Article Text
Statistics from Altmetric.com
Introduction
On 19 December 2018, Altria announced an offer of US$12.8 billion for a 35% share of Juul Labs.1 2 The deal combines Altria (formerly Philip Morris),3 the company with the largest share of the US cigarette market, with the large and rapidly growing vaping product (aka e-cigarette) company, Juul Labs.4 5 The acquisition price was based on a US$38 billion valuation, which was more than twice Juul Labs’ August valuation, and a surprise to many investors on Wall Street.1 The deal includes a 6-year agreement, in which Altria would not be allowed to acquire additional Juul Labs shares above the agreed 35%. In addition, Altria dropped its MarkTen e-cigarette brand.2
Juul Labs’ motivations for the deal with Altria
Juul Labs has clear motivations for the merger. Besides the direct gain to Juul Labs’ owners from the acquisition price,1 they can also benefit in the legal and regulatory sphere. With its vast experience, Altria can provide Juul Labs support in legal battles regarding patent infringement6 7 and consumer health claims.8 9 With Juul Labs under pressure to respond to Food and Drug Administration (FDA) concerns about youth use of its product,10 Altria could also help them navigate the regulatory waters.
The deal can also serve to strengthen Juul Labs’ future market prospects. The US vaping product industry is still rapidly growing.4 11 Within 5 years, the leading mass-manufactured vaping product in the USA has gone from N-JOY to Blu to Vuse to Juul.4 Juul, as the current leader, may be replaced by another technology, product or company. In particular, Juul Labs faces the challenges from competitors producing Juul-like vaping products (eg, BO, Phix and SMOK)12 and from open system products that are typically less expensive than Juul.4
Altria may directly help Juul Labs to increase sales. Altria has touted how they will help Juul obtain greater access to retail.13 While Juul had been in 90 000 US retail outlets, Altria’s reach extends to 230 000 US outlets. In particular, Altria may increase Juul’s retail presence through the slotting allowances.14 This will not only ensure shelf space but can also provide space near Altria products and retail displays. In addition, Altria has agreed to provide Juul Labs access to its consumers through Juul coupons on its cigarette packs, as well as provide Juul Labs access to its database of more than 10 million smokers. While Juul has been successful attracting youth and young adults, Altria can help attract older smokers.
Financing from Altria can also help protect and maintain Juul’s future growth. Altria has historically generated large dividends to stockholders, which technology companies cannot match. While cigarette companies distribute much of their profits as dividends, technology companies need to heavily invest in research and development. Through this deal, Juul Labs is given a large pool of financial resources to develop better products and expand its market. In particular, they may take advantage of Altria’s capacity for product testing and development.
Altria’s motivation for the deal with Juul Labs
While Juul Labs has clear motivations for the deal, Altria’s motivations to pay US$12.8 billion for a non-controlling stake are less clear. With Juul often used by those attempting to quit cigarette use15 and with Altria having a 55% share of the US cigarette market (mostly Marlboro),3 growth in Juul use would likely reduce Altria’s profits from cigarette sales. In addition, Altria has recently gained permission from the FDA to market Phillip Morris International (PMI’s) heated-tobacco product, iQOS, which is also likely to compete with vaping products for a share of the nicotine delivery market. Thus, increased Juul sales are likely to at least partially reduce Altria’s profitability from cigarettes and iQOS.
With the growth of Juul Labs and other vaping firms,5 financial markets appear to reflect the major challenges that cigarette companies face from alternative nicotine products. With steeper declines in their sales, Altria and the other two major US cigarette companies, British American Tobacco (BAT) and Imperial, have experienced a steep drop in their stock prices since July 2017,16 when the FDA announced its plan to encourage the use of safer nicotine delivery products instead of cigarettes.17 The per cent reduction in stock prices far exceeds that of general consumer products or for the overall market, and is occurring despite ongoing high profits.16 18 19
Previous to the growth of the vaping industry, Altria had a lucrative and secure cigarette business model where they could afford complacency and fail to innovate. However, the decline in stock market value as well as their own market intelligence likely showed that disruption from alternative products had hit a tipping point, where they felt compelled to act. Altria CEO Howard Willard stated, ‘At a time when e-vapor is going to grow rapidly and likely cannibalize the consumers we have in our core business, if you don’t invest in the new areas you potentially put your ability to deliver …at risk.’2 Indeed, Altria reportedly pursued the Juul Labs acquisition for a year and BAT also reportedly attempted to purchase Juul Labs.2
If Altria projected that the rapid growth in Juul use is likely to continue, then obtaining a share of Juul Labs would provide a hedge against losses in cigarette profits as well as earn them a share of the profits from the growing vaping market. In addition, Altria may recoup at least part of its lost cigarette sales by switching its cigarette smokers (eg, Marlboro smokers) to Juul. These gains could be especially great if the FDA were to adopt a nicotine reduction strategy for cigarettes.17
The Juul Labs deal may also reflect Altria’s corporate culture. As the dominant firm in the US cigarette industry, the investment may help Altria to maintain a semblance of control and their position as leader (as shared with Juul) in the nicotine delivery market. In addition to their relationship to Juul, Altria now controls other products that substitute for cigarettes. Through acquisitions of independent firms, Altria now has a 55% share of the smokeless tobacco market and a 33% share of the cigar market,11 and have recently acquired a firm producing oral tobacco-derived products.19 With all of these products and iQOS and Juul, Altria is able to provide a variety of nicotine products to different consumer tastes, thereby refining marketing efforts to expand sales with stronger market segmentation. As one financial analyst has stated, ‘Juul appeals to millennials/hipsters and iQOS appeals to slightly older & more affluent smokers,’19 suggesting that Altria is looking at greater market segmentation as the nicotine market is further disrupted.
