Walmart wine selling key to SA push

Wednesday, 27 March, 2013
Bloomberg
South Africa, the eighth-biggest wine producer, is seeking to regain a foothold in the US market lost to imports from Australia to Argentina by promoting brands at Walmart Stores and Whole Foods Market, a diplomat said last week.
“We used to have a quite substantial market presence in the US and it went all the way down,” George Monyemangene, the consul general of South Africa in New York, said in an interview.

“Maybe we were not as responsive as we should have been to newcomers,” said Monyemangene.

Walmart, the world’s largest retailer, started selling South African wines in August 2012 and now has bottles in 1 600 stores, according to Deisha Barnett, a spokeswoman in Bentonville, Arkansas.

Whole Foods Market, the largest US natural-foods grocer, was planning a South African wine promotion later this year, said Doug Bell, the company’s national wine and beer buyer.

South Africa’s share of the market for wines imported to the US fell to 1.2 percent last year from a peak of “about 8 percent” in the 1990s, according to data from San Francisco-based Wine Institute and Monyemangene.

Italian wines have about 29 percent of the import market, followed by France, Australia and Argentina. Imports of South African wine to the US have risen fivefold since 2000, compared with a more than 12-fold jump for Argentina and New Zealand wine imports, according to the South African Consulate.

“South African wine has matured,” Bell said in a telephone interview from Blue Ridge, Georgia. “It’s time to showcase them. The quality is there. I don’t think they are the little brother of the wine world anymore.”

In the US, Walmart sells Seven Sisters wines, founded by seven sisters of South Africa’s Brutus family, Barnett said in a telephone interview. Walmart entered Africa’s largest consumer market in 2011 with the acquisition of a majority stake in Johannesburg-based Massmart Holdings.

The efforts to boost sales of South African wine in the US are taking place as the rand trades at a four-year low against the US dollar amid labour disputes in the mining industry, a widening budget shortfall and the threat of a downgrade of South Africa’s BBB credit rating, the second-lowest investment grade. The currency has slipped more than 8 percent this year, the most among 25 major emerging-market currencies compiled by Bloomberg.

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