
Diageo to launch new bourbons, doesn't need beam inc.
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AP Alcoholic drinks maker Diageo PLC (DGE.L) does not need to buy rival Beam Inc (BEAM.N), its chief executive officer said on Tuesday, since it is expanding its existing whiskeys and
launching new ones. Diageo has long been seen as a potential buyer of newly independent Beam, since Beam's array of bourbon whiskies would complement Diageo's two dozen Scotch
brands, which include Johnnie Walker, J&B and Talisker. "We don't need to" buy Beam, Menezes told reporters following a meeting with investors, referring to the maker of
Jim Beam, Maker's Mark and Knob Creek. "Fundamentally our position in total North American whiskey is strong," he said. Diageo already has 23 percent of the North American
whiskey market, it says, with its Bulleit Bourbon, Crown Royal, George Dickel and 7 Crown, making it tied for No. 1 with Jack Daniels maker Brown Forman (BFb.N). (_Read more_: 10 things you
didn't know about Kentucky & bourbon) For the so-called ultra-premium end of the bourbon market, Diageo plans to launch two new brands, Orphan Barrel and Blade & Bow. Orphan
Barrel will be sold in very limited quantities, for $75 to $125 per bottle, and should go on the market during the first quarter of 2014, Menezes said. Blade & Bow will come out later in
the year. Bulleit, Diageo's only bourbon, is doubling every year, Menezes said, and the company plans to expand its distribution to new countries. "We'll probably do 600,000
cases this year, and we can get to a million cases," he said. Whereas Scotch must be made in Scotland, bourbon whiskey must be made in the United States. STILL THIRSTY Diageo has made
eight acquisitions in emerging markets over the past three years, spending about 3 billion pounds to gain access to growing middle classes who are drinking more alcohol. Its purchases
include a maker of raki in Turkey, cachaca in Brazil and beers in Ethiopia and Tanzania. "There are a few places we'd still like to have a presence and we'll look at
opportunities which come along," Menezes said. "If we get more beer assets coming up in Africa, we'd definitely look at them." Diageo also owns Guinness and Red Stripe
beers. (_Read more_: Rarebourbon stolen from Kentucky distillery) Menezes declined to comment on the ongoing investigation by Britain's competition regulator into the Whyte & Mackay
whisky brand, which is owned by the Indian company United Spirits, of which Diageo acquired a 25 percent stake. "Whatever the outcome, the core asset of what we are buying in USL, we
are still very bullish about," Menezes said. Menezes, of Indian origin, took the reins at the world's top spirits maker in July. This was his first meeting with investors as CEO.
Like other consumer goods companies, Diageo has experienced a softening in emerging markets like China and Brazil. Still, Menezes stood by the company's forecast for 6 percent overall
revenue growth, but stressed that the goal was for the medium term, not the near term. —_By Reuters_