couple minutes making sure you touch on what you want to make sure investors understand, that's a great opportunity.
Great stuff.
Okay. All right. Welcome, everybody. Good afternoon. We are delighted today to have, once again, Molson Coors here. And we get two for the price of one today. We get, we have Gavin Hattersley, President and CEO, and we have Tracey Joubert, our CFO here. Thank you both for coming back. I can already guess what questions I'm gonna be getting on the iPad, but I promise we're gonna hit every aspect of the business today. Before we dive into all the questions I have, first of all, could you start by giving a broad overview, perhaps for those in the audience who don't track you guys as closely as I do, what are your strategic priorities for the business?
Thanks, Nadine, thanks for having us on. Look, our strategic priorities are all grounded in our Revitalization Plan, which we launched nearly 4 years ago. You know, that had several ladders to it. Trace, if you'll, maybe you can talk to the capabilities one. At its heart was restructuring how our business operated. We took out a significant amount of cost at the time, and the objective of that was to put that money around our 3 pillars of our brands and our 4th pillar of capabilities and our people.
The other thing which it did was it very nicely removed a significant amount of, how should I say this? Maybe bureaucracy in our organization. It made us much more nimble, much quicker to react to things. At the same time, we changed our mission and our values and so on. That set the scene for us as we were coming into 2020. The focus areas for our business was our core brands, whether they were the core brands in the United States, Miller Lite, Coors Light, core brands up in Canada, Coors Light, Molson Canadian, or core brands in our European business, whether that was Carling or Grolsch or Staropramen, and so on.
you know, first and foremost, if we're gonna be successful as a business, we need to make sure we had healthy core brands that are the biggest profit driver in our business, and also obviously a big volume driver. The second area of focus for us was changing the shape of our portfolio into the above premium space. you know, think brands like Blue Moon, Leinenkugel's, Peroni in the United States, and then our above premium brands in Europe and in Canada. you know, we were comparatively disadvantaged at that time in terms of the share of our portfolio that contributed contribution came from above premium. It's really important that we accelerate us, our impact there.
The third area was moving beyond beer, and that's into spaces like seltzers, flavor more broadly, non-alc, hard liquor in some respects as well, to reshape the shape of our portfolio from that perspective as well. You know, above premium, big focus area for us. All of the beyond beer space is really above premium. Taking the global share of NSR, what it was from 23% to a much bigger proportion of our business, was a core strategic priority for ourselves. From a capabilities point of view, also an area of big focus for us.
Yes. In terms of capabilities, we've invested both, behind our people, but we've, also invested behind our breweries. If we think about breweries, for example, we've built two new breweries up in Canada. We on a project at the moment to modernize our Golden Brewery in Colorado. Then we've bought in-house capabilities that we didn't have before, so flavor capabilities, which now enables us to do brands like, hard seltzers, like Simply, flavors. We now have flavor houses in our brewery, so we're able to do that, which, actually is good from a margin point of view because we're not co-manufacturing those brands. We're doing it in-house.
We've invested in capabilities in our marketing, so understanding, you know, digital marketing, making sure that we've got the right tools to measure our return on marketing investments, and then, also invested in insights and analytics capabilities. We've got a whole team now.
Mm-hmm.
that tracks, you know, consumers, customers, and a lot of the sort of KPIs that drive our business.
To cap all of that, Nadine, was obviously the single objective that we have, was to grow the top line and bottom line of our business. You know, four years ago, that was something that we hadn't done in a very long time. All of this work we were doing from a strategic point of view was with that end goal in mind. You know, the fact that we did what we said we were gonna do, and it had the result we wanted. Last year, we grew both top line and bottom line. Again, this year, our guidance is out there for top line and bottom line. We feel like our strategy is working, and we're gonna keep focusing on it.
All right. Perfect. Before we dive into the big share shifts we've seen over the last couple of weeks, I'd actually like to focus on light beer from a slightly more long-term perspective. If I look at the last decade, light beer as a whole had been losing share. What do you see as the role of light beer within the U.S. for beer today, and how does that inform your view on Molson Coors's growth going forward?
