Coronavirus: Drinks Giant Warns of Profit Hit as Bars Close
Drinks giant
Diageo has warned its profits will fall this year, as bars and restaurants in
China are forced to close due to the coronavirus outbreak.
The
Guinness-owner said operating profits could be £140m-£200m lower than expected
due to disruption across Asia.
It joins
companies such as Apple and Danone in warning about the impact of the
deadly virus.
Financial
markets have also fallen sharply this week as fears of a pandemic grow.
The company
whose brands include Smirnoff, Johnnie Walker, Tanqueray and Gordon's gin also
warned on Wednesday that sales could be £225m-£325m lower than expected,
depending on how long it took for the outbreak to end.
It said that
bars and restaurants in China "have largely been closed and there has been
a substantial reduction in banqueting. We have seen significant disruption
since the end of January which we expect to last at least into March.
"Thereafter,
we expect a gradual improvement with consumption returning to normal levels
towards the end of fiscal 2020."
Events being
postponed in several other Asian countries, especially South Korea, Japan and
Thailand, as well as a reduction in conferences and banquets and a drop in
tourism have all had an impact on people buying its products.
It added
that the coronavirus outbreak had caused a "significant reduction" in
people using airports, especially in Asia, hitting travel retail.
China is a
very important market for Diageo. In the six months to 31 December, net sales
in Greater China, which includes Taiwan, increased 24%.
There was
double-digit growth in both Chinese white spirits and Scotch.
Investors
are clearly nervous about the effects of the coronavirus - UK and US markets
have in the last two days lost all the gains they have made so far this year -
but have struggled to quantify exactly how big the problem will be, and how
different sectors will be affected.
In the
absence of information, they have sold the obvious shares - airlines, holiday
operators and luxury goods companies.
Diageo's
market update, which says its annual profit could be hit by £200m, will give
them pause for thought about the wider implications.
The drinks
company spells out what should be obvious - bars and restaurants across China,
one of its biggest markets, have been closed.
Big events,
another money-spinner for Diageo, have been cancelled across Asia.
It is a
sobering - no pun intended - assessment of how corporate earnings will be
affected.
Last year's
giant stock market gains were a reflection of investors' assumptions that
profits would stay high. That assumption now looks in grave doubt.
Most
infections are in China, the original source of coronavirus, where more
than 77,000 people have the disease and over 2,600 have died.
More than
1,200 cases have been confirmed in about 30 other countries and there have been
more than 20 deaths. Italy reported four more deaths on Monday, raising the
total there to seven.
There are 53
confirmed cases in the US, and officials are calling on Congress to approve
billions of dollars to fund the response effort.
FROM .bbc.com/news/business
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