среда, 19 декабря 2012 г.

Electronic cigarettes gaining on traditional products



The swelling popularity of electronic cigarettes may add to the regulatory and revenue tension between tobacco manufacturers and states.
Electronic cigarettes, or e-cigs, are battery-powered devices that heat a liquid nicotine solution in a disposable cartridge and create a vapor that is inhaled.

Refill cartridges can be purchased in different sizes and flavors; five-packs typically cost between $9 and $18. By comparison, a carton of cigarettes can cost between $25 and $50 for most name brands.
Bonnie Herzog, a Wells Fargo Securities analyst, believes the e-cig craze has shifted from “fad” to “here to stay.”
So much so that Herzog said recently in a note to investors that e-cig sales could grow fast enough to affect the payments states receive from the landmark Master Settlement Agreement.
Tobacco companies, including R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co., agreed in 1998 to settle lawsuits filed by 46 state attorneys general over smoking-related health-care costs by paying those states about $206 billion over more than 20 years.
Most states have redirected much, if not all, of their MSA money to general expenditures, much to the chagrin of public-health advocacy groups.
Meanwhile, sales of electronic cigarettes are about $300 million a year and the products have about 2.5 million users, according to Tobacco Vapor Electronic Cigarette Association.
There are projections of $1 billion in annual sales within a few years, Herzog said, in part because there is no federal excise tax on e-cigs. Only Minnesota has a state excise tax.
“If the prospects for e-cig category growth are as robust as we believe, this should have a meaningful positive impact on the industry's profitability long term,” Herzog said.
“Given that the industry's MSA payments are volume based, as e-cigs take share from traditional cigarettes, the decline in these payments to the states should accelerate. In other words, the dollar amount of these MSA payments should drop faster.”
As a result, Herzog said, those manufacturers that embrace e-cigs, either through internal production or acquisition, will gain – at least in the short term – better sales margins.
Anyone who has visited the check-out counter at a convenience store or tobacco outlet has seen what Herzog is describing – multiple e-cig brands on display, according to Winston-Salem Journal.

понедельник, 10 декабря 2012 г.

Images may harm your smoking pleasure


Alex Town's first box of plain-packaged cigarettes did not faze him.
Gone was the familiar trademark of his favourite brand, Benson & Hedges, to be replaced by an innocuous image of a cigarette being stubbed out in an ashtray. He had won his first round of health-warning roulette.
The drab olive packages which became mandatory this month feature a variety of new, graphic warning labels designed to confront consumers with the consequences of smoking-related disease.
Some of the images are more confronting than others: there is the eyeball being surgically opened ("smoking causes blindness"), the decaying lung, the cancerous tongue and the stained, rotting teeth.
But the two warning labels giving smokers the most discomfort are the gangrenous foot and the infamous "Bryan", who is pictured brutally emaciated and almost dead from lung cancer. And it is these larger, more shocking graphics - rather than the lack of branding - which are challenging users to reconsider their habits.
"The colour doesn't put me off, it actually looks quite smart to me," says Town, a 26-year old public servant who has decided to quit as his New Year's resolution, according to smh.com.au.

вторник, 4 декабря 2012 г.

Cigarette prices to increase again



Cigarette prices are rising again, with the two largest tobacco manufacturers expressing confidence that another 6-cent a pack increase won’t deter smokers in a down economy.

R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co. and Philip Morris USA confirmed Thursday they are raising their list price by 6 cents on all their brands. Reynolds’ price increase goes into effect today, while Philip Morris’ goes into effect Tuesday.

Lorillard Inc. is raising the list price by 6 cents a pack on its Newport, Kent, Maverick, and True brands.
Although the list price is geared toward wholesale and direct-buying customers, they tend to pass most or all of such increases on to consumers.

“I cannot speculate how this will affect the price at retail, as we don't set that price,” Reynolds spokesman Richard Smith said.

In June, Philip Morris and Reynolds raised the list price by 6 cents on most of its brands, while Lorillard increased its list price by 8 cents.