Yeah, it's a great question. If you go back 10 years, 15 years, 20 years, 5 years, doesn't matter, somebody's been calling light beer dead for a long time. We don't particularly share that view. I think the data doesn't support that view. More than half of the beer consumed in the United States, I think it's 52%, is light beer. Light beer is here to stay, it's a core and important area for us. You know, when craft beer had its explosion back in the early 2000s, I think folk were predicting the death of light beer and that craft beer was gonna be bigger than. I think many pundits said that seltzers was gonna be bigger than light beer in a fairly short time frame.
Of course, we all know these things haven't happened.
Mm.
Light beer, through all of that, has remained resilient. The American consumer likes light beer. It's a go-to subsegment for them, and that's not gonna change. I think the dynamics within the subsegment might change, but the overall consumption of light beer is not gonna change materially. Look, I mean, you're right. I think we've been gaining collectively with Miller Lite and Coors Light for the last almost nine years now. Over the last four years, since we launched our Revitalization Plan, I think our teams have done a really nice job of making it very clear what those two brands stand for, making it very clear, or pulling them apart.
Mm.
They've each got their own swim lane. You know, Miller Lite taste, its Miller time, Coors Light refreshment, and how we bring it to life. I think we've been maniacally focused on making sure that those brands are consistent, and they come to life consistently with our consumer. If you'd asked consumers 10 years ago what Miller Lite stood for, they probably wouldn't be able to tell you. Gosh, people inside our company, you'd probably get three or four different answers. You don't get that situation now, either in the company, in our distribution network with retailers or with consumers. Everybody understands what those two brands stand for.
The teams have brought them to life in a very consistent way, and we've also invested behind them, and that's why we took those structural changes and costs out of the business. We wanted to take that $150 million and put it, first and foremost, behind our core brands to make sure that they were properly funded. I think we've done a pretty reasonable job of that over the last four years, and you can see that in the share trends. We came out of last year in a strong place, and we came out of the first quarter in a strong place, with those brands.
All right. Now turning to the really big share shifts that we've seen over the last 2 months. We obviously have all seen the Nielsen data, but are you able to offer any more timely takeaways as to what you're seeing today?
Well, Nadine, we don't give in-quarter guidance, right?
Right.
From a volume perspective. You certainly see the data in Circana just like we do. You know, it's hard to add more to that, right?
Mm.
I mean, we are focused on our brands. As you know, we came into this year wanting to invest more behind our portfolio. Core portfolio, whether it is here in the U.S. or in Europe or Canada, is really important to us. We had those plans in place anyway.
Mm.
As I said, coming out of the first quarter, the performance of those two brands was strong. We'll continue to invest what we thought we were gonna invest and put the focus on those brands, which we believe are necessary.
I appreciate you can't comment on in-quarter numbers, nor would I ask you. You made the decision of when you commented on your guidance at the last results, to make it clear those did not include any of the changes we were starting to see in the market. I think that made sense. It was still very early on.
Right.
How should investors here in the room think about framing their guideposts for guidance now that we've had two months of these big share changes, and, you know, by the time we get to results, it'll have been a couple more?
Yes, I mean, obviously, at the time of the first quarter earnings, there were two things, right? There was very early days, and frankly, nobody then, and I think nobody now...
Mm
... would, could, reliably predict how long this share shift is gonna continue for. The second thing is obviously we have some caution around the consumer environment. You know, there was a lot going on in the first quarter, with relatively easier comps with the Omicron virus.
Mm
... from last year, which particularly benefited in the on-premise. The Pacific region, the West, was particularly tough. I mean, they had really tough weather situations out there, and it's a big beer-consuming market. There was a lot going on there. At the same time, we've got a fairly uncertain economic environment with inflation at the levels at which it is, and interest rates rising at a reasonable clip. You know, that obviously led into our caution around doing anything from a guidance point of view. The next time that we will have an opportunity to give guidance is at our second quarter earnings, which I think is in August.
Mm-hmm.
By then, we'll have most of summer under the belt. We'll have a much better feel for some of these share shifts and how prolonged and sticky they will be. You know, you and the investors are seeing the same data out there as we're seeing, obviously.
You mentioned being cautious on the consumer, given the macro environment. What are you seeing today in terms of downtrading, changes in consumer activity, or is it still broadly resilient?
