -- Credit Suisse -- Analyst Hey, Michel, Fernando, two from me, please. Firstly, I appreciate your earlier comments on Colombia. But if I look at some of your major emerging markets, more broadly, volume seems to have deteriorated as pricing has picked up. So I'd love to get your thoughts on any inflections you're seeing in consumer behavior, particularly with regard to frequency of consumption, past formats, etc. And then my follow-up is really around Brazil. One of your competitors there recently filed for bankruptcy. I think you called out stable market share in the quarter, but I'd love to get your perspective on how you see the competitive landscape evolving in Brazil in recent weeks and months. Michel Doukeris -- Chief Executive Officer Sanjeet, two pieces there. I'll try to address both to you. The first one, I think there is this inflationary scenario, which is common across the globe. And we see that, as I've been saying, different clusters, three type of clusters where we see the industry and the whole consumer purchase power and consumer goods moving is slightly different, and they're all dealing with the same issue. The key point there is we see the beer category continues to be resilient and performing well and gaining share of growth. I just gave the example of Colombia. Of course, when you talk about resilience, doesn't mean growth across the board and all the markets at the same time. Especially because when inflation moves fast, you have this timing in which salaries, especially minimal salaries for these developing countries, they get to be approved. So think about Brazil that just announced the salary increases now in May, right? So January to April, consumers were dealing with high inflation, and they have their salaries from last year. Industry performed well. But now you have an extra injection of cash and purchase power coming to consumers. So when inflation goes up, there is some time for prices to catch up, and there is some time for salaries to catch up. I think that we need to look throughout the lenses of the full year before drawing to many conclusions. And among the markets, they have different realities. To use the same example, why you see currency devaluation in Colombia. And Colombia has a high percentage of goods that they import, Brazil is in the other side of that, because currencies that are appreciating, and therefore, the import goods will have like a different impact on the basket for inflation, as well as focused consumer purchase power. So I think that we keep an eye on that, an eye on our revenue management. The industry is performing well in most of the countries, especially when we look at in the context of the other beverage. We know that premiumization being placed, that beer is more resilient, and we are happy so far with our strategy in terms of revenue management, and this is coming. On the other point on Brazil, what I say is that -- I see three things in Brazil that are very interesting and very important. I see the industry structure in Brazil, a healthy one, so players focus on premiumization. We see an environment in terms of inflation, price that's playing well for the industry. We see that Brazil was hit earlier than other markets on the cost effects, and now we are getting to the other side of this equation, where cost of goods sold is becoming more normalized and FX is playing more in our direction. You see the company, our portfolio today in Brazil is as healthy as never before. So [indiscernible] is performing very well. Origin Now, which is a premium brand of ours, performing very well. Our core brands performing very well. Corona, we had a limitation in terms of supply that we are organized to have more volumes. And as we supply the brand sales by itself, so a very healthy brand in Brazil, growing a lot. And our digital transformation continues to accelerate not only the pace in which we gather more consumers into that delivery, but our capabilities will be, and the algorithms, [indiscernible] intelligence helping us to harness the data and to elevate the potential of what we have there, and this is a competitive advantage that we built and is helping us drive the business forward. So I'm optimistic with Brazil, I think that the thing there is doing a great job. Our market share is in good position. Our revenue strategy is well organized in place, our portfolio very healthy, and our digital transformation is accelerating our opportunity in flotation in Brazil. So I see Brazil in a place that's as good as it has been for many, many years. Sanjeet Aujla -- Credit Suisse -- Analyst And just one quick follow-up on that. Has there been any noticeable change in the competitive landscape since one of your competitors filed for bankruptcy there in recent weeks? Michel Doukeris -- Chief Executive Officer Not meaningful for us to talk about here. And I think that while they deal there with that situation, our focus is on our consumers, our focus is improving our service level that's very high in Brazil now in getting our portfolio to perform, the portfolio of the physical brands that we have in the digital assets. So we remain steady focused on our strategy. Sanjeet Aujla -- Credit Suisse -- Analyst Great. Thank you. Operator Thank you. Our final question is coming from the line of Brett Cooper with Consumer Edge. Please proceed with your question. Brett Cooper -- Consumer Edge Research -- Analyst Thank you. So I want to come back to, I guess, the first question, but more from an operational standpoint. After the SAB deal, you guys have been relatively inactive on acquisitions. At the same time, the beverage and alcohol markets have changed and are evolving. So can you continue to maximize the growth potential of your business via organic activity, or acquisitions and higher growth parts of the industry necessary to maximize that growth in returns? Fernando Tennenbaum -- Chief Financial Officer Brett, it's Fernando here. At the end of the day, this is a resource allocation discussion and about the value creation discussion. If you look at our business, when we did the investor day, we said that the outlook for the business is to be able to deliver 4% to 8%. And if we deliver that, there is a minimum amount of value to be created. We can enhance this penetration by making resource allocation decisions. And that's the triangle. So -- which means that the priority is to invest behind our business because we believe it can grow, can grow at a decent pace and can create a lot of value with excess cash and our business generates a meaningful amount of the cash. How we use that excess cash can also create value on a stand-alone basis. Over the last two or three years, there was a strong focus on leveraging because, as we said, the leveraging creates a meaningful amount of value, most of that going to get to us three times. We made meaningful progress, but we are not at three times yet, which means that we can still benefit from value creation by deleveraging a little bit further. But as we keep making progress, other options open up for us. Other options like we increased the dividend is likely as a percentage it was a meaningful increase. In that sole basis, it was not that much of an increase. But increased dividends, we are improving on that. And M&A is definitely an option as well. We can have selective M&A. We know how to do M&A. We did M&A in the past. We know how to create M&A. So if the right deal at the right moment shows up, of course, we entertain that if it can bring another avenue of growth. But we don't need M&A to deliver a meaningful value creation to pursue growth. Brett Cooper -- Consumer Edge Research -- Analyst And if I can bug you with one follow-up. One component of your business is different than it was when you've done M&A in the past, is all the digital infrastructure that you've built? So how do you think that extracts value from transactions or creates or, I guess, improves your ability to create value from organic activity? And does that weight your view one way or the other over the medium to long term? Michel Doukeris -- Chief Executive Officer Yes, I can take this one. I think that in a short answer, these digital products that we created both on the B2B side and on the B2C side, they help us to get better, and they are the second pillar of our strategy. They get us better because we have more information. With more information, we can make better decisions. And as we standardize our ways of operating with these products, we have efficiencies that we can extract from this scale, from these revised processes, and our ability to act faster with the data that we have. A second part of that, as I keep saying, another advantage of the digital products is that once you build them, the scalability is very fast, and you don't need more resources. So different from the physical products, if you grow Corona, the example that I just gave here in Brazil, we need more bottles, more production capacity. We need to invest in physical assets so we can grow our physical brands, which we are doing. On the digital space, the scalability once the product is ready and available, is much faster. And the resources that you need to invest for the scalability are much smaller in proportion to the physical products. So we can continue to grow, and we are doing that. For example, with beer, we are getting to geographies where we do not operate. We are getting there with the digital product by using partners. And then it can continue to monetize the digital product even if you are not present in that market. But then now that we are becoming present in that market, so you might have opportunities to go to market differently than what we had before. So you are right in the intuition that the digital projects are -- have done to our M&A, to [Inaudible]. But they can also become an important vehicle as we grow organically, including geographies that we are not present today because the digital roll to market becomes an enabler for our expansion strategy. Thank you. Operator Thank you. This was our final question. If your question has not been answered, please feel free to contact the Investor Relations team. I will now turn the floor back over to Mr. Michel Doukeris for closing remarks. Michel Doukeris -- Chief Executive Officer Thank you, Jesse, and thank you all for your time today and for your ongoing partnership and support of our business. Stay safe and well. Operator [Operator signoff] Duration: 0 minutes Call participants: Michel Doukeris -- Chief Executive Officer Fernando Tennenbaum -- Chief Financial Officer Priya Ohri-Gupta -- Barclays -- Analyst Rob Ottenstein -- Evercore ISI -- Analyst Mitch Collett -- Deutsche Bank -- Analyst Trevor Stirling -- AllianceBernstein -- Analyst Jeff Stent -- Exane BNP Paribas -- Analyst Laurence Whyatt -- Barclays -- Analyst Edward Mundy -- Jefferies -- Analyst Sanjeet Aujla -- Credit Suisse -- Analyst Brett Cooper -- Consumer Edge Research -- Analyst More BUD analysis All earnings call transcripts This article is a transcript of this conference call produced for The Motley Fool. While we strive for our Foolish Best, there may be errors, omissions, or inaccuracies in this transcript. As with all our articles, The Motley Fool does not assume any responsibility for your use of this content, and we strongly encourage you to do your own research, including listening to the call yourself and reading the company's SEC filings. Please see our Terms and Conditions for additional details, including our Obligatory Capitalized Disclaimers of Liability. The Motley Fool has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. View Quote ------------------------ Click To View Spoiler Some HAPPY news in all this. The Lord of the Rings - Gondor calls for Aid "HD" https://nypost.com/2023/08/04/company-offers-to-help-laid-off-bud-light-workers-find-jobs-at-pro-america-businesses/ Company offers to help laid-off Bud Light workers find jobs at 'pro-America businesses' By Teny Sahakian, Fox Business August 4, 2023 10:14am Updated Former Bud Light workers are taking two conservative organizations, Public Sq. and RedBalloon, up on their offers to help find them new employment after being laid off. "We hope that this results in more and more positive actions that hopefully send a strong counteracting message to the actions of Bud Light over the past few months," PublicSq. CEO Michael Seifert told FOX Business. "It's pretty amazing to witness this parallel economy that's emerging that's based upon meritocracy and excellence." Bud Light's parent company, Anheuser-Busch, announced last week that it was laying off 2% of its U.S. workforce, primarily corporate and marketing roles rather than frontline workers. Conservative job board RedBalloon and patriotic online marketplace PublicSq. published an open letter to laid-off Bud Light workers, offering to help them find new jobs at "pro-America businesses." Laid-off Bud Light workers were 'caught in the crossfire': "We're sorry that Anheuser-Busch leadership prioritized left-wing ideology over sound business practices," the letter states. "You are the ones that suffer for Bud Light's disastrous decision." "People like to say 'go woke, go broke' and in reality, the economic consequences rarely fall on the wealthy liberals that make the woke decision," it continues. "Both PublicSq. and Red Balloon will distribute your resumes to our respective networks of tens of thousands of pro-America businesses." ... Seifert said they have already received "quite a few" resumes from laid-off Bud Light employees since releasing the letter last week and have been brokering relationships between them and businesses within their network looking to hire. "I can tell you that we have placed some incredible interviews and are very excited that the ball is rolling down the court with more than a few of these folks," he told FOX Business. While he generally agrees with the consumer-driven backlash Bud Light is facing, Seifert said lower-level employees losing jobs is an unfortunate consequence of a free, value-driven market. "Consumers carry a lot of buying power, and they should move their money to brands that share their values. And we've learned that Bud Light doesn't," he said. "But a lot of the people caught in the crossfire are these innocent employees that had nothing to do with the decisions made by upper management." Seifert said some of the laid-off Bud Light staff have told him "very explicitly and clearly that the values at the top of Anheuser-Busch that have led to marketing decisions like this do not represent their employee base." OK EVERYONE ELSE, get in there and HELP! ---------------------------- When even the ex C-suiters from anti-self-defense places like levis can see it ... https://nypost.com/2023/08/04/bud-light-shows-consequences-of-stifling-open-debate-and-discussion-says-former-levis-exec-frightening/ Bud Light shows consequences of stifling 'open debate and discussion,' says former Levi's exec By Kendall Tietz & Brian Flood, Fox News August 4, 2023 10:48am Updated Sey called the silencing of opposing views within businesses "incredibly frightening," and pointed to Bud Light as a prominent example of what can happen in a company where honest and open debate isn't fostered. The beer brand, which was previously one of the top-selling American beer brands, has seen plummeting popularity after it partnered with transgender activist and influencer Dylan Mulvaney and its marketing vice president was caught on camera criticizing the brand's consumers as "fratty" with "out of touch humor." "My guess is there was no open debate and discussion about the choice to hire Dylan Mulvaney as an influencer for the brand," Sey told Fox News Digital. "Whether or not you agree with it or don't agree with it, the discussion, a rational discussion around whether it was good for the business, whether it was relevant to their brand, is one that should have been." ---------------------------- Sharks are circling: Click To View Spoiler Bud Light shelf space, bar taps are being reallocated for other beers: Molson Coors CEO By Alexander Hall, Fox News August 4, 2023 9:48am Updated ... The Wall Street Journal noted that as Bud Light sales continue "cratering," the "biggest beneficiary of Bud Light's woes" is rival company Molson Coors Beverage. "There are reasons to believe that Bud Light sales might be permanently impaired. Molson Coors Chief Executive Gavin Hattersley said on a conference call with analysts that retailers are already reallocating space to other brands during shelf resets that take place in the spring, with more resets to come in the fall," The Journal reported. "In bars and other on-premise channels, the company gained more than 12,000 tap handles in the quarter, he added." ----------------------------------------------------------- 8-8 https://archive.is/eE5ac Anheuser-Busch InBev (AB-InBev) announced today that it will sell eight craft brands to Tilray Brands, significantly cutting AB-InBev's craft beer portfolio. Tilray, a Canadian cannabis company, will expand its growing craft holdings, which currently include SweetWater Brewing, Montauk Brewing, Green Flash, and Alpine Beer Co. The deal is expected to close in September, 2023. The momentous deal will include Shock Top, Breckenridge Brewery, Blue Point Brewing Company, 10 Barrel Brewing Company, Redhook Brewery, Widmer Brothers Brewing, Square Mile Cider Company, and Hiball Energy, which AB-Inbev discontinued in May of this year. The purchase price is equal to $85 million in cash, according to an 8-K filing by Tilray. The transaction will include current employees, breweries, and associated brewpubs. In total, Tilray will acquire production facilities in Portland and Bend, Ore., Littleton, Colo., and Patchogue, N.Y., as well as eight new brewpubs across the country. https://archive.is/FuA1r By paying a price equal to $85 million in cash, according to an 8-K filing by Tilray, it seems Tilray got the better end of the deal; especially when you look at the $300 million they paid for SweetWater in 2020. The transaction includes all employees, breweries, four production facilities, and eight brewpubs nationwide. https://nypost.com/2023/08/07/bud-light-sink-another-26-amid-dylan-mulvaney-fiasco/ The Anheuser-Busch brand's sales plunged by 25.9% during the week ended July 29 extending the downward spiral since Bud Light's ill-fated tie-up with the trans influencer on April 1, according to data from NielsenIQ and Bump Williams Consulting. Bud Light has been dethroned as the nation's top-selling beer for the past three months after Mulvaney's shout-out led to a nationwide boycott. Modelo Especial is expected to vault into the No. 1 spot for the entire year by the end of the month, Dave Williams told The Post, reiterating an earlier prediction by his company. Bud Light controls an 8.4% market share compared with Modelo's 8.2% share, according to the NielsonIQ data. The Constellation-owned brand, which posted a 14.8% increase in sales last week, isn't the only beneficiary of Bud Light's demise. Rivals Coors Light (20.7%), Miller Lite (19.25) and Yuengling Lager (22.5%) enjoyed double-digit spikes, the most recent data show. ----------------------------------------------------------- 8-10 BW sales non-existant at sturgis:Click To View Spoiler Budweiser at Sturgis is Not Going Well.... Well. If you wanted to know how to kill your brand... ----------------------------------------------------------- 8-16 AB think they can win people back by ...
