The Risks Of Investing In Diageo plc

Royston Wild outlines the perils of stashing your cash in Diageo plc (LON: DGE).

| More on:

The content of this article was relevant at the time of publishing. Circumstances change continuously and caution should therefore be exercised when relying upon any content contained within this article.

You’re reading a free article with opinions that may differ from The Motley Fool’s Premium Investing Services. Become a Motley Fool member today to get instant access to our top analyst recommendations, in-depth research, investing resources, and more. Learn More.

Today I am highlighting what you need to know before investing in Diageo (LSE: DGE) (NYSE: DEO.US).

North American growth on the slide

The major takeaway from Diageo’s latest set of financial results last month (as I pointed out in my previous article) was the issue of worsening sales activity in emerging markets, most notably in China.

Although signs of falling demand in key growth geographies is of course a huge headache for the firm, news that Diageo’s key brands are also falling out of favour with drinkers in its established North American marketplace should equally make investors sit up and take notice. The business sources around 53% of group profits from this territory alone.

The beverages giant saw organic net sales here edge 3% higher during the 12 months concluding June 2014, although this indicates the onsetDiageo of a steady yet significant slowdown. And organic volumes actually dipped 1% from the previous year.

By comparison, net sales growth from June 2013 to December advanced 4.6%, while revenues advanced 3.7% in the nine months to March. As Diageo noted, the ‘economic recovery in the US is uneven, and this is reflected in the consumer trends seen in US spirits, with overall spirits category growth slowing and premium and above price points driving category growth.’

Beer giant SABMiller has also noted lumpiness in North America, and its own organic net producer revenues — on a constant currency basis — edged 3% higher during April-June, mainly due to a positive sales mix and higher prices. But like Diageo, SABMiller has also seen volumes decline in recent months, and physical consumption dipped 2% during the period.

Colossal sums needed to resuscitate sales?

In a bid keep sales ticking even modestly higher, Diageo is embarking on an extensive programme of new product launches and fresh innovations across existing brands, examples of which include Johnnie Walker Platinum and Gold Reserve which were wheeled out in the highly-lucrative North American premium market during the past year.

Such launches of course require vast amounts of cash to get consumers to sit up and take notice, and as a consequence the firm’s marketing spend in North America leapt 10% in fiscal 2014.

These hefty sums have failed to arrest declining sales growth in the region, however, and questions have been raised over how much Diageo will have to raise the advertising budget by in order to put a rocket under sales performance. And with revenues in emerging regions also taking a hammering, global marketing spend may have to explode in order to underpin even modest sales expansion.

Royston Wild has no position in any shares mentioned. 

More on Investing Articles

Investing Articles

I asked ChatGPT to settle the ISA v SIPP debate once and for all. It said…

Instead of working out whether an ISA or SIPP is the better tax wrapper, Harvey Jones called the robots in.…

Read more »

Middle-aged white male courier delivering boxes to young black lady
Investing Articles

Amazon shares: overpriced or a possible bargain?

Christopher Ruane thinks Amazon shares look pricier than he normally likes -- but also reckons they could be a potential…

Read more »

Female Tesco employee holding produce crate
Investing Articles

In a jittery market, could Tesco shares be a defensive choice?

Could Tesco shares be a safe haven in nervous markets, given that consumers always need to eat? Our writer is…

Read more »

British coins and bank notes scattered on a surface
Investing Articles

How much might £10,000 in Rolls-Royce shares soon be worth? Let’s ask the experts

Do Rolls-Royce shares look like a good buy after recent price falls? City analysts still appear bullish, but global events…

Read more »

Queen Street, one of Cardiff's main shopping streets, busy with Saturday shoppers.
Investing Articles

Take a deep breath! £10,000 invested in Greggs shares a year ago is now worth…

Someone who bought Greggs shares a year ago is nursing a paper loss. Our writer digs into the reasons why…

Read more »

Mature black woman at home texting on her cell phone while sitting on the couch
Investing Articles

Whatever happened to the stock market crash?

The stock market refuses to crash, despite the Iran war. But Harvey Jones says lots of FTSE 100 shares have…

Read more »

Petrochemical engineer working at night with digital tablet inside oil and gas refinery plant
Investing Articles

BP’s share price will keep surging in 2026, according to this broker

BP’s share price is in a strong upward trend right now. And one City brokerage firm seems to believe that…

Read more »

Picture of an easyJet plane taking off.
Investing Articles

These 4 red flags mean I’m avoiding easyJet shares like the plague!

easyJet shares have slumped by around a quarter during the past month. Does this represent a dip-buying opportunity? Royston Wild…

Read more »