You know, it's not terribly different from what we said at the first quarter earnings call. You know, we are still seeing premiumization, albeit at a slow pace. I mean, some of that is driven by the slowdown in the seltzer market. We're not seeing a lot of trade down into the economy portfolio. The strength of our economy portfolio is coming, you know, from a different angle. What we are seeing, perhaps, is consumers making different pack choices and, frankly, making more trips to the store.
Mm.
Somewhat of a bifurcation. The lower income household tending to downsize from a pack point of view and make more frequent trips, and the higher income consumer actually going on the opposite direction and going into larger pack sizes. From an overall downtrade point of view, still not seeing much of that.
All right, some slight changes in behavior-
Right.
nothing broad enough that we're seeing something nationally coming out there.
Right.
Okay. Now, you've clearly had a huge spike in demand for your products. How is your production capacity and supply chain coping with that?
The short answer is well. You know, we I think it's safe to say that we're battle-hardened after the last 3 and a half years, right? I mean, we've dealt with any number of dislocations and challenges to our business, and I don't think, I know it's made our supply chain much more flexible and quick to react to unexpected situations. That manifested itself through a number of different actions. Obviously, we didn't foresee or predict what we're currently going through right now, but our decision to do a SKU rationalization 2 years ago to allow focus on the brands that really were the bread and butter of our organization, is proving to be pretty helpful right now, right?
Because we removed a lot of complexity from our supply chain. We removed a lot of SKUs and changes and so on, and just made the business much more efficient. We also, because of the pandemic changes that were driven into our supply chain and in fact into global supply chains, and then the Russian invasion of Ukraine and the knock-on impacts that had, we've spent a lot of time in our supply chain and in our procurement divisions, making sure that we have, you know, plan B, C, and D ready, in case something happens. All that work had taken place. We came into this year with high inventory levels. We did that deliberately, because we didn't know what was gonna happen this year.
We were thinking that we wanted to make sure that if something went awry with our supply chain, that we had the, you know, as good of a buffer as we could have. That behavior persisted all the way through the first quarter. We came into the year with good inventories, we came out of the first quarter with good inventories, and our supply chain team have done an amazing job of keeping up with this sudden and elevated demand.
Mm.
I'm not saying that there isn't a single out of stock in the country, 'cause there always is something, right? By and large, we are in a really great place. Our supply chain is keeping up. Our upstream suppliers are keeping up. They've done an amazing job meeting our requests for input materials that are somewhat higher than our original forecasts, we're doing. I, you know, we're well positioned heading into summer.
It sounds like the changes that you implemented over the last three years, since, really, the Revitalization Plan kicked off, put you in a good position to benefit from what is happening now, despite the fact that there's no way we could have anticipated it.
Correct. I mean, there's nothing quite like getting experience in things, right? I think our supply chain team of all functions in our company have had to deal with any number of things that have been thrown at them. They are used to dealing with curve balls that come their way. They are dealing with this one really, really well.
What about shelf resets, shelf allocation? Obviously, this isn't a small share shift. This is unprecedented. Some are commenting that they might expect, in the fall, this to have implications on shelf resets. What's your view?
I think from a chain point of view, that is less likely. I'm not saying nobody will do it, but I think that's less likely.
Okay.
Most large chains do their shelf resets in the spring, and my expectation is that they would continue to do that. I think, more flexibility and a more chance of shelf resets would be taking place in the independent channel.
Mm-hmm
... which is a large part of the U.S. beer business. I mean, it's more than half of the U.S. beer business goes through independent C stores or independent liquor stores or grocery channels. I think there's more of a chance that those retailers are gonna make changes if these velocity changes persist. I do think that that's possible.
You know, this impact has been, I think, deeper and longer than many had initially anticipated, I would say, myself included. What do you take away from this entire situation when it comes to developing brands in America today? I think that's what every CPG company is now asking themselves.
I mean, it's a great question. You know, we've had a robust process in place in our organization for quite some time now. I think that's very positive. I think we've got some really strong governance processes that exist within our organization. I also think our marketing and sales teams are as close as they have ever been. You know, going back four years ago to our head of sales at the time, and our head of marketing at the time, forged a really strong relationship, and so these were not two organizations heading off in a different direction. These two organizations were joined at the hip, and having robust debates about whether something was gonna work, whether it wasn't gonna work.
