The Artisanal Spirits Company (ASC) is the owner of The Scotch Malt Whisky Society, which curates unique ultra-premium single cask Scotch malt whiskies and other spirits, with a focus on distinct flavour profiles. Sales are made exclusively to its global subscription-paying members and are mostly made direct to consumer (D2C), namely its own online websites and venues, and with remaining sales via partner bars around the world. ASC has a loyal customer base and a significant inventory of maturing whiskies. Future growth opportunities include continued growth of its membership and geographic and virtual presence, as well as moves into adjacent product markets such as blended whiskies, with the potential to improve profitability.
The Artisanal Spirits Company |
The spirit to grow
Beverages |
Spotlight – IPO report
19 May 2021 |
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Business description
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The Artisanal Spirits Company (ASC) is the owner of The Scotch Malt Whisky Society, which curates unique ultra-premium single cask Scotch malt whiskies and other spirits, with a focus on distinct flavour profiles. Sales are made exclusively to its global subscription-paying members and are mostly made direct to consumer (D2C), namely its own online websites and venues, with remaining sales via partner bars around the world. ASC has a loyal customer base and a significant inventory of maturing whiskies. Future growth opportunities include continued growth of its membership and geographic and virtual presence, as well as moves into adjacent product markets such as blended whiskies, with the potential to improve profitability.
Historical financials
Source: Company data |
Unique, limited edition luxury
The structural tailwinds of increasing global wealth and aspiration are expected to continue to drive growth for ultra-premium spirits at a higher rate than lower-priced spirits. ASC taps into this demand by creating a constant stream of limited edition products that have individual characters, using its own skills in the maturation process. The products are marketed exclusively to a growing and loyal global membership, by proactively building ‘anticipation’ ahead of the regular new launches. With an average lifetime customer value of £932 versus low customer acquisition costs (eg £65 in the UK), management’s focus is to grow the membership base, revenue and profitability while investing in maturing inventory, which is currently equivalent to 26x the volume sold in FY20.
Focus on profitable revenue growth
Management’s strategy to grow revenue and EBITDA has four key pillars: developing the membership base and geographic expansion; enhancing the e-commerce channels; improving margins by buying younger spirits, increasing the proportion of higher-value spirits and optimising the supply chain; and developing new and complementary brands and platforms.
Recent news flow and upcoming catalysts
In Q121, ASC’s total revenue grew by 20% y-o-y to £3.4m, driven by strong international growth of 39% to £2.5m, partially offset by a 10% decline in UK revenue to £1.0m. Strength in the UK’s online business, which grew by 56% to £0.8m, was not enough to offset the COVID-19 related decline of two-thirds to £0.2m for UK venues and events. The Q121 performance would have been better in the absence of fulfilment delays on sales to the EU following Brexit on 31 December 2020, which led to just one-third of orders that were placed being booked as revenue during the period.
With easier comparatives for a good part of the remainder of FY21 due to COVID-19 related restrictions during 2020, notably for the UK venues and events, and the temporary suspension of US tariffs on Scotch whisky (announced in March 2021) which is expected to provide a short-term (at least) boost to US demand, management is optimistic about ASC’s prospects for FY21.
ASC’s net debt at the end of March 2021 was £14.6m excluding IFRS 16 liabilities, a slight increase versus the December 2020 net debt of £13.7m.
Market overview
Management estimates its global addressable market was worth $4.2bn in 2019. The global addressable market is defined as Scotch whiskies (including primary malt, blended and grain Scotch) in price brands that are ultra-premium (see Exhibit 9) and above, and excludes sales made through duty-free channels. ASC does not currently offer blended Scotch whiskies but will on the launch of JGT in mid-2021.
