A spotlight on French and European wine data.

Tag: Champagne

As France Grows to Love Rosé, Red Wine and Champagne Face Pressure

With Generation Z coming of age, France is increasingly serving rosé and white wine rather than the traditional ‘ballon de rouge’

Whatever France’s reputation as red wine country, turns out French drinkers are more likely to be found sipping a glass of pale yellow-gold or pink wine these days.

Rosé wine volumes sold in French supermarkets and hypermarkets doubled between 1994 and 2020, data published by crop office FranceAgriMer show. White wines registered comparatively pedestrian 13% volume growth over the period. By contrast, red wine sales fell by more than half.

French hypermarket and supermarket shoppers are turning to rosé wine and away from reds.

Food retail is where most French consumers buy their wine, ahead of specialty stores, bars and restaurants, surveys show. Combined sales volumes of rosés and whites in hypermarkets and supermarkets overtook red wine in 2018, according to the data gathered by Symphony IRI.

Generational shift

There’s clearly a generational shift. One in every three glasses of wine consumed by Generation Z and Millennials is a rosé, according to a Wine Intelligence survey ahead of February’s Vinexpo Paris. That compares with less than one glass in four for wine drinkers aged 55 and over.

The popularity of pink wine is a bit of a French thing. The country accounts for 35% of global rosé intake, according to an observatory by the Provence wine board with FranceAgriMer. That compares with France’s 11% share of overall global wine consumption.

White and rosé wines were the preferred purchase for French shoppers in the 18-to-24 year age range in an OpinionWay survey from September 2021, with less than one in ten choosing red wine. Champagne was the wine to buy for 17% of Gen Z-ers of drinking age.

This colour shift is happening in the context of a vertiginous drop in French wine drinking in recent decades. Average wine consumption fell to 36 liters per capita in 2018 from 71 liters in 1990 and 128 liters in 1960, statistics office Insee says.

Drinking less, but better

Less drinking has also gone hand in hand with a shift away from wines for daily consumption, the “vins de consommation courante,” to higher-quality bottles. An Ipsos survey in October 2021 found consumers were spending an average €11.70 a bottle, an increase of €4.20 from six years earlier.

Red wine producers may take some consolation from these higher prices, which have helped make up for lower sales volumes. The value of red wine sold in French supermarkets and hypermarkets stood at 1.95 billion euros in 2020 from 1.68 billion euros in 1994.

Still, the gains for reds pale in comparison with the jump in value of rosé sold through food retailers, which climbed fourfold to 1.14 billion euros in the same period. White wine sales in supermarkets and hypermarkets more than doubled to 927 million euros, the FranceAgriMer data show.

Growth for rosés, and whites for that matter, has been particularly strong in the category of IGP wines, for Indication Géographique Protégée. Consumers are clearly happy seeking out, say, a rosé produced from cinsault and grenache grapes in the IGP Pays d’Oc, or a white chardonnay from the IGP Val de Loire.

While business in IGP wines has been dynamic, in value and to a lesser extent in volume, the Appellation d’Origine Protégée category has been more lackluster. Typically considered a step up in quality, AOP wines have seen falling volumes, and spending also took a turn for the worse in recent years.

The ramp-up for supermarket sales of rosé coincides with a decline in Champagne shipments in France since 2010. While correlation is not causation, quaffing of bubbly and blush does appear to be heading in opposite directions.

French Vineyard Prices Climb in Pandemic Year

French vineyard values shrugged off the Covid-19 pandemic in 2020, with average wine property prices lifted by deals in the most expensive parts of Bordeaux. Less prestigious growing areas didn’t do as well, with prices sliding in some regions.

The cost of buying a hectare of vines, a plot the size of a rugby pitch, rose 1.6% to 150,500 euros last year, according to data from Safer, France’s rural property agency. Prices have more than tripled since 1997, with a mostly uninterrupted rise over that period.

Excluding the Champagne region, the cost of vines with a French appellation of origin increased 4.3% to a record 78,100 euros per hectare. The sparkling-wine region north-east of Paris is the country’s most expensive overall, accounting for 52% of France’s total vineyard real estate by value and skewing the numbers.

The health crisis did impact the number of wine-property transactions, down 11% to 8,190 as estate visits became more complicated and buyers pulled out. That was the lowest in data going back almost 30 years, below the previous low point of 2009 after the financial crisis.

The overall value of property changing hands fell 13% to 861 million euros. Only in the Bordeaux-Aquitaine region did the total value of wine-real estate transactions rise, up 4.7% to 231 million euros, even as the number of deals declined 21%.

In Bordeaux, eight sales of prestigious estates accounted for 72% of the transaction value, according to Safer. Those deals helped explain a 9% increase in average vineyard prices in France’s second-most valuable wine region.

Safe Haven Bordeaux

In Pauillac on the Left Bank of the Gironde estuary, the average price for a hectare climbed 22% to 2.8 million euros. As the large estates gobble up the remaining small vineyard owners of Pauillac, Saint-Julien and Margaux year after year, property prices could continue to rise, according to Safer. The top-end properties are seen as safe-haven investments at a time of financial uncertainty, the agency said.

The lofty heights for Bordeaux’s elite names contrast with more down-to-earth growing areas, with generic-label Bordeaux vines falling 13% to 13,000 euros per hectare. Vineyards producing generic Medoc slumped 20% to an average 40,000 euros per hectare, as the area struggles with faltering exports and supermarket sales, Safer said.

Two developments of note in Bordeaux’s more affordable wine areas: certified-organic vines in good health traded at a premium, and plots sensitive to freezing had a hard time finding buyers. The latter seems prescient, with France suffering its most damaging spring frost in decades this year, and climate change increasing the risk of such events.

In Burgundy, prices hikes were more modest than for its bigger rival, but across the board. While the price of grand cru vines that traded rose 4.1% to 6.77 million euros per hectare, regional Burgundy appellations – the cheapest wine property in the Cote d’Or departement – rose 4.9% to an average 47,200 euros.

A priceless view in Burgundy.

Champagne values mostly declined, with the average per-hectare price slipping 1.3% to 1.1 million euros. The grand and premier cru vines of Montagne de Reims and Grande Vallée proved more resilient, climbing 7.2% to average 1.24 million euros per hectare.

Resilient Cognac

In Cognac, the protected origin that exclusively supplies the grapes used to produce the eponymous spirit, prices climbed across the appellation. Cognac exports have remained relatively resilient during the pandemic, after years of growing demand from countries including the U.S. and China.

Vineyard prices on average fell in the production areas of Alsace, Languedoc-Roussillon and south-west France. The cost of buying vines for making wine in Corsica continued to rise, even as Safer said very little property changed hands.

Overall wine property values rose in Val de Loire-Centre, with the Loire Valley presenting a study in contrasts. While the price of vines in Sancerre jumped 29% to 220,000 euros per hectare, the biggest gain in the data published by Safer, the more modest origin of Bourgeuil slumped 30%.

I’ll take a more localized dive into the Safer data in coming days and weeks, including a look at the longer trends for some appellations in places such as Bordeaux and the Loire Valley. So don’t hesitate to check back in at Wine Graphs!

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