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The Deutsch-Casella Joint Venture and [Yellow Tail]® Wines: Trading Up or Trading Down?
In early February 2009, executives from a U.S. wine importer, W. J. Deutsch & Sons (Deutsch), met in White Plains, New York, to try and reach a consensus on how to respond to changes in the marketplace. Wine consumers had begun purchasing less expensive wines, or "trading down," amidst a global recession in 2008-2009, reversing a five-year "trading up" trend. Inventories ballooned in the wine industry supply chain. Some producers and importers, unable to sell stocks, went into default. After an initial failure in the late 1990s to create an import brand with Casella Wines in Australia, Deutsch found success with the [ yellow tail ] brand - the number one Australian wine export and U.S. import from 2003-2008. John Casella, Managing Director of Casella Wines, suggested repositioning the [ yellow tail ] brand, priced at $4.99 - $5.99 per 750ml bottle, while Deutsch's founder, Bill Deutsch, and his son, Peter (CEO), could not agree on a strategy. -
Sula Vineyards
Rajeev Samant, founder of Sula Vineyards, was a pioneer in the nascent Indian wine industry. After selling off a minority equity stake to private investors in 2005 to raise funds for expansion of his winery, Rajeev in mid 2007 again faced the challenge of deciding whether or not and if so, at what rate to grow Sula to meet forecasted rapid growth in demand for Indian wines. He developed financial projections to present to Sula's board. Rajeev now needed to decide on the appropriate plan to present to his board as well as the anticipated level and sources of funding needed to support this plan. In seeking new funding, Rajeev was mindful of the tradeoffs inherent in new equity financing, which could lead to a further dilution of ownership control, versus new debt financing, which would place additional claims on future cash flows and increase Sula's financial risk.