The deal could also help Altria’s reputation by showing that they now embrace harm reduction. As Juul Labs and other companies show that it is possible to make acceptable alternatives to cigarettes, the litigation and regulatory risks of cigarette companies increase as the evidence of them selling an unnecessarily defective and deadly product increases.20 Altria could ultimately help their reputation and reduce regulatory and litigation risks by showing that they are actively investing in and seeking to give marketplace advantages to a less harmful product that can replace cigarettes.
In view of the acquisition price, it is likely that Altria views the deal as providing a partial hedge for lost cigarette profits in the face of disruptive technology and vaping as an important part of their future business. Nevertheless, Altria may still gain if the deal leads to a backlash from public health advocates and from legislators and regulators. If the backlash leads to increased scrutiny and regulation of vaping products, Altria can better pursue their main product line, cigarettes, while lessening a major threat to their dominant position in the cigarette market. Indeed, Altria may have been motivated by this potential backlash. Notably, this deal has occurred at the same time as Altria was seeking approval to market PMI’s iQOS. With tobacco companies having a relative advantage with heated tobacco products (HTPs),4 it may be in their interests to equate the rules for HTPs and vaping products, thereby making both nonviable as competitors to cigarettes, or to favour HTPs over vaping.
The future impact of the deal on the US cigarette and alternative nicotine delivery market
From a public health perspective, the impact of the deal will depend on whether it leads to increased cigarette use (eg, through increased initiation or less cessation) or less cigarette use (eg, as a means of cessation or initiation into e-cigarette or no use rather than cigarettes) than would have occurred in the absence of e-cigarettes.21 Independent (ie, non-cigarette) firms have greater incentives than cigarette companies to encourage smokers to switch entirely to vaping, and have played a key role in developing a product that better substitutes for cigarettes.4 At the same time, Juul has been associated with increased vaping by youth and young adults.22–24 The future public health impact of the Altria-Juul Labs deal is difficult to predict, but will likely depend how the deal affects market competition and future FDA regulation.
The Altria-Juul Labs deal can increase competition in the vaping market by effectively highlighting these vaping products as a lucrative opportunity. By paying such a high price for Juul, the deal signals to other firms the potentially high profits in alternative nicotine products, and can thereby attract product developers, entrepreneurs and venture capitalists. Indeed, if Juul Labs uses this deal to gain current smokers as customers, competitors will see further evidence of the financial benefits.
The deal could also increase competition from other cigarette companies. The Altria-Juul Labs deal appears to be unlike Altria’s 2008 purchase of US Tobacco, a US smokeless tobacco company. Altria as well as Reynolds American bought a category of well-established tobacco firms, thereby creating stability and strengthening their cartel-like market structure in cigarettes.25 The Juul Labs deal at least in the short-run does not provide Altria the same degree of control as the smokeless tobacco acquisitions. Indeed, the deal may destabilise the rapidly growing vaping market by creating incentives for the other major US cigarette companies, BAT and Imperial, to more strongly market vaping products. Imperial already produces the blu product line, which includes the Juul-like Myblu. BAT markets Vuse e-cigarettes, which had grown rapidly before the entry of Juul, and has already decided to expand their product lines.26
At the same time that there are market tendencies that may increase competition, there are consequences that can instead reduce competition. This deal directly removes Altria as an independent competitor in the vaping market by terminating its sales of MarkTen. Before Juul entered the US vaping market, Nielsen data from mass market retail (eg, pharmacies and grocery stores) indicated that Altria had a 16% share and the four cigarette companies had a 72% combined share in 2015.4 By September 2018, Juul had 72% of the market (dollar value, 55% in units sold), while the share of Altria fell to 7% by July 2018 and combined cigarette firm shares fell to 25%.4 However, mass market retail was estimated to be 40% of the entire vaping market. Although information is limited on market shares in the vape shop or online consumer channels, cigarette manufacturers have generally not sold their vaping products in these sectors.27 28 With MarkTen having had a small and declining vaping market share, the impact of their exit from the market is likely to be minimal. However, Altria’s potential role as a future competitor is likely more important. After the Juul Labs deal, Altria has less incentive to introduce new vaping products2 and to aggressively market PMI’s iQOS product.4
The deal can also impede competition by Altria working with Juul Labs (eg, through onserts on the outside of packages with coupons for Juul and providing their customer lists for marketing purposes) to insure that those smoking Altria products (eg, Marlboro) switch to Juul rather than other e-cigarette companies’ products. To the extent that brand loyalty is created for Juul products, new entrants will face greater barriers to market entry. In addition, Altria is likely to help Juul Labs fight patent infringement cases.
