Rabobank analyst Elena Saputo said in its Wine Quarterly Q3: "One of the most important developments in today's wine market is a shift in the consumer base, in both geographic and in demographic terms.
"In non-traditional wine drinking countries, millennials are drinking more wine than any of the previous generations did at their age, while in traditional wine drinking countries, they are drinking less but better wine.”
She said the need to adapt to an evolving global consumer landscape is presenting many wine companies with the dilemma of either sticking to a tried and tested formula for the mainstay consumers of the past, or altering their approach to suit impressionable consumers of the future. Rather than diluting well-established brands, progressive companies have developed contemporary brands with a fresh look-and-feel that fit the preferences of the new consumers.
She concludes: “As mainstream wine demand is shifting, a more attuned, bolder and progressive approach is necessary for global wine companies to win market share and pricing power in an increasingly complex and dynamic global market landscape.”
International Supply update:
The 2014 harvests across most of the Southern Hemisphere have been fairly mixed, but on the whole, stock levels appear more than ample in most locations owing to the large 2013 harvest. The Northern Hemisphere crop generally appears to be progressing well with the usual exception of some isolated weather disruptions in some regions.
International Trade update:
Across Europe, wine exports fell for the major producers in the first four months of 2014, despite countries such as Spain seeing a 17% increase in volumes. Elsewhere in the Northen Hemisphere, US exports grew 3.2% by volume and 1.9% by value. In the Southern Hemisphere, there were contrasting shifts in export volumes in countries such as New Zealand and Chile, who recorded a 25.3% rise and 8.9% decline in volumes respectively.