Exhibit 8: Global addressable market
Market |
Global addressable market ($m) 2019 |
Global addressable market growth 2010–19 |
SMWS whisky sales ($m) 2020 |
SMWS market share |
United States |
1,502 |
323% |
3.1 |
0.2% |
Taiwan |
424 |
116% |
0.3 |
0.1% |
China |
412 |
120% |
3.8 |
0.9% |
United Kingdom |
327 |
157% |
3.7 |
1.1% |
Germany |
156 |
239% |
0.9 |
0.6% |
Japan |
147 |
158% |
0.9 |
0.6% |
Australia |
140 |
354% |
0.7 |
0.5% |
France |
113 |
81% |
0.2 |
0.2% |
Top eight markets |
3,222 |
203% |
13.5 |
0.4% |
Other current markets |
604 |
206% |
2.0 |
0.3% |
Top current markets |
3,826 |
204% |
15.4 |
0.4% |
Markets within reach |
397 |
190% |
0.0 |
0.0% |
Total addressable market |
4,222 |
202% |
15.4 |
0.4% |
Source: Management analysis of The International Wines and Spirits Record (IWSR) data
In the individual markets, ASC’s market shares are low and globally its market share is c 0.4%.
The recognised price bands for the spirits industry and their respective sizes and historic growth rates are as follows:
Exhibit 9: Global Scotch whisky market 2019
Price band |
£ per 70cl bottle |
Market size ($bn) |
CAGR 2010–19 |
Prestige-plus |
Over 225.00 |
0.7 |
27% |
Prestige |
75.00–224.99 |
1.1 |
11% |
Ultra-premium |
35.00–74.99 |
3.8 |
9% |
Super-premium |
28.75–34.99 |
3.2 |
9% |
Premium |
22.50–28.74 |
5.0 |
1% |
Standard (and below) |
Up to 22.49 |
12.9 |
2% |
Total |
26.7 |
4% |
Source: IWSR
At $5.5bn in 2019, the ultra-premium and above price bands (ie more than £35 per 70cl bottle) represented c 21% of the global Scotch market having demonstrated a nine-year CAGR of 10% since 2010, which was greater than the average annual growth rate for the total Scotch market of 4% over the same period. IWSR (Source: ASC company data) forecasts that the ultra-premium market will represent 13% of the total market by 2024 (ie its growth rate will continue to exceed that of the total market). All of SMWS’s sales are in the ultra-premium and above price points, of which 96.9% of ASC’s spirit sales are single cask Scotch malt whisky. Management is confident that ASC’s future growth rate will exceed market growth given its focus on innovation and new flavours and entering new geographies while taking market share in existing countries.
The structural growth drivers for the spirits markets include increasing global wealth, which enables a larger customer base to be able to afford higher-priced products; aspiration amongst the population, which leads to more people seeking products with more heritage, prestige and authenticity (ie ‘branded’ products at higher price points); innovation by the spirits makers; and global distribution including the rapid growth of e-commerce due to higher internet and mobile penetration along with the consumer’s desire for more convenience.
ASC’s primary competitors for share of wallet are the other distillers including Diageo and Pernod Ricard, which are significantly different in scale and have broader product mixes in different price bands.
With respect to online distribution, competitors include whisky membership clubs and cask specialists, online whisky or spirits retailers, or general online retailers. Management believes that its key competitive advantages versus these various competitors include technical expertise in maturation, the wide distiller supplier network, scale and global reach of its established membership.
Financials
ASC has generated strong revenue growth as it has grown the membership base, increased geographic coverage and enhanced new revenue streams outside membership and whisky sales. It has reported consistent operating losses primarily due to investment in growing the membership base as well as some one-off costs including exceptional costs and tariff increases, mainly in FY19 and FY20. Excluding the one-off costs, ASC was profitable at the adjusted EBITDA level in both FY19 and FY20.
Income statement
Revenue grew at a CAGR of c 11% between from FY18–FY20, including growth of c 21% in FY19 and c 3% in FY20 due to the effects of COVID-19, predominantly in the UK. Between FY18 and FY20 the membership base has grown from 24,300 to 28,300, a CAGR of 8%, implying growth in average revenue per member. ASC’s reported revenue is net of VAT but includes excise duty, which may distort comparability with numbers for other distillers that report revenue gross and net of excise duties.
