Tuesday, April 26, 2011

Philip Morris Int'l CFO Waldemer



March's earthquake and tsunami in Japan offered up an opportunity for Marlboro maker Philip Morris International.

Japan Tobacco Inc., the world's No. 3 tobacco maker, suspended shipments of cigarettes within the country because of disruptions in supply. It planned to halt shipments of all tobacco brands, including the popular Camel and Winston, from March 30 to April 10.

That helped brands sold by the world's biggest nongovernment cigarette maker, Philip Morris International Inc. It was able to minimize supply disruptions because all of its cigarettes for sale in Japan are produced outside the country and shipments at ports were being unloaded normally. A small number of its third-party distribution centers were closed because of damage.

The company's ability to keep its supply chain moving allowed it to sell brands like Marlboro cigarettes to customers who normally bought other brands.

Complicating the Japanese market for all tobacco companies is a 40 percent tax hike on cigarettes that went into effect in October last year.

In a conference call with analysts on Thursday regarding Philip Morris International's first-quarter earnings, Chief Financial Officer Hermann Waldemer discussed its business in Japan.

QUESTION: Are you seeing the events in Japan as a potential to grow and sustain market share in the country?

RESPONSE: Japan, of course, in terms of spending overall already before any of that happening was one of our focus markets. ... Our shares are developing very, very nicely. However, really, I think the Japanese situation with the country in trouble will lead to a different average behavior of a consumer. I believe that the retention levels probably will be lower than they would be in another country. Some of them, of course, we will be able to retain, I would think. To what extent, that today is just impossible to say.

Cutting tobacco tax could hurt kids' health



Last year, New Jersey proposed reducing its tax 30 cents, to $2.40 per pack, but hasn’t followed through. And it shouldn’t.

The fiscal concerns aside, tobacco taxes are one of the most effective resources we have in preventing our youth from smoking before the age of 18.

We will pay a high price with more children and teenagers smoking, more lives lost to tobacco and higher tobacco-related health care costs.

The Campaign for Tobacco Free Kids estimates that a 10-cent reduction in the tobacco tax would result in 1,000 new young smokers in New Hampshire. Let’s not let this happen here in New Jersey.

Reducing the tobacco tax sends the wrong message to our youth.

Five Citations Issued During Tobacco Decoy Operation



Pleasanton Police and the Alameda County Public Health Department conducted a decoy operation on Saturday at dozens of businesses throughout the city that sell tobacco products.

Five citations were issued to clerks who sold tobacco products to underage decoys.

Police reported that citations were issued at the following businesses: Vista Bottle Shop on the 6000 block of West Las Positas Boulevard, Beverages and More on the 5700 block of Johnson Drive, Chevron on the 5200 block of Hopyard Road, Union 76 on the 4100 block of First Street, and Shell on the 3700 block of Hopyard Road.

California law bars the sale of tobacco products to minors. There are currently 40 businesses licensed to sell tobacco products in the city, according to police. During the operation 38 businesses were visited and two were not open.

Elderly couple gets 5 pound brick of marijuana in the mail



The package arrived on Wednesday with a return address in Arizona. The elderly couple first thought it was delivered by mistake, since they didn't recognize the name.

When they opened the box, they found a five pound brick of high-grade pot, wrapped in Styrofoam lining.

Police suspect the shipment was just a test by drug smugglers, to see whether they could get the pot past detectors.

Supt. Michael Chitwood with the Upper Darby Police said, "This was a trial run to see if it would be picked up in transit, five pounds they probably have thousands of pounds."

Because the return label turned out fake, federal investigators are now looking into where the drugs were sent from.

2 Very Different Hookah Lounges Open in North Hollywood

The recently opened Rain Forest Cafe in North Hollywood is not just a hookah lounge, it's also a restaurant that serves Mediterranean and Middle Eastern food in an all-you-can eat Brazilian-style buffet manner.

After filling up on the buffet, rounds of meat are brought out to the customers, who may also order and enjoy hookahs right at their table or in the hookah lounge.

The Rain Forest Cafe is an open-air restaurant that has been completely remodeled since the Magnolia Boulevard site was occupied by an establishment called Royal Garden.

"We are all outdoors, 6,000 square feet," said Avo Hakopian, who opened the restaurant on March 26. Because it's outdoors, smoking is not prohibited.

