We heard on Monday about the fantastic growth that whiskey
has enjoyed across the world in the past several years. The growth has been so
rapid that it’s put considerable strain on inventories, no small problem in an
industry where the product must age for years before it’s marketable. Some have
even declared
a “whiskey crisis” in larger markets, as supply proves insufficient to meet
demand. While part of the alarm may be savvy marketing, the supply crunch is
real.
Or, at least, it was. Export of Scotch fell
sharply in 2015, down 11% in the US and an alarming 41% in Singapore,
another large market. Diageo put its £1 billion
whiskey capacity expansion project on
hold. While many new distilleries are still
opening, the industry seems significantly more cautious now than it was a
few years ago.
It turns out that these wild swings in fortune are nothing new in
the whiskey business. Indeed, the industry seems to follow 10-20
year cycles. The product has all the features of difficult to forecast,
boom and bust markets: very long lead times, fickle consumption, and a
collectability dynamic that exacerbates shortages.
The last big demand boom came in the late 1960s and 1970s. As now,
the market got very tight and people invested a lot of money in new distilleries.
The result was a “whiskey loch”—a lake of whiskey flowing from the new
investment. Unfortunately, the lock hit the market several years down the road,
when demand had cooled. Whiskey sold in grocery stores for the same price as
the cheapest vodka, which doesn’t carry the cost of aging. As a result, many of
the newly built distilleries closed. This reduction in capacity arguably has a
lot to do with the current spike in prices.
The question is whether whiskey’s growth today is merely another
boom before the inevitable bust or a structural upward shift in demand.
Optimists point to the opening up of Asian markets to whiskey consumption.
Asian consumers have developed a taste
for whiskey, particularly high-end, prestigious Scotch. In the last boom,
Asian consumption was negligible. But pessimists say that a lot of the growth
comes from a faddish trend for whiskey—great for the industry in the short
term, but disastrous if investment chases it.
Diageo’s discipline in their investment plan hopefully augurs for
a more rational approach in the future.
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