Tag: Herzog

  • Juul’s Market Share Still Falling, Vuse Continues Growth

    Juul’s Market Share Still Falling, Vuse Continues Growth

    Credit: Golib Tolibov

    The top-selling Vuse electronic cigarette of R.J. Reynolds Vapor Co. continued to expand the market-share gap with Juul in both monthly and yearly comparisons.

    Vuse’s market share rose from 40.7 percent in the previous report to 41.1 percent, compared with Juul declining from 27 percent to 26.7 percent. For 2022 overall, Vuse’s market share was 35.7 percent, compared with 30.1 percent for Juul.

    No. 3 NJoy slipped from 2.8 percent to 2.7 percent, while Fontem Ventures’ blu eCigs was unchanged at 1.4 percent.

    Juul’s four-week dollar sales in the latest report have dropped from a 50.2 percent increase in the Aug. 10, 2019, report to a 23.7 percent decline in the latest report, according to media reports.

    By comparison, Reynolds’ Vuse was up 32.7 percent in the latest report, while NJoy was up 0.1 percent, blu eCigs down 33.4 percent and Japan Tobacco’s Logic down 15.1 percent.

    As recently as May 2019, Juul held a 74.6 percent U.S. e-cig market share.

    On Sept. 30, Altria Group Inc. cleared the way to re-enter the e-cigarette marketplace after choosing to permanently end its non-compete agreement with Juul Labs.

  • E-Cig Market Gap Between Juul, Vuse Continues to Close

    E-Cig Market Gap Between Juul, Vuse Continues to Close

    The market-share gap between the top-selling U.S. electronic cigarettes has shrunk over the past month with Juul holding about a 4.2-percentage point gap over R.J. Reynolds Vapor Co.’s Vuse.

    The latest Nielsen analysis of convenience store data, covering the four-week period ending Feb. 12, determined Juul was at 37.9percent market share and Vuse at 33.7 percent, according to Winston-Salem Journal.

    There has been a 4- to 4.8-percentage point gap between the two e-cigarettes for the last six Nielsen reports.

    NJoy was at 3.2 percent, up from 3.1 percent in the previous report, while Fontem Ventures’ blu eCigs rose from 2.3 percent to 2.4 percent.

    E-cigarette sales overall have slumped since February 2020, when the Food and Drug Administration implemented its latest round of heightened regulations on the products.

    Those restrictions foremost required manufacturers of cartridge-based e-cigarettes, such as Juul Labs Inc., Reynolds Vapor, NJoy and Fontem, to stop making, distributing and selling “unauthorized flavorings” in February 2021, or risk enforcement actions.

    Goldman Sachs analyst Bonnie Herzog said another factor in the slump is “the impact of e-cigarette market denial orders by the FDA as it continues to work through premarket tobacco applications.”

  • U.S. Vapor Sales Still Slow After Enhanced Regulation

    U.S. Vapor Sales Still Slow After Enhanced Regulation

    Thee market-share gap between the top-selling U.S. electronic cigarettes remained unchanged with both having a slight decline in the latest Nielsen analysis of convenience store data. The report covers the four-week period ending Dec. 18, according to the Winston-Salem Journal.

    Nielsen determined No. 1 Juul was at 37.6 percent, down from 38.2 percent in the previous report.

    Meanwhile, the Vuse brand of R.J. Reynolds Vapor Co. had a 33.5 percent market share, down from 34 percent in the previous report. NJoy was at 3 percent, unchanged from the previous report, while Fontem Ventures’ blu eCigs was at 2.3 percent, down from 2.4 percent.

    Overall, sales of electronic cigarettes were up 4.8 percent year over year for the latest four-week period, boosted by recent price hikes. Still, e-cigarette sales overall have slumped since February 2020, when the Food and Drug Administration implemented its latest round of heightened regulations on the products.

    Those restrictions foremost required manufacturers of cartridge-based e-cigarettes, such as Juul Labs Inc., Reynolds Vapor, NJoy and Fontem, to stop making, distributing and selling “unauthorized flavorings” in February 2021, or risk enforcement actions.

    Goldman Sachs analyst Bonnie Herzog said another factor in the slump is “the impact of e-cigarette market denial orders by the FDA as it continues to work through premarket tobacco applications.”

  • E-Cigarette Sales Slumping Since Regulatory Action

    E-Cigarette Sales Slumping Since Regulatory Action

    For the last 10 months, convenience store e-cigarette sales have been slumping. According to Nielsen data, e-cigarettes sales are down 3.5 percent for the four-week period ending Dec. 25. The sector, mostly consisting of convenience stores since Nielsen doesn’t track vape shop sales, has been failing since the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) implemented its latest round of heightened regulations on the products on Feb. 6.

    vape shop 2
    Credit: Timothy S. Donahue

    Overall e-cigarette sales-volume growth has declined steadily since Nielsen’s Aug. 10, 2019, report, when it was up 60.2 percent year over year, according to a story in the Winston-Salem Journal. The latest FDA restrictions on the sector debuted Feb. 6. Those restrictions foremost required manufacturers of cartridge-based e-cigarettes to stop making, distributing and selling “unauthorized flavorings” by Feb. 6, or risk enforcement actions.

    Top-selling Juul’s four-week dollar sales have dropped from a 50.2 percent increase in the Aug. 10, 2019, report to a 15.6 percent decline for the latest report. By comparison, Reynolds’ Vuse was up 87.3 percent in the latest report and NJoy down 31.5 percent.