Yeah
... tweaking it, and ultimately aligning and moving forward in a coordinated way, and that process is continuing, even though both of those leaders are different today. I also think our relationships with distributors is as good as it's been in a long time, and we get really good input from our distributors about what's working and what's not working, and certainly our larger programs and our larger campaigns, we take through our distributor council, and I know the teams have got trusted confidants out there in the distributor network that they talk to to test and bounce ideas off.
You know, I think the way that we've been growing our core brands, Miller Lite, Coors Light, in particular, has been robust and strong, and I think we're seeing the benefit of that.
You know, many of us here might have seen anecdotal pictures, I know there are a lot floating around on Twitter, about price discounting for ABI products. Begging the question, you know, will there be more broad-based discounting? How does this affect the brand, and therefore, the broader competitive landscape that your brands sit in? What are you hearing from your distributors and retailers?
Look, I think it's fair to say that the discounting or promotional activity that you're seeing is not as broad as what you might conclude, based on what you're seeing in the press or on social media. Yes, it does exist, but it's not as broad as you might anticipate.
I think the important thing for us is we really do focus in on our brands, on a brand-by-brand basis, on a market-by-market basis, and, you know, we're gonna continue to do what we think is right for our brands, taking into account the strength of the brands at the moment, the strength of their brand health, the impact that that might have on brand perception and brand health. We're gonna take all of those factors into account, and don't necessarily feel the need to follow some promotional activity which is out there.
Given that, if you remind everybody in the room, your approach to pricing for this year?
Yes. We did put in historic levels of pricing last year. We put a big increase in that sort of 4%-6% range in the spring of last year. We put a similar level of increase in the fall of last year. Both times, we saw an impact from an elasticity point of view, but it bounced back reasonably quickly to show, exhibit elasticity levels, which were lower than perhaps we would've expected a few months into the price increases. I think what our approach is this year is somewhat of a wait and see, right? I mean, I find a hard time believing that we're gonna get anything like the pricing that we got last year.
Mm.
I think that was a fairly historical shift from a pricing point of view. We've been fairly consistent in our belief that pricing will get back to that sort of 1%-2% range, which has been the historical average for the last decade or so, if you exclude last year. We've got time to make that decision. Obviously, what the consumer landscape looks like, what the economic environment looks like, and what the competitive, you know, world looks like will drive that decision.
Why do you think that price elasticity impact was felt to the extent that it was? You know, something many investors will ask is, if I look at CSDs, they were taking far more pricing, even though both account for a similar proportion or of wallet, of consumer spending. What do you think about beer meant that we saw that price elasticity kick in?
I think you've got to go a little bit further back than just last year, right? I mean, I think, beer had been taking higher price increases than perhaps CSDs had prior to that.
Mm.
I also think that the elasticities weren't as great as we were expecting them, and that's probably because when you look at other consumer goods, they were taking much greater price increases than we were. Even though we were taking historical levels of price, they did tend to pale into insignificance when you compared them with 40% price increases on eggs or bread or milk.
Mm
or so on.
Related to pricing, if we shift to margins, one for you, perhaps, Tracey. When we look at what you've guided to this year, I believe it was a gross profit per hectoliter growing in 2023. How should investors think about the scope for expansion in gross and EBIT margins on a more long-term basis?
Yeah. It's gross margin dollars per hectoliter.
Okay.
What we did say is that the gross margin dollar per hectoliter will increase for both our business units, so, you know, Europe and the Americas. A couple of things that go into the gross margin. Obviously, pricing, you know, is a part that plays in that. From a COGS point of view, you know, we've spoken about our extensive hedging strategy, so we've got good line of sight as to what our commodities are gonna look like over the next, you know, 12 months, 24 months, 36 months, depending on the commodity. You know, our cost savings programs is starting to deliver, you know, some of the items we need to mitigate some of the inflation. We've put a lot of money into our breweries.
You know, I mentioned two new breweries up in Canada. They are a lot more efficient, automated. You know, that comes with a lower cost. The work that we've done in the U.S., for example, in our Fort Worth brewery, I mentioned the.
Mm
capabilities that we've put in place there, but we've also done things like we've added a variety packer. what that means is, you know, previous to bringing the Topo Chico and Simply in-house, we were co-manufacturing it. You bring it into the brewery. You know, once it's there, you actually send it back out to co-packers. They pack the product for you. You bring it back into the brewery, you distribute it.
