Alcoholic beverage sales shot up 55% in the third week of March compared to the same time a year ago, according to Nielsen. That’s when several states, including New York, ordered people to “shelter in place.” Those
social distancing guidelines limited people from hanging out and restaurants and bars were ordered to close. However, many stores selling alcohol — including liquor outlets or grocery stores — stayed open.
Sales of beer, which has been
gradually falling out favor with the American drinker, also soared. Nielsen said that larger packs of 24 or 30 both grew roughly 90% for the week compared to a year ago as people were preparing to limit their outside errands.
The week ending on
March 21 will probably be the peak for alcohol sales, predicted Danelle Kosmal, vice president of Nielsen’s Beverage Alcohol Practice Area. Subsequent weeks will be a “better indicator of the new normal in how consumers are responding to the crisis,” as people consume the alcohol they’ve stockpiled
and as more Americans lose their jobs.
Sales could fall this month if there’s a deeper recession and people shift their spending to essentials like food, noted Laurent Grandet, an analyst at Guggenheim. He expects sales to remain strong for cheaper beer like Budweiser but
warns that the craft beer industry will be hurt. Around 70% of its sales come from the brewer’s taprooms or at bars, which are both currently closed in much of the US, he said.
“It’s a perfect storm for the craft beer business,” he told CNN Business. He said they will further be harmed since retailers pick larger brands to stock their shelves because they’re easier to get.
Even when social distancing rules are eased and the country gets back to something resembling normalcy, the recovery in alcohol sales won’t be immediate. People might still be wary of rushing back to bars or restaurants, and Grandet predicts 20% won’t reopen. It will also take time for the supply chain to ramp up production again.