    Juul’s market share dropped from 54.3% in the previous report to 53.8 percent. It was at 55.1 percent a year ago. Vuse’s market share slipped from 28.5 percent to 28.1 percent, while No. 3 NJoy was unchanged at 5 percent, and Fontem Ventures’ blu eCigs was unchanged at 3.6 percent.

    Goldman Sachs analyst Bonnie Herzog has cautioned in her monthly reports in recent months that there has been increasing consumer demand for lower-priced traditional cigarettes during the pandemic.

    Herzog referred to the trend as “downtrading” from many top brands. That trend could be offset somewhat by the scheduled $600 federal stimulus payment to most Americans, which could be released as early as this week,

    Cowen & Co. analyst Vivian Azer also says consumer downtrading in traditional cigarettes “remains a central theme in the U.S.

    FiscalNote Markets managing director Stefanie Miller said that the Food and Drug Administration under a Biden administration “is likely to begin working anew on nicotine cap regulations for cigarettes.”

    “Because of likely inaction in Congress, we now expect the Biden administration to reopen stalled menthol/flavor regulations as well.”

    The $908 billion federal stimulus package contains an element that affects the distribution of electronic-cigarette products, according to tobacco analysts. The Preventing Online Sales of E-Cigarettes to Children Act prohibits the U.S. Postal Service from delivering packages containing e-cigarettes. The bill also subjects e-cigarettes to other rules that currently govern online cigarette sales. The prohibition could go into effect as soon as 120 days.

    “We see this policy as mainly advancing the trend we’re already seeing in the market — which is that the large, well-capitalized manufacturers will be poised to pay the costs to be in compliance with the new more burdensome policies,” Miller wrote. “Meanwhile, smaller manufacturers and retailers likely fall short and will be forced to exit the market.”

  • Combustible Cigarette Sales Outperform Vapor During Pandemic

    Combustible Cigarette Sales Outperform Vapor During Pandemic

    Vapor sales are slumping during the Covid-19 crisis, while combustible cigarette sales continue to perform better than expected, according to two industry analysts.

    Overall sales volume for traditional cigarettes was down just 0.2 percent for the four-week period that ended July 11, according to the latest Nielsen survey of convenience stores.

    By comparison, the sales volume was down 7.2 percent in the four-week period that ended in Aug. 10, 2019, writes Richard Craver in an article for the Winston-Salem Journal.

    Meanwhile, sales of electronic cigarettes — down 13.2 percent for the four-week period — have continued to slump five months after the Food and Drug Administration implemented its latest round of heightened regulations on the products.

    The FDA regulations have depressed the demand for closed-pod cartridges that provide the nicotine, with No. 2-selling Vuse of R.J. Reynolds Vapor Co. being the lone exception, according to the article.

    The ability of traditional cigarette to flatten its sales decline year-over-year represents “a very dramatic change in the market and coincides with the concerted attacks on vaping over the past year,” said David Sweanor, an adjunct law professor at the University of Ottawa and the author of several e-cigarette studies. “It is deeply ironic that the credit for the recovery of the cigarette business from a near-death experience a little over a year ago can be credited to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Michael Bloomberg and the others who pushed an abstinence-only agenda on nicotine. By undermining the low risk alternatives to cigarettes they protected the cigarette business.”

    The biggest factor in the most recent report was the list price hike by the major three U.S. tobacco manufacturers in June.

    Goldman Sachs analyst Bonnie Herzog reported that Philip Morris USA raised its list price by 11 cents a pack for Marlboro, including Marlboro HeatSticks, and eight other brands. It is typical that R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co. and ITG Brands LLC raise their prices by a similar amount.

    The list price is what wholesalers pay manufacturers for their products. The increase typically is passed on to customers at retail, the article states. The manufacturers also raised by 8 cents a pack the list prices of their traditional cigarettes on Feb. 23.

    During 2019, the manufacturers raised their prices by 9 cents to 11 cents a pack in April, 6 cents in June and 8 cents in October. Traditional cigarettes had $60.05 billion in sales at convenience stores over the past 52 weeks, representing 80 percent of all U.S. tobacco sales, according to the Nielsen report.

    Moist snuff and chewing tobacco were at $7.51 billion and 10 percent, while electronic cigarettes were at $3.8 billion and 5 percent, and cigars at $3.59 billion and 5 percent.

    Overall e-cigarette sales-volume growth has declined steadily since Nielsen’s Aug. 10, 2019, report, when it was up 60.2 percent year over year.

    The latest FDA restrictions on the sector debuted Feb. 6. The FDA raised the legal smoking age from 18 to 21 on Dec. 20. Those restrictions foremost required manufacturers of cartridge-based e-cigarettes, such as Juul Labs Inc., R.J. Reynolds Vapor Co., NJoy and Fontem Ventures, to stop making, distributing and selling “unauthorized flavorings” by Feb. 6, or risk enforcement actions.

    The menthol and tobacco flavors still allowed for cartridge e-cigarette flavorings are the same as those that are legal in traditional cigarettes, the article states.

    Juul’s four-week dollar sales have dropped from a 50.2 percent increase in the Aug. 10, 2019, report to a 31.7 percent decline for the latest report. By comparison, Reynolds’ Vuse was up 62.9 percent in the latest report and NJoy down 14.2 percent.

    Juul has a 57.6% market share, down from 58.9 percent in the previous report. Vuse is at 22 percent, up from 20.4 percent, while NJoy at 5 percent, down from 11.3 percent, and Fontem Ventures’ blu eCigs at 2.7 percent, down from 3 percent.

    Herzog said that NJoy “refutes Nielsen’s data and methodology,” according to the article.