China: Beijing launches anti-dumping investigation into cognac

Published Jan 5, 2024

Tridge summary

China has announced an anti-dumping investigation into liqueur products from the European Union, particularly targeting French producers and containers smaller than 200 liters. The impact of this investigation is limited, as local products like Baiju still dominate the Chinese market. The investigation is believed to be part of a wider trade conflict between the European Union and China.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

Beijing declares war on imported liqueurs and the Chinese cognac syndrome affects all the main European spirits stocks: first of all the French Pernod Ricard and Remy Cointreau, but also Diageo and Davide Campari itself, which drops on Piazza Affari at the lowest levels of the last twelve months. China has announced that it is about to launch an anti-dumping investigation into liqueur products such as brandy and cognac from the European Union. The investigation, which Beijing says was triggered by a request from a national spirits association, particularly targets French producers and will focus on containers smaller than 200 liters (44 British gallons) coming from the European Union. However, the commercial exchange is of limited size for a country where the consumption of a local product such as Baiju is still dominant: in the first eleven months of last year China imported distilled grape wine liqueurs from the European Union for a value of 1.57 billion dollars. Compared to ...

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