Budweiser@budweiserusa New can, same support for our nation's veterans. Our camo cans are now available nationwide. They're getting roasted:
Final Cut MI???? @Mlantgios As a veteran, attempting to buy your way out of the bad decisions you have made... makes me distance myself even further from your brand. 7:30 PM Aug 14, 2023 2,676 Views They're getting directly told at least part of what they have to do to get any recovery out of this at all ...
The Pudy Tat @ThePudyTat And I'm blocked. That's a great way to win back customers. Just apologize. The whole world knows you screwed up. Business students will literally use you as a case study in marketing class of what not to do. Just admit your mistake. 7:16 PM Aug 14, 2023 1,791 Views 8 Reposts 1 Quote 102 Likes We know theyr'e seeing this, because they blocked it. They are refusing to apologise. ----------------------------------------------------------- 8-17 https://www.theepochtimes.com/us/anheuser-busch-family-heir-makes-major-offer-to-bud-lights-current-owners-5472580 Click To View Spoiler Anheuser-Busch heir Billy Busch said he would consider buying back Bud Light owner Anheuser-Busch if AB InBev was looking to sell it. Mr. Busch, whose family sold Anheuser-Busch to Netherlands-based InBev in 2008, said that he would be willing to purchase his family's old brand back. It comes in the midst of a monthslong boycott targeting Bud Light after the beer produced promotional materials from a transgender influencer. "If they don't want that brand any longer, sell it back to the Busch family. Sell it to me. I'll be the first in line to buy that brand back from you, and we'll make that brand great again," he told Outkick this week. Two Predictions I'd like to see the actual questions on the deutche bank survey, to see what the option was that respondants chose besides "very unlikely to buy the brand" ... if they chose something like "unlikely" ... thats not good news. The devil is in the details.It comes as two market analysts gave grim news to Bud Light, with one predicting there would be "no recovery" for the boycott-beleaguered brand in 2023. "We assume no recovery in Bud Light [this year]," RBC Capital Markets analyst James Jones wrote in a note this week, according to Yahoo Finance. Recent sales data show that retail-store dollar sales of the brand dropped 26.1 percent in the week ending July 15 and 26.8 percent in the week ending July 22, compared with the previous year. Meanwhile, the beer lost its No. 1 spot to Modelo Especial in May and June, according to figures. "Recent data continues to show that tracked channels reached a point of stabilization at significantly lower levels for Anheuser-Busch InBev than pre-controversy," Evercore ISI analyst Robert Ottenstein added in a separate note, according to Yahoo. However, Deutsche Bank conducted a survey with 600 respondents, finding that the proportion of consumers who no longer purchase Bud Light fell from 21 percent to 19 percent. It also found that Bud Light drinkers who say they are very unlikely to buy the brand in the next three to six months fell from 18 percent to 3 percent this month, according to reports. "Crucially, the proportion of former Bud Light drinkers who are [saying] they are very unlikely to buy the brand in three to six months has reduced from 18% to just 3 percent, a significant improvement," Deutsche Bank research analyst Mitchell Collett wrote Wednesday. ----------------------------------------------------------- 8-22 The boycott is over! REEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE! https://nypost.com/2023/08/22/bud-light-dethroned-by-modelo-after-dylan-mulvaney-fiasco/ Click To View Spoiler Bud Light dethroned as nation's best-selling beer by Modelo after Dylan Mulvaney fiasco By Ariel Zilber Social Links for Ariel Zilber August 22, 2023 1:02pm Updated Modelo Especial knocked off Bud Light from its decades-long perch as the nation's top-selling beer in the wake of the Dylan Mulvaney controversy that sparked a boycott of the Anheuser-Busch brand. Sales of Modelo at groceries and beer stores for the year outpaced Bud Light the first time the brand has beaten Bud Light on a year-to-date basis, according to the latest data from NielsenIQ, whose figures were first reported by CNN. Modelo, which is distributed in the US by New York-based Constellation Brands, had an 8.34% share of dollars spent on beer compared to 8.28% for Bud Light through Aug. 12, NIQ reported. ----------------------------------------------------------- 8-30 https://www.breitbart.com/economy/2023/08/29/wokelash-modelo-leaves-bud-light-behind-widens-lead-as-best-selling-u-s-beer/ Click To View Spoiler The latest NielsenIQ data provided to FOX Business by Bump Williams Consulting shows Bud Light sales in off-premise locations such as grocery stores and gas stations tumbling 15.9 percent on a dollar basis and down 20.1 percent on a volume basis year to date as of Aug. 19. Modelo was up 10.3 percent in sales and 9.6 percent in volume. https://nypost.com/2023/08/28/modelo-especial-widens-sales-gap-over-bud-light-in-wake-of-dylan-mulvaney-fiasco/ Modelo had an 8.34% share of the market, compared to Bud Light’s 8.28% through Aug. 12, according to a NielsonIQ report. The Mexican beer, which is distributed in the US by Costellation Brands, has consistently beaten Bud Light in monthly sales since May — after unprecedented outrage over the company tapping Mulvaney on April 1 to promote the brand. A national boycott of Bud Light has shown no signs of abating. On a weekly basis sales of Bud Light declined by 26.8% through Aug. 19 while sales of Modelo Especial over the same period grew by 15.9%. Other non-Anheuser-Busch related brands are also stealing market share, including Miller Lite, which saw 18.5% growth in sales, Coors Light with 21.6% growth and Yuengling Lager with 19.7% increase for the week ended Aug. 19, according to the data. Meanwhile, Budweiser sales have been hurt by the controversy, declining 10.3% over the same period. Michelob Ultra – another Anheuser-Busch brand – has seen some improvement with a 0.4% increase in sales in the week-long period. And their adverts are STILL failing: (from here: https://www.westernjournal.com/bud-light-hits-resistance-launching-huge-effort-win-back-nfl-fans-nice-try/ )
... and more ....
----------------------------------------------------------- 9-5 I Tried To Give Free Bud Light To Drunkest People On Earth | These Reactions ?? ----------------------------------------------------------- 9-10 https://nypost.com/2023/09/09/bud-light-still-down-30-six-months-after-dylan-mulvaney-partnership/ Click To View Spoiler Bud Light’s sales are still floundering months after its disastrous partnership with transgender TikTok star Dylan Mulvaney — and drinkers of America’s former top-selling beer are “just lost forever.” “You see Bud Light still just stubbornly down around 30% in volume compared to last year, which is where it’s been since May or June,” Beer Business Daily publisher Harry Schuhmacher told Fox News Digital Friday. “That tells me that this is quasi-permanent, meaning those consumers are just lost forever.” Schuhmacher’s remarks come less than a month after it was revealed the Anheuser-Busch InBev-owned company had won back 15% of its boycotting drinkers. Bud Light — which lost its top spot to Modelo after the controversy — is down 26.9% in dollars and 30.3% in volume, he said, citing a study by Bump Williams Consulting. The publisher believes it is “likely” the company will continue to see similar year-over-year declines for the “foreseeable future.” ----------------------------------------------------------- 9-10 https://abcnews.go.com/Business/bud-light-set-lose-shelf-space-major-retailers/story?id=103165753 A nationwide reset of shelf space could solidify sales declines, analysts said. ByMax Zahn September 15, 2023, 8:01 AM Even more, a reset of shelf space that takes hold every fall at major retailers could solidify the sales declines and make it much more difficult for Bud Light to return to its performance before the boycott, according to ABC News' interviews with a former Anheuser-Busch executive, a local Bud Light wholesaler and beer industry analysts. Bud Light is set to lose refrigerator space at a vast network of stores belonging to key beer sellers like Walmart and 7-Eleven, since the retailers typically reapportion shelf space based on recent sales performance, taking space away from struggling brands and giving it to hot-selling ones, the industry sources told ABC News. "During a busy shopping period on a Friday or Saturday night, if you don't have the beer available cold on the shelf, consumers pick something else," former Anheuser-Busch InBev executive Anson Frericks told ABC News, calling shelf space "the single largest determinant of sales in a store." "There will be a dramatic shift," Frericks added. ... Over a four-week period ending in early September, sales of Bud Light slid 27% compared to the same period a year prior, according to data from Bump Williams Consulting and Nielsen NIQ reviewed by ABC News. Meanwhile, sales of rival brands have surged. During that same four-week period, Coors Light sales climbed 20% compared to a year ago; while sales of Yuengling's light lager jumped a staggering 80%, the data showed. ... Molson Coors, the maker of Coors Light, held an earnings call last month during which CEO Gavin Hattersley said the company had already heard from nearly 20 top retailers saying that the company's brands would receive additional shelf space as part of the reset. "We're working hard at making sure that shelf resets reflect the current reality in the marketplace, which shows that there is a strong momentum behind all of our core brands," Hattersley said. The impending loss of shelf space for Bud Light imperils roughly 500 independent wholesalers that sell and deliver the beer, Carlos Laboy, a beverage industry analyst at HSBC, told ABC News, noting that many of the distributors have already seen their revenue from Anheuser-Busch beverages this year decline by a third or more. ----------------------------------------------------------- 9-20 https://nypost.com/2023/09/20/ex-anheuser-busch-employees-blast-company-of-cowardice-over-dylan-mulvaney-backlash/ Leftist/center leftist employees have talked to the media. Of course we won't hear from anyone not like them - what sane person who isn't a wild eyed revolutionary would if they didn't have to or the cost of liferuin wasn't worth the squeeze ... Click To View Spoiler Ex-Anheuser-Busch employees blast ‘incompetent’ leadership for handling of Dylan Mulvaney fiasco By Kristine Parks, Fox News Published Sep. 20, 2023, 2:51 p.m. ET Frustrated former employees of Anheuser-Busch complained that “incompetent” leadership at the beer company had cowered in fear to the criticism it faced for partnering with Dylan Mulvaney last April, and should’ve doubled down in supporting the transgender influencer. “I really wish that we had stuck to our guns and said: ‘We did this; beer is for everyone; get over it,'” one ex-employee told The Guardian. The media outlet spoke to several former employees on the condition of anonymity about their experience working for the beer giant while they dealt with “one of the biggest boycotts in US history.” ... Another ex-employee said leadership responded with “panic and rash decisions” to the chaos in the immediate aftermath. “There was a lot of panic and a lot of rash decision-making,” the person said. “We didn’t hear anything from leadership for over a month, and then after a few weeks, someone high up at Anheuser-Busch released a statement that pretty much said nothing.” Anheuser-Busch initially defended their campaign, saying their partnership with the transgender activist helped “authentically connect with audiences.” As backlash mounted to Mulvaney’s post, Anheuser-Busch CEO Brendan Whitworth remarked two weeks later, “We never intended to be part of a discussion that divides people. We are in the business of bringing people together over a beer.” Former staff described how the company’s response left them worried for months about Mulvaney’s welfare and their own job security. “Are we doing everything we can as a company to support this person?” one former employee remembered asking. Their boss reportedly told them they were “constantly talking” to Mulvaney. Got that? How are we supporting *mulvaney.* This makes me suspect that AB is - in the positions of meaningful control - completely ideologically captured by the revolutionary left. That is one of the main things that DEI does; it makes life (intentionally) hell for anyone not like the DEI inquisitors, so that they leave. This is a company that's OK with blatantly racist (as bad as the KKK and plantation owners racism) practice. "Oh, we haven't got rid of enough of X race in the company, we have work to do." And sexist too. (see the video in the spoiler fold that has been up for some time now, or the DEI docs that were outed). The same person revealed there wasn’t “much assurance” from top leaders at the company in addressing staff concerns about the backlash. Looking back, they said there was a pattern of “a lot of trickled-down lies from leadership.” After the initial statements to the media, the company told its publicity department to “stop communicating” with the press while “everyone regrouped,” the first anonymous employee claimed. Anheuser-Busch also temporarily turned off comments on its social media pages. Some employees pointed to the company’s lack of diversity and “incompetence’ at the top level as responsible for what they perceived as a botched response to the backlash. “It’s just old White men,” the employee said. That’s why they said staff was “excited” to see former top executive Alissa Heinerscheid promoted as the first female vice-president of marketing for Bud Light last year. “Representation in the C-suite doesn’t solve everything – and Anheuser-Busch is far from the only company without it – but former employees say that a more diverse boardroom might have led to a more empathetic handling of the controversy,” the Guardian said, summarizing employee sentiment. Anheuser-Busch also didn’t understand how to handle the controversy because they had previously played it safe in their marketing campaigns, another employee argued. “Anheuser-Busch was operating always from a position of fear,” they said. "They should have been more radically progressive and squashed those evil not us types!" AND here's the money quote: One ex-employee said while Heinerscheid was blamed for the marketing campaign with Mulvaney, she inherited a strategy that was already established “by men that were previously working in these positions.” The former staffer told the Guardian there was an “incompetence in the leadership on a national level” at Anheuser-Busch, describing its chief marketing officer as someone who “doesn’t really understand a lot of the political battles” at the national level. They might as well just bluntly say it: They hate our guts for not being like them. "Already established." This is why people in c-suites need to keep their mouths shut where it doesn't matter or they don't know their customers, because the cost can be staggering, and for no gain at all. ----------------------------------------------------------- 9-24 This is like a dog eating his crap! Once through it's gut wasn't enough, apparently. https://www.theguardian.com/world/2023/sep/19/dylan-mulvaney-bud-light-boycott Click To View Spoiler ... Bud Light has been supporting LGBTQ+ causes since the 90s, with targeted ads in gay publications and Pride sponsorships, though they flew under the mainstream radar before the internet. ... ^^^ this didn't come out of nowhere. It is part of a trend in the company. Expect other corporations to be subejct to the same pressures and do the same evil stuff. ‘Incompetence on a national level’ The idea for Mulvaney’s March Madness post came from a Bud Light team member who “wanted to push and make change”, says a former Anheuser-Busch employee. The team member was excited to “slowly but surely plant the seeds of inclusion”. The brand then went to Captiv8, a top California-based influencer marketing agency. “Bud Light was trying to advertise to the LGBTQ+ community,” says a former employee of Captiv8. “They obviously wanted to pick an influencer who was part of that community.” The actor and singer Reneé Rapp was also considered, they recall, though it’s unclear if those conversations ever got off the ground. “I was surprised [at the LGBTQ+ focus], given the Bud Light name, but I was interested to see where it would go from there.” Mulvaney was contracted for the sponsored post and received an estimated four- or five-figure fee for In a statement to the Guardian, a Captiv8 representative says: “In every influencer partnership, both the brand and the collaborating media agencies define the creative strategy, approach and talent. However, the final decisions regarding content and talent selections rest with the brand.” ^^^ Ceo "It was just one can..." No. It wasn't. You can see what that guy's word is worth. Quote edited by me to fix the orwellian delusion speak. Note, the captiv8 commentator KNEW it was a dumb idea. ‘You’ve got to stay the course’ This summer and fall, Bud Light has pivoted to all-American marketing, with sponsored country and rock shows, sun-dappled ads depicting summer barbecues, and costly marketing around NFL and college football. For some, it has felt like a cop-out. “They tried to appease everybody [and say] ‘This is us with our American values,” says