It's a disaster for producers but does that mean a bonanza for domestic consumers? Perhaps in the short term as wines made specifically for the US market but now not a saleable proposition there start to hit the shelves here, heavily discounted in an attempt to generate sales in an market increasingly given to the consumption of alcoholic softdrinks (sodas?). Not an encouraging scenario when domestic wine consumption has apparently plateauxed and may even be starting to decline. The doomsayers of a few years ago are starting to seem as though they were soothsayers with crystal balls. Wine lake? What wine lake?
Hmmm, wines made for the US market sold cheap on the Australian market? Parkerisation by stealth?
The A$ has risen considerably against the US$ since last November and is starting to buy more of the other major currencies as well. I don't think the Australian wine industry enjoys the luxury of forward contracts and doubt that hedging would be of much benefit in the current situation. It may be that the major producers' share prices will plummet to a level low enough to offset the high A$ and make them attractive takeover propositions. I hope the ACC and/ or the FIRB would would prevent the Australian wine industry (let's face it, the independent, small/medium producers are mostly specialist and have only a minor share of the market) becoming a Constellation subsidiary. Goodbye Southmount!
On a year-to-year basis, exports of wine dropped 11+% last November. Any prognostications on that drop reaching at least 25%, if it hasn't already? With the BSE scare in the US, how many vines planted over the last couple of years or so will be pulled to have fodder crops planted instead so the beef industry can service the Japanese and other markets? That's an extreme given that fodder crops need more water, an increasingly finite and expensive resource, but markets is markets.
It's likely that particularly smaller and medium-sized wineries heavily dependent on exports are already really feeling the
pinch unless they have loyal niche markets. If the value of the A$ hits the US80c mark and stays in the 76-80 band for a couple of years, the Australian wine industry will be, to say the least, turbulent.
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daz