Mm
... you know, either to a warehouse or distributor. Bringing that in-house, we've got our own variety packer. We're making the brands in-house. We're variety packing it in-house, we just send it out once to the warehouse and distributors. From a logistics point of view, from an efficiency point of view, that is all helping on the COGS line as well. Some of the work that I also mentioned ongoing, like the modernization of the Golden Brewery, that's gonna be more efficient, you know, more effective. That comes with cost savings.
You know, some of the work that we've already done, like taking off some of the SKUs, you know, rationalizing the SKUs, it takes out a lot of inefficiencies, it takes out a lot of complexities, and that has helped the margins as well. Then from an EBIT margin, look, we, you know, we've done a lot of work around marketing spend as well. You know, we believe that we've become a lot more efficient with our marketing spend. We're getting a much higher return with marketing. More than 50% of our marketing dollars is now focused on digital marketing, which, again, is a little bit cheaper, but also a lot more flexible.
you know, we can turn off marketing, if it's on Facebook or YouTube, and we can do it overnight. We've also brought some of our marketing agency work in-house.
Mm.
Not only is that cheaper, but it gives us more control. It's also much quicker to take ideas to market because it's all in-house. That also is driving some of the EBITDA margins.
Okay. I definitely wanna come back to that digital marketing, while we're still on the point of margins, obviously, there likely, I suspect, will be positive operating leverage from the unprecedented volume growth that you're seeing. Is there any way, without giving guidance, that you can provide at least some guideposts for investors on how to think about how this is gonna impact the business?
Yeah, I mean, I think what we, what we would say is, if you go back to, I believe it was Q2 of last year, we did have volume shortfalls. You know.
Yes.
We did give some numbers relating to deleverage.
Mm-hmm.
Basically, leverage will sort of work the opposite way.
Okay.
You know, as you think of more volume, obviously, we get the fixed cost, leverage benefit from that. I think it was Q2 of last year, if you go back and have a look at that, you know, you can get a similar idea of what it would mean from additional volumes.
All right. Very helpful. Digital marketing. One thing that we saw recently with the Bud Light situation was, I believe it was Senator Ted Cruz approaching the Beer Institute, and the approach for not just ABI, but I guess companies in general, how do you approach marketing alcohol brands on social media platforms? Which is very different if we cast our mind even just 10 years ago, mainly TV adverts, et cetera. Especially this from an ESG standpoint, when we think about investors here in the room who are maybe less familiar, can you just walk us through how that digital marketing works? What type of age gate procedures are there, and how can you then best market your brands to the right people?
Yeah, look, the BI has got very, very clear codes, which all of us, as part of the Beer Institute, adhere to, and obviously, digital marketing is a subset of that.
Mm-hmm.
There is a level at which, we, all of us in the industry, won't market, if it doesn't meet those particular parameters. One of the keys of those is age gating.
Mm.
There's a reason that beer companies don't show up on TikTok, is because it doesn't age-gate. You won't see any of us actually advertising on TikTok. There are particular levels of a percentage, it's Lost the exact number in my head, but it's 76.3 or 73.6, one of the two, that the audience has to be above legal drinking age...
Mm
... for you to market in those areas, and we are very rigid about how we approach that. We also have a marketing compliance governance process that meets on a, I think, it's a weekly basis. They go through every single channel that we want to advertise on, actually every piece of material that we want to put out there, and they make sure that it complies-
Mm
with the BI code. I think we've got the processes in place to do that. We also have an amazing media team, Tracey referenced, that is also in-house. They are also gatekeepers from that perspective. We monitor where our brands show up, how they show up, and make sure that we're in compliance with the code, for sure.
How do you find the efficacy of digital marketing versus traditional marketing?
Yeah, I think, it's a lot more.
Mm
... agile, you know, we can switch off, Facebook overnight. You know, whereas your traditional marketing, you've got, you know, longer term media contracts, or you've got these big out-of-home billboards that, you know, you can't.
Mm
... take down overnight. Digital is more flexible. It is cheaper, obviously, than, you know, like a live sports, NFL game or whatever. Yeah, it's just a lot more flexible. We're able to bring things to market much easier and to take things off much easier.