Brian Wenke, executive director of the LGBTQ+ youth non-profit It Gets Better. “They lost the LGBTQ+ people, they lost the conservative people and nobody wanted to engage with them any more. You’ve got to stay the course, because you will do exponentially more damage than if you had just stuck to what you believed was the right path.” Even the sexual anarchists who are intentionally destroying our society know: PICK A SIDE and STICK TO IT if you think you HAVE to get involved. In the CBS interview, Whitworth said Bud Light would “continue to support the communities and organizations that we’ve supported for decades”. The evidence so far is spotty. The brand sponsored Orlando Pride for the last two years, but will not be returning for this year’s October event. (“We have noticed a reduced interest or involvement from a few organizations,” says Tatiana Quiroga, Orlando Pride’s executive director.) But it (AB - VIA BL - FLASH) will go ahead with the planned “presenting sponsorship” of Phoenix Pride festival the same month, an event that typically attracts a quarter of Orlando Pride’s 200,000 attendees. “We’re going to be putting on a full weekend of family friendly drag entertainment, less than three miles from the Arizona capitol, where they’re trying to shut down that entire culture,” said Jeremy M Helfgot, a spokesperson for Phoenix Pride. “It’s only because of the support of corporate partners like Bud Light that we can do that.” They are sponsoring it AGAIN. When asked whether brands and agencies are shying away from queer and trans-centred activations, Lauren Gray, a senior vice-president at the PR company Edelman and member of the its LGBTQ+ taskforce, Out Front, points to an Instagram post from the writer Fran Tirado. Tirado argues that many companies are using “the recession as an excuse to boot marginalized storytelling” and that Bud Light’s Mulvaney partnership has “stoked fear” of potential backlash. ^^^ Good news. White pill. Bud Light turned its Instagram comments back on in mid-June. Read them and you’d think that the backlash had died down. “They’re filtering them,” says the second ex-Anheuser-Busch employee. “So if you think that everybody’s praising whatever they’re doing, it’s because they’re filtering out all the bad ones.” --------------------------------- Here's the event AB is sponsoring: And here it is: Straight from phoenix pride: https://archive.ph/AMlf9 KidSpace Phoenix Pride Festival We have created a children’s play area that will be open from 12:00pm-5:00pm on Saturday and Sunday. KidSpace is located just inside the Main Entrance by the Community Stage. Various craft/creative activities, games and a rest area will be available for children from 4-12 years old. Each child must be accompanied by a parent or guardian at all times. (Please note that this is not a babysitting service.) The KidSpace area is managed by volunteers. Emphasis added. https://archive.ph/A3iRp OCTOBER 21-22, 2023 | STEELE INDIAN PARK CRAFT COCKTAILS | LOCAL FOOD TRUCKS | FAMILY FUN For 41 years, Phoenix Pride has been organizing marches, rallies, parades, entertainment and education and outreach events to celebrate the Phoenix LGBTQ+ community. In 2021, over 300 corporations, local business, and organizations supported the 40th Annual Phoenix Pride Festival in Phoenix. This year’s Phoenix Pride Festival will continue to be a two day celebration designed to bring our diverse LGBTQ+ and allied communities together for a weekend of camaraderie and celebration of our past, present and future, while raising funds for the Phoenix Pride Community Programs and educating the public about the existence and continuing civil rights battle facing our community. ... General Info October 21-22, 2023 Steele Indian School Park Festival Hours Noon-9:00p ... Ticket Information Children under 12 and active military receive free admission. Children 13-17, seniors 55+ and former military receive discounted admission at the ticket gate. ... Picture in the spoiler fold, if you have the stomach for it: Click To View Spoiler Under the event sponsors: ----------------------------------------------------------- 10-3 When other businesses *celebrate* getting away from your business: https://www.westernjournal.com/brewing-company-celebrates-no-longer-owned-anheuser-busch/ Brewing Company Celebrates No Longer Being Owned by Anheuser-Busch By Joe Saunders October 3, 2023 at 11:40am In a news release Monday, the founder of 10 Barrel Brewing Co. in Bend, Oregon, welcomed the brewing company’s purchase by Tilray Brands Inc., a Canadian cannabis and packaged goods company, from brewing giant Anheuser-Busch, according to New School Beer, an online publication that covers the craft beer and cider industry. “We are excited for 10 Barrel and our new partner, Tilray! Our team has always been focused on making the best beer, and most importantly, having fun,” Chris Cox, who still manages the company, said in the release. ... Besides 10 Barrel Brewing, Tilray purchased five other Anheuser-Busch beer brands, one cider brand and one energy drink brand, according to a Tilray news release. https://tilray.gcs-web.com/news-releases/news-release-details/tilray-brands-closes-transaction-acquiring-eight-beer-beverage NEW YORK, Oct. 02, 2023 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Tilray Brands, Inc. (“Tilray Brands”, “Tilray”, “we” or the “Company”) (Nasdaq | TSX: TLRY), a leading global cannabis-lifestyle and consumer packaged goods company, today announced that the Company has closed its all-cash previously-announced acquisition of eight beer and beverage brands from Anheuser-Busch (NYSE: BUD), including the breweries and brewpubs associated with them. The acquired businesses include Shock Top, Breckenridge Brewery, Blue Point Brewing Company, 10 Barrel Brewing Company, Redhook Brewery, Widmer Brothers Brewing, Square Mile Cider Company, and HiBall Energy. ----------------------------------------------------------- 10-15 https://nypost.com/2023/10/15/yuengling-wants-its-fair-share-of-the-bud-light-debacle/ Click To View Spoiler Yuengling, America’s oldest brewery, wants its ‘fair share’ of the Bud Light debacle By Lisa Fickenscher Published Oct. 15, 2023, 11:45 a.m. ET A brawl is breaking out in the beer aisle as retailers reshuffle shelf space following the Bud Light fiasco – and America’s oldest brewery is fighting to keep its footing against the big conglomerates, The Post has learned. DG Yuengling & Son says supermarkets and convenience stores have regularly sold out of its brew since Bud Light’s catastrophic tie-up with transgender influencer Dylan Mulvaney in April — making it the fourth fastest growing beer brand in the US, according to data from Bump Williams Consulting and NielsenIQ. Sales jumped 22% year to date through Sept. 9 across the 26 states where Yuengling is sold, according to the research firm. The Pottsville, Pa.-based company’s top-selling beer, Yuengling Lager, soared by 80% in the four-week period ended Sept. 9 compared to a year ago. Sales of Bud Light during the same period tumbled 27%. “Yuengling is largely out of stock in the markets it’s available in and deserves more distribution and shelf space because consumer demand is higher today than what retailers have given them,” Bump Williams, CEO of the consulting firm, told The Post. Nevertheless, Yuengling’s torrid growth has lately hit a wall. Dick Yuengling, the company’s chief executive and fifth-generation owner, claims bigger brands have been trying to squeeze in on its shelf space, even as some distributors have been exerting pressure to push its famously low prices higher. “We just want our fair share of the Bud Light debacle,” 80-year-old Yuengling told The Post. “We are the little guy on the block so we have to fight harder, but how do we grow if they don’t give us more shelf space?” The problem is twofold, according to Yuengling: Distributors aren’t replenishing its beers fast enough at stores, with some retailers out of stock for up to three days. Meanwhile, stores haven’t yet given Yuengling more footage on their shelves amidst an epic battle between big beer brands — foremost among them Anheuser-Busch — to grab more than 20% of beer drinkers who have switched away from Bud Light. The jockeying for shelf space has created a “very aggressive selling environment,” Yuengling’s chief operating officer David Casinelli told The Post, adding that Anheuser-Bush is tapping into its deep pockets to maintain its positions in stores. “Within the letter of the law, I think they are using all of their resources, rebating, discounts — they are the largest brewer in the world,” Casinelli said. “They are advertising, doing marketing consumer research. If there’s anything beyond that, I wouldn’t know.” Anheuser-Busch did not respond to requests for comment. View Quote Nevertheless, Yuengling’s torrid growth has lately hit a wall. Dick Yuengling, the company’s chief executive and fifth-generation owner, claims bigger brands have been trying to squeeze in on its shelf space, even as some distributors have been exerting pressure to push its famously low prices higher. The problem is twofold, according to Yuengling: Distributors aren’t replenishing its beers fast enough at stores, with some retailers out of stock for up to three days. Meanwhile, stores haven’t yet given Yuengling more footage on their shelves amidst an epic battle between big beer brands — foremost among them Anheuser-Busch — to grab more than 20% of beer drinkers who have switched away from Bud Light. Well isn't that just american of AB ... or is this a dutch thing? ----------------------------------------------------------- 10-20 https://nypost.com/2023/10/19/anheuser-busch-dangles-150m-in-incentives-to-beer-distributors/ Click To View Spoiler Anheuser-Busch dangles $150M in incentives to distributors to keep beer in stock By Lisa Fickenscher Published Oct. 19, 2023, 2:15 p.m. ET Anheuser-Busch is dangling big incentives to distributors to keep its beers on store shelves following Bud Light’s disastrous tie-up with Dylan Mulvaney — even as retailers begin reassigning the space they allocate to popular beers, according to reports. The embattled brewer — whose Bud Light brand has been slammed by boycotts over an April 1 marketing tie-up with the transgender influencer — is offering as much $150 million in relief this year alone, according to Beer Marketer’s Insights. That includes reimbursements to distributors for certain freight and fuel surcharges and giving them an extra five days to pay their bills to the brewery, according to the trade publication. “I imagine for those that are having some cash flow concerns, this would help somewhat,” one distributor told The Post. Anheuser-Busch also is boosting a financial aid package to distributors that it began in June, according to Beer Business Daily. Those relief programs including sales incentive payments, have been extended through the spring, according to the report. Anheuser-Busch is dangling big incentives to distributors to keep its beers on store shelves following Bud Light’s disastrous tie-up with Dylan Mulvaney — even as retailers begin reassigning the space they allocate to popular beers, according to reports. The embattled brewer — whose Bud Light brand has been slammed by boycotts over an April 1 marketing tie-up with the transgender influencer — is offering as much $150 million in relief this year alone, according to Beer Marketer’s Insights. That includes reimbursements to distributors for certain freight and fuel surcharges and giving them an extra five days to pay their bills to the brewery, according to the trade publication. “I imagine for those that are having some cash flow concerns, this would help somewhat,” one distributor told The Post. Anheuser-Busch also is boosting a financial aid package to distributors that it began in June, according to Beer Business Daily. Those relief programs including sales incentive payments, have been extended through the spring, according to the report. ----------------------------------------------------------- 10-25 Quoted: Money exchanges hands at the corporate level for the shelf space for a year or more in advance in any chain store. They call it "The Set". There is a layout that all of the vendors understand and can pull up to see the facing and positions of all of the beers on the the shelf. This Bud thing happened midstream and won't cost them shef space for another year or more. If Buds parent company pays enough they won't lose anything. There are cases where if a vendor is blown out and has NO product to fill the shelf, a store manager may permit it to be filled by another vendor temporarily but as soon as the blown out vendor gets more product in, that shit on their part of the shelf is going in the floor. Was a grocery salesman and merchandiser for a few years in my 20s for a distributor for area. We moved a lot of beer. LOL View Quote So, just another 7-8 months of not drinking a lousy beer or anything from that company. People said this wouldn't last back in april. Thanks for the info! ----------------------------------------------------------- 10-26 Hat tip to the thread, page 37-38: https://nypost.com/2023/10/24/business/ufc-partners-with-bud-light-as-embattled-beer-tries-to-fight-off-dylan-mulvaney-backlash/ Click To View Spoiler UFC partners with Bud Light as embattled beer tries to fight off Dylan Mulvaney backlash By Joseph A. Wulfsohn, Fox News Published Oct. 24, 2023, 7:20 p.m. ET UFC announced Bud Light will be its official beer as part of a partnership with Anheuser-Busch following months of controversy surrounding the beer brand that erupted earlier this year. The mixed martial arts organization revealed Tuesday it struck a multiyear deal with the beer giant involving the Bud Light brand having a heavy presence in UFC’s content in its broadcasts and online beginning in 2024. “Anheuser-Busch and Bud Light were UFC’s original beer sponsors more than fifteen years ago. I’m proud to announce we are back in business together,” UFC CEO Dana White said in a statement Tuesday. “There are many reasons why I chose to go with Anheuser-Busch and Bud Light, most importantly because I feel we are very aligned when it comes to our core values and what the UFC brand stands for. I’m looking forward to all of the incredible things we will do in the years ahead.” “Anheuser-Busch and Bud Light have always been on the cutting edge of iconic sporting moments that fans remember forever, and reuniting with UFC is a continuation of this industry leading legacy,” Anheuser-Busch CEO Brendan Whitworth said in the press release. “As one of the largest and longest standing sport sponsors, we are excited to work with UFC to celebrate our passionate fans while always making a positive impact in communities across America.” Anheuser-Busch will be replacing Modelo as the UFC’s official beer partner. Appearing on “The Sean Hannity Show,” White said his decision to partner with Anheuser-Busch “was the furthest thing about money.” “These guys employ 65,000 Americans, thousands of vets they employ. They spend over $700 million a year with US farmers, you know, buying their crops for their product. And there’s many, many other reasons that I did this,” White told Fox News’ Sean Hannity on his radio show. “Where I sit personally with my core values and I felt like the core values of the UFC, even though we’re a global sport, and we have fighters from all over the world. This is an American company. And I love this country and this is more about me being aligned with somebody who is a sponsor of the UFC and somebody I’m going to work with every day.” White alluded to the backlash Bud Light previously received by saying fans “might not love” every business decision that is made by either UFC or Anheuser-Busch but insisted “it wasn’t a tough decision at all.” “This is more about core values to me than anything else,” White added. Really? It's about values? Is it that you like AB's DEI programs and their sexism and racism? Or do you like them sponsoring pride events where kids are (intentionally, I believe) exposed to hyper-sexualized content that's been designed to destroy the barriers conscience puts up naturally against destructive sexuality? Or are you planning on firing a lot more white men at UFC for racist and sexist reasons, exactly like that video that AB put out said? What AB values are you standing with, dana? If you're just doing it for the money: https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/ufc-boycott-calls-soar-after-mega-sponsorship-deal-bud-light Citibank data shows Bud Light sales continue to flounder: Weekly US Nielsen data through to 7th October shows Bud Light volume/sales declines continued broadly in line with prior trends. Latest weekly volumes were down -29% (last 3-mth average -30%), with sales down -27% (-27%), while volume share was down -387bps and value -352bps (last three months -399bps and -354bps, respectively). There continues to be contagion to the wider ABInBev portfolio, with Budweiser, Busch, and Michelob still weak, while Coors, Miller, and Modelo (Constellation) continue to gain share. Our estimates and the stock price increasingly discount a base case where the current rates of volume decline in ABI’s US portfolio continue through Q1-24E. As we head into 2024, given likely COGS deflation, an ongoing focus on overheads containment, the risk to the management’s 4-8% mid-term EBITDA growth guidance appears to be skewed to the upside. We reiterate our preference for Beer stocks and Buy rating on ABInBev Or maybe you like this sort of reaction?
