According to Daily Wire, Anheuser-Busch lost $27 billion in market value from April 1 - May 31, with Bud Light sales down over 25%. The boycott is definitely having an effect, regardless of what spin people try to put on it.
Channel stuffingaggielostinETX said:jja79 said:
Gilbert, Arizona today. Bud Light completely full and the only brand stacked in the aisle.
This is exactly what I thought Anheuser-Busch would do. They're fudging the numbers by pushing the product into the store is where it's actually just sitting there. But eventually the space is not gonna be able to keep up.
This got me wondering now.David Happymountain said:
This was all coordinated by the government, media and AB top brass.
Lol, I've got the wife properly trained now. She just returned from the store with a 12 pack of YF.Hungry Ojos said:
WILL YOU A-HOLES STOP BUYING UP ALL OF THE YEUNGLING FLIGHT? I CAN'T EFFING FIND IT ANYWHERE IN AUSTIN!
OK that makes more sense although the pictures above are from Arizona but they may have similar laws. If that law is on the books for most of the states they really are screwed because they simply won't be able to move their product before it has to be destroyed.aggielostinETX said:Prosperdick said:aggielostinETX said:jja79 said:
Gilbert, Arizona today. Bud Light completely full and the only brand stacked in the aisle.
This is exactly what I thought Anheuser-Busch would do. They're fudging the numbers by pushing the product into the store is where it's actually just sitting there. But eventually the space is not gonna be able to keep up.
Those dummies still have it priced way too high. They need to price it where it's so low you'll have folks buying it and drinking it privately just to save money. The fact that it's still priced relatively high (even on sale) shows me they still have no idea how bad it is.
I don't think you can sell alcohol at a loss in Texas.
16oz aluminum cans are legit. Don't worry though, we're not in competing geographical areas. I don't find them everywhere I go, but every couple of stores....Hungry Ojos said:
WILL YOU A-HOLES STOP BUYING UP ALL OF THE YEUNGLING FLIGHT? I CAN'T EFFING FIND IT ANYWHERE IN AUSTIN!
TJaggie14 said:Counterpoint said:
College Station HEB yesterday... Boycott appears to be working for Bud Light Lime & Platinum, but not regular Bud Light or Budweiser.
https://imgur.io/NS5kht7
Hungry Ojos said:
WILL YOU A-HOLES STOP BUYING UP ALL OF THE YEUNGLING FLIGHT? I CAN'T EFFING FIND IT ANYWHERE IN AUSTIN!
YouBet said:deddog said:You are wrong on them trying to placate both sides.Jack Ruby said:
BL has stepped into quicksand. Trying to placate both sides, but failing miserably as they're trying to swim themselves out. They could've just kept the dilly dilly campaign, but the tiny tiny and vocal minority in charge convinced them otherwise. It honestly stuns me how they just handed the keys to the asylum inmates voluntarily.
For the love of God, let this be a lesson to CEOs. We don't want to be preached to, just say: "hey look, our product is cheap, drinkable, and gives you a nice buzz"
Is it really that difficult to understand?
If BL wanted to placate their customers, they would have admitted that serious mistakes were made. They have done no such thing. Why? because we've reached a point where ESG matters more than your balance sheet. If the execs disown the campaign openly, they will never ever be employed at a Fortune 500 company or even S&P mid size company - Vanguard and BlackRock will never approve their appointment.
So the execs would rather watch BL going down the drain.
They are simply trying to wait this out. Up until now, 10 times out of 10, that has worked because our attention spans and stamina for causes in this country has been non-existent for decades especially on the right. I guarantee you the executives said "Let's give it a week and see where we are" at the beginning of this. And they've been saying the same thing every Monday morning in their Exec Huddle since week one.
At this point, they would have already had an emergency BoD meeting where the same conclusion was drawn because most board members are left wing ESG sycophants at that level either as true believers or out of peer pressure.
This has gone on longer than anyone thought it would so we are basically in unchartered waters for the current era so at this point they just aren't sure what to do. It's why their Twitter went silent but then they think they can still support the ESG cause through back doors (like the Gay Chamber of Commerce) and then just hope it doesn't get picked up and go viral.
There will be a History Channel "The Men that made America" episode about it like they did with New Cokei-miss-the-republic said:
You know it's bad when your brand becomes a verb: "Company X didn't want to Bud Light themselves."
Prosperdick said:OK that makes more sense although the pictures above are from Arizona but they may have similar laws. If that law is on the books for most of the states they really are screwed because they simply won't be able to move their product before it has to be destroyed.aggielostinETX said:Prosperdick said:aggielostinETX said:jja79 said:
Gilbert, Arizona today. Bud Light completely full and the only brand stacked in the aisle.
