This report explores the state of the global soft drinks industry in 2023, examining category and market growth over the year. The competitive positioning of leading companies and brands within the worldwide non-alcohol drinks industry is presented, along with the five key trends and challenges that one of the largest and most profitable consumer goods industries faces over the forecast period.
This report comes in PPT.
After the soft drinks industry largely defied expected price elasticities in the first half of 2022, the bill finally came due in 2023, as volumes were flat or declining in several key mature markets. In the long term, brand owners, bottlers and retailers face a growing challenge in balancing a high value, price-premium transactional model of growth in developed markets against the need to maintain and grow per capita volumes globally, in a way that aligns with commitments to sustainability and public health.
Price inflation in 2022 and the first half of 2023 across the Americas and Europe forced consumers to cut back, but without an immediate surge in private label drinks. Instead, locally produced and regional B-brands have been winners, as major multinational producers raised prices and reduced package mix. Hard discounter chains and warehouse clubs have also capitalised, forcing impulse-orientated categories, like energy drinks and sports drinks, to adjust their available SKUs.
The rise of Prime sports drink is a recent example of celebrity-backed product innovation in non-alcoholic drinks, with a devoted online fanbase producing strong retail growth, with a fraction of the traditional media spending of established brands. Social media, viral campaigns and gaming are increasingly central to reaching younger demographics. Major brands in carbonates, sports drinks and energy drinks will increase their presence and investment in these media channels to stay relevant.
Emerging from a niche area of “blurring lines”, alcoholic flavoured RTDs and co-branded ventures with spirits and premium mixers form an important part of the growth strategies of major soft drinks companies. The Coca-Cola Company and PepsiCo have made sizable investments in increasing their distribution capacity for alcohol in North America, and have scaled successful launches to global markets with the aim of growing the “hard” side of their drinks portfolio.
Energy drinks remains the fastest growing area of non-alcoholic drinks, with a new wave of innovation in advanced hydration beverages. Increasingly, non-RTD formats (powder mixes and tablets) and high electrolyte oral replenishment solutions are taking share from standard sports drinks. Sports nutrition and supplement brands are gaining a foothold within energy-boosting beverages.
This is the aggregation of the following categories; Carbonates, Fruit/vegetable juice, Bottled water, Functional drinks, Concentrates, RTD tea, RTD coffee and Asian speciality drinks.
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