"We're not a smoke-free environment, we're a free-to-smoke environment, since we're all outdoors," Hakopian said. "Yet if a customer requests a non-smoking section, we do offer that, it's not a problem." Although it is open-air, all the seating areas are covered to protect against rain.

There are some interesting touches, including a cave booth, several small pit fires scattered around and a few bunnies, which roam freely. Belly dancers perform every other Saturday.

Hakopian, who is from North Hollywood, previously owned and operated Nick's Hot Wings on Laurel Canyon Boulevard but said he sold the place to invest in the Rain Forest Cafe.

"I've been trying to get this place for like four years," he said. "I used to come with my girlfriend and just say, 'This place has such potential.' And now that I have it, I'm just using my imagination."

You want to smoke the best tobacco for hookah? Than buy Al Fakher tobacco for hookah, for wholesale price

Thursday, April 21, 2011

Reynolds American 1Q net income climbs



Reynolds American Inc.'s first-quarter net income surged as the cigarette maker benefited from strength in its Pall Mall and Camel brands and higher prices.
The nation's second-biggest tobacco company said Thursday it earned $353 million, or 60 cents per share, for the period ended March 31, up from $82 million, or 14 cents per share, a year ago.
Last year's quarter also included 37 cents per share in charges related to settlements with the Canadian government.
Adjusted earnings rose to 59 cents per share from 56 cents per share. The results beat the 58 cents per share that analysts polled by FactSet expected.
Reynolds' first-quarter revenue was flat at $1.99 billion. Wall Street forecast revenue of $1.88 billion.
Reynolds American's larger competitor, Altria Group Inc., parent company of Marlboro maker Philip Morris USA, said Wednesday that raising prices and cutting costs helped its first-quarter net income climb 15 percent. The number of cigarettes it shipped fell 6.4 percent and the top-selling Marlboro brand lost market share.
The number of cigarettes the Winston-Salem, N.C., company sold fell 5.2 percent to 17.2 billion cigarettes during the quarter, compared with its estimate of a 3.4 percent decline for the whole industry. First-quarter cigarette market share was stable at 27.9 percent.
Reynolds American sold 16 percent more of its Pall Mall cigarettes during the quarter and its share of the U.S. market grew 2 points to 8.5 percent. The company continues to promote the brand as a longer-lasting and more affordable cigarette as smokers weather the weak economy and high unemployment, and it says half the people who try the brand continue using it. It is the country's third-biggest cigarette brand.
The number of Camel cigarettes it sold remained stable at 4.7 billion cigarettes, while the brand's U.S. market share grew 0.7 points to 7.8 percent for the quarter.
The company's financial performance "reflects R.J. Reynolds' successful focus on its powerful growth brands, Camel and Pall Mall, as part of a defined brand-portfolio strategy," CEO Daniel Delen said in a statement. He also said the company benefited from productivity gains.
Reynolds American and other tobacco companies are also focusing on cigarette alternatives such as snuff, chewing tobacco and other smokeless products for future sales growth as tax increases, smoking bans, health concerns and social stigma make the cigarette business tougher.
The company said it sold 13.2 percent more of its Kodiak and Grizzly smokeless tobacco products in the quarter. Its smokeless market share grew 1.3 points to 31.1 percent of the U.S. market.
It also said its Camel Snus, small pouches filled with tobacco that users stick between the cheek and gum, showed steady growth.
It also is testing Camel-branded dissolvable, finely milled tobacco shaped into orbs, sticks and strips, in Charlotte, N.C., and Denver.
Reynolds American also reiterated its full-year forecast for earnings between $2.60 and $2.70 per share. The guidance excludes costs related to plant closings and tax items. Analysts expect $2.66.

Analysts eye market share, cigarettes sold as Philip Morris Int'l reports 1Q results Thursday



Cigarette maker Philip Morris International Inc., which sells Marlboro gold and other U.S. brands abroad, reports its first-quarter results before the market opens Thursday.

WHAT TO WATCH FOR: Whether fewer cigarettes sold in the wake of tax hikes and growing tobacco control efforts. Smokers face new tax hikes, bans, health concerns and social stigma worldwide, but the impacts are starker in the U.S. than in many other countries.

With offices in New York and in Lausanne, Switzerland, Philip Morris has compensated for consumers buying cheaper cigarettes — and for the weak economy — by cutting costs and raising prices. Its market share has increased.

