LOUISVILLE, Ky.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--
Brown-Forman Corporation (NYSE: BFA) (NYSE: BFB) announced today that it
will establish a new head office for its European operations in
Amsterdam, The Netherlands, effective January 1, 2014. Brown-Forman’s
corporate headquarters will remain in Louisville, KY.
The opening of the European head office follows significant recent
activity in the region, including the consolidation of the company’s
Western Europe and Greater Europe organizations into a single
pan-European operation on January 1, 2013. Brown-Forman also created a
fully integrated German company in 2010, formed its own distribution
company in Turkey in 2012,and will establish a new distribution
company in France in January 2014. It also owns and operates
distribution companies in Poland and the Czech Republic. In total,
Europe accounted for 30% of Brown-Forman’s total net sales in fiscal
2013.
“We’ve spent a significant amount of time evaluating how to best
structure and where to locate management oversight of this important
region so that we can work more effectively and efficiently in driving
results that will help Brown-Forman achieve its strategic B-F 150
goals,” said Mark McCallum, executive vice president of Brown-Forman,
who is responsible for the company’s business in Europe, Africa, India,
Asia Pacific, and Travel Retail. “We believe locating our European
leadership team and key functional leaders together in Amsterdam will
help this important region sustain its healthy growth rates and
contribute more to Brown-Forman’s future prosperity.”
Brown-Forman will also relocate its Finlandia Global Brand Team to
Amsterdam from Louisville, KY. “The growth of our vodka portfolio – and
Finlandia in particular – is a vital part of our B-F 150 strategy,” said
Lawson Whiting, senior vice president and chief brands officer for
Brown-Forman. “With more than 80% of Finlandia’s business sourced in
Europe, it makes sense to put our global Finlandia leaders closer to
their largest consumer base and to where the vodka is produced in
Finland.”
By January, Thomas Hinrichs, senior vice president and managing director
of Brown-Forman’s Europe operations, and other key members of the
company’s European leadership team will move to Amsterdam from Hamburg,
London, Paris, Prague, and Louisville. In addition, Carmen d’Ascendis,
senior vice president and managing director of Brown-Forman’s vodka
business, and other key leaders of the Finlandia Global Brand Team will
relocate to Amsterdam from Louisville, KY. Ultimately, the company
expects to have approximately 40 employees based in Amsterdam, although
it will probably take a few years before that number is achieved.
McCallum said Brown-Forman chose Amsterdam as the head office for the
company’s recently consolidated European team because it is centrally
located with easy access to the rest of Europe and other international
markets. The Netherlands also provides an excellent business climate and
a well-educated and multi-lingual workforce.
For more than 140 years, Brown-Forman Corporation has enriched the
experience of life by responsibly building fine quality beverage alcohol
brands, including Jack Daniel’s Tennessee Whiskey, Southern Comfort,
Finlandia, Jack Daniel’s & Cola, Canadian Mist, Korbel, Gentleman Jack,
el Jimador, Herradura, Sonoma-Cutrer, Chambord, New Mix, Tuaca, and
Woodford Reserve. Brown-Forman’s brands are supported by nearly 4,000
employees and sold in approximately 160 countries worldwide. For more
information about the company, please visit http://www.brown-forman.com/.
This press release contains statements, estimates, and projections that
are “forward-looking statements” as defined under U.S. federal
securities laws. Words such as “aim,” “anticipate,” “aspire,” “believe,”
“continue,” “could,” “envision,” “estimate,” “expect,” “expectation,”
“intend,” “may,” “plan,” “potential,” “project,” “pursue,” “see,”
“will,” “will continue,” and similar words identify forward-looking
statements, which speak only as of the date we make them. Except as
required by law, we do not intend to update or revise any
forward-looking statements, whether as a result of new information,
future events, or otherwise. By their nature, forward-looking statements
involve risks, uncertainties and other factors (many beyond our control)
that could cause our actual results to differ materially from our
historical experience or from our current expectations or projections.
These risks and other factors include, but are not limited to:
-
Unfavorable global or regional economic conditions, and related low
consumer confidence, high unemployment, weak credit or capital
markets, sovereign debt defaults, sequestrations, austerity measures,
higher interest rates, political instability, higher inflation,
deflation, lower returns on pension assets, or lower discount rates
for pension obligations
-
Risks associated with being a U.S.-based company with global
operations, including political or civil unrest; local labor policies
and conditions; protectionist trade policies; compliance with local
trade practices and other regulations, including anti-corruption laws;
terrorism; and health pandemics
-
Fluctuations in foreign currency exchange rates
-
Changes in laws, regulations or policies - especially those that
affect the production, importation, marketing, sale or consumption of
our beverage alcohol products
-
Tax rate changes (including excise, sales, VAT, tariffs, duties,
corporate, individual income, dividends, capital gains) or changes in
related reserves, changes in tax rules (e.g., LIFO, foreign income
deferral, U.S. manufacturing and other deductions) or accounting
standards, and the unpredictability and suddenness with which they can
occur
-
Dependence upon the continued growth of the Jack Daniel’s family of
brands
-
Changes in consumer preferences, consumption or purchase patterns -
particularly away from brown spirits, our premium products, or spirits
generally, and our ability to anticipate and react to them; decline in
the social acceptability of beverage alcohol products in significant
markets; bar, restaurant, travel or other on-premise declines
-
Production facility, aging warehouse or supply chain disruption;
imprecision in supply/demand forecasting
-
Higher costs, lower quality or unavailability of energy, input
materials or finished goods
-
Route-to-consumer changes that affect the timing of our sales,
temporarily disrupt the marketing or sale of our products, for result
in implementation-related or higher fixed costs
-
Inventory fluctuations in our products by distributors, wholesalers,
or retailers
-
Competitors’ consolidation or other competitive activities, such as
pricing actions (including price reductions, promotions, discounting,
couponing or free goods), marketing, category expansion, product
introductions, entry or expansion in our geographic markets or
distribution networks
-
Risks associated with acquisitions, dispositions, business
partnerships or investments - such as acquisition integration, or
termination difficulties or costs, or impairment in recorded value
-
Insufficient protection of our intellectual property rights
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Product counterfeiting, tampering, or recall, or product quality issues
-
Significant legal disputes and proceedings; government investigations
(particularly of industry or company business, trade or marketing
practices)
-
Failure or breach of key information technology systems
-
Negative publicity related to our company, brands, marketing,
personnel, operations, business performance or prospects
-
Business disruption, decline or costs related to organizational
changes, reductions in workforce or other cost-cutting measures, or
our failure to attract or retain key executive or employee talent
For further information on these and other risks, please refer to the
“Risk Factors” section of our annual report on Form 10-K and quarterly
reports on Form 10-Q filed with the SEC.
Use of Non-GAAP Financial Information This press release includes
measures not derived in accordance with generally accepted accounting
principles (“GAAP”), including constant currency net sales, underlying
net sales and underlying operating income. These measures should not be
considered in isolation or as a substitute for any measure derived in
accordance with GAAP, and also may be inconsistent with similar measures
presented by other companies. Reconciliations of these measures to the
most closely comparable GAAP measures, and reasons for the company’s use
of these measures, are presented on Schedule A attached hereto.

Brown-Forman Corporation
Phil Lynch, 502-774-7928
Vice
President
Director Corporate Communications and Public Relations
or
Jay
Koval, 502-774-6903
Vice President
Director Investor Relations
Source: Brown-Forman Corporation