Friday, June 26, 2015

Cuba’s top rum gets boost from tourism while awaiting U.S. entry

Cuba's top rum gets boost from tourism while awaiting U.S. entry
Sales of Havana Club rum have soared in Cuba as tourism has grown.
BY ANDREW WILLIS
Bloomberg

The Parisian distiller Pernod Ricard SA is toasting the thaw in
U.S.-Cuba relations.

After decades on the U.S. no-go list, Cuba is developing into a hotspot
in the Caribbean, spurring interest by companies ranging from Airbnb
Inc. to Netflix Inc.

Pernod was an early pioneer, joining with Cuba's state distiller
Corporacion Cuba Ron SA to produce Havana Club rum for world
distribution, starting in 1993. Since the U.S. agreed to normalize
relations with Cuba in December, there's been a "double digit" sales
bump in that country, according to the venture's managing director,
Jerome Cottin-Bizonne. And he sees more growth ahead.

"We've definitely seen a positive impact on our sales," Cottin-Bizonne
said in an interview in Havana. "And if you look at the longer-term,
Cuba will be a source of growth because of the influx of tourists and
the development of the economy."

Cuba's government eventually anticipates that 10 million Americans will
visit annually, up from about 1 million this year under newly
liberalized travel rules for U.S. citizens. The country annually
receives about 3 million foreign visitors a year, mostly from Canada and
Western Europe, and arrivals this year are already up 14 percent over
the same period in 2014, according to the government's data.

Havana Club is available in more than 120 markets worldwide, and its 50
percent share within Cuba accounts for about one-fourth of the venture's
4 million cases in annual sales. Now, the Havana Club partnership is
eagerly awaiting an easing of the U.S. trade embargo on Cuban goods that
dates back more than 50 years, according to Cottin-Bizonne.

"We have absolutely no idea when we will be able to sell our rum in the
U.S.," he said. "But we are prepared."

In Cuba, tourists are often eager to try the local drinks, said Yassel
Diaz, 30, a bartender at the Saratoga Hotel in Havana. Cuban rum is a
staple for many of them.

"Many clients are told by previous visitors to try the rum, especially
Havana Club," which goes into daiquiris and mojitos, his most popular
concoctions, Diaz said. The local rum is also "used to make lots of the
new cocktails that the city is famous for."

Pernod's U.S. unit already sells brands including Absolut Vodka, Chivas
Regal whiskey and Seagrams gin. That existing distribution network would
make it easy for Havana Club rum to catch on in the U.S. Plus, after
being unavailable in the U.S. for decades, the drink would benefit from
a "forbidden fruit" effect that may help it quickly gain market share,
Cottin- Bizonne said.

It will face a challenge from Bacardi Ltd., the world's biggest rum
maker, which is already selling a Havana Club- branded rum in the U.S.
that's made in Puerto Rico. Bacardi has won a string of U.S. court
victories against Cubaexport, Pernod Ricard's Cuban partner in the
distribution of the iconic rum

Pernod It has registered the name Havanista for potential use in the
U.S. if the embargo is lifted, while maintaining its claim on the Havana
Club name.

The Havana Club trademark was first used in the 1930s by Cuba's
Arechabala family, whose distilling company was confiscated by Fidel
Castro's revolutionary government. After the trademark owned by the
Arechabalas lapsed, the state-owned Cubaexport registered it in the U.S.
in 1976 and assigned it to the Pernod joint venture in 1993.

"We hope that with the new relationship between Cuba and the U.S. we
will be able to find a solution," Cottin-Bizonne said.

Source: Cuba's top rum gets boost from tourism while awaiting U.S. entry
| Miami Herald Miami Herald -
http://www.miamiherald.com/news/business/article25531777.html

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