Last quarter, Philip Morris International's cigarette shipments increased 3.1 percent to 224.9 billion cigarettes, with gains in Asia, including Indonesia, Korea and Pakistan. The company also benefited from its acquisition of Fortune Tobacco Co. in the Philippines.

Tax increases hurt the number of cigarettes sold in various regions in the fourth quarter. Shipments fell 5.4 percent in the European Union. Volumes fell about 6 percent in Eastern Europe, the Middle East and Africa and grew 2.4 percent in Latin America and Canada.

Weakness in places like Spain, Ukraine, Japan and Mexico could drive volumes down in the first quarter, Goldman Sachs analyst Judy Hong said in a recent research note. Impacts from the recent earthquake and tsunami in Japan won't likely be seen until next quarter.

Analysts also expect the company's earnings to be affected by foreign exchange rates compared with the U.S. dollar. When the dollar is rising, companies that sell goods internationally and must convert revenue from foreign currencies usually take a hit in the dollar value of that revenue, and vice versa. That effect is particularly strong for Philip Morris International, because it does all its business overseas.

WHY IT MATTERS: Philip Morris International is the world's second-biggest cigarette company after the state-controlled China National Tobacco Corp.

Altria Group Inc. in Richmond, Va., owner of Philip Morris USA, spun off Philip Morris International in 2008. Altria is the largest U.S. cigarette seller.

WHAT'S EXPECTED: Analysts on average expect Philip Morris International to report earnings of $1.04 per share on revenue of $6.95 billion, according to FactSet. Analysts typically exclude one-time items.

LAST YEAR'S QUARTER: Philip Morris International reported net income of 90 cents per share on revenue of $6.5 billion.

Earnings Preview: Altria Group Inc.



Altria Group Inc., owner of the biggest U.S. cigarette maker, Philip Morris USA, reports its first-quarter results before the stock market opens Wednesday.

WHAT TO WATCH FOR: Whether the top-selling Marlboro brand continues to gain more of the cigarette market. Marlboro has gained market share as the number of cigarettes sold has declined industrywide in the face of recent tax increases, smoking bans and rising health concerns and social stigma.

Richmond-based Altria has introduced several new products the Marlboro brand -- often with lower promotional pricing -- including special blends of both menthol and nonmenthol cigarettes to help keep the brand growing and attract its competitor's smokers.

The company said Marlboro accounted for 42.3 percent of cigarettes sold in the U.S. in the fourth quarter, although it sold 5.7 percent fewer cigarettes in the period. Its other brands, including Virginia Slims, Parliament and Basic, saw declines in market share and volumes.

Altria faces competition from other companies' less expensive brands -- like Pall Mall from Reynolds American Inc. and Maverick from Lorillard Inc. Even so, Altria has raised prices on some brands and maintained its profit per pack.

Analysts also will look to see how Altria's Black & Mild cigars and Copenhagen and Skoal smokeless tobacco products, as well as Marlboro Snus, perform. Its smokeless products have seen gains in recent quarters. Altria's cigar business saw revenues fall last quarter as it spent more money promoting the brand, but its volumes remained unchanged.

Altria and other tobacco companies are looking to cigarette alternatives -- such as cigars, snuff and chewing tobacco -- for growth.

The company also has planned to conduct a $1 billion share buyback program in 2011 and continues to work on cutting general and manufacturing costs by $1.5 billion compared with 2006.

WHY IT MATTERS: Increased spending on premium brands like Marlboro could signal consumers are adjusting to higher prices on cigarettes following a federal and state tax increases. Consumer spending continues to be critical to a strong rebound from the worst economic downturn since the Great Depression.

WHAT'S EXPECTED: Analysts expect Altria to earn 44 cents per share on sales of $3.9 billion, according to FactSet. Analysts typically exclude one-time items from their earnings estimates.

LAST YEAR'S QUARTER: Altria reported net income of 42 cents per share, excluding one-time items. Its revenue was $3.95 billion, excluding excise taxes.

Tuesday, April 19, 2011

Smokers Cling to Mistaken Notion of ‘Safer’ Cigarettes, Study Says



Simply banning the use of words such as “light” and “mild” from cigarette packaging may not be enough to wean smokers away from the mistaken belief that some brands are less harmful than others, a study suggests.

