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Analysis-Ebbing demand for China's favourite firewater adds to debt concerns

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By Casey Hall and Sophie Yu

MAOTAI, China (Reuters) – In the Chinese village of Maotai, the local firewater named after the town is not only a key source of income, it’s a barometer of the country’s battered consumer market and the economic misfortunes of its home province.

In the weeks before Lunar New Year, tourists traditionally flock to the town, nestled in the mountains of the southwestern province of Guizhou, to buy the baijiu, or white spirit, as gifts – this year, those crowds were notably smaller.

The premium spirit made locally by Kweichow Moutai has for decades been a fixture at weddings, business dinners and state functions, but its sales in the past two years have been hit by poor consumer and business confidence.

Victor Shih, a professor of political science at the University of California San Diego, says Moutai’s strong cash flows have been “an important part of the strategy to help Guizhou’s government repay debt that is constantly coming due”.

That means any contraction in Moutai’s profit constitutes a problem for the government, which “needs that money to repay their debt and to run the government,” he added.

Shanghai-listed Kweichow Moutai is majority-owned by Moutai Group, in turn wholly owned by Guizhou, China’s second-most indebted province.

Its contribution to Guizhou’s economic development is enormous, not only as a major employer but also as a vehicle for the province to raise revenue and pay down debt.

Long considered a bellwether of Chinese consumer demand, its retail performance has been squeezed in recent years by wider deflationary pressures.

“Before, people would fly from Beijing to buy bottles of Moutai for more than 3,000 yuan ($412) several times per year,” said a shopkeeper at one of the many liquor stores lining the river in Maotai village.

“Now you can get a bottle for as little as 1,699 yuan, but the environment is so bad, no-one wants to buy.”

Kweichow Moutai, the world’s largest alcohol company and until last year China’s most valuable listed firm with a market value as high as $400 billion, makes its clear spirit from sorghum and has a special place in the nation’s history.

Premier Zhou Enlai toasted U.S. president Richard Nixon with Moutai on his landmark 1972 China visit.

But a persistent slump in sentiment has taken the wind out of Kweichow Moutai’s share price and the price consumers are willing to pay for the product.

The firm’s value has fallen by almost half since hitting a record high in 2021, and the market price of a 500 ml bottle of its flagship 53% proof Feitian “Flying Fairy” last year dropped as much as 22% from 2,700 yuan at the start of 2024.

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