Stubbed out: British American Tobacco just booked a $31.5bn write-off

Not yet a subscriber? Sign up free below.

Stubbed out

Cigarette giant British American Tobacco (BAT) has wiped a whopping $31.5 billion from the value of some of its US brands like Newport, Camel, and Pall Mall, in one of the biggest corporate write-offs in history.

CEO Tadeu Marroco stoically dismissed the writedown as “accounting catching up with reality”, with American smoking rates continuing to plummet, hovering near record lows of 12%, down from 26% just 20 years ago. The move caused shockwaves throughout the industry, sending BAT shares, as well as those of rivals Altria and Philip Morris, down 9%, 3%, and 1%, respectively.

Still unmatched

Big tobacco has been smoldering since the Surgeon General's 1964 report linking smoking to cancer. But, nearly 6 decades on, tobacco is still... big (and profitable). Indeed, relative to what consumers pay, cigarettes remain incredibly cheap to manufacture, with BAT itself reporting a 38% operating profit margin last year. That’s better than what Coca-Cola, Nike, Apple, and even luxury giant LVMH managed.

That margin gives the company a lot of financial firepower in its transition for the future, with BAT aiming to generate up to 50% of its revenue from smoke-free non-combustibles, such as vapes, by 2035. That's the obvious strategy, given that you're much more likely to find students stealthily vaping than lighting up a cigarette these days — CDC data reveals that just 2% of high schoolers admit to smoking cigarettes, a record low.

Not yet a subscriber? Sign up free below.

Tags

Stories from this newsletter

Twitch is shutting down in South Korea
McDomination: The Golden Arches have huge ambitions
Grade inflation: Most students are getting A's at Harvard and Yale
We and our partners use cookies and similar technologies (“Cookies”) on our website and in our newsletters for performance, analytical or advertising purposes to ensure you have the best experience on our site and/or interaction with us. To find out more about the use of Cookies, see our Cookie Notice. Please click OK