Okay. I'd just like to remind everybody, you're more than welcome to submit questions on the Pigeonhole link, which you should have, that we'll integrate into our conversation. Switching back to the brands in your U.S. portfolio, and perhaps focusing on super premium, we've seen, up until very recently, brands like Michelob ULTRA doing well. We know of Modelo Oro entering that, Heineken Silver. Could you explain, you know, how are you viewing that super premium category? Which brands are you using to get that specific consumer?
Yeah, our innovation focus, at the moment, is on beyond beer-
Mm-hmm
and particularly the flavor space. in the U.S. I think we've got some really, really successful brands that we launched last year, and which we're doubling down on this year, whether that's Simply Spiked Lemonade or Simply Spiked Peach and Topo Chico. Those brands play in the super premium space from a pricing point of view. Both were extremely successful launches last year, and the early signs as we head into the high consumption period for both of those brands is particularly strong. From an innovation point of view, that's where we are focusing.
We've also got, the largest craft brand in the country, which is Blue Moon, which is a, from a price point point of view and a profitability point of view, very strong.
Mm.
I think we've got some really good plans to expand that brand from a both a distribution point of view and a velocity point of view as we head into this year. I think we also and I know your question was specific to the U.S., but we have our most successful innovation, certainly in Europe, in a very long time with Madrí Excepcional.
Mm.
We launched that brand at the beginning of the pandemic as an above premium brand in the on-premise, and that brand has, is a rocket ship. It's exceeded every expectation that we have. It's already our fifth largest above premium brand in the world. It is has taken over it has surpassed brand Bud both in the on-premise and off-premise. It's surpassed Stella Artois in the on-premise, in the United Kingdom. These are brands that have been around for a, for a very long time. This is a, this is a brand in its, in its infancy, so we're very, very excited about it, from a, an innovation point of view and a, and an above premium margin point of view.
The potential for that brand, both in the UK and actually beyond the shores of the UK, is impressive.
I was talking to a bartender in a pub in London, who said it was their number one bestseller, Madrí. There you go.
Yes, it is. It is doing extraordinarily well. You know, it's on the heels of Peroni, which is a very large on-premise brand, in the, in the UK. We're very excited about it.
You touched on Beyond Beer there. Obviously, it has been through a rollercoaster over the last 4 years, whether that's, your traditional hard seltzers, your FMBs. How are you viewing the future of that category?
You know, we look at it in total, right?
Right.
You know, consumers look at flavor sometimes in total, and so we look at it more broadly than just, than just seltzers or just, you know, flavored alcohol beverages. We're just looking at it collectively. When you look at it collectively, that Beyond Beer segment is doing just fine. Seltzers within that is certainly down year-over-year, but the space in which Simply operates is not, and it's growing very strongly. You know, we're gonna put a lot of effort behind Simply Spiked and Simply Peached. Simply Peached, as we head into the summer months, demand is very strong for it. It was such a successful launch last year that we couldn't meet the demand.
You know, even though we've got tough comps coming up, I think we're gonna exceed those meaningfully.
you know, thinking of that Beyond Beer category, are there any pockets, or even for your portfolio more broadly, any pockets within that that you would like to see yourself play more meaningfully in the next one, two, three years?
You know, Nadine, there's a limit to what you can do, right? There's a limit to what you can do inside your organization and then also outside your organization with distributors and retailers. We do have to be somewhat choiceful.
Mm.
I think we've got two really successful innovation launches from last year, as I said, and we're going to double down on those launches. At the same time, we are trying new things. We are launching Topo Chico Spirited around in a not everywhere in the country, but in a limited rollout. We do have Roxie, which is a non-alc cocktail, which we're testing in some markets in the country, and we've got Peace Hard Tea coming-
Mm
further on. You know, when, I think history has shown when we try to do too much, we both overload our own internal capabilities, and we overload our system as well. We do need to be choiceful, and that's what we've done.
Well, you mentioned your system. How have your beer distributors responded to the challenge of having a more complex portfolio of brands?
You know, they're always used to dealing with complexity because their portfolio, I mean, we bring a lot of SKUs to them. The SKUs from the non-Molson Coors suppliers is, in most cases, substantially more than we bring. You know, we tend to bat above the average of SKUs within a distributor's house. You know, the support from the distributors, and as I said, I think our relationship with distributors is as strong as I can remember it having been. Their support through this process has been fantastic. You know, we asked them to take inventory up coming into this year and coming out of Q1. They didn't have to, they did.
