Treasury Wine Estates

Treasury Wine Estates is an Australian global winemaking and distribution business with headquarters in Melbourne. It was formerly the wine division of international brewing company Foster's Group.[1]

Treasury Wine Estates Limited
Public
Traded asASX: TWE
ISINAU000000TWE9 
IndustryWinemaking
PredecessorFoster's Group
Founded2011
HeadquartersSouthbank, Melbourne, Australia
Key people
Michael Clarke (CEO)
Products
  • Wynns Coonawarra
  • Lindemans
  • Wolf Blass
  • Penfolds
Revenue
  • A$2.5 billion (2017)
  • $A2.3 billion (2016)
  • A$269 million (2017)
  • A$173 million (2016)
Number of employees
3400+
Websitewww.tweglobal.com

History

Treasury Wine Estates traces its roots back to the establishment of several New World wineries in the 19th century. These include Lindeman's and Penfolds in Australia, and Beringer Vineyards in the United States.

Foster's began to build its wine division from 1995 onwards. Through acquisition, it built the division into one of the world's largest winemakers. By 2005, Beringer Blass was the seventh largest producer of wine in the United States.[2] The same year, Fosters acquired the Australian wine-making group Southcorp, adding famous brands including Lindeman's, Penfolds and Rosemount, and around A$1 billion to revenues.

However, the wine division performed poorly, often draining cash from the highly profitable brewing business. In 2008, Foster's chief executive officer Trevor O'Hoy resigned.[3] By 2011, the company had written down the value of the wines division by half since it acquired it at the peak of the market, leaving it worth about A$3.1 billion.[4]

After further difficulties in the division resulted in an additional A$1.3 billion write-down, 99 per cent of Fosters Group shareholders agreed at a meeting in Melbourne in April 2011 to split Fosters Group business into separate brewing and wine companies. Treasury Wine Estates officially became a separately listed company the following month, with David Dearie as its CEO.[5]

Further write-down of stock worth around A$160 million took place in 2013, followed by the redundancy of David Dearie and appointment of interim chief executive Warwick Every-Burns. This left the business in a more fragile state as shares dropped almost A$2 to just above A$4. Steamrollers crushed millions of bottles of cheap wine to dispose of excess stock in the United States.[6] This eventually led to a class-action by disgruntled shareholders which was settled in 2017.[7][8]

Treasury has since worked with Accolade Wines to promote bottling efficiency, strengthening its performance in Asia, Australia, New Zealand and Europe.

In 2014, the board of directors appointed Michael Clarke, a former food executive with Kraft Foods and Premier Foods, as CEO.[6]

In 2015, Treasury reportedly began reducing its presence in the British market to concentrate on Asia, where margins were much higher.[9] However, later that year Treasury bought the majority of the wine business of London-based multinational Diageo.[6]

In July 2016 Treasury Wine Estates slimmed down its wine portfolio, announcing the sale of 12 cheap wine brands in the United States. The sale of the US brands represented around one million cases of wine.[10]

By 2017, Treasury had begun stockpiling luxury wines and rationing their release in China and the United States. More money was spent marketing the most profitable brands.[6]

In January 2019, Treasury's share price fell dramatically on a slew of news reports and was targeted by short sellers in the markets who accused the company of engaging in illegal practices including "channel stuffing" in attempts to inflate its profits.[11]

Operations

The business is divided into four regions: (1) Australia and New Zealand, (2) the Americas (i.e. United States and Canada only), (3) Europe (including Latin America), and (4) Asia (including the Middle East and Africa). Globally the company says it has access to more than 13,000 hectares of owned or leased vineyards, with more than 3400 employees, and 36 million cases of wine sold in the 2017 financial year.[12]