Besides directly increasing Altria’s market share, the deal can generally lead to increased market shares and market power of cigarette companies. At least up until the FDA was given authority over vaping products (the ‘deeming rule’) in 2016,29 market concentration and entry barriers in the vaping market were low, with cigarette companies having relatively small market shares and facing strong competition from independents selling in vape shops and online.4 However, as the vaping market becomes more established and the major firms become more entrenched, cigarette companies may be positioned to deter the entry of new firms and products. As previously employed in the cigarette market, they may engage in predatory and discriminatory pricing, limit retail shelf space and expand their product lines to fill market niches.3
Through its effects on market competition, the FDA will play a major role in how the Altria-Juul Labs deal affects the vaping market. FDA regulation can have a major impact through its enforcement of the deeming rule,18 especially through their impact on the survival of the independent firms. Although new or modified tobacco products will eventually need FDA permission to legally enter the US market, the FDA has not yet been enforcing the requirements that all new e-cigarette products must be approved.30 Substantially modified or new brands of e-cigarettes (eg, Juul copycats) have freely entered the market since the deeming rule went into effect. As suggested above, the deal may encourage stricter FDA regulation. Indeed, Altria and Juul Labs will have stronger incentives to encourage stricter regulations, since new offerings will need to secure new product approvals. Cigarette companies, with their previous regulatory experience, are well positioned to overcome regulatory hurdles. Market competition, especially from non-cigarette firms with less regulatory experience and product innovation, would then be reduced.
The Altria-Juul Labs deal has direct implications through its effect on marketing and competition in the vaping market. In particular, the merger could increase the likelihood that independent (non-cigarette-company-affiliated) firms play a lesser role, because of advantages by cigarette companies in eliminating market competition and in meeting requirements of FDA regulation. These tendencies could reduce innovation and increase the prices of vaping products. Thereby, youth vaping may be reduced. At the same, cigarette smoking may be prolonged on a population basis if vaping products become a less viable substitute for cigarettes products.
Conclusions
In view of the high price paid by Altria, the deal with Juul shows that Altria now views vaping products as a major threat to its cigarette business. While Altria’s yearly profits in cigarettes are under threat, Juul potentially enables Altria to reassert themselves as a major player in the broader market for alternative nicotine products. However, Altria’s presence in the US vaping industry as well as the increased presence of other cigarette companies is likely to at least initially increase the role of cigarette manufacturers in the national nicotine product business. In addition to the possibility of increasing prices and reducing innovation of vaping products, particularly with regulatory barriers to new entrants, cigarette companies may use their marketing experience to increase initiation into and reduce cessation from alternative nicotine products. Further, we have confined the analysis to the USA; a full assessment of the impact of the deal will require examining the impact in other countries.
The ultimate impact of the Altria-Juul Labs deal on the nicotine delivery product market is difficult to predict, but will likely depend on Altria’s inter-relationship with Juul Labs under the current deal (eg, the extent to which they promote Juul’s products in retail settings), future extensions of the deal, the reaction of other current and prospective players and tobacco product regulation. In gauging how this all plays out in the broader nicotine delivery market, better information is needed on the market shares of the different companies through mass market retail, kiosks, online and vape shop consumer channels. The FDA will need to develop a coherent tobacco control strategy, recognising that the demand for non-combustible nicotine delivery products can significantly grow and replace the cigarette market in the coming years. Regardless of one’s views on harm reduction, the Altria-Juul Labs deal should serve as a wake-up call on the need to carefully monitor competition in the nicotine delivery market, and evaluate how regulations and policies impact cigarette and non-cigarette firms selling alternative nicotine delivery products.
What this paper adds
On 19 December 2018, Altria, the company with the largest share of the US cigarette market, announced an offer for a 35% share of the large and rapidly growing vaping product company, Juul Labs. The implications of this deal have not been discussed in the tobacco control literature.
The Altria-Juul Labs deal could increase the sales of vaping products through increased promotion of Juul by Altria or through increased competition by the cigarette companies in the vaping product market. However, the deal could also reduce incentives for non-cigarette firms to develop new vaping products, reduce their prices and actively promote their products.
Footnotes
Contributors DTL wrote the original article along with DS, and with advice and comments of all coauthors. Each of the coauthors contributed substantially in the rewriting of the paper.
Funding The authors received funding from the National Cancer Institute under grants P01CA200512 and U54CA229974.
Competing interests MLG also received a research grant and served as an advisory board member to pharmaceutical companies that manufacture smoking cessation medications.
Patient consent for publication Not required.
Provenance and peer review Not commissioned; externally peer reviewed.