Dude needs to get his head scanned. ----------------------------------------------------------- 10-31 https://nypost.com/2023/10/31/business/ab-inbevs-us-sales-plunge-more-than-13-on-bud-light-fiasco/ Click To View Spoiler Beer giant AB InBev’s US sales plunge more than 13% on Bud Light fiasco By Lisa Fickenscher Published Oct. 31, 2023, 11:45 a.m. ET ... The largest brewer in the world said US revenues fell nearly 14% from July through September, while other global regions including the Middle East, Africa, and Asia-Pacific grew. The company said sales in Europe were “soft.” Overall revenues for the Belgian-based conglomerate rose 4% to $15.6 billion and EBITDA sunk by 29.3%. It’s the second consecutive quarter in which sales in the US have declined. Paywalled, but the snippet out public says a good bit: https://beernet.com/a-b-u-s-depressed-shipments-depletions-trends-deepen-in-q3/ October 31, 2023 A-B U.S. Depressed Shipments, Depletions Trends Deepen in Q3 Dear Client: As with the prior quarter, in Q3, Anheuser-Busch InBev saw "global momentum" that was offset by U.S. performance. Indeed, U.S. shipments and depletions declines deepened since last quarter. In the U.S., A-B’s Q3 shipments declined by 17.6% and depletions dropped 16.6%, which were a couple points below Q2 marks of -15% and -14%, … ----------------------------------------------------------- 11-3 AB gives shareholders 1bn Click To View Spoiler https://beernet.com/gavin-mc-share-gains-stickingbud-light-worsening/ November 3, 2023 Gavin: MC Share Gains Sticking, Bud Light Worsening Molson Coors Gains "Tens of Thousands of Cubic Feet" in Shelf Space Dear Client: Molson Coors reported its third quarter results yesterday, as U.S. distributor depletions were up 4.5% in the quarter (vs. 8.7% the prior quarter), against a tougher comp with last year's price increases and the subsequent timing of trade load-in, holiday timing, … https://www.westernjournal.com/desperate-bud-light-parent-company-offers-disgruntled-shareholders-1-billion-apology-dylan-mulvaney-disaster/ Desperate Bud Light Parent Company Offers Disgruntled Shareholders $1 Billion Apology for Dylan Mulvaney Disaster By Jack Davis November 3, 2023 at 2:28pm The parent company of Bud Light is making a $1 billion buyback of shares as a way to rebound from the disaster caused by the company’s partnership with transgender influencer Dylan Mulvaney. The buyback will take place over the next year and kick in “almost immediately,” Anheuser-Busch InBev Chief Financial Officer Fernando Tennenbaum said on a call with investors, according to Yahoo Finance. It was announced Tuesday in AB InBev’s third-quarter report. Bank of America analyst Andrea Pistacchi said the gesture by the Belgium-based conglomerate was “not large” but was also “not expected.” Trevor Stirling, an analyst at Bernstein, said the buyback was “a very important psychological signal” to investors, according to The Times of London. According to The Hill, ABInBev’s stock has lost $27 billion in value since the Mulvaney promotion sparked a boycott of Bud Light. Bud Light’s parent company Anheuser-Busch InBev saw its sales sink by 13.5% last quarter as fallout from the Bud Light boycott continues. See the full story at https://t.co/VkKHQwI3eK pic.twitter.com/lySyzIpbSN — Freespoke (@FreespokeSearch) November 1, 2023 In presenting its quarterly results, the company noted that revenue in the United States was down 13.5 percent largely as a result of the Bud Light boycott. Yahoo Finance reported that U.S. sales to wholesalers were down 17.6 percent and sales to retailers dropped 16.6 percent. That led to a 29.3 percent drop in operating profit, according to MarketWatch. In looking ahead, the company is focusing its marketing on more traditional areas, such as the partnership with UFC that begins Jan. 1. We’re proud to announce that starting in 2024, we’ll once again be the official beer sponsor of @UFC pic.twitter.com/n9jcDyLhVv — Bud Light (@budlight) October 24, 2023 “They’re trying to find some new people, and I think the UFC provides them the opportunity to do so,” said Anjali Bal, associate professor of marketing at Babson College. AB InBev CEO Michel Doukeris referenced the partnership during the earnings call. “I could not be more excited about joining or rejoining UFC on this comeback and to have Bud Light in the US for the fans and Budweiser being activated globally,” he said. Doukeris offered some hope that the worst has passed, noting that the company’s market share has not fallen further since it cratered in April, according to ABC News. He claimed an internal poll found 40 percent of former Bud Light drinkers would come back to the brand. “This gives us some certainty that we are moving in the right direction. don’t think we are at a new normal yet, but we have a good grip on what we need to do and how we are proceeding,” the CEO said. View Quote According to The Hill, ABInBev’s stock has lost $27 billion in value since the Mulvaney promotion sparked a boycott of Bud Light. Bud Light’s parent company Anheuser-Busch InBev saw its sales sink by 13.5% last quarter as fallout from the Bud Light boycott continues. Yahoo Finance reported that U.S. sales to wholesalers were down 17.6 percent and sales to retailers dropped 16.6 percent. That led to a 29.3 percent drop in operating profit, according to MarketWatch. And their c-suiters are still shockingly out of touch with reality: “They’re trying to find some new people, and I think the UFC provides them the opportunity to do so,” said Anjali Bal, associate professor of marketing at Babson College. ... Doukeris offered some hope that the worst has passed, noting that the company’s market share has not fallen further since it cratered in April, according to ABC News. He claimed an internal poll found 40 percent of former Bud Light drinkers would come back to the brand. ----------------------------------------------------------- 11-7 https://www.westernjournal.com/top-anheuser-busch-name-bud-light-brand-crisis-claims-latest-victim/ Click To View Spoiler Lauren Denowitz — who was the global entertainment head at Anheuser-Busch — wrote in a LinkedIn post last month that she was no longer with the company and cited the unprecedented corporate crisis ignited by its failed partnership with Mulvaney. “Last week, my nearly-seven-year run at ABInBev came to an end,” Denowitz said. “With the Bud Light situation earlier this year, the company experienced its largest brand crisis in its several-hundred-year history,” she wrote. “The impacts are being felt far and wide, and, understandably, as the company navigates [its] path back to sturdy ground, it’s prioritizing resourcing shorter-term impact initiatives vs longer-lead-time strategic bets like brand entertainment,” Denowitz said. Her unceremonious exit now casts a shadow over the murky future of Anheuser-Busch’s entertainment projects. “The world’s biggest brewer had been building an entertainment division to develop shows and movies it could sell to streamers like Netflix, as big marketers increasingly turn to Hollywood in a bid to reach consumers who are increasingly glued to ad-free streamers,” Business Insider reported. ----------------------------------------------------------- 11-17 https://nypost.com/2023/11/16/business/anheuser-buschs-marketing-chief-to-exit-after-dylan-mulvaney-fiasco/Click To View Spoiler Anheuser-Busch’s US marketing chief plans to resign as the brewer continues to grapple with sharp sales drops following its disastrous Bud Light campaign with transgender influencer Dylan Mulvaney. Benoit Garbe, chief marketing officer for the embattled company’s US portfolio of beers, canned cocktails and non-alcoholic beverages since 2021, “will be resigning at the end of the year in order to embark on a new chapter in his career,” Anheuser-Busch confirmed in a statement to The Post. Recently, the largest brewer in the world said US revenues fell nearly 14% from July through September, while sales in Europe were “soft.” Also in September, “Bud Light [is] still just stubbornly down around 30% in volume compared to last year, which is where it’s been since May or June,” Beer Business Daily publisher Harry Schuhmacher told Fox News Digital at the time. “That tells me that this is quasi-permanent, meaning those consumers are just lost forever.” Bud Light is down 26.9% in dollars and 30.3% in volume, Schuhmacher said, citing a study by Bump Williams Consulting. The publisher believes it is “likely” the company will continue to see similar year-over-year declines for the “foreseeable future.” --------------------------- “This was one single can given to one social media influencer,” the letter states. “It was not made for production or sale to the general public. This can is not a formal campaign or advertisement.” Steven Crowder (@scrowder) November 16, 2023 Awfully expensive can ----------------------------------------------------------- 12-4 Bud refusing to apologise, just trying to use memberberries to get people to buy back in: Click To View Spoiler
So now they're going to tarnish manning and smith. One of the replies:
And the team at AB is dumb enough to retort:
They don't think they did anything wrong.