Brands

WineryAppellation/RegionCountryExternal linkNotes [13]
19 CrimesSouth Eastern AustraliaAustralia
Acacia WineryLos CarnerosUnited States
Annie's LaneClare ValleyAustralia Previously named "Quelltaler". Other labels: Copper Trail.[14]
Bailey's of GlenrowanNorth-East VictoriaAustralia
Beaulieu VineyardRutherfordUnited States
Belcreme De LysCentral CoastUnited States
Beringer VineyardsNapa ValleyUnited States The oldest continuously operating winery in the Napa Valley, founded 1876.
The winery is on the National Register of Historic Places as a Historic District.[15]
Blossom HillCentral CoastUnited States
Castello di GabbiannoTuscanyItaly
Chateau St. JeanSonoma ValleyUnited States
Coldstream HillsYarra ValleyAustralia
Devil's LairMargaret RiverAustralia
EtudeLos CarnerosUnited States
Fifth LegMargaret RiverAustraliaA label of the Devil's Lair winery.
Greg Norman Estates(various)(various)
HeemskerkTasmaniaAustralia Other labels: Abel's Tempest, Georg Jensen [16]
Hewitt VineyardRutherfordUnited States
IngoldbyMcLaren ValeAustralia
Jamieson's RunLimestone CoastAustralia
Killawarra"South Eastern Australia"Australia Created by Seaview in 1971.
Leo BuringClare Valley &
Eden Valley
Australia
Lindeman'sHunter Valley &
Coonawarra
Australia
Matua Valley WinesMarlboroughNew Zealand Other labels: Angel Cove[17]
MeridianCentral CoastUnited States
MetalaLanghorne CreekAustralia
PenfoldsAdelaide Hills &
Barossa Valley
Australia
PepperjackBarossa ValleyAustralia
Provenance VineyardsRutherfordUnited States
Rawson's Retreat"South Eastern Australia"Australia
Rosemount EstateMcLaren ValeAustralia
Run RiotCentral CoastUnited States
SaltramBarossa ValleyAustralia
Secret StoneMarlboroughNew Zealand
SeppeltVictoriaAustralia
Shingle PeakMarlboroughNew Zealand
SledgehammerNorthern California & MendozaUnited States & Argentina
Squealing PigMarlboroughNew Zealand
St Hubert'sYarra ValleyAustralia
Stags' Leap WineryNapa ValleyUnited States
Stellina di NotteVenetoItaly
Sterling VineyardsNapa ValleyUnited States
T'GallantMornington PeninsulaAustralia
Wolf BlassSouth AustraliaAustralia
Wynns CoonawarraCoonawarraAustralia
Yellowglen"South Eastern Australia"Australia

References

  1. http://www.fostersgroup.com/news/demerger-scheme-effective.aspx
  2. T. Stevenson The Sotheby's Wine Encyclopedia Fourth Edition p. 468 Dorling Kindersly 2005 ISBN 0-7566-1324-8.
  3. Takeovers rarely work for shareholders, Michael West (10 June 2008) smh.com.au.
  4. "Foster's shareholders decide wine and beer don't mix". ABC News. 29 April 2011. Retrieved 29 April 2011.
  5. "Foster's Group Implements Treasury Wine Estates Demerger". Just Drinks. 23 May 2011. Retrieved 11 March 2016.
  6. Evans, Simon (26 February 2011). "History lessons for Treasury Wine Estate's California dream". The Australian Financial Review. Fairfax Media. Retrieved 28 February 2017.
  7. Gray, Darren (28 August 2017). "Treasury Wine Estates settles shareholder class action for $49 million". The Sydney Morning Herald. Fairfax Media. Retrieved 9 December 2017.
  8. Sambrook, Jeremy (10 November 2017). "Court Approval of Conditional Settlement Treasury Wine Estates Limited" (PDF). Australian Securities Exchange. IMF Bentham. Retrieved 9 December 2017.
  9. Evans, Simon (28 September 2015). "Paul Schaafsma the new boss in Accolade Wines reshuffle". The Sydney Morning Herald. Fairfax Media. Retrieved 8 December 2016.
  10. "Treasury Wine Estates dumps cheaper US brands". ABC Rural. 3 July 2016. Retrieved 2 November 2016.
  11. Gray, Darren (1 February 2020). "Treasury Wine Estates shareholders back company's US presence". The Sydney Morning Herald. Fairfax Media. Retrieved 23 February 2020.
  12. "About". Treasury Wine Estates. Retrieved 9 December 2017.
  13. "Our brands". Treasury Wine Estates. Retrieved 6 December 2016.
  14. Annie's Lane
  15. Beringer Vineyards
  16. Heemskerk
  17. Matua Valley Wines
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