Saturday, July 26, 2008

The Sleeper Issue of 2008: Beer

I got dinner and drinks yesterday with a couple of friends from St. Louis, and inquired whether they had heard about the takeover of Anheuser-Busch by Belgian beer conglomerate InBev. I was met with a couple of incredulous stares. Asking a St. Louisan about whether they've heard about the Anheuser-Busch takeover is tantamount to asking them they've ever seen Albert Pujols hit a fastball. This is very big news in St. Louis and other parts of Missouri.

The objections aren't just a matter of patriotic pride over Anheuser-Busch's flagship Budweiser brand, which might be the most recognizably American brand in the world. Rather, the issue is that it is a near-certainty that InBev will cut jobs. If InBev is smart, it will delay or limit the number of job cuts in St. Louis itself. But consolidation and cost-savings are how money is made in mergers between mature companies, and that means a certain number of 'redundant' positions are going to be eliminated. Indeed, Anheuser-Busch had already announced job cuts of 10-15 percent in June in an effort to trim its fat and make itself a less meaty target for InBev, whose takeover bid it initially considered hostile.

Ordinarily, it would be hard to tie the takeover to the political campaign. Like it or not, this is capitalism at work, and it is not clear that the merger had anything to do with the recession. Alcohol stocks are notoriously recession-proof, and BUD had remained basically flat over the past two years before ticking upward on rumors of the InBev bid, which paid its shareholders a substantial premium.

However, Cindy McCain is the chairwoman of Phoenix-based beer distributor Hensley & Co, which has substantial holdings in Anheuser-Busch. The Wall Street Journal reports that Hensley & Co stands to make around $1 million on the transaction.

This is still an issue involving a candidate's wife, rather than the candidate himself, and so the Obama campaign might need to handle it fairly delicately; it might be territory better suited for a 527 group, for instance. The other issue is that it is not immediately clear what policies might have been implemented to prevent the transaction, as Obama himself said in a trip to St. Louis earlier this month.

There is, however, one potential remedy. The deal arguably runs afoul of antitrust laws, as it increases the amount of consolidation in the domestic macrobrew industry, which SmartMoney.com describes as "basically an oligopoly of Anheuser, SABMiller and Molson Coors. Though InBev does not own any domestic labels, it does owns three of the ten best-selling brands of imported beers: Heineken, Beck's and Amstel Light.

Obama, therefore, could pressure the Federal Trade Commission on the matter, or request oversight hearings from the U.S. Senate Subcommittee on Antitrust, Competition and Consumer Rights.

The ranking member of the Antitrust Committee is Wisconsin Senator Herb Kohl; Russ Feingold is also one of its 11 members. The Wisconsin Senators can speak to the the likely job cuts in Milwaukee brought about by the recent Miller-Coors merger, which bypassed both Milwaukee and Denver to place its new headquarters in Chicago. One can imagine Obama and Feingold holding a "Save our Jobs" rally outside Anheuser-Busch headquarters in St. Louis, with Feingold promising to hold hearings on the InBev merger and Obama pledging to appoint FTC commissioners who will aggressively defend American interests. John McCain, because of his wife's interests in the transaction, would be in no position to rebut their proposals.

That's meat-and-potatoes politics at its best, and nothing goes better with meat and potatoes than a little beer.

152 comments

Rhode Island X said...

I'm not sure if anyone will see it as any more than a coincidence. I can't see it being held against McCain.

I suppose it could find a way into an "elitist" narrative, but that hasn't been sticking to McCain as one might expect. (Right?)

DCM said...

I think it would be GREAT if Obama would become a crusading populist on bubba issues like jobs & monopolies & especially oil & healthcare + social security for that matter.

Hillary, yes. Barack, not so much probably...

Maybe his VP pick will be the front man/woman for these issues. One can always hope !

Englishbeerdrinker said...