The fact that they did support us in that, in that regard, has certainly made everybody's lives a little easier now as we face this current situation. You know, they deal with complexity all the time. They deal with more complexity than we do, and they're pretty good at it.
Turning to the brands once again, if I take a moment on economy, you obviously rationalized your SKUs a few years ago, which simplified dramatically, as you touched on, for efficiencies in your operations. If I ask you the same question I did about light beer, the economy beer had been losing share for years within beer. Where do you see the role of economy beer today, and how does that shape how you think it should be in your portfolio for the years to come?
Yeah, I think we've been pretty consistent with our mantra that all segments within beer matter. There is an economy consumer, just like there's a premium light consumer, just like there's a craft consumer, just like there's a super premium consumer. There's an important economy consumer as well. It's important to foot traffic for our retailers. You know, consumers want what they want, and if they want an economy beer, or they want a Miller High Life or a Keystone Light, and a retailer doesn't have it, they'll go and get it somewhere else. That's why it's so important that we continue to sell this message that all segments matter.
SKU rationalization and brand rationalization 2 years ago certainly has made things more focused for us. We've got the 4 economy brands which we focus on, Keystone Light and Miller High Life and Steel Reserve and Icehouse. It's certainly made our capabilities better because it's more narrowly focused. It's taken some complexity out of our distributors and also our retailers. I think you're starting to see the benefits of that. I think we've, for 2 quarters now, even before this current situation, 'cause the current situation has also had a positive impact on our economy portfolio, we were growing share of those core 4 brands even before this. I think that focus and attention is paying dividends.
Maybe turning to my home country of Canada. Obviously, Canada has had some challenges with the strike that have now been put behind you, and you have the new brewery there as well. I was digging into the data, and I was actually surprised to find that per capita alcohol consumption overall, beer, spirits, and wine, has actually been falling in Canada if I look on a 15-year view. That is in stark contrast to the U.S., where that's been held pretty constant, actually, despite what the headlines say about people's changing consumption preferences. Within that, beer losing share. What do you think is actually different about Canada? Why is that per capita number falling? How does that inform your view as to positioning yourself in Canada going forward?
You know, Canada, the focus in Canada is the same as it is for us in the United States. We've got the same strategic pillars that we're focused on, whether that's core brands, Coors Light, Molson Canadian, whether it's pushing into the above premium space. In fact, their share of the above premium in their portfolio is greater than it is in the United States, innovating beyond beer. All three of those strategic pillars are consistent, and we're seeing success in them. Obviously, last year was a difficult year for us. We had the pandemic, we had the strike, which went on for, you know, a fair amount of time, to all intents and purposes, took us the whole year to recover from.
We don't have those challenges, this year. The focus that we're putting on our core brands, whether that's Coors Light or Molson Canadian, is having results. Molson Canadian is actually growing and growing share for the first time in as long as I can remember. Our share of the seltzer category is growing. You know, it's interesting that, Coors Seltzer does particularly well.
Yes
up in Canada.
Yes
... which, you know, we quickly took it out here because we just thought it wasn't resonating with consumers, but it resonates very nicely up there. We've just launched Topo Chico. We've got Vizzy up there. You know, our share of the seltzer space is actually greater up in Canada and growing than it is down here. We've just recently launched Simply Spiked up there as well.
Good.
You know, we feel that our beyond beer efforts, in some respects are as good as, or, in some spaces, slightly better...
Good
than in the United States. Again, we've got our core above premium portfolio up there, with Blue Moon, which we've just recently rebranded from Belgian Moon.
Oh, is it Blue Moon now, or back?
It is Blue Moon now.
Okay.
Yes. We're able to do that now. I think when you look at our overall performance in Canada, I think you're going to see a vastly different outcome than perhaps before. I think the other benefit that we're seeing is the recent structural change, which we made to create, you know, a chief commercial officer who now looks after our entire Americas business from a commercial point of view, Canada and the U.S. and also our Latin American, South American business. I mean, we're only 60 days into this, but you can already see the benefits of one coordinated approach to our brands.
Mm-hmm.
I think that's gonna reap big dividends for us north of the border.
Out of curiosity, that change in Blue Moon, from memory, when I dug into this, it was a trademark issue. How did you get around that now?