----------------------------------------------------------- 12-15 https://www.newsbusters.org/blogs/business/tom-olohan/2023/12/15/matt-walsh-bud-light-boycott-stillClick To View Spoiler Matt walsh: “[F]or once in our lives, for once ever, in modern American history, conservatives fought back in an organized, competent, effective way. We organized a boycott. We stuck with it,” he said. “We actually made the woke company feel the pain. We imposed our will in a way that conservatives have never been able to do, ever. The Bud Light boycott is by far — and it’s not close — the most effective conservative boycott of a major company ever, of all time.” Uh, MW, if you see this ... was it organized? Grant you I haven't looked for that information, but I haven't seen any organization of the abandonment (it's not a boycott) in any sense beyond ... AB and BL got abandoned and the news reported on it. This is the strength of the not-left - it doesn't have to be organized. When you cross something that actually matters to people and it's feasable and the cost is worth the value you get from it ... well: see this post. The Daily Wire host then laid out his terms for Anheuser Busch’s surrender, noting that it would take a “very compelling strategic reason,” and boycotters would need “some kind of major concession” from Bud Light to end the boycott. “They would need to apologize for pushing transgenderism. They would need to apologize specifically and explicitly. They would need to grovel at our feet in humiliating fashion and disavow gender ideology entirely,” he said. Anything less would mean trading victory for defeat. Walsh hammered the point home that there are only three endings to a devastating boycott: abject surrender and concessions from the company, financial destruction of the target or boycotters backing down in defeat. As Bud Lite has yet to surrender, Walsh encouraged those boycotting the brand to continue letting the woke beer company face the consequences of its own actions. “Let them wither and die, let their brand destroy itself, let it burn, I don’t care,” Walsh said. *points at the racism and sexism inherent in AB's internal DEI and HR practices and hiring/firing* Hey, don't leave those out. ---------------------- From beernet: https://beernet.com/a-b-revises-sales-call-frequency-requirements/ December 14, 2023 A-B Revises Sales Call Frequency Requirements Dear Client: Yesterday, Anheuser-Busch sent notice to wholesalers about new sales call frequency requirements for both standard and digital accounts. It basically aims to bring the sales call frequency policy in line with today’s route to market dynamics, per company. A-B says its current call frequency requirements “were defined decades ago and advances in data … Continue reading "A-B Revises Sales Call Frequency Requirements" ---------------------- People who are no friends of conservatives or anyone not democrat out themselves when they speak off the cuff: (hat tip "usernames", found this in his thread: https://www.ar15.com/forums/general/Black-rifle-coffee-on-bud-light/5-2693380/) (not safe for kids, foul language) Vote With Your Wallet - Boycotting Bud Light #clearedhot #podcast "who the * cares, why are these people getting so mad?" People don't understand things they don't know about. BRCC guy, apparently, at a podcast. ----------------------------------------------------------- 12-18 https://nypost.com/2023/12/18/business/teamsters-approve-strike-against-anheuser-busch/ Click To View Spoiler Teamsters approve strike against Anheuser-Busch months after Dylan Mulvaney controversy By Social Links for Lisa Fickenscher Published Dec. 18, 2023, 12:21 p.m. ET Embattled beer giant Anheuser-Busch — which has seen its market share and sales plummet in the wake of the Dylan Mulvaney fiasco — could face a possible work stoppage at its US breweries after members of the Teamsters overwhelmingly voted to authorize a strike. The union representing about 5,000 workers at a dozen US breweries said Dutch conglomerate AB InBev has been dragging its feet on negotiating about “job security issues” since talks on a new contract broke down last month, Teamsters leaders said. The union is asking for higher wages, job, health and retirement benefits protections, but did not disclose details about these issues. ... The jobs covered under the contract — which ends at the end February — include workers who “brew, package and ship beer,” a spokesperson for the Teamsters told the Post. ... The union has also criticized Anheuser-Busch’s decision for $1 billion in stock buybacks “to wealthy investors as it simultaneously ignores the need to protect good jobs.” ----------------------------------------------------------- 12-27 https://nypost.com/2023/12/27/business/beer-sales-plummeting-to-lowest-level-in-24-years-amid-dylan-mulvaney-fiasco/ Beer sales plunge to lowest levels in 24 years — thanks to Bud Light’s disastrous Dylan Mulvaney campaign By Social Links for Lisa Fickenscher Published Dec. 27, 2023, 3:17 p.m. ET Beer sales in the US are expected to plunge to their lowest level since 1999 — largely due to Bud Light’s massive falloff after its disastrous tie-up with transgender influencer Dylan Mulvaney, industry experts said. ... “This year in particular AB is driving the decline in the industry,” David Steinmann, vice president and executive editor of the publication (Beer Marketer’s Insights - Flashman), told The Post. For the four weeks ended Dec. 9, Bud Light’s retail store sales were down 28% compared with the same period a year ago, according to a Wall Street Journal report, citing data from NielsenIQ and Bump Williams Consulting. ----------------------------------------------------------- 1-12 https://nypost.com/2024/01/12/business/bud-light-brewer-ab-inbev-to-sponsor-olympics-after-dylan-mulvaney-fiasco/ Click To View Spoiler Bud Light brewer AB InBev to sponsor Olympics after Dylan Mulvaney fiasco By Social Links for Shannon Thaler Published Jan. 12, 2024, 7:26 p.m. ET The Belgium-based brewer on Friday announced a long-term deal with the International Olympic Committee for the next three Olympics and Paralympic Olympic Games. The sponsorship deal further attempts to distance Anheuser-Busch from Bud Light’s now-infamous tie-up with transgender influencer Dylan Mulvaney, whose ad for the brand on social media last April led to boycotts that caused Bud Light beer sales to plummet to their lowest level since 1999. “This partnership illustrates the opportunity for our category to positively impact and engage with billions of fans around the world, ushering in a new era of Olympic spirit as we cheer for our favorite teams and athletes as they go for gold. We look forward to activating at the 2024, 2026 and 2028 games,” Doukeris said. Financial terms of the sponsorship weren’t revealed. However, the maker of Budweiser, Bud Light, Stella Artois and a slew of other suds will promote its zero-alcohol beer, Corona Cero, as the global beer sponsor of the games, the company said in a press release. It fits, I guess, considering the olympics are willing to let males compete in their female sports: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transgender_people_in_sports#History_of_transgender_athletes_in_competition In November 2021 the IOC issued a non-legally binding framework that focuses on ten principles of inclusion: "prevention of harm, non-discrimination, fairness, no presumption of advantage, evidence-based approach, primacy of health and bodily autonomy, stakeholder-centered approach, right to privacy and periodic reviews". The new guidelines have been described as loosening rules that impede transgender and intersex athlete's participation in Olympic sports, with enforcement of sport-specific rules governing inclusion.[41][42][43][44] It's been several years since I watched the olympics. I lost interest after they let that dude witht he genetic conditions (Wiki says: 5a-Reductase 2 deficiency (5aR2D) is an autosomal recessive condition caused by a mutation in SRD5A2, a gene encoding the enzyme 5a-reductase type 2 (5aR2). The condition is rare, affects only genetic males, and has a broad spectrum. ) sprint against the women. For a good writeup on this mind boggling mess: https://matthewbrealey.medium.com/caster-semenya-male-or-female-c5502364d564 Take some excedrin before you read that. You'll need it. ----------------------------------------------------------- 1-19 https://thepostmillennial.com/bud-light-workers-threaten-to-strike-over-job-security-benefits Click To View Spoiler Thousands of workers at 12 of Anheuser-Busch’s US breweries are threatening to strike over contract disagreements on job security and improvements in benefits and retirement, saying "there won’t be any beer come March." 5,000 workers represented by Teamsters voted by 99 percent last month to authorize a strike, according to the Guardian. Teamsters wrote on X earlier in January, "Without a contract by February 29, there won’t be any beer come March." They will strike "if this multibillion-dollar corporation fails to deliver a fair contract." Hat-tip Ghostface in the thread for this one: https://finance.yahoo.com/news/bud-light-sales-down-nearly-185139958.html Bud Light sales down nearly 30% year over year as rivals continue to climb Breck Dumas Wed, January 31, 2024 at 1:51 PM EST·2 min read In this article: BUD +1.47% Anheuser-Busch InBev's beleaguered Bud Light brand is still having trouble luring back the customers it lost following its controversial partnership with transgender activist Dylan Mulvaney last year. Bud Light sales were down 29.9% year over year for the week ending Jan. 20, compared with the same period last year, according to the latest numbers provided to FOX Business by Bump Williams Consulting, which analyzed NielsenIQ data. Two more months till one year out, waiting to see if shelf space gets reset downwards. ----------------------------------------------------------- 2-7 From the NY post. We'll see how the donor angle ages. https://nypost.com/2024/02/07/business/donald-trump-getting-bought-out-as-he-defends-bud-light-critics/ Donald Trump getting ‘bought out’ after pleading for Bud Light to get ‘second chance’ over transgender fiasco: critics By Social Links for Ariel Zilber Published Feb. 7, 2024, 3:35 p.m. ET Donald Trump called for a cease-fire in the culture war over Bud Light’s transgender fiasco – a move that provoked critics to claim he was getting “bought out” by mega-brewer Anheuser-Busch. The former president took to his social media platform Truth Social on Tuesday and declared that Anheuser-Busch was “not a woke company” and that it had already paid a “very big price” for Bud Light’s ad campaign featuring transgender social media influencer Dylan Mulvaney. Trump added that it was time to move on from outrage over the ads, which he called “a mistake of epic proportions.” The former president noted that Anheuser-Busch “spends $700 million a year with our great farmers” and employs 65,000 Americans. Trump urged his followers to give Bud Light a “second chance” and to shun other companies that “are looking to destroy America!” Trump’s post on Truth Social came just weeks before a top GOP lobbyist for Anheuser-Busch was scheduled to host a fundraiser for the former president’s re-election campaign, according to Politico. Jeff Miller, the lobbyist who is known to be close to former House Speaker Kevin McCarthy, announced on the X social media platform that he would be hosting the fundraiser, which is charging attendees $10,000 a head. Dozens of GOP lawmakers are scheduled to attend — as is the former president’s eldest son, Donald Trump Jr. Don Jr. has defended Anheuser-Busch in the past. In a podcast last year, he noted that the company donated more to Republicans than to Democrats. Noah Rothman, a writer for National Review, criticized Trump for his embrace of Anheuser-Busch — accusing the 45th president of getting “bought out of the culture wars.” Rothman noted that both Trump and Anheuser-Busch have a vested financial interest in a truce since the boycott of Bud Light put a dent in the company’s earnings while the Republican National Committee is “struggling financially.” “Trump and Anheuser-Busch need one another,” Rothman wrote. “Their mutual admiration is set to cool the tensions between Bud Light and the customers the brand communicated in no uncertain terms it did not want.” Rothman also took Trump to task for abandoning the “effective and organic effort by cultural conservatives to convince corporate America that social-justice activism doesn’t pay.” “Not only does it pay, it pays off all the right people,” Rothman wrote. Trump’s call for peace with Anheuser-Busch was seconded by Caitlyn Jenner, who called Anheuser-Busch an “incredible American company.” “They made a huge mistake and have paid a large price,” the conservative reality TV star shared to X on Tuesday. Anheuser-Busch will look to take another step in reclaiming its dominant position among American beer-drinkers during Super Bowl weekend, when it will air a commercial on the most watched television program of the year. The perennial Super Bowl marketer is bringing back fan-favorite characters the Clydesdales and a Labrador Retriever — a nod to the dogs that starred in earlier commercials during advertising’s biggest night. View Quote No, trump, AB and Inbev are still "woke" ... in both meanings of that term. Also: Trump’s call for peace with Anheuser-Busch was seconded by Caitlyn Jenner, who called Anheuser-Busch an “incredible American company.” “They made a huge mistake and have paid a large price,” the conservative reality TV star shared to X on Tuesday. .... the irony of calling bruce jenner a conservative when he's actively participating in the destruction of the very idea of male and female ... AB being the worst sort of woke: 5-24-23 https://archive.md/rYELw In the video, one employee of Anheuser-Busch explains, "we're still 40 percent women, and 60 percent men, still predominantly white: so there's still work to be done." The "work" to be "done" is apparently replacing white male workers with alternatives. Failed To Load Title https://web.archive.org/web/20230521052258/https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TYUpsy2PPmo Kinda explains why that firm filed suit against them. ^^^^ I haven't seen any indication that they realized that this and DEI are wrong, and honestly apologized for it and than moved to expunge it from their company. We know what it looks like when a company gets rid of the "woke" practices. We've seen examples before: https://world.hey.com/jason/changes-at-basecamp-7f32afc5 Jason Fried April 26, 2021 Changes at Basecamp At Basecamp, we treat our company as a product. It's not a rigid thing that exists, it's a flexible, malleable idea that evolves. We aren't stuck with what we have, we can create what we want. Just as we improve products through iteration, we iterate on our company too. Recently, we've made some internal company changes, which, taken in total, collectively feel like a full version change. It deserves an announcement. In the product world, not all changes are enjoyed by all customers. Some changes are immediately appreciated. Some changes take time to steep, settle in, and get acquainted with. And to some, some changes never feel quite right — they may even be deal breakers. The same is true when changing your company, except that the customers are the employees. And when you get to a certain count — customers or employees or both — there's no pleasing everyone. You can't — there are too many unique perspectives, experiences, and individuals. As Huxley offers in The Doors of Perception, "We live together, we act on, and react to, one another; but always and in all circumstances we are by ourselves. The martyrs go hand in hand into the arena; they are crucified alone. Embraced, the lovers desperately try to fuse their insulated ecstasies into a single self-transcendence; in vain. By its very nature every embodied spirit is doomed to suffer and enjoy in solitude." Heavy, yes, but insightful, absolutely. A relevant reminder. We make individual choices. We all want different somethings. Some slightly different, some substantially. Companies, however, must settle the collective difference, pick a point, and navigate towards somewhere, lest they get stuck circling nowhere. With that, we wanted to put these directional changes on the public record. Historically we've tried to share as much as we can — for us, and for you — so this transmission continues the tradition. 1. No more societal and political discussions on our company Basecamp account. Today's social and political waters are especially choppy. Sensitivities are at 11, and every discussion remotely related to politics, advocacy, or society at large quickly spins away from pleasant. You shouldn't have to wonder if staying out of it means you're complicit, or wading into it means you're a target. These are difficult enough waters to navigate in life, but significantly more so at work. It's become too much. It's a major distraction. It saps our energy, and redirects our dialog towards dark places. It's not healthy, it hasn't served us well. And we're done with it on our company Basecamp account where the work happens. People can take the conversations with willing co-workers to Signal, Whatsapp, or even a personal Basecamp account, but it can't happen where the work happens anymore. Update: David has shared some more details and more of the internal announcement on his HEY World blog. 2. No more paternalistic benefits. For years we've offered a fitness benefit, a wellness allowance, a farmer's market share, and continuing education allowances. They felt good at the time, but we've had a change of heart. It's none of our business what you do outside of work, and it's not Basecamp's place to encourage certain behaviors — regardless of good intention. By providing funds for certain things, we're getting too deep into nudging people's personal, individual choices. So we've ended these benefits, and, as compensation, paid every employee the full cash value of the benefits for this year. In addition, we recently introduced a 10% profit sharing plan to provide direct compensation that people can spend on whatever they'd like, privately, without company involvement or judgement. 