And that resulted in the National Beer Wholesalers Association‘s Beer Purchasers Index rising to 70.5 in July from 64.7 a year earlier.
The “at-risk inventory” index for total beer (inventory at risk of going out of code in the next 30 days) fell to another all-time low reading of 20 in July 2020 from 45 in July 2019.
NBWA Chief Economist Lester Jones explained, “Beer distributors continue to take an aggressive stance in their ordering to minimize out-of-stocks in the marketplace during the hot summer months of 2020.”
To be sure, the Beer Purchasers Index was lower in July than it had been in June, when it reached an all-time high of 81 as wholesalers move to refill warehouses depleted by the coronavirus.
Here’s how the various segments stack up:
- The FMB/seltzer segment continues to produce the highest BPI readings. The FMB/seltzer index recorded its second consecutive month at 94 for July 2020 and is above the July 2019 reading of 81.
- The index for imports at 59 remains in expansion territory for July 2020 but below the July 2019 reading of 65. The higher BPI for imports follows several months of Mexico’s mandatory closures of brewing for April and May.
- The craft index for July at 41 fell below the 50 break-even mark and significantly below the 59 reading reported in July 2019.
- Across the domestic beer segments, premium lights, regulars and below premiums all continue to post historically high readings in July and continue a 4-month streak posting higher readings than craft and imports. Premium lights at 71 remain significantly elevated compared to the 42 mark for July 2019. Premium regular segment posted a 58 reading in July 2020 relative to 37 in July 2019. The below premium segment at 57 was also significantly higher than the July 2019 reading of 34.
- The cider segment remains in contraction territory, falling to 37 in July 2020 from 42 at the same time last year.
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