Anheuser-Busch InBev Banned in New Delhi for Alleged Tax Evasion

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India’s capital city has banned the world’s largest brewer, Anheuser-Busch InBev, from selling its products in the key New Delhi market for 3 years for allegedly evading local taxes. This news was reported on by Reuters based on government orders they’d seen.

The city government orders from earlier this month followed a 3-year investigation which found that beer maker SABMiller — acquired by AB InBev in 2016 for around $100 billion — used duplicate barcodes on its beer bottles supplied to city retailers that year, allowing it to pay lower levies.

“The barcodes were being duplicated by … SABMiller and supplied to the retail outlets to evade payment of excise duty,” said a 19-page order, dated July 16, which detailed the findings.

In a second order last week, the Delhi city authority said that AB InBev should be put on a “blacklist” for three years. It also called for the sealing of two of AB InBev’s warehouses in the capital city, an action that a senior Delhi government official told Reuters on Tuesday had already been completed.

“This means the company is debarred from Delhi market for all purposes, unless they appeal against this,” said the official, adding that no fresh stock of AB InBev beer brands can be sold at liquor shops or restaurants.

AB InBev, which counts popular beer brands such as Budweiser, Hoegaarden and Stella Artois in its portfolio, told Reuters the Delhi government’s allegations related to operations of SABMiller prior to its takeover, and it looked forward to receiving a fair hearing on the matter.

“Integrity and ethics are part of our core values … (We) look forward to presenting our views in full cooperation with the excise appellate process,” a company spokesman said.

AB InBev is the second biggest player in India’s $7 billion beer market, accounting for a 17.5 percent market share, according to research firm IWSR Drinks Market Analysis.

Though separate local market share figures were not available, industry executives said the Delhi ban would be a major setback for AB InBev, which is also battling a separate Indian antitrust probe concerning alleged beer price fixing by SABMiller and other companies.

“New Delhi remains an extremely critical market for any beer company… this is the country’s social capital, apart from Mumbai. It’s a showcase market for the premium beer portfolio,” said a former senior AB InBev executive, who declined to be identified.

This month, AB InBev canceled the planned listing in Hong Kong of its Asia Pacific unit, citing “several factors, including the prevailing market conditions”.

A young and affluent population and a growing pub culture, especially in the big cities, have spurred beer consumption in India. That is despite the fact that the industry is tightly regulated, with most states individually regulating pricing and imposing taxes, which form a vital source of their revenues.

Sandeep Chilana, a New Delhi-based lawyer specializing in excise law, said that rules mandate each beer bottle sold in the city has to have a unique barcode for track and trace purposes, and to ensure there is no duty evasion.

The current dispute centers around a random inspection at BarShala, a drinking spot in a posh New Delhi area, on the night of August 16, 2016. City officials said they found 12 beer bottles of SABMiller brands at the bar that barcode records showed should have been in the company warehouse at the time.

A follow-on investigation showed that some beer bottles sent to the bar in November had identical barcodes to those found in the inspection in August, the government order said.

The bar denied any wrongdoing.

The brewer argued the discrepancy could be due to the technical or clerical errors in the barcoding system, but the city government said the company’s defense was “devoid of merit”, according to the order.

The Delhi government said it was “reasonable to believe” that the same barcodes were duplicated multiple times and supplied to various retail vendors in Delhi, adding that this amounted to the offense of selling non-duty paid liquor.

“The same barcodes were supplied twice at the same restaurant and hence the discrepancy could be noticed. Had the same been supplied to a different retail outlet the discrepancy could not have been noticed easily,” the order said.

Ban Remains in Place after Rejected Appeal

While the company’s appeal is still under consideration, Anheuser-Busch InBev also filed a separate plea with the Commissioner for putting the ban order on hold pending appeal, but that request was turned down, one of the government sources reported to Reuters last week.

“The (ban) order was detailed, there was no ground to give an interim stay,” said the official, who declined to be named as the decision is not public.

“We are strongly committed to operating with integrity and high ethical standards and making the City of Delhi part of our larger growth story in India,” it said in a statement.

In recent weeks, Anheuser-Busch InBev’s senior executives, including vice president for legal and corporate affairs for South Asia, John K. Johnson, appeared before the Delhi officials who are hearing the company’s appeal, the second government source and a third person familiar with the matter said.

Anheuser-Busch InBev to Launch Non-Alcoholic Budweiser in India

In spite of the ban in New Delhi, Anheuser-Busch InBev will enter the non-alcoholic beer market elsewhere in India with the launch of Budweiser 0.0, the company announced last week. Budweister 0.0 will be available in cans and bottles at retailers in Mumbai, Delhi, Bangalore, Pune, Chennai, Hyderabad, Kolkata and Gujarat, according to The Economic Times.

“Budweiser is one of the fastest growing beer brands in the country and we are thrilled to add Budweiser 0.0 to our portfolio here,” Ben Verhaert, Anheuser-Busch InBev president for South Asia, said in a media statement. “While the market for non-alcoholic beers is still nascent here, as a leading brewer we see a great opportunity to grow this segment.”

About Anheuser-Busch InBev

For more than 165 years, Anheuser-Busch has carried on a legacy of brewing great-tasting, high- quality beers that have satisfied beer drinkers for generations. Today, we own and operate 23 breweries, 14 distributorships and 23 agricultural and packaging facilities, and have more than 18,000 colleagues across the United States. We are home to several of America’s most recognizable beer brands, including Budweiser, Bud Light, Michelob ULTRA and Stella Artois, as well as a number of regional brands that provide beer drinkers with a choice of the best-tasting craft beers in the industry.

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