Sales of Jameson whiskey jump 13% on back of US demand

Pernod Ricard, owner Irish Distillers, report strong sales growth for Ireland’s top-selling whiskey

Bottles of Jameson whiskey, produced by Irish Distillers, are seen as they pass along the production line at the Pernod-Ricard bottling plant in Dublin. Photograph: Aidan Crawley/Bloomberg
Bottles of Jameson whiskey, produced by Irish Distillers, are seen as they pass along the production line at the Pernod-Ricard bottling plant in Dublin. Photograph: Aidan Crawley/Bloomberg

Sales of Jameson, Ireland’s top-selling whiskey brand, grew by 13 per cent in the nine months to the end of March led by strong US demand.

Pernod Ricard, which owns Irish Distillers - maker of Jameson whiskey, however, posted weaker-than-expected third-quarter sales today, hit by persistent weakness in its major Chinese market, and kept a target for slower full-year profit growth.

The world's second-biggest spirits group behind Britain's Diageo also said it had agreed to buy Kenwood Vineyards in Sonoma Valley, California, to beef up its premium wines portfolio in the United States, its top market.

"This transaction illustrates Pernod Ricard's ability to seize tactical growth opportunities that can benefit our entire portfolio in key markets such as the United States," chief executive Pierre Pringuet said in a statement.

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Pernod Ricard posted sales of €1.616 billion in the three months to March 31st, flat year-on-year on a like-for-like basis and slower than its 2 per cent year-on-year growth rate in the second quarter.

This was below the average of analysts’ estimates of 1.2 per cent growth.

On a reported basis, quarterly revenue fell 7 per cent on the year due to weaker currencies notably in emerging markets.

Pernod, the owner of Mumm champagne, Absolut vodka and Martell cognac, kept its forecast of underlying operating profit growth of 1 to 3 per cent for the full year to June 30th, slowing from 6 per cent growth in the previous year.

Like rivals Diageo and Remy Cointreau, Pernod has been hit by a Chinese government crackdown on luxury gift-giving and personal spending by civil servants as well as by slowing economic growth in its second-biggest market.

Investors had been cautious about Pernod's trading in China after the group warned last month that demand in China could stay sluggish until 2015.

Recent trading updates from Diageo and Remy Cointreau also showed further pressure on the Chinese market.

Pernod Ricard makes 12 per cent of sales and 15 per cent of profits in China. Asia accounts for around 40 per cent of its sales and 46 per cent of annual profits.

Reuters