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Heineken H1 hits shares – four things to learn

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“We delivered a solid first half of the year,” Heineken CEO and chairman Dolf van den Brink told investors and analysts yesterday (29 July) as he presented the brewer’s first-half results.

By the end of the day, shares in the Dutch giant had fallen 9.7% on Friday’s closing trading price as the market reacted to an impairment in China, group beer volumes in the first half that missed analyst forecasts and changes to the company’s 2024 guidance that also fell short of their (consensus) expectations.

“Overall, following a decent Q1, this print will do little to improve investors’ belief that they can sleep easy at night whilst owning Heineken,” Barclays analyst Laurence Whyatt wrote in a note to clients.

Heineken talks up China performance amid impairment

Heineken included a hefty impairment charge on its business in China in its first-half accounts.

The Amstel brewer posted a group half-year loss of €95m ($102.9m) after writing down the value of its stake in Chinese brewer CR Beer. The move led to an impairment charge of €874m.

Heineken holds 40% of CRH (Beer) Limited (CBL) after a deal struck in 2019. CBL in turn owns a controlling interest of 51.67% in the Hong Kong-listed China Resources Beer (Holdings) Co. Ltd (also known as CR Beer). As a consequence, Heineken has an effective 20.67% economic interest in CR Beer.

In Heineken’s results statement today, the group said the fair value of its investment in CR Beer, based on the share price, was below its cost as of 31 December 2023.

However, it said on 30 June, “a significant decline in the fair value of the investment below its cost was identified”.

Heineken pointed to trading conditions in China. “The decline was driven by concerns on the macroeconomic environment in China and a negative view on consumer goods companies seen as more exposed to soft consumer demand,” it said.

The brewer did say the volumes of Heineken-branded beer it sold in China in the first half of 2024 were “up more than 25%”.

H1 beer volumes miss expectations

Heineken’s group beer volumes rose 2.1% in the first half on an organic basis, driven by a 9.2% rise in volumes of its namesake branded products. The brewer, which also markets brands including Birra Moretti, Tiger and Edelweiss, said volumes of its “premium” beer were up 5%.

The group said it saw “all regions contributing” to its volume performance, pointing out that it “gained or held market share in more than half of our markets”.

Nevertheless, Heineken acknowledged its volume growth was “slower” in the second quarter than in the opening three months of the year. It cited the change in when Easter fell this year versus 2023, stiffer competition in the “economy segment” in Brazil and “poor weather” in June in Europe.