Exhibit 11: Summary income statement
Year end 31 December (£m) |
FY18 |
FY19 |
FY20 |
Revenue |
12.148 |
14.645 |
15.026 |
Cost of goods sold (COGS) |
(4.891) |
(6.112) |
(6.222) |
US tariff increases |
0.000 |
(0.149) |
(0.658) |
Adjusted gross profit |
7.257 |
8.682 |
9.462 |
Adjusted gross margin (%) |
59.7% |
59.3% |
63.0% |
Reported gross profit |
7.257 |
8.533 |
8.804 |
Reported gross margin (%) |
59.7% |
58.3% |
58.6% |
Selling and distribution expenses |
(2.594) |
(3.178) |
(2.979) |
% of sales |
(21.4%) |
(21.7%) |
(19.8%) |
Administrative expenses |
(5.196) |
(5.927) |
(6.938) |
% of sales |
(42.8%) |
(40.5%) |
(46.2%) |
Other income |
0.410 |
||
Adjusted EBITDA |
(0.019) |
0.284 |
1.298 |
Margin (%) |
(0.2%) |
1.9% |
8.6% |
Reported EBITDA |
(0.019) |
0.115 |
0.572 |
Margin (%) |
(0.2%) |
0.8% |
3.8% |
Operating profit before exceptionals |
(0.483) |
(0.572) |
(0.311) |
Exceptionals |
(0.050) |
0.000 |
(0.392) |
Reported operating profit |
(0.533) |
(0.572) |
(0.703) |
Finance costs |
(0.268) |
(0.439) |
(0.499) |
Reported PBT |
(0.801) |
(1.011) |
(1.202) |
Tax |
(0.102) |
(0.330) |
(0.418) |
Reported PAT |
(0.903) |
(1.341) |
(1.620) |
Minorities |
(0.137) |
(0.236) |
(0.068) |
Attributable profit |
(1.040) |
(1.577) |
(1.688) |
Source: Company data
Management estimates that it currently holds in stock (see cash flow and balance sheet section below) a mix of spirits to fulfil 95% of all future bottlings that would build to revenue of £40m in 2026, cumulative growth of 166% from FY20’s revenue of £15.0m, a CAGR of c 18% pa.
Exhibit 12: Sources of revenue
£m |
FY18 |
FY19 |
FY20 |
Sale of whisky |
7.947 |
10.219 |
12.047 |
Membership income |
1.157 |
1.273 |
1.523 |
Sale of other spirits |
0.344 |
0.284 |
0.384 |
Member rooms |
1.245 |
1.704 |
0.552 |
Events and tastings |
1.193 |
0.769 |
0.340 |
Other |
0.262 |
0.396 |
0.180 |
Total |
12.148 |
14.645 |
15.026 |
Source: Company data
In FY20, whisky represented 80% of group revenue, and its importance to the group has increased, partially exaggerated by the effects of COVID-19 on certain revenue streams in FY20.
ASC’s adjusted gross margin, namely before US tariff increases, has grown from 59.7% in FY18 to 63.0% in FY20. The reported gross margin has been broadly stable, ranging between 58.3% in FY19 to 59.7% in FY18. The gross margin is mainly influenced by sales mix (higher valued products have a higher gross margin) and the geographic location of its customers. In October 2019, the United States imposed a 25% tariff on the import of single malt Scotch whisky into the country, which the Scotch Whisky Association estimates has led to cumulative lost exports for the whole industry of £500m. In March 2021 the temporary suspension (for four months) of the tariffs was announced, during which time the United States and the UK would seek to reach a long-term settlement. The tariffs, which were absorbed by ASC mainly as increased COGS, negatively affected ASC’s gross profit by £0.1m in FY19 and a further £0.7m in FY20.
