Much of the rye whiskey aging in hundreds of barrels at Catoctin Creek Distillery in Virginia could end up being consumed in Europe, a market the 9-year-old distilling company has cultivated at considerable cost.
But an escalating trade dispute has the distillery’s co-founder and general manager, Scott Harris, worried those European sales could evaporate as tariffs drive up the price of his whiskey in markets where consumers have plenty of spirits to choose from.
“If Europe dried up, then we’re sitting on inventory we didn’t need,” Harris said by phone. “And that’s a really tough position to be in.”
What American whiskey makers have dreaded is becoming reality. The European Union will start taxing a range of U.S. imports on Friday, including Harley-Davidson bikes, cranberries, peanut butter, playing cards and whiskey. The union is responding to President Donald Trump’s decision to slap tariffs on European steel and aluminum.
American distilleries large and small have watched warily as the threat of tariffs from Europe ratcheted up in recent weeks. And while larger, corporate-owned facilities tend to do the most business overseas, small and mid-sized companies could be especially vulnerable, since they lack the ability to stockpile reserves and take other protective steps.
Foreign markets have become lucrative for American whiskey makers. Export revenues for bourbon, Tennessee whiskey and rye whiskey products topped $1 billion in 2017, continuing a strong trend in recent years, according to the Distilled Spirits Council.
Four of the five top growth markets by dollar value for American distilled spirits were in Europe — the United Kingdom, Germany, France and Spain. Total U.S. spirits exported to the EU in 2017 were valued at $789 million, the distilled spirits trade group said.
American whiskey has also been targeted by other countries embroiled in trade tensions with the U.S., including China, Canada and Mexico.
In Germany, some whiskey retailers predict consumers will probably refrain from buying expensive American whiskey and go for cheaper alternatives once the tax is added to U.S. spirits. Volker Rickmann, from the Tabac & Whisky Center in Berlin, predicted his customers would buy Canadian and Irish whiskeys once U.S. spirits prices rise. At the Staendige Vertretung bar, supervisor Rowena Strehlow showed a near-empty bottle of imported Wild Turkey Bourbon.
“Germans only order expensive drinks for special occasions,” she said. “Once the prices rise, they will simply drink something else.”
In a recent letter to U.S. Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross, the Distilled Spirits Council said: “The imposition of tariffs on these products by our major trading partners threatens to seriously impede the export progress that has benefited our sector and created jobs across the country.”
European markets — led by Germany, Italy and the UK — represent about 25 percent of Catoctin Creek’s overall business, Harris said. The distiller, which makes rye, gin and other spirits, has invested close to $100,000 in recent years to build its European business, he said. It developed special bottles and labels, built distribution networks and promoted its products.
“We’re continuing on right now, hoping that it will blow over,” Harris said. “But I am not a big fan of these trade tariffs. I think they are ill-thought through. I’ve had certain people say, ‘Well, this would be our patriotic duty to take it on the chin so that we can normalize the playing field out there.’ But I come from a free-trade background. Let us compete freely, fairly in these markets and our products … will do well.”
Some of his inventory could be sold in the U.S. if European sales decline, Harris said. But expanding market share in the ultracompetitive U.S. market is tough for a small distiller.
Industry giant Brown-Forman Corp., whose brands include Jack Daniel’s Tennessee Whiskey and Woodford Reserve, tried to hedge against tariff-related price increases by stockpiling inventories overseas. About one-fourth of its revenues are generated in Europe.
Beam Suntory, whose brands include Jim Beam and Maker’s Mark, has “contingency plans in place,” company spokeswoman Emily York.
But small and mid-sized distilleries often don’t have the luxury to stockpile supplies.
“That’s just not an option. We don’t have that kind of capital,” said Amir Peay, owner of the Lexington, Kentucky-based James E. Pepper Distillery, whose signature bourbon and rye brand is James E. Pepper 1776.
Peay had projected the European share of his business — now about 10 percent of overall sales — would more than double by next year. His distillery spent hundreds of thousands of dollars in the past year expanding its European presence. Now, the tariffs come as “a punch to the gut,” he said.
Meanwhile, at the distillery he founded with his wife, Becky, in Purcellville, Virginia, Harris is bracing for a drawn-out trade battle.
He worries his overseas distributors might drop his spirits if the dispute drags on, and consumers will quench their thirst elsewhere. Already, rye whiskeys are coming out of Ireland and Scotland, he said, and with a bit of internet digging, “I could probably come up with a German distiller who’s making a corn spirit that could, for all practical purposes, be very similar to bourbon.”
The industry is known for its patience, since whiskey takes years to mature. Harris wants to take the long view. But he sees little reason for optimism on the trade front.
“I think we’re digging in deeper with China, we’re digging in deeper with Europe,” he said. “Unless something miraculous happens, I don’t have a lot of hope right now.”
(AP)
4 Responses
Trump’s policies are a disaster for America. This obvious truth is becoming clearer by the day.
Obviously Mr. Trump has never understood economics, and spent his time at Wharton hanging out somewhere other than the library. The last time we had a real trade war, it turned the 1929 stock market crash into the Great Depression. I feel sorry for the people who voted for him thinking he was going to be their economic savior, but I feel sorrier for the rest of us, who are going to have to live with the consequences of their gullibility.
When is the Republican Party going to remember that it’s the party of business and fiscal sobriety? Maybe the real Republicans should split and start a third party. It might lose for an election or two, but afterwards it would return to being a real party, not an echo chamber for an elderly ex-television star. The people who coined the term RINO (Republican in name only) should get their wish, and see all the sane party members withdraw and start a real Conservative Party.
The President is 100% correct. American’s will now buy Made-in-America products for less than the garbage shipped from overseas. The EU and other foreign countries will still purchase American products with the tariffs or they will create a black market for these goods because American goods are superior to any one else’s.
I lived in Bangkok, Thailand in the early 1960s. There was a thriving black market for all sorts of things since the Thai Government had hugh tariffs on almost everything that came from other countries.
drugcommish : You convoluted logic is self contradictory. You write that Trump’s tariffs will cause people to buy American but then write that tariffs in Thailand created a black market for everything that came in from other countries. And your claim about the superiority of American products is equally flawed as anyone who wears an Armani suit, enjoys a fine Bordeaux, or drives a Rolls Royce or Jaguar can tell you.