To curb misleading marketing practices, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration outlawed the labeling of cigarettes as “light” or “mild” last year. But researchers who surveyed 8,000 smokers from the U.S., the United Kingdom, Canada and Australia concluded that cigarette packaging continues to distort perceptions about smoking even though all conventional brands pose the same level of health risk.

The new study, published in the journal Addiction, found that 20 percent of smokers wrongly believe that some brands of cigarettes are safer than others. Those assumptions were highest among U.S. smokers. And moves by manufacturers that critics and regulators say are intended to perpetuate those notions — by, for example, changing their “light” cigarettes to “silver” and “gold” brands — appear to have paid off.

“Smokers of ‘gold’, ‘silver’, ‘blue’ or ‘purple’ brands were more likely to believe that their own brand might be a little less harmful compared to smokers of ‘red’ or ‘black’ brands,” the researchers say.

The findings could boost efforts to further regulate cigarette packaging. The Australian government is introducing legislation that would limit package design to plain colors and require packages to carry graphic health warnings. In the U.S., likewise, the FDA has proposed bigger and more graphic warnings on cigarette packages.

Study co-author David Hammond attributes the findings in part to a “hangover effect” from decades of sophisticated cigarette marketing. ”It is not terribly surprising when one thinks about the legacy of tobacco industry marketing, as well as the way in which brands continue to be marketed with descriptors such as ‘slims’ and ‘smooth’,” he told the Sydney Morning Herald.

In the U.S., Philip Morris came under scrutiny last year after it attached advertising “onserts” to its Marlboro Lights packs that stated, “Your Marlboro Lights pack is changing. But your cigarette stays the same. In the future, ask for ‘Marlboro in the gold pack.’” The FDA expressed concern that the onserts “may perpetuate the mistaken beliefs associated with your ‘light’ cigarettes when marketed as Marlboro in the gold pack.”

The new study found that smokers also falsely believe that slim cigarettes are less harmful, cigarettes with harsh taste are riskier to smoke than smooth-tasting cigarettes, filters reduce risk, and nicotine is responsible for most of the cancer caused by cigarettes.

Police impound fake 75, 000 Marlboro cigarettes



A JOINT GHANAIAN police and Interpol operation dubbed ‘Operation Atlantic’ has led to the arrest of 16 persons for allegedly engaging in intellectual property offences, running into several thousands of Ghana Cedis, with four suspects currently on the run.

However, all the 16 suspects, according to the Director-General of the Criminal Investigations Department (CID) Deputy Commissioner of Police (DCOP) Prosper Kwame Agblor, have been granted police enquiry bail, explaining that the nature of the purported crime did not warrant their detention for more than the specified 48 hours.

A 40-footer container laden with fake Marlboro cigarettes, he told the media in Accra yesterday, was discovered at the Tema Port during the group’s operation. “If the importers had been successful, they would have made GH¢75,000,” he indicated.

In addition, twenty-eight half pieces, and nine full pieces of replica Ghana Textile Products (GTP) were seized in just three stalls within the 31st December Market in Accra. 1,060 compact discs and digital video discs (DVD) of pirated musical and artistic products were equally confiscated.

DCOP defined Intellectual Property as a number of distinct creations of the mind, where the owners or the originators are granted certain exclusive rights to their assets. These innovations include musical products, literary, artistic works, and discoveries among others.

Reports indicated that some of the seized textile products were made in China, but were marked with the trade name of Ghana Textile Products, and some with designs which GTP did not even produce.

DCOP Agblor cautioned the general public to be wary of innovators, organised groups and criminal gangs, who produce counterfeit products to the detriment of the originators.

He further mentioned that a chunk of Ghanaian songs had been copied illegally on to Chinese phones, popularly known in Ghana as China phones, and sold here in the country.

This piracy phenomenon, he added, had been extended to other technological industries, which manufacture printer cartridges, especially, the Hewlett Packard brand of cartridges, on the Ghanaian market.

“The issue of counterfeiting has become so pronounced that if nothing is done to fight it, the whole nation is going to be inundated by counterfeit and pirated products in the very near future. In other words, counterfeiting or piracy is not limited to only a few selected goods,” he stressed.

Although the Ghana Police Service is bent on flushing out miscreants in society, DCOP Agblor said they could not do it alone, calling on the good citizens of the country to assist them in this exercise.