ASC’s COGS includes a charge for inventories of £3.7m in FY18, £4.2m in FY19 and £4.7m in FY20, which have equated to c 69–76% of total COGS over this period and therefore represented 31.5% of sales in FY20. This implies a product gross margin for FY18–FY20 of 69.6%, 71.3% and 68.5% respectively, including the recent negative effects of the US tariffs.
ASC’s gross margin compares favourably to the larger quoted beverage companies, albeit they have a more diverse product mix at wider price points (including less than ultra-premium), methods of distribution (on-trade/off-trade versus D2C), infrastructure, scale and geographic presence. In the year ended June 2020, Diageo’s gross profit of £7,098m on gross sales (sales including excise duties) of £17,697m equated to a gross margin of 40.1%. From this, Diageo spent £1,841m (10.4% of gross sales) on ‘marketing’, and reported a clean operating profit of £3,494m (19.7% of gross sales). Diageo’s costs included a charge for raw materials and consumables of £2,842m, equivalent to 16% of gross sales.
ASC has consistently reported an operating loss mainly due to its high investment in future growth, which has been accentuated by the decision to absorb the US tariff increases in FY19 and FY20, and exceptional costs for enterprise resource planning (ERP) and reviewing fund-raising options in FY20. Selling and distribution expenses reduced relative to revenue in FY20 due to geographic mix and lower promotions for events due to COVID-19 closures. Excluding the one-off costs (tariffs and exceptionals), adjusted EBITDA was positive in FY19 and FY20.
Other income in FY20 included primarily government grants, and financial support from governments due to COVID-19.
As the key strategy is to invest in order to grow the number of global members, management does not intend to distribute a dividend in the near term.
Cash flow and balance sheet
ASC has generated positive cash flow from operations (ie prior to tax and interest payments) and after including the costs of purchasing replacement inventory in each of the last three financial years. When the additional investment in growing inventory, and cash tax and interest payments are deducted, cash flow from operating activities and free cash flow have been negative for FY18–FY20. However, relative to revenue, the trends in free cash consumption have improved. The negative free cash flow has been more than funded by new debt of c £6m pa in both FY18 and FY19, and c £1m of new equity (rights issue to existing shareholders) in FY20, leading to an improvement in the year end cash position from FY18 to FY20.
Exhibit 13: Summary cash flow
£m |
FY18 |
FY19 |
FY20 |
Operating activities |
(4.581) |
(3.385) |
(1.019) |
- Profit after tax |
(0.903) |
(1.341) |
(1.620) |
- Depreciation and amortisation |
0.495 |
0.753 |
0.966 |
- Working capital |
(4.232) |
(2.986) |
(0.762) |
o/w Inventories |
(4.466) |
(4.138) |
(0.698) |
- Cash from operations |
(4.216) |
(2.777) |
(0.215) |
- Taxes paid |
(0.099) |
(0.169) |
(0.327) |
- Interest paid |
(0.266) |
(0.439) |
(0.477) |
Investing activities |
(1.178) |
(1.822) |
(1.077) |
- Investment in fixed and intangible assets |
(0.948) |
(1.674) |
(1.097) |
Free cash flow |
(5.529) |
(5.059) |
(2.116) |
Financing activities |
5.875 |
5.734 |
2.703 |
- Asset backed lending draw down |
1.751 |
5.369 |
1.980 |
- Net loans |
4.124 |
0.626 |
0.111 |
- Dividends |
0.000 |
(0.124) |
(0.254) |
- Share issue |
0.000 |
0.000 |
0.991 |
Change in cash |
0.116 |
0.527 |
0.607 |
Cash at start |
0.933 |
1.060 |
1.536 |
Cash at end |
1.060 |
1.536 |
2.176 |
Net debt at end (excl IFRS 16 liabilities) |
10.758 |
12.237 |
13.688 |
Net debt at end (incl IFRS 16 liabilities) |
10.758 |
13.929 |
15.255 |
Relative to revenue: |
|||
Operating cash flow |
(38%) |
(23%) |
(7%) |
Investing cash flow |
(10%) |
(12%) |
(7%) |
Free cash flow |
(46%) |
(35%) |
(14%) |
Source: Company data
Typically, investment in cask stock is relatively high for distillers as they continue to lay down inventory for the multi-year maturation process, but the annual increase in value is not realised until sold as inventory on the balance sheet is valued at the lower of cost and net realisable value. In FY18 and FY19 the investment in growing inventory represented an additional cash investment of £4.1–4.2m pa, but a more modest £0.7m in FY20 while investment was paused due to COVID-19. Movements in trade debtors and trade creditors at year end can be volatile due to the phasing of the purchase of spirits and shipments. From a non-current asset perspective, the investment in fixed and intangible assets has been typically c 7–8% of revenue due to the investment in casks, and was higher at c 11% of revenue in FY19 due to the refurbishment and opening of the Glasgow venue in March 2020.