3. No more committees. For nearly all of our 21 year existence, we were proudly committee-free. No big working groups making big decisions, or putting forward formalized, groupthink recommendations. No bureaucracy. But recently, a few sprung up. No longer. We're turning things back over to the person (or people) who were distinctly hired to make those decisions. The responsibility for DEI work returns to Andrea, our head of People Ops. The responsibility for negotiating use restrictions and moral quandaries returns to me and David. A long-standing group of managers called "Small Council" will disband — when we need advice or counsel we'll ask individuals with direct relevant experience rather than a pre-defined group at large. Back to basics, back to individual responsibility, back to work. 4. No more lingering or dwelling on past decisions. We've become a bit too precious with decision making over the last few years. Either by wallowing in indecisiveness, worrying ourselves into overthinking things, taking on a defensive posture and assuming the worst outcome is the likely outcome, putting too much energy into something that only needed a quick fix, inadvertently derailing projects when casual suggestions are taken as essential imperatives, or rehashing decisions in different forums or mediums. It's time to get back to making calls, explaining why once, and moving on. 5. No more 360 reviews. Employee performance reviews used to be straightforward. A meeting with your manager or team lead, direct feedback, and recommendations for improvement. Then a few years ago we made it hard. Worse, really. We introduced 360s, which required peers to provide feedback on peers. The problem is, peer feedback is often positive and reassuring, which is fun to read but not very useful. Assigning peer surveys started to feel like assigning busy work. Manager/employee feedback should be flowing pretty freely back and forth throughout the year. No need to add performative paperwork on top of that natural interaction. So we're done with 360s, too. 6. No forgetting what we do here. We make project management, team communication, and email software. We are not a social impact company. Our impact is contained to what we do and how we do it. We write business books, blog a ton, speak regularly, we open source software, we give back an inordinate amount to our industry given our size. And we're damn proud of it. Our work, plus that kind of giving, should occupy our full attention. We don't have to solve deep social problems, chime in publicly whenever the world requests our opinion on the major issues of the day, or get behind one movement or another with time or treasure. These are all important topics, but they're not our topics at work — they're not what we collectively do here. Employees are free to take up whatever cause they want, support whatever movements they'd like, and speak out on whatever horrible injustices are being perpetrated on this group or that (and, unfortunately, there are far too many to choose from). But that's their business, not ours. We're in the business of making software, and a few tangential things that touch that edge. We're responsible for ourselves. That's more than enough for us. This may look like compression. A reduction, an elimination. And it is. It's precisely that. We're compressing X to allow for expansion in Y. A return to whole minds that can focus fully on the work we choose to do. A return to a low-ceremony steady state where we can make decisions and move on. A return to personal responsibility and good faith trust in one another to do our own individual jobs well. A return to why we started the company. A return to what we do best. Who's responsible for these changes? David and I are. Who made the changes? David and I did. These are our calls, and the outcomes and impacts land at our doorstep. Input came from many sources, disagreements were heard, deliberations were had. In the end, we feel like this is the long-term healthy way forward for Basecamp as a whole — the company and our products. When you've been around 20 years, you've been through change. You're used to it, and comfortable with it. These changes are part of a continuum in the experiment of independence that is Basecamp (and 37signals before that). We'll eventually run headlong into big change again. This is what we've done, and this is what we'll do — time guarantees it. We're very much looking forward to this new version of the company. Once the construction site is cleaned up, and the dust settles, we believe we'll see a refocused, refreshed, and revitalized Basecamp. Here we go, again. About Jason Fried Hey! I'm Jason, the Co-Founder and CEO at 37signals, makers of Basecamp and HEY. Subscribe below to follow my thinking on business, design, product development, and whatever else is on my mind. Thanks for visiting, thanks for reading. Sent to the world with HEY View Quote 1. No more societal and political discussions on our company Basecamp account. 2. No more paternalistic benefits. For years we've offered a fitness benefit, a wellness allowance, a farmer's market share, and continuing education allowances. They felt good at the time, but we've had a change of heart. It's none of our business what you do outside of work, and it's not Basecamp's place to encourage certain behaviors — regardless of good intention. 3. No more committees. For nearly all of our 21 year existence, we were proudly committee-free. No big working groups making big decisions, or putting forward formalized, groupthink recommendations. No bureaucracy. But recently, a few sprung up. No longer. We're turning things back over to the person (or people) who were distinctly hired to make those decisions. 4. No more lingering or dwelling on past decisions. We've become a bit too precious with decision making over the last few years. ... It's time to get back to making calls, explaining why once, and moving on. 5. No more 360 reviews. Employee performance reviews used to be straightforward. A meeting with your manager or team lead, direct feedback, and recommendations for improvement. Then a few years ago we made it hard. 6. No forgetting what we do here. We make project management, team communication, and email software. We are not a social impact company. Our impact is contained to what we do and how we do it. AB is still woke, and not the ignorant and wrong meaning that the dems use ("just be nice"). ----------------------------------------------------------- 2-9 Post-trump-statement coping mechanisms seem to be in play: https://www.marketwatch.com/story/anheuser-busch-inbev-stock-rises-as-trump-says-bud-light-maker-should-get-second-chance-8a67fae1 Referenced Symbols ABI -1.14% BUD -1.68% Anheuser-Busch InBev shares saw their best one-day rise in three months on Wednesday after getting an endorsement from former President Donald Trump, who said people should give the brewer a second chance. In Brussels trade, the stock ABI, -1.14% BUD, -1.68% rose 4%, its best single day of gains since a 5% rise on Oct. 31. Huff that copium! ----------------------------------------------------------- 2-10 https://www.americanthinker.com/blog/2024/02/forgive_anheuserbusch_over_bud_light_not_yet.html Click To View Spoiler February 10, 2024 Forgive Anheuser-Busch over Bud Light? Not yet. By W.A. Eliot On Tuesday, Donald Trump posted on Truth Social that Anheuser-Busch made a very bad mistake with Bud Light, but it is not a woke company, and among other things, it helps farmers and employs veterans. He then says, “Anheuser-Busch is a Great American Brand that perhaps deserves a Second Chance? What do you think?” I’m glad you asked, Donald. My answer is no, not yet. First, some other opinions. On the same day Trump posted the above, Brandon Morse, writing for RedState and without mentioning Trump (the time stamp for Morse’s article is 2:15 P.M., while for Trump’s it is 3:30 P.M., so it appears that Morse posted first), claimed that A-B has done enough by firing the executives responsible for the ad, teaming with UFC, and hiring a “conservative-friendly comedian” as a representative. Furthermore, realistically, a big company like A-B will not be destroyed, so it’s time to declare victory and end the boycott. Nowhere does he mention the need for an apology. Stephen Green, writing for PJ Media, is more neutral, acknowledging that A-B has not really apologized, but, referencing Trump, asks if it’s time to end the boycott. Shawn Fleetwood, writing for The Federalist, claims in the title that “Trump’s Defense of Anheuser-Busch Undermines Conservatives’ Most Effective Boycott Yet.” He wonders aloud whether “a top Anheuser-Busch GOP lobbyist ... hosting a fundraiser” for Trump next month or Trump’s financial investments in A-B has anything to do with Trump’s plea. Fleetwood emphasizes that A-B has never apologized, both for promoting transgenderism — in fact, it continued to push it by sponsoring LGBT pride events — and for insulting its customers. He says ending the boycott now would just embolden other companies to continue pushing radical leftism down our throats. I couldn’t agree more. The reality is that companies have decided they’d rather support groups pushing woke causes — even if it means smaller profits — rather than be singled out for withering criticism by a loud woke mob and a compliant MSM, as well as risk being blacklisted (which could sink the company altogether). When the NFL gives $250 million to BLM and puts BLM logos on the field and helmets, is it because it shares BLM’s Marxist vision for America (just think what that would mean for NFL profits) and approves of wanton death and destruction, or is it because it’s just easier to pay mafia protection money? When MLB moved the All-Star game out of Atlanta (hurting mostly minority businesses) shortly after President Biden said it would be a good idea, and Atlanta companies such as Coke and Delta joined the movement, is it because they really believed that Georgia’s sensible reforms minimizing election fraud would restrict Blacks and other minorities from voting? Of course not. Coke and Delta backed off after they sensed there might be a boycott against them. Do all these companies pushing DIE training labeling all whites as racist believe it will eliminate racism, is good for morale and the bottom line? Of course not. These companies are starting to back off DIE only because of messy lawsuits charging them with violating the Constitution and civil rights laws. A-B thought it was just another company pandering to the woke mob and was stunned to get burned. Ending the Bud Light boycott now sends the wrong message. I’ll add another reason not to end the boycott just yet. We live in an era in which those with conservative or traditional values are not allowed to express genuine views that used to be mainstream and common sense just a short time ago without being labeled racist, getting removed from social media, and possibly losing their jobs. Add in government-sponsored censorship targeting just this one side. The stakes are too high. Rather than forgive and forget, we should be increasing the penalties for corporate woke excesses so they think twice. Is there anything Anheuser-Busch can do to get back in our good graces? For starters, a sincere apology. No, “We’re sorry we lost money” doesn’t cut it. I don’t expect the apology to be one rejecting transgenderism outright, but it could be one in which the company says it is sorry it pushed support for an alternative lifestyle on consumers who may not share those views and will refrain from doing so in future, and it is so sorry the executive inappropriately insulted the customers and that the company did not repudiate her comments immediately. I would also recommend changing the beer name slightly, say from Bud Light to Buds Light, the plural indicating the camaraderie of drinking bud(die)s and also an eternal reminder of the change we effected. I think I’d be willing to forgive under those conditions. I might even buy Buds Light. W.A. Eliot is a pseudonym. View Quote The reality is that companies have decided they’d rather support groups pushing woke causes — even if it means smaller profits — rather than be singled out for withering criticism by a loud woke mob and a compliant MSM, as well as risk being blacklisted (which could sink the company altogether). When the NFL gives $250 million to BLM and puts BLM logos on the field and helmets, is it because it shares BLM’s Marxist vision for America (just think what that would mean for NFL profits) and approves of wanton death and destruction, or is it because it’s just easier to pay mafia protection money? ... Fleetwood emphasizes that A-B has never apologized, both for promoting transgenderism — in fact, it continued to push it by sponsoring LGBT pride events — and for insulting its customers. He says ending the boycott now would just embolden other companies to continue pushing radical leftism down our throats. I’ll add another reason not to end the boycott just yet. We live in an era in which those with conservative or traditional values are not allowed to express genuine views that used to be mainstream and common sense just a short time ago without being labeled racist, getting removed from social media, and possibly losing their jobs. Add in government-sponsored censorship targeting just this one side. The stakes are too high. Rather than forgive and forget, we should be increasing the penalties for corporate woke excesses so they think twice. Is there anything Anheuser-Busch can do to get back in our good graces? For starters, a sincere apology. No, “We’re sorry we lost money” doesn’t cut it. The fact that AB was (and AFAIK still is?) engaging in identitarian hiring (and I suspect firing) that boils down to being racism and sexism indicates that they need to clean house. At least in the way basecamp did. Basically, this is not just about AB and inbev (again, a dutch/european company). It's this modern popular form of racism and bigotry that needs to take the loss. AB just volunteered to place itself on the table as the sacrifice, and even though they've been repeatedly told what they can do to get otu of this mess, they have utterly refused. The discipline should fit the bad behavior. People who run corps need to realize that if they take the mafia protection money, they will get what they deserve for doing that. ----------------------------------------------------------- 2-13 https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/molson-coors-boosts-ad-spending-capitalize-bud-lights-decline Molson Coors Boosts Ad-Spending To Capitalize On Bud Light's Decline Tyler Durden's Photo by Tyler Durden Tuesday, Feb 13, 2024 - 08:00 PM ... Shares of Molson Coors, maker of Coors Light, a top competitor to Bud Light, jumped 4% in premarket trading but gave up all gains in the cash session. Earlier, the company announced earnings that beat average estimates for earnings and net sales. ... To gain market share, Molson Coors increased marketing and administrative spending by 19% in the fourth quarter compared with the same period one year ago. This significant increase was a strategic decision by the management to leverage the declining demand for Bud Light nationwide, which followed Mulvaney's TikTok Bud Light ad in April. Separately, data from Bump Williams Consulting shows Bud Light sales plunged 20% in 2023. For the first four weeks of 2024, sales tumbled 29.4% as the hemorrhaging continued. ----------------------------------------------------------- 2-26
So, possibly some info on the 29th or 30th to come. A strike impending on those days. https://beernet.com/this-week-all-eyes-on-anheuser-busch/ February 25, 2024 This Week, All Eyes on Anheuser-Busch Dear Client: A-B has done a remarkable job of neutralizing some of the most outspoken proponents of the Bud Light boycott earlier this month, (above and beyond sponsoring comedian Shane Gillis' tour), somehow managing to garner positive public remarks from Kid Rock, Donald Trump, Jr., Tucker Carlson, Joe Rogan, and finally Donald Trump himself -- … Continue reading "This Week, All Eyes on Anheuser-Busch" "We threw money and PR at people who live in isolated bubbles and suckered them into saying nice stuff about us" The CEO of AB went down to kid rock's place and personally schmoozed him, if anyone missed that bit. ----------------------------------------------------------- 2-28 https://www.wsj.com/business/retail/bud-light-missed-out-on-the-super-bowl-party-a5387584 The maker of Bud Light hoped that the Super Bowl might turn things around for the struggling brand. It barely moved the needle. Modelo Especial won the big game with 8.7% of all beer sold in U.S. retail stores in the week before and the week after the Super Bowl, according to an analysis of Nielsen data by consulting firm Bump Williams. Bud Light represented 7.3%. Modelo last May unseated Bud Light as the top-selling U.S. beer by dollar sales, after a Bud Light boycott began in April. Bud Light’s sales still haven’t recovered. The brand’s sales volume was down by 30% in the two-week period ended Feb. 17, compared with the same period a year earlier, Bump Williams said. So much for AB's attempts to schmooze and spend their way out of it this time around. Not even trump and kid rock saying nice things about them helped. They'll never learn or take responsibility for it. ----------------------------------------------------------- 3-1 https://www.freightwaves.com/news/teamsters-anheuser-busch-reach-new-5-year-contract Teamsters, Anheuser-Busch reach new 5-year contract Pay to increase 23% on average over the life of the deal John Kingston · Friday, March 01, 2024 The contract agreement reached this week between the Teamsters union and Anheuser-Busch, averting a strike that could have begun Friday, calls for wage increases of $8 an hour over the five years of the deal. A $4-per-hour raise kicks in immediately. Anheuser-Busch (NYSE: BUD) announced the deal late Wednesday. It awaits ratification in the coming days by approximately 5,000 workers across the company’s U.S. operations. The new contract also calls for a $2,500 ratification bonus. 