I know I should be looking at this more cerebrally, but right now I just feel a great surge of hope that InBev will take over and announce that they will immediately stop making that crime upon humanity known as Budweiser.

Seriously, patriotic pride in Budweiser? I understand that whole Prohibition thing may have skewed American perceptions of what a good beer is, but Budweiser makes British lager seem good, and if you've ever tasted that piss we call Carling, you'll see what I'm getting at.

Still, my Missourian friend will be pleased he no longer has to feel guilty about his home state's beer.

Anonymous said...

Better to let the deal go through and remind every Missourian just who profited from the deal.

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Mark said...

...nothing goes better with meat and potatoes than a little beer.
That is just obviously false. It is intuitively obvious to the casual observer that a lot of beer goes better with meat and potatoes than does a little beer.

JGabriel said...

Anon@6:59Pm: Better to let the deal go through and remind every Missourian just who profited from the deal.

Then compare the losses and gains: (Whatever number) millions of dollars lost in St. Louis vs. 1 million profit for the McCains.

Followed by a tagline like: "The McCains will send tens of millions of dollars in American jobs just to make 1 million for themselves."

Of course, it's probably better if the purchase doesn't go through, but if it does, the contrasts between who loses and who profits should definitely be promoted.

.

Gerthein said...

"which might be the most recognizably American brand in the world."
Not as long as McDonald's, Disney, Ford etc. are around. You'd be surprised at how many Europeans actually have never heard of Budweiser.

Juris said...

Methinks Cola Cola beats them all.

Gerthein said...

Knew I was missing an obvious one. :)

Juris said...

Doh! Coca Cola.

Anonymous said...

It's not clear from context, but I understood Nate to be saying that Budweiser is "the most recognizably American brand [of beer] in the world." Is that true, or is there some other American beer as widely known (as widely disparaged?) as Bud?

John Peterson said...

If by "sleeper issue" you mean "puts us to sleep," then I agree totally.

Englishbeerdrinker, you can do A LOT worse than regular Budweiser for a macrolager. Of course, our California, Colorado and Oregon microbrews put your English beer to shame.

Hellmut said...

Yes, Coca Cola is to America what beer is to Belgium. Globally, Budweiser is just an aftertought.

Although in Missouri, it might be the other way around. Missouri is a battle state and the world is not.

It would be unwise, though, for Obama to soil himself with petty attacks. If the Obama campaign plays the personal enrichment card at all, it should be played by surrogates.

May be, such an attack can be useful in the context of depicting McCain as out of touch with the economic challenges of ordinary Americans.

It is more important, however, that Obama begins to focus on the economy himself. In that respect his triumphant tour of orient and occident has been a distraction.

Anonymous said...

It's always funny to hear the International Law crowd flipping out over a foreign company doing business in America. What's the matter? I thought we were supposed to all be good Citizens of the World. Or are we only supposed to like Germans when they're cheering for the Lightworker?

I'm a proud supporter of Corporations Without Borders.

Anonymous said...

This should tie in nicely with McCain's "I will veto ever beer" blooper . . .
( http: //www.youtube.com/watch?v=xob2HyCbj50 )

Anonymous said...

What's with the scare quotes around 'redundant'? Aren't workers pretty redundant if there jobs can be eliminated without affecting production and such?

Also, the last thing I want to see is Obama turning more protectionist. I'm general in support of a lot of liberal attitudes about helping the economically depressed. -- progress tax brackets, minimum wages, union rights, social security, lowering costs of higher education, etc.. But protectionism is the worst -- it discourages economic activity, makes things less efficient, and it helps people in a very nonuniform and not particularly need based way.

The Dude Abides said...

InBev is a Belgian company. On the day InBev's takeover of Anheuser Busch was approved, McCain was in Missouri to celebrate and raise money with the former US Ambassador to...BELGIUM.
http://www.firedupmissouri.com/mccain_belgian_inbev_brauer

I can't believe Obama's campaign isn't making a big issue of this in Missouri TV ads.

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