Exhibit 14: Summary balance sheet
Year end 31 December (£m) |
FY18 |
FY19 |
FY20 |
Non-current assets |
5.799 |
8.704 |
8.775 |
- Property, plant and equipment |
2.896 |
5.700 |
5.785 |
- Intangibles |
2.673 |
2.613 |
2.599 |
Current assets |
19.726 |
25.068 |
25.866 |
- Inventories |
16.815 |
20.953 |
21.651 |
- Receivables |
1.851 |
2.547 |
1.956 |
- Cash |
1.060 |
1.536 |
2.176 |
Current liabilities |
(13.710) |
(17.136) |
(18.591) |
- Payables |
(1.893) |
(3.622) |
(3.157) |
- Financial liabilities |
(7.490) |
(12.940) |
(14.963) |
Non-current liabilities |
(0.703) |
(2.884) |
(3.057) |
- Financial liabilities |
(0.288) |
(0.833) |
(0.901) |
Net assets |
11.112 |
13.752 |
12.993 |
Minorities |
0.237 |
0.349 |
0.163 |
Shareholders' equity |
10.875 |
13.403 |
12.944 |
Source: Company data
ASC has a well-capitalised balance sheet with the primary asset being its inventory, which includes the maturing cask whisky and bottled stock of £21.7m at the end of FY20, equivalent to c 63% of total assets of £34.6m. The inventory includes spirit in cask of £18.7m and the balance of £2.9m is bottled stock and dry goods such as bottles, labels and corks. The stock position is equivalent to over 14,000 casks of whisky, which represents c 4.3m standard 70cl bottles or approximately 26x the volume sold during FY20. Management estimates that this stock provides the potential to produce over 14,000 new products lines and that using the average SMWS selling price per bottle of £76 in FY20, the implied retail value of the current spirit stock is c £330m.
Within non-current assets, property, plant and equipment of £5.8m includes £1.9m of casks, from which a portion of the annual depreciation charge is typically capitalised as a cost of stock, while the remainder is charged to the income statement. The main intangible assets include goodwill of £1.3m and trademarks of £0.7m. Trade debtor days have been relative stable at 42–49 days for the last three financial years.
Total financial liabilities of £15.9m (£15.0m current and £0.9m long term) at the end of FY20 included an asset-based lending facility of £14.8m, which was repaid in full in January 2021 from a new three-year £18.5m revolving credit facility (RCF). The asset-based lending facility was secured by a bond and floating charge over ASC’s assets, but now the RCF is secured over the inventory. Total financial liabilities have increased as the business has grown, funding the investment in cask inventory. The increase in total financial liabilities has led to a growing net debt position (excluding IFRS 16 liabilities) from £10.8m at the end of FY18 to £13.7m at the end of FY20. IFRS 16 lease liabilities were £1.6m at the end of FY20.
Valuation
ASC does not have any directly comparable quoted peers that have control over the maturation process, ‘branding’ of their products, and distribute the majority of their products globally D2C online. The most valid comparators are the quoted spirits beverage companies given the control and provenance of their products, albeit their scale, product mix and infrastructure are very different to ASC. The online retailers that distribute the products of others are not useful comparators given the lack of control over the production of the final products offered.
