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China Examines Official Spending on Luxury Alcohol

Source: Google.

This material belongs to: Bloomberg.

China’s disciplinary watchdogs are examining official spending on luxury alcohol as Xi Jinping steps up an anti-corruption campaign, just as premium liquor makers are regaining momentum after an earlier crackdown.

The Communist Party is asking local cadres to identify all the illegal spending on luxury liquor from January to August, including how much officials have spent and the names of those who attended banquets that included luxury alcohol, according to notices published on government websites.

Sales of China’s premium liquor segment were hit hard after 2012, when Xi’s signature anti-corruption campaign focused on officials’ lavish spending on entertaining. However, the impact of the latest push may not be significant, as makers of the most popular luxury brands are seeing a surge in consumption in the mass market and the economy is showing signs of strength.

“The demand for premium liquor is very strong now in China, mainly from family and friend gatherings, and normal business needs,” said Qi He, a Shanghai-based fund manager at Huatai Pinebridge Fund Management Co. “The sales contribution from government consumption has reduced much from more than 50 percent years ago, to less than 20 percent now in China.”

Kweichow Moutai Co., the most valuable distiller in the world with a market value of about $90 billion, last month reported first-half profit climbed 28 percent as Chinese consumers spend more on premium products.

Liquor makers led gains in consumer stocks on Wednesday, helping push a benchmark tracking the industry to a record high, amid signs of broad-based retail strength and economic buoyancy. Data released on Wednesday showed China’s consumer prices strengthened 1.4 percent in July from a year ago, while retail sales jumped 11 percent in June, the most since December 2015.

Kweichow Moutai rose 1.7 percent to a record, and Wuliangye Yibin Co. advanced 1.5 percent, touching an intraday high. Shanxi Xinghuacun Fen Wine Factory Co. shares increased 5.5 percent to the highest close since its 1994 listing; JiuGui Liquor Co. climbed 6.9 percent.

The government’s campaign comes as the party prepares for its once-in-five-year leadership reshuffle, in which as many as 11 of the 25 members of the ruling Politburo could be replaced.