Let's just say we resolved it.
Okay. All right. Turning to Europe, obviously, that has rebounded very nicely coming back from Covid. The pubs near where I live are full, which is very nice to see. Now that we have had that rebound, very strong price mix, how do you view Europe fitting strategically into your business? I think it's something sometimes, U.S.-based investors-
Mm-hmm
don't know as well.
You want me to take it?
Yeah.
I'll take it. We like Europe. We've been fairly-
We like to hear that.
We've been fairly consistent about that. you know, we've got a Western European business which is recovering nicely from the pandemic. As I said, I don't wanna sing any more praises on their latest innovation, but it's a game changer for us in the United Kingdom market. We've got fantastic capabilities in the on-premise, which is an important space for us, and you know, we're gaining share there. Central Eastern Europe probably is a little bit more challenged for us, but not as challenging as we were expecting because, you know, a fairly mild winter had a positive impact on gas and energy costs, which has somewhat flown through into the consumer.
I like the health of our brands in Central and Eastern Europe. I think the team have done an amazing job following the same processes as we're doing in the rest of the world. The core brands, Above Premium and Beyond Beer. You know, a brand like Ožujsko in Croatia is a big brand and growing market share, and turned it around very nicely over the last few years. Carling remains the number one brand in the United Kingdom. Staropramen outside of the Czech Republic is growing very nicely. You know, when you look at that business and you look at the brands that are doing well, they're all our global brands, whether that's Coors, whether it's Miller Genuine Draft, Staropramen, Blue Moon.
These are brands which we believe have potential to have broader reach than just the markets in which we operate.
With the few minutes we have left, I have two final questions. The first for you, Tracey, where are you allocating your incremental $1 of capital, and has that changed now, given the big share shifts we've seen in the U.S.?
Yeah, so look, our capital allocation priorities haven't changed. You know, we'll continue to invest behind our business. That was what the Revitalization Plan was about. It's to invest, to sustainably grow the top and bottom line, and as Gavin mentioned last year, we grew both. This year, our guidance is to grow both. We'll continue to invest both in our breweries, our capabilities, as well as behind our brands. The second bucket that we've really been focused on, particularly over the last couple of years, is to strengthen our balance sheet. You know, we've got a target leverage ratio out there of around 2.5 times. We ended last year at below 3 times.
You know, we'll have a look at what the debt situation and interest markets look like, as to, you know, do we further pay down debt or do we refinance? I think the good thing is, with the health of our balance sheet, we have got options. You know, we don't have to put it in one particular bucket. You know, the third bucket, and again, you know, it hasn't changed, is to return cash to our shareholders. When we reinstated our dividend back in 2021, you know, the board was very clear with us that they wanted us to reinstate a dividend that was sustainable, but that could also grow as the performance of our company improved.
You know, we've increased our dividend twice since we reinstated it, so that's, you know, another area of making sure that we do give our shareholders a return. You know, having said that, we use models to make sure that we do invest where we're gonna give our shareholders the highest rate of returns, and, but it's really those 3 buckets that we focus on.
All right. My final question, which I always like to end on, is: what do you believe is the single most misunderstood or underappreciated thing at Molson Coors?
Most underappreciated thing? I think it's that we're doing what we said we were gonna do. You know, when we launched our Revitalization Plan 4 years ago, I've actually got 2 slides in my, in my office, which I've kept of all of the comments which everybody had about our Revitalization Plan.
Self-made comments?
Little bit.
A bit of both, yeah. Media comments, distributor comments, everybody's comments, right? Some of them were fair and justified, right? Because we hadn't delivered top and bottom line growth in this organization in a very long time. You know, as hard as some of them were to read, they were true. We had a plan. We've executed against that plan. We've done what we said we were gonna do, even in a very difficult environment, unprecedented environment at some times. We've come out of that delivering the top and bottom line, which I think a lot of people were highly skeptical that we were able to do. We did it, and we've got it as our guidance for this year again.
I think, yeah, that's what I think.
Yeah
... somewhat underappreciated, is when you look at everything we've had to deal with, we did what we said we were gonna do, and we got the outcome that we wanted.
I think that's a fantastic place end. Thank you so much both-.
Thank you.
... for the great discussion. Thank you, everyone.