Cheaper cigarettes Lucky Strike and Pall Mall



British American Tobacco (BAT) announced today decision to lower price of cigarettes Lucky Strike and Pall Mall. New prices will take effect on Wednesday, April 13th 2011.

Lucky Strike entire portfolio will be cheaper 20 dinars, except Lucky Strike 100's which will be cheaper 10 dinars. The new price of Lucky Strike is 130 dinars, except Lucky Strike 100’s which will cost 140 dinars.

At the same time, the entire Pall Mall portfolio will be cheaper for 10 dinars and will be 110 dinars instead so far 120 dinars.

As stated in BAT statement, cheaoer portofolio is result of recent changes in business environment and inadequate excise structure to which the representatives of BAT had warned when it was past at the end of last year.

Monday, April 4, 2011

Students remove more than 5,000 cigarette butts from Jackson Park

About 30 students from three local high schools collected 5,000 to 6,000 cigarette butts on Saturday as they walked through Jackson Park.
“It’s very gross,” said Ciera Griffith, 16, a student at East Henderson High School.

The clean-up was done by members of the Interact Club, SWAT Club and ROTC at East Henderson, Hendersonville and North Henderson high schools. SWAT is an anti-smoking coalition at the schools. The Interact Club focuses on the environment.

“Basically, we want to help make this park a lot cleaner place,” Ciera added.

“I think it’s important to not have cigarette butts around the playground,” said Kimbrella Lee, 16, a student at East.

Students picked up butts around benches, playgrounds, the ball fields and tennis courts in Jackson Park.

This is the second location where students from the schools have picked up cigarette butts around Henderson County. In May of last year, 20 students picked up more than 10,000 cigarette butts along Main Street in Hendersonville. In October, about 50 picked up almost 21,000 cigarette butts on Main Street.

Tracy W. Stevens, Henderson County Public Schools tobacco prevention coordinator, referenced the 2008 annual report, done by the American Association of Poison Control Centers, which cited more than 7,000 reports of young children ingesting tobacco products and needing medical attention. Children who ingest tobacco products may experience vomiting and nausea, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

4 High Yield Tobacco Stocks Benefiting From FDA's Recent Decision



On Friday, after tobacco companies were anxiously awaiting a report from the Food and Drug Administration, it was reported that the FDA would not ban menthol cigarettes. The news caused several of the cigarette stocks to rise. Lorillard, Inc. (LO) rose by over 10% for the day.

Some investors have strong feelings against investing in cigarette stocks, but if you don't, you should consider them for their extremely high yields. Lorillard has a payout of 6.6%. The stock, which markets the Newport, Kent, True, Maverick, Old Gold, and Max brands, trades at 11.6 times forward earnings. According to WallStreetNewsNetwork.com, there are over half a dozen tobacco stocks with yields in excess of 4%.

Another example is Vector Group Ltd. (VGR), a Florida based tobacco company that has many brands of cigarettes including Liggett, Grand Prix, Eve, Pyramid, USA and nicotine-free Quest. The stock has a price to earnings ratio of 23.7, and pays a yield of 9.3%.

Reynolds American Inc. (RAI) makes and markets cigarettes and other tobacco products including the Camel, Kool, Pall Mall, Doral, Winston, Salem, Misty, Capri, Dunhill, and Natural American Spirit brands. The stock has a forward PE ratio of 11.8, and pays a yield of 6.3%.

Altria Group Inc. (MO) is a Virginia based company that makes and markets cigarettes, cigars, and beer. It is the largest cigarette company by market cap in the US. The stock has a forward PE of 11.3, and pays a yield of 6.1%.

Brookfield's U.K. unit buys Pall Mall business



Brookfield Investment Management (UK) acquired the European high-yield fund management business of Pall Mall Investment Management.

Terms weren't disclosed.

A team of five investment professionals and roughly $370 million in assets from Pall Mall will go to Brookfield. The team, led by Curt Schibli and Jonathan Goble, both managing directors and portfolio managers, run Pall Mall High Yield Europe Plus, an institutionally focused fund, according to a news release. The fund's name was changed to Brookfield High Yield Europe Plus.

Brookfield spokeswoman Alice Olive said the London team will allow U.S. parent Brookfield Investment Management to expand its U.S. high-yield capabilities and to pursue global strategies as well.