This is exactly what I thought Anheuser-Busch would do. They're fudging the numbers by pushing the product into the store is where it's actually just sitting there. But eventually the space is not gonna be able to keep up.
Those dummies still have it priced way too high. They need to price it where it's so low you'll have folks buying it and drinking it privately just to save money. The fact that it's still priced relatively high (even on sale) shows me they still have no idea how bad it is.
I don't think you can sell alcohol at a loss in Texas.
That's when they really take a blood bath for artificially pumping their numbers by shipping it to stores that have to place it on the floor like the pictures above.
Eso si, Que es said:
My bet is the expired beer is just replaced next month and counted as new sales. Obviously they will have to take a write off, but I bet they juggle it to not affect revenue and hide it as a cost. I honestly don't know if they capture revenue when it leaves the brewery, the warehouse or when it leaves the shelf in a shopping cart.
Hungry Ojos said:
WILL YOU A-HOLES STOP BUYING UP ALL OF THE YEUNGLING FLIGHT? I CAN'T EFFING FIND IT ANYWHERE IN AUSTIN!
Daddy-O5 said:16oz aluminum cans are legit. Don't worry though, we're not in competing geographical areas. I don't find them everywhere I go, but every couple of stores....Hungry Ojos said:
WILL YOU A-HOLES STOP BUYING UP ALL OF THE YEUNGLING FLIGHT? I CAN'T EFFING FIND IT ANYWHERE IN AUSTIN!
EskimoJoe said:Daddy-O5 said:16oz aluminum cans are legit. Don't worry though, we're not in competing geographical areas. I don't find them everywhere I go, but every couple of stores....Hungry Ojos said:
WILL YOU A-HOLES STOP BUYING UP ALL OF THE YEUNGLING FLIGHT? I CAN'T EFFING FIND IT ANYWHERE IN AUSTIN!
my preferred candy store has 12 packs of 16oz cans. i picked up a couple and thought the price must have gone up. I didn't realize they were the 16 oz cans until i opened the first one.
ProgN said:EskimoJoe said:Daddy-O5 said:16oz aluminum cans are legit. Don't worry though, we're not in competing geographical areas. I don't find them everywhere I go, but every couple of stores....Hungry Ojos said:
WILL YOU A-HOLES STOP BUYING UP ALL OF THE YEUNGLING FLIGHT? I CAN'T EFFING FIND IT ANYWHERE IN AUSTIN!
my preferred candy store has 12 packs of 16oz cans. i picked up a couple and thought the price must have gone up. I didn't realize they were the 16 oz cans until i opened the first one.
It's wild how regulated the alcohol industry is.bonfarr said:Retailers can't sell beer at a loss, what AB would have to do is lower their cost on BL to distributors and they lower cost to the retailer and the retailer can drop the price. Margins on 12 packs and larger suck so retailers aren't going to drop the price on their own.Prosperdick said:OK that makes more sense although the pictures above are from Arizona but they may have similar laws. If that law is on the books for most of the states they really are screwed because they simply won't be able to move their product before it has to be destroyed.aggielostinETX said:Prosperdick said:aggielostinETX said:jja79 said:
Gilbert, Arizona today. Bud Light completely full and the only brand stacked in the aisle.
This is exactly what I thought Anheuser-Busch would do. They're fudging the numbers by pushing the product into the store is where it's actually just sitting there. But eventually the space is not gonna be able to keep up.
Those dummies still have it priced way too high. They need to price it where it's so low you'll have folks buying it and drinking it privately just to save money. The fact that it's still priced relatively high (even on sale) shows me they still have no idea how bad it is.
I don't think you can sell alcohol at a loss in Texas.
That's when they really take a blood bath for artificially pumping their numbers by shipping it to stores that have to place it on the floor like the pictures above.
And AB isn't padding sales by pushing product into stores the retailers would never allow that. Why would the retailers agree to buy product from AB to help them pad their sales ?
Hungry Ojos said:
WILL YOU A-HOLES STOP BUYING UP ALL OF THE YEUNGLING FLIGHT? I CAN'T EFFING FIND IT ANYWHERE IN AUSTIN!
YouBet said:
Yeah that's kind of wild. Can't sell at a loss?
So loss leader strategy not a thing in the beer world I guess.
Hungry Ojos said:Hungry Ojos said:
WILL YOU A-HOLES STOP BUYING UP ALL OF THE YEUNGLING FLIGHT? I CAN'T EFFING FIND IT ANYWHERE IN AUSTIN!
Haha, deal with it losers!!!!!!