ASC reports an operating loss at the reported level, and the different disclosure with respect to revenue (some peers report gross of excise duties and others net of excise duties) make EV/sales multiples not directly comparable. EV/gross profit should be comparable with that of peers.
Exhibit 15: Peer valuations
Company |
Year end |
Share price (local) |
Currency |
Market cap (local m) |
EV (local m) |
Sales growth |
EBIT margin |
EV/sales (x) |
EV/gross profit (x) |
EV/EBIT (x) |
||
FY1 |
FY0 |
FY1 |
FY0 |
FY0 |
FY0 |
FY0 |
||||||
Diageo PLC |
30/06/2021 |
3,304 |
£ |
77,320 |
91,299 |
6 |
(9) |
32.0 |
29.7 |
7.8 |
12.9 |
26.1 |
Pernod Ricard SA |
30/06/2021 |
174 |
€ |
45,441 |
53,782 |
2 |
(8) |
28.1 |
26.8 |
6.4 |
10.6 |
23.8 |
Davide Campari Milano NV |
31/12/2021 |
10 |
€ |
11,741 |
12,745 |
8 |
(4) |
22.1 |
18.2 |
7.2 |
12.4 |
39.6 |
Remy Cointreau SA |
31/03/2021 |
165 |
€ |
8,337 |
8,741 |
(0) |
(9) |
24.6 |
20.9 |
8.5 |
N/A |
40.8 |
Distil PLC |
31/03/2021 |
3 |
£ |
14 |
13 |
N/A |
N/A |
N/A |
7.5 |
5.3 |
9.0 |
70.6 |
Average |
4 |
(7) |
26.7 |
20.6 |
7.0 |
11.2 |
40.2 |
Source: Refinitiv, company data. Note: Priced 14 May 2021.
In its last financial year, ASC reported revenue growth versus declines reported by the peers, and in the prior year reported greater growth than the peers, although the different year ends may affect comparability. We highlight that in Q121, ASC reported revenue growth of 20% y-o-y to £3.4m, versus c 3% growth in FY20.
Sensitivities
Below we highlight what we believe are the key sensitivities for ASC:
■
Demand for its products may be affected by changes in consumer tastes between beverage categories and versus other branded spirits. The maturation process takes a significant period of time, during which consumer preferences may change.
■
The alcoholic beverages industry is highly competitive, and ASC has many competitors that have more scale and financial strength.
■
ASC is vulnerable to changes in regulation, excise duties and tariffs that may influence consumer demand for its products and/or the company’s profitability.
■
ASC is responsible for the curation of its products and brands, the IP of which may not be adequately protected in other countries.
■
Brexit may present risks to ASC’s ability to trade freely and its ability to move goods without delay.
■
ASC is reliant on third-party distilleries as a source of supply of the spirits used in its maturation process.
■
ASC is dependent on a small number of key individuals from a technical perspective, albeit they have been loyal employees and are well incentivised.
■
Spirit production can be affected by the quality of grain production which is dependent on weather conditions.
■
In certain geographies ASC is reliant on franchisees, joint ventures, importers and other partners that operate bars.
■
ASC will continue to enter new geographies which will present new execution and foreign currency risks.
■
ASC plans to launch two new brands (JGT and AWS) in adjacent markets, one of which is non-membership, unlike its core business.
■
ASC is reliant on outsourced bottling, storage and distribution.
■
Pandemics such as COVID-19 may affect ASC’s ability to trade normally due to limitations on travel and social distancing.
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Research: Metals & Mining
Monarch Mining Corporation was spun out of Monarch Gold in January 2021, retaining a suite of potentially high-return gold projects in the well-established Abitibi Gold belt in Canada. Its Beaufor asset may start production in FY22, with Croinor in FY24/25. Meanwhile, given the highly prospective locations, ongoing exploration is likely to add to available resources and potentially lead to life extensions. In the future, its McKenzie Break and Swanson assets could add further significant value.
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