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Modelo dethroned Bud Light in America — here’s what the numbers say

Modelo dethroned Bud Light in America — here’s what the numbers say
Modelo dethroned Bud Light in America — here’s what the numbers say


For the first time in over two decades, Bud Light recently lost its title as the best-selling beer in America. Amid ongoing controversy and conservative backlash from a partnership with TikTok personality Dylan Mulvaney, the fall from the top isn’t that surprising. However, the new king of beer in America isn’t a comparable product, such as competitor Molson Coors’ Miller Lite. Instead, the brand to finally unseat the reigning champ was Mexican lager Modelo Especial, owned in the U.S. by Constellation Brands.

For the four-week timeframe ending the week of June 10, Bud Light’s dollar share of the beer category dropped to 7.2%. During the same period, Modelo saw its dollar share surge to 8.4%, with the brand’s year-to-date (YTD) share hovering at 8%. On a YTD basis, Bud Light remains the number one beer in America with an 8.9% dollar share of the beer category.

While these numbers reflect the trouble Bud Light is in, they also tell the story of Modelo and how slow brand building can pay off. The Mexican lager has been growing at a steady rate and is yielding the results of this climb, according to Dave Williams, vice president of analytics and insights at Bump Williams Consulting.

“It’s not really lighting the world on fire in terms of performance,” Williams said. “It’s not way above average in terms of performance, but it has always been in recent memory, a steady growth engine, a catalyst-type brand for the beer category.”

The data, which was measured by NielsenIQ, looked at off-premise sales only. The analysis provided by Bump Williams looked at volume and sales trends over a year period, a four week period and one week period.

Flat beer

Bud Light’s dollar market share slip isn’t surprising, given the heavy backlash regarding the beer’s brief partnership with Mulvaney. Plus, the botched response from parent company Anheuser-Busch InBev, which has spent months in crisis management mode, hasn’t helped.

Despite the less than stellar dollar performance for Bud Light, it is still the number one beer in the country in terms of volume, commanding an 8.7% share for the four week period. However, that is still much lower than the brand’s YTD average of 10.7%. Modelo’s four-week volume share stood at 7.1%, up from the YTD average of 6.7%.

While controversy played a part in Modelo taking the top spot from Bud Light, it also accelerated the inevitable, according to Williams. Modelo, which is controlled by Constellation Brands in the U.S. and AB InBev globally, has been focused on building up a solid consumer base and has seen consistent year-over-year gains.

“They do have strong brand loyalty among Hispanic consumers, but I think they also have the ability to reach non-Hispanic drinkers,” said Williams. “The wider a net you can cast in terms of finding potential consumers or potential drinkers for your product, the better chance you have at growth,” said Williams. “It’s either get more people drinking, get them drinking more frequently, or get them drinking more or purchasing more per occasion.”

The long game

Modelo’s broad appeal may also be why Bud Light was unseated by a lager, rather than by another light beer. Light beer is a crowded and fractured category, with many major competitors vying for a piece of the pie. Light beer drinkers haven’t gone away, they just have a lot of choices.

“Bud Light may be ceding some sales on some occasions, to some degree, those are being absorbed by Coors Light, Miller Lite… similar price, similar style, similarly widely available… So I think there is some trading of occasions there,” said Williams. “I don’t think there’s a fallout in terms of affinity for the style.”

For the single week ending June 10, brands such as Miller Lite and Coors Light saw even larger dollar share gains compared to the YTD average than Modelo did. While Modelo had a 5.7% increase, Miller Lite saw a 21.1% jump while Coors Light saw a 25.4% gain. Yet Model still wound up on top, supporting the idea that Modelo’s success is based on a long-term ramp up.

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