SA Wine Export to China up 60% – Cape Legends Exemplifies Growth

More China Wine Market News…

Stellenbosch-based Cape Legends has entered into a long-term agreement to sell its wines into China. It expects sales volumes to increase “substantially” as a result, according to the business manager for the portfolio of specialty wines, Isobel Armstrong.

The successful negotiation comes in the wake of the growing appetite among Chinese consumers for South African wines with the country increasing the volumes of bottled wine sold in the People’s Republic by 60% for the 12 months to March this year, compared with the previous 12 months, according to SA Wine Industry & Information Systems (SAWIS).

Producers worldwide are looking to China to grow sales volumes and market analysts International Wine & Spirit Research (IWSR) are projecting that China’s wine market will continue to grow annually in value to reach $6 billion by 2014. Wine Intelligence, a UK-based research organisation, expects that the number of Chinese wine drinkers will rise to about 34 million by 2015.

Rabobank has reported that China’s market for table wine has been growing by around 20% per year for the last five years, with consumption now at about 1,48 billion litres, according to Euromonitor data.

Cape Legends is represented by Guangzhou South Africa Valley. The deal involves 14 products across five brands – Alto, Jacobsdal, Neethlingshof, Plaisir de Merle and Stellenzicht. With one exception, all the wines in the line-up are red, given the positive associations that the colour holds in China and the current demand for mostly red wine. The single white is an off-dry and very fragrant Gewürztraminer, universally recognised as being a compatible partner with Chinese foods. It is made by Stellenbosch estate, Neethlingshof.

Guangzhou accounts for 16% of China’s upper middle-class wine-drinkers, according to Meininger’s Wine Business International and is already familiar to some extent with South African wines.