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AB InBev loses $13 billion in value as beer drinking slows in Brazil and South Korea

FILE PHOTO: The logo of AB InBev is pictured outside the brewer's headquarters in Leuven

By Philip Blenkinsop

BRUSSELS (Reuters) - Anheuser-Busch InBev <ABI.BR> saw more than $13 billion (£10 billion) wiped off its market value on Friday, after a profit warning and weaker-than-expected third-quarter earnings growth sparked by reduced demand for its beer in Brazil and South Korea.

The cautious outlook from the world's largest brewer came after main rival Heineken <HEIN.AS> trimmed its 2019 guidance on Wednesday after an unexpected dip in sales in the Americas.

The downbeat updates highlight challenges facing global brewers in large developing markets in Asia, Latin America and Africa, whose promise of higher growth is supposed to make up for reduced beer drinking in Europe and the United States.

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The maker of Budweiser, Corona and Stella Artois previously predicted strong growth of revenue and core profit, or EBITDA, this year. On Friday, it forecast only "moderate" growth in EBITDA, citing a "challenging" July-September period.

The Belgium-based company's third-quarter core profit was unchanged year-on-year at $5.29 billion, missing market expectations for a 3% rise.

Shares in the firm were down 9% by 1318 GMT, set for their second biggest daily drop in a decade. They were the weakest performers in the blue-chip pan-European <.STOXXE> stocks index, dragging down rivals Heineken and Carlsberg <CARLb.CO>.

AB InBev had warned of some weakness after a strong second quarter when beer sales rose at their fastest pace in more than five years.

The company said it had anticipated some of the challenges.

Firstly, shipping beer to China had been disproportionately higher in the second quarter because of promotions, and so was lower in the third. Costs rose because of higher aluminium and malt barley costs, and due to the weaker currencies of some of its markets, notably the Brazilian real.

Sales and marketing costs were also higher than in the third quarter of 2018. Last year, such costs were skewed towards the first half of the year because of the football World Cup.

"Whilst the third quarter has a number of timing issues on the cost side, it is uncharacteristic of ABI to miss on margins," said Jefferies analyst Edward Mundy.

The results suggest full-year organic EBITDA growth of about 4-5%, compared with current consensus of 7%, he said.

Graphic: Anheuser-Busch InBev and beer companies - https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/mkt/12/7846/7777/anheuser.png

BRAZIL AND SOUTH KOREA

Beyond these anticipated items, the company also suffered lower sales in Brazil and Korea as it increased prices in weak markets.

In Brazil, AB InBev's second-largest market behind the United States, it saw volume drop by 3% as some competitors sold their beer at a discount to consumers, who have been feeling pressure on their disposable income.

Brazil's economic performance has been erratic, reporting a contraction in the first quarter. The central bank has raised its growth forecast for 2019 to 0.9% but cited a high degree of uncertainty.

In South Korea, where AB InBev is market leader, it hiked prices in April, but rolled them back this month because of an economic slowdown and after rivals failed to follow suit.

South Korea's trade-reliant economy has been among those worst hit by cooling demand as a prolonged U.S.-China tariff war disrupts global supply chains. Its economic growth slowed more than expected in the third quarter.

AB InBev said it still expected strong overall revenue growth in 2019 but challenges in Brazil and South Korea would continue into the fourth quarter, so the company only expected "moderate" growth in core profit.

Economic challenges in other markets, including Argentina and South Africa, also led the company to push more affordable lagers, meaning revenue per litre growth would be slightly behind inflation. It previously forecast above-inflation growth.

AB InBev has generally sought to push drinkers towards more expensive beers. In developing markets, its focus has been to win over customers to beer, and encourage them to buy slightly more expensive brands in larger bottles that keep down prices.

CEO Carlos Brito told Reuters affordable beers did not mean lower margins because the use of local crops and tax advantages would cut costs.

The company also said recent disposals would reduce its net debt-to-EBITDA ratio to below four times at the end of 2019, a year ahead of target, from 4.6 at the end of June.

(Reporting by Philip Blenkinsop; Editing by Edmund Blair and David Holmes)