5000 workers, instant $4 an hour wage increase, with another 4 to come. --------------------------------- https://fortune.com/europe/2024/03/01/bud-light-boycott-ab-inbev-1-4-billion-sales-transgender-influencer-dylan-mulvaney/ Bud Light beer boycott may now have a price tag, as AB InBev notches a $1.4B drop in U.S. sales following transgender influencer row BYPrarthana Prakash ... Now, there’s a price tag on the controversial Bud Light ad spot involving transgender influencer Dylan Mulvaney. In North America, AB InBev found organic revenue—a proxy for operating performance—slid by $1.4 billion owing to less Bud Light beer sold. To be sure, this geography includes Canada in addition to the U.S. However, the group’s revenue growth remained flat for the year in the former, while Bud Light’s boycott took a toll in the U.S. AB InBev CEO Michel Doukeris said the group’s “growth potential was constrained by the performance of our U.S. business” during an earnings call Thursday. Attached File NOW it's a good START. Insult your customers, go woke, have everyone find out about your DEI, and constantly screw up over and over ... instead of realizing you did wrong, fessing up, giving back the protection money, and just trying to treat your customers right ... Get punished. ----------------------------------------------- 3-14 Hat tip anothermisanthrope in the thread: Quoted: Altria, which sells Marlboro cigarettes in the US, owns about 10% of the beermaker. It will sell AB InBev stock in a global secondary offering of shares in the US, Europe, the UK and other countries outside the US, Altria said Wednesday. The tobacco group will offer the AB InBev US shares in a range of $60.75 to $62.75 each, according to people familiar with the plans who cannot be identified discussing confidential information. AB InBev fell as much as 5.1% in extended New York trading and was suspended in Brussels when markets opened. Altria stock was little changed at the close on Wednesday. View Quote https://finance.yahoo.com/news/altria-plans-sell-35-million-202956169.html https://finance.yahoo.com/news/shares-brewer-ab-inbev-suspended-083116531.html View Quote ----------------------------------------------- 3-28 Bud Light may lose 18% of grocery store shelf space after Dylan Mulvaney boycott By Social Links for Ariel Zilber Published March 28, 2024, 1:04 p.m. ET ... “Anheuser-Busch’s beers will lose a range of about 10% to 15% of their space nationally as resets start,” Jesse Ferber, chief strategy officer for Columbia Distributing, which works with retailers such as Walmart and Target in the Pacific Northwest, told Bloomberg News. Ferber said that while the final numbers won’t be known until May or June, he estimates that stores in certain regions of the country could downgrade Bud Light’s shelf space by as much as 18% while in other areas it could be as low as 5%. Molson Coors Brewing Co, whose stable of brands includes Coors Light, Miller Lite and Coors Banquet, expects to see an increase of shelf space of more than 10%. Brian Feiro, president of US sales at Molson Coors, told Bloomberg that more than 50 retailers increased shelf space for Coors Light and Miller Lite by 6% to 7% last summer and fall. ------------------ Commentary from the thread (not my post or my content) There it is. The numbers on the new sets still won't be completely correct because of logistical constraints of the old sets limited the sales for companies like Yuengling who were perpetually blown out once people started reaching for an alternative beer. IF Yuengling can get greater shelf real-estate based off of the increased sales from last year's abandonment of Bud Light, I'd expect to see an even larger contraction of Buds space in another year because Yuengling and others will have more space in the coolers THIS year after the resets. Empty spots on a vendor controlled shelf with thousands of SKUs can be tricky for stores to monitor. There are probably hundreds of beers that could take even more of Buds space that only get 2 to 4 six packs of volume on the shelf, one guy comes in and empties it immediately and no sales are made until the vendor comes back in a day or two. This looks like slow sales on paper but it isn't telling the story that there is actually great demand but no more cold beer for people to buy. IMO Bud is only losing half or less as much as they deserve but they have been such a behemoth for so many years it is going to take time for the system to whittle away at their frontage. View Quote ----------------------------------------------- 4-12 https://www.thedrinksbusiness.com/2024/04/bud-light-teams-up-with-nfl/Click To View Spoiler Bud Light teams up with NFL 08 April 2024 By James Evison In a bid to grow new sales in the brand, AB InBev’s Bud Light has teamed up with the National Football League (NFL) to promote the lager. The new deal will see a campaign called Easy to Sunday promoted, which includes new TV and digital advertising, and will run during the traditional NFL season in autumn and winter 2024/2025. In addition, the brand will release special edition cans for 23 NFL teams, complete with the team colours, logos and an illustration of the players. ... According to Anheuser-Busch’s CEO Michael Doukeris, who was also signposted by USA Today, he has informed investors that around 80% of more than 170,000 consumers that were surveyed gave a “favourable or neutral” rating of Bud Light. ... The news follows on-trade beer sales rising 16% during the Super Bowl, but the vent was further bad news for AB InBev’s Bud Light brand which had easily topped the on-premise sales table for the 2023 game. AB InBev spent heavily on the day to restore Bud Light among fans’ affections, even harking back to iconic heritage advertising featuring Clydesdale heavy horses. But the campaign fell flat with Bud Light’s sales on the day plummeting a massive 50% below those on Super Bowl day in 2023. Note the copium in there.^^^ https://seekingalpha.com/article/4682975-bud-overvalued-and-facing-multiple-headwinds Click To View Spoiler Anheuser-Busch InBev: Overvalued And Facing Multiple Headwinds Apr. 09, 2024 5:39 PM ETAnheuser-Busch InBev SA/NV (BUD) Stock, BUDFF StockPRNDY, HEINY, PDRDF14 Comments Ahoy Alpha profile picture Ahoy Alpha 131 Followers Summary Anheuser-Busch InBev is rated as a "Sell" due to negative long-term trends in beer consumption and its high valuation. Beer consumption is declining due to health awareness, government regulation, and a shift towards spirits and wines. Investors may find better returns in spirits-focused companies like Pernod Ricard or tobacco companies like British American Tobacco. ----------------------------------------------- 5-6 https://beernet.com/mich-ultra-surpasses-bud-light/ Click To View Spoiler May 5, 2024 Mich Ultra Surpasses Bud Light Plus, some newer hot brands showing fatigue. Dear Client: It's happened. In the latest four weeks of Circana MULC data to April 21 there’s a new top-selling beer at Anheuser-Busch: Mich Ultra. Indeed, Mich Ultra pulled in $259,657,987 in sales this latest four weeks, edging out Bud Light’s $259,613,224 in sales. ----------------------------------------------- 5-9 https://www.foxbusiness.com/lifestyle/bud-light-sales-suffering-us-year-controversy Click To View Spoiler Published May 8, 2024 12:21pm EDT | Updated May 8, 2024 1:22pm EDT Bud Light sales still suffering in US a year after controversy In its first-quarter earnings released Wednesday, A-B reported a 2.6% increase in revenue globally, but a 9.1% decrease in America. Sales to retailers in the U.S. were down 13.7%, primarily driven by a drop in Bud Light volume, the company said. Sales to wholesalers in the U.S. market were also down by 10.1%, and the company's earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization (EBITDA) dropped by 19.7%. Total volumes globally were down 0.6% in the quarter, with A-B's beer volumes down by 1.3%, but non-beer volumes were up by 3.5%. ----------------------------------------------- 5-10 https://finance.yahoo.com/news/bud-light-sales-still-falling-as-modelo-coors-fight-to-keep-their-gains-173043825.html "We've lost a whole generation of hardcore Bud Light shoppers," Bump Williams of Bump Williams Consulting told Yahoo Finance. "It's going to take us at least 10 years to try and recapture what we lost in one year." Williams said AB InBev will have to "buy" shoppers. As Gen Zers grow up and turn 21, they'll turn to brands that made an impression on them in their younger years. "They're not going to remember any of that stuff [regarding the boycott]. When they come into the marketplace, they're going to say, 'Oh, boy ... I know that I liked their advertising ... I'm going to go grab one," Williams added. Since the plunge in Bud Light's sales first hit in Q2 2023, its next quarterly results will be the true test of the company. "We think a lot of consumers are never going back ... but some are coming back," CFRA analyst Garrett Nelson told Yahoo Finance. "The longer-term impact, I think [we won't know] until we see their second quarter results," Nelson said. Click To View Spoiler ----------------------------------------------- 5-20 Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito sold Bud Light brewer’s stock during Dylan Mulvaney fiasco — and bought Coors By Ariel Zilber Published May 20, 2024, 3:24 p.m. ET Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito sold shares of Bud Light parent company Anheuser-Busch and bought stock of its rival Molson Coors during a social media boycott of the brand over its controversial advertising partnership with transgender social media influencer Dylan Mulvaney. Financial disclosure forms released by the federal judiciary show that Alito sold between $1,000 and $15,000 of AB InBev stock on Aug. 14 of last year. On the same day, he bought the same amount of shares in Molson Coors, according to the disclosure report. ----------------------------------------------- 6-1 https://legalinsurrection.com/2024/05/vox-bemoans-the-predictable-demise-of-brands-woke-activism-blame-inflation-and-bud-light/ One big indicator of this power shift is that big companies, the “brands,” have had enough. For them, this whole fundamental transformation thing didn’t work. They aren’t creating public opinion with their woke crazy, they are just angering their potential customer, people who will actually spend money—or not—on their “brand.” Super woke Vox opined on this change in public sentiment (archive link). The world is picking sides — on abortion and Gaza and Trump’s trials. And from brand-land? By and large, the sound of silence. That’s because, despite prior pretense, advertising follows, not leads; it needs markets, not morality. That silence, therefore, says much about our sociopolitical moment: As culture warriors find themselves on the defensive, brands, wary from the backlash against Bud Light’s use of a trans influencer, no longer show interest in advancing their causes. Indeed, today’s primary “cause” — and, arguably, election issue — is lower on the hierarchy of needs: cost of living. That makes for a more practical, less symbolic battleground for commercial content. In 2024, whatever else might happen, the revolution will not be advertised. ... Again, commercial communication follows, not leads. Advertising’s activist retreat mirrors a reversal in public sentiment, perhaps a post-pandemic fatigue. One poll finds just 20 percent of Americans are now interested in corporations taking a stand on political issues or current events, and fewer than 30 percent want to hear brands opine on international conflict. Curiously, among the least supported issues (for brand engagement, at least) are many that defined the commercial battlegrounds of the Trump years: police reform, immigration, LGBTQ+ rights, and abortion. View Quote ----------------------------------------------- 6-3 https://www.usatoday.com/story/money/2024/05/22/target-bud-light-boycott-pride-month-2024/73737866007/ Expect fewer rainbow logos for LGBTQ Pride Month after Target, Bud Light backlash Jessica Guynn USA TODAY Every year, national brands cozy up to LGBTQ+ Americans with colorful merchandise for Pride Month. This June, those displays may not be as loud and proud. “Especially during Pride season, most companies like ours are pretty busy working on Pride projects. I can tell you for myself, I have not been, and I think it’s across the board,” said Matt Skallerud, president of Pink Media, which helps brands reach the LGBTQ+ demographic. Mainstream brands used to brush off anti-LGBTQ+ sentiment. That changed last year when conservatives organized boycotts online that slashed sales. National retail chain Target moved its Pride displays from the entrances to the back of stores after conservative activists confronted employees and vandalized displays. This year, Target is scaling back its Pride collection and won’t carry the collection in all stores. Bud Light, owned by beer giant Anheuser-Busch, is still struggling after last year’s conservative blowback over a social media campaign with transgender influencer Dylan Mulvaney. “The goal is to make ‘pride’ toxic for brands,” conservative commentator Matt Walsh wrote on X, formerly Twitter, at the time. The strategy worked. Activists rallied supporters using hashtags and slogans like “go woke go broke” and held boycotts and other actions they called “Bud Lighting.” Not only did sales suffer, some in the LGBTQ+ community turned away from Target and Bud Light, too, for bowing to conservative pressure. Now brands are navigating the volatile political climate more gingerly. Expect fewer rainbow logos, Skallerud says. “Nobody in the media, marketing and advertising world wants to admit how heavy and hard this has been,” he said. “Ever since Target and Bud Light had their fiascos last year, a tremendous number of brands have decided it would be much better to sit on the sidelines and let this sort itself out.” ----------------------------------------------- 6-17 https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/sales-cratered-one-year-after-bud-light-boycott-looming-uncertainty-about-brand-making-full "Sales Cratered": One Year After Bud Light Boycott, Looming "Uncertainty" About The Brand Making A Full Recovery by Tyler Durden Monday, Jun 17, 2024 - 06:25 PM It turns out the boycott of Bud Light over its employ of trans influencer Dylan Mulvaney a year ago wasn't just a passing fad, as many on the left and in the media laughed it off to be. In fact, the Bud Light brand is still suffering a year later, according to a new report from 6ABC. ... Sales of Bud Light dipped by about 25% after the controversial product endorsement, but recent trends indicate a slow recovery, although still below pre-boycott levels. Dave Williams, the president of Bump Williams Consulting, told ABC News: "Sales cratered and sat there. They didn't get any worse but they sure as heck didn't get any better. I don't think there are a lot of examples where the king of the castle, someone in such prominence, took such a public and drastic hit in beer." https://6abc.com/bud-light-boycott-still-hammers-local-distributors-1-year-later-v/14953997/ Bud Light boycott still hammers local distributors 1 year later: 'Very upsetting' ByMax Zahn ABCNews logo Saturday, June 15, 2024 12:45PM When conservative activists set aflame boxes of Bud Light and urged a boycott in response to an endorsement from a trans influencer last spring, they sent sales of the beer plummeting in a rare success in the long history of consumer movements. Even more improbably, the backlash continues to hammer Bud Light and strain independent local wholesalers more than a year later, according to third-party sales data shared with ABC News as well as interviews with six Anheuser-Busch wholesalers. Most of the wholesalers, small- and medium-sized businesses that draw a significant portion of their revenue from Bud Light, said they remain weakened by the decline in sales and uncertain about when, if ever, the brand will fully recover. The owner of an Anheuser-Busch wholesaler in the Northeast, whose child is trans, told ABC News they have taken a 30% pay cut to make up for the losses and are considering retirement. "It was really hurtful personally," the owner said. "I'm trying to understand what my kid is going through and then this happens." "It's still very upsetting," the owner added, noting the company's Bud Light sales declined by 50% in the immediate aftermath of the boycott. "It's very difficult to come in every day and look at those sales numbers, knowing I have a responsibility for everyone here." Another executive at a wholesaler in the Mid-Atlantic said they have spent sleepless nights devising ways to shed costs without laying off employees; and a top official at a distributor in the Southeast said they expect sales of Bud Light will remain down for at least two more years. Still, the wholesalers added, harassment of employees and drinkers has faded, indicating the boycott fervor has died down and the brand reputation of Bud Light has begun to mend. Many of the wholesalers said sales had improved lately and Bud Light remains their top-selling beer. The wholesalers requested anonymity because they didn't want to be publicly identified speaking about the financial consequences of the boycott. In all, roughly 500 independent distributors sell Anheuser-Busch products nationwide. In response to ABC News' request for comment, a spokesperson at Anheuser-Busch touted the success of Bud Light and the company's relationship with wholesalers. "Bud Light continues to be the number one selling beer brand in the country because for decades it has been synonymous with programs and activations that consumers love, including partnerships with the NFL, NHL, UFC, and College Football," the spokesperson said. "As we have for nearly a century, we continue to work side-by-side with our 350+ wholesaler partners to drive growth for our collective business and provide best-in-class service to our consumers and retailers across the country," the spokesperson added. Sales of Bud Light declined by roughly 25% over the weeks following a product endorsement from Dylan Mulvaney, a transgender influencer, which sparked backlash among many conservatives last April, according to data from Bump Williams Consulting and Nielsen NIQ obtained by ABC News. In a video posted on Instagram, Mulvaney held a specially designed can of Bud Light featuring an illustration of her. The can, Mulvaney said, included a message congratulating her on "365 days of womanhood." Until April of this year, sales of the beer stayed stuck at the same level while the boycott persisted, Dave Williams, the president of Bump Williams Consulting, told ABC News. "Sales cratered and sat there. They didn't get any worse but they sure as heck didn't get any better," Williams said. "I don't think there are a lot of examples where the king of the castle, someone in such prominence, took such a public and drastic hit in beer." In recent months, sales have shown signs of improvement but remain well below pre-boycott levels, Williams added, noting that some customers appear to have returned to the brand as the social stigma has waned while others remain steadfast in their opposition. "The goal is to retain the consumers they have and hopefully try to win some back." An executive at a wholesaler in the Southeast said Bud Light sales plummeted by at least 20% in the aftermath of the boycott and remained at that level for the rest of 2023. The blow to the balance sheet hurt company morale and raised questions about the firm's future, the executive said. "We've got employees who expected a career helping to build this brand and this business," the executive added. "To have that undone was a bit of a shock, to say the least." In recent months, hostility toward the brand has faded, sales have stabilized and morale has improved, the executive added, acknowledging that sales still stand well below pre-boycott levels. "Once a consumer drops off a product -- where there is a readily available and similarly priced substitute -- a habit has formed and it's difficult to shake that habit," the executive said. "We have to give them a reason to come back." Williams said Bud Light has returned to its spot as the top-selling U.S. beer by volume, even if revenue has lagged. Meanwhile, other Anheuser-Busch beer brands are performing better than they did before the boycott. Some wholesalers expressed optimism about Bud Light's outlook and praised Anheuser-Busch for providing financial support in response to the sales slump. They also downplayed the boycott's impact, attributing much of the sales decline to a wider shift away from beer to other alcoholic drinks. "The beer industry -- no matter what product you're selling -- is down in sales," Tom Davis, director of operations at Maryland-based Katcef Brothers, Inc., an Anheuser-Busch wholesaler, told ABC News. "That has a bigger impact on beer sales than anything." An Anheuser-Busch spokesperson shared a statement from a wholesaler with ABC News. "Anheuser-Busch recognizes the vital role their wholesaler partners play in the business, and last year they stepped in to provide critical resources to ensure we were positioned to continue serving our consumers and communities across the country," Sarah Matesich Schwab, President of Ohio-based Matesich Distributing, said in the statement. "There's lots of positive momentum in the system, and we are focused on strengthening our partnership so that we can continue to grow and succeed together," Matesich Schwab added. The enduring impact of the Bud Light boycott defies a decadeslong history of largely ineffective consumer boycotts, Maurice Schweitzer, a professor at the University of Pennsylvania's Wharton School of Business who studies consumer movements, told ABC News. The continued struggle of Bud Light owes to the easy availability of similar products as well as the highly polarized political environment nationwide, Schweitzer said. "Given the history of boycotts and its history of ineffectiveness, it is really surprising that this one has had the staying power that it has," Schweitzer told ABC News. "In this moment, we're so politicized," Schweitzer added. "The weather is political, the employment rate is political and now beer is political." Report a correction or typo Copyright © 2024 ABC News Internet Ventures. View Quote Even more improbably, the backlash continues to hammer Bud Light and strain independent local wholesalers more than a year later, according to third-party sales data shared with ABC News as well as interviews with six Anheuser-Busch wholesalers. Most of the wholesalers, small- and medium-sized businesses that draw a significant portion of their revenue from Bud Light, said they remain weakened by the decline in sales and uncertain about when, if ever, the brand will fully recover. The owner of an Anheuser-Busch wholesaler in the Northeast, whose child is trans, told ABC News they have taken a 30% pay cut to make up for the losses and are considering retirement. "It was really hurtful personally," the owner said. "I'm trying to understand what my kid is going through and then this happens." "It's still very upsetting," the owner added, noting the company's Bud Light sales declined by 50% in the immediate aftermath of the boycott. "It's very difficult to come in every day and look at those sales numbers, knowing I have a responsibility for everyone here." ----------------------------------------------- 7-2 https://archive.vn/YUUC4 With such acceptance, we became that capitalist ideal: a market to sell into. Giant corporations began flattering gay consumers by courting them — and their wallets. Then came last summer. Many of those companies realized that Pride remains contentious — and defiant — when Target Corp. and Anheuser-Busch InBev NV were lashed with anti-trans boycotts and social media protests. I wrote about this at the time, believing that those companies and others would somehow remain loyal to LGBTQ+ consumers because they were attached to our money. That was wishful thinking. This year, it’s been a summer of humbled Pride. ... The biggest lesson marketers took away last year is the fate of Anheuser-Busch’s Bud Light. A niche campaign featuring Dylan Mulvaney, a trans woman actor, became the object of vitriol and a boycott from conservative groups, leading to a more widespread backlash against the beer. Bud Light sales in the US are down 28% from 2023, when it lost its top rank to Modelo Especial, a Mexican brew, amid the controversy. With market share and profits at risk, companies recoiled from LGBTQ+ consumers. ----------------------------------------------- 7-18 https://www.newser.com/story/336481/bud-light-officially-dethroned.html UPDATE Jul 18, 2024 12:21 PM CDT
The fallout from Bud Light's trans controversy of last year appears to still be taking a toll. First, the longtime top-selling beer in America fell to No. 2. And now, reports the Wall Street Journal, it has dropped to No. 3. The latest industry stats have Bud Light at 6.5% of beer dollar sales, behind Modelo Especial (9.7%) and Michelob Ultra (7.3%). The silver lining for parent company Anheuser-Busch InBev is that the new No. 2, Mich Ultra, is owned by them, too. Modelo Especial, a Mexican import, is owned by Constellation Brands. Jun 14, 2023 2:31 AM CDT In what the Wall Street Journal paints as ongoing fallout from its Dylan Mulvaney controversy, Bud Light has been officially pushed out of the American beer market's top spot. Formerly the country's top-selling beer, Bud Light is now down to No. 2, with Modelo Especial replacing it in the No. 1 spot. Bud Light's sales have been falling since April, when the transgender influencer was featured on a promo can, and in May, it represented just 7.3% of US retail-store beer sales compared to 8.4% for Modelo. Other Anheuser-Busch beers have also seen sales decline, but the New York Post reports that some of those appear to be starting to recover, unlike Bud Light. Bud Light does still hold the US' top-selling spot for the year to date, but some distributors worry its April-May drop out of the No. 1 position may be permanent. |
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They still don’t get it. One can, or a 1000 cases, you put yourselves in league with everything that is going badly in this country.
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Yet they STILL dont have the balls to fire the moron girl that did this. Which says a lot.
If i caused a 7 billion loss at my work; everyone including the janitor would line up to kick my balls -- and then four guys would grab me, lift me off the ground, open the front door with my head and heave me into traffic. |
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They're doing everything except admit they were wrong and offended a ton of their customers so fuck em.
And anyone who thinks boycotting them is a waste of time, fuck you too |
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Lack of firing Harvard MBA girl and a non-apology from the ex-CIA CEO keeps hurting them, which is a good thing.
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Anheuser-Busch chief executive, Michel Doukeris has attempted to distance the company from the Mulvaney partnership and told investors during an earnings call last week, “We need to clarify the facts that this was one can, one influencer, one post and not a campaign. View Quote I hope it all burns to the ground. |
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Wow, investors must be in shock. Based on the last 3 weeks stock prices, clearly it would have taken a WIZARD to have seen this coming
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If AB is surprised that it's not just BL, this is yet another example of how little they think of their customers and how dumb they think they are.
"You mean these rubes have figured out that we make other beers besides Bud and now they aren't buying those too?" With every single thing AB does or doesn't do in response to this situation they made, they just keep digging the hole deeper. |
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Anheuser-Busch chief executive, Michel Doukeris has attempted to distance the company from the Mulvaney partnership and told investors during an earnings call last week, “We need to clarify the facts that this was one can, one influencer, one post and not a campaign". View Quote They still don't fucking get it. No, what they NEED to do is to clarify the fact that they made a mistake. |
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AB is between a rock and a hard place. On one hand, we are boycotting them for the ad campaign. On the other hand, you have the alphabet soup nuts boycotting for AB "apologizing". Need to redo that "button choice" meme for this one......lol
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Time for the AB InBev CEO to opine again!
........yeah, that'll do it. |
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Quoted: Wow, investors must be in shock. Based on the last 3 weeks stock prices, clearly it would have taken a WIZARD to have seen this coming View Quote Look at the 6 month or 1 year chart, you can see when the Blackrock money came pouring in for the tranny can. The big announcement was beginning of April. Attached File |
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Quoted: If AB is surprised that it's not just BL, this is yet another example of how little they think of their customers and how dumb they think they are. "You mean these rubes have figured out that we make other beers besides Bud and now they aren't buying those too?" With every single thing AB does or doesn't do in response to this situation they made, they just keep digging the hole deeper. View Quote |
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At this point it doesn’t matter what they say or do, will never buy any of their brands again.
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Need to see how many congressmen & senators are hold AB stock, they won't allow it to slide very far.
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Quoted: Yet they STILL dont have the balls to fire the moron girl that did this. Which says a lot. If i caused a 7 billion loss at my work; everyone including the janitor would line up to kick my balls -- and then four guys would grab me, lift me off the ground, open the front door with my head and heave me into traffic. View Quote Everything woke is presented softly and has the best intentions. I only wish that the whole campaign “against” Bud Light was completely unspoken, as if it were an “organic” reaction….because the media will point out how mean you are for not supporting “woke” beer. |
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That dumb marketing bitch who did this is gonna be unemployable now. Like the guy who recorded himself giving the chik-fil-a worker shit at the drive thru window is now having to draw food stamps from the last article I read about him.
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Quoted: That dumb marketing bitch who did this is gonna be unemployable now. Like the guy who recorded himself giving the chik-fil-a worker shit at the drive thru window is now having to draw food stamps from the last article I read about him. View Quote |
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Quoted: Look at the 6 month or 1 year chart, you can see when the Blackrock money came pouring in for the tranny can. The big announcement was beginning of April. https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/122080/A2221DFB-5432-4BE1-85E5-3FD33465AD9F_jpe-2812054.JPG View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Wow, investors must be in shock. Based on the last 3 weeks stock prices, clearly it would have taken a WIZARD to have seen this coming Look at the 6 month or 1 year chart, you can see when the Blackrock money came pouring in for the tranny can. The big announcement was beginning of April. https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/122080/A2221DFB-5432-4BE1-85E5-3FD33465AD9F_jpe-2812054.JPG And there it is. |
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Quoted: That dumb marketing bitch who did this is gonna be unemployable now. Like the guy who recorded himself giving the chik-fil-a worker shit at the drive thru window is now having to draw food stamps from the last article I read about him. View Quote You could not be more wrong. She will be praised for being so progressive and brave in the face of bigotry and given a cushy position with some other woke company. |
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None of this is possible because GD has taught me that nothing matters. Nothing will change. Just look at the biden news conference thread. Every other post is the same.
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As I mentioned in a previous thread, my coworker has been moonlighting there on the weekends and holidays for over 20 years.
They normally run 5 or 6 of the 7 bottling/canning lines, the 7th being a keg line. Last weekend they were running one line. He said that executives are literally in hiding because employees and investors alike are hounding them to make it right. Schadenfreude. |
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Quoted: Yet they STILL dont have the balls to fire the moron girl that did this. Which says a lot. If i caused a 7 billion loss at my work; everyone including the janitor would line up to kick my balls -- and then four guys would grab me, lift me off the ground, open the front door with my head and heave me into traffic. View Quote I’m beginning to wonder if nepotism might be in play (almost convinced). Is she somehow related to, or a family member of hers an acquaintance possibly, with someone within the company? |
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Quoted: If this keeps going ... GD group buy of the clydesdales? View Quote Attached File In true Budweiser fashion. .. this one's got a penis |
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Quoted: They still don't fucking get it. No, what they NEED to do is to clarify the fact that they made a mistake. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Anheuser-Busch chief executive, Michel Doukeris has attempted to distance the company from the Mulvaney partnership and told investors during an earnings call last week, "We need to clarify the facts that this was one can, one influencer, one post and not a campaign". They still don't fucking get it. No, what they NEED to do is to clarify the fact that they made a mistake. |
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BUD wanted to be inclusive and bring every one together over a beer.
They succeeded beyond their wildest dreams. OG beer drinkers and LGBTQs are both boycotting AB-InBev products. That beer they are celebrating over? It is a Coors, or a Miller, maybe a Yeungling or a locally brewed craft beer. Anything but an AB-InBev product.?? |
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Quoted: AB is between a rock and a hard place. On one hand, we are boycotting them for the ad campaign. On the other hand, you have the alphabet soup nuts boycotting for AB "apologizing". Need to redo that "button choice" meme for this one......lol View Quote Its kind of funny they are getting fucked from both sides yet still capitulate to the Left. |
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In before the Trump family tells us it’s wrong to boycott them. A-B deserves to be put out of business for the countless microbreweries they’ve run out of business or bought up. Not to mention their BS games in the retail space choking out smaller breweries.
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Quoted: I think most of the people I know that drink Busch Light ,Natty and Ultra are likely drinking Yuengling products now that it is available in more places. View Quote Yes! I had never seen Yuengling products offered for sale around here. Last week I saw a banner announcing they had it for sale! A banner! This beer literally went from me being the only one who had ever heard of it in this area to so many people asking for it in a month it became a regularly stocked item! Bought a 12 pack of Flight. Replacing AB's Michelob Ultra with it for the ultra light beer days. I have tried Yuengling lager before and really liked it but it just wasn't readily available here. |
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Here is a list of companies Inbev owns.
https://www.tapintoyourbeer.com/guide-our-beers Apparently they have Busch as well. That I wont miss They also import Modelo, I will miss that one. |
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Bud Light said they disapproved of their customer base and wanted to replace them. Then the CEO essentially blamed the boycotters for not appreciating Bud Light’s inclusivity.
Interesting how spitting on your base = inclusivity. |
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Quoted: Yet they STILL dont have the balls to fire the moron girl that did this. Which says a lot. If i caused a 7 billion loss at my work; everyone including the janitor would line up to kick my balls -- and then four guys would grab me, lift me off the ground, open the front door with my head and heave me into traffic. View Quote Years ago, a part I designed was specifically named as a primary contributor to the total loss of a nearly $200M prototype during a flight test. It iced up during the ascent, f’ed everything up, and ultimately the FAA made us activate the flight termination system once we were over a remote area. It literally crashed & burned. And they still let me work there |
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AB is no longer a USA-company, it is European, and the Europeans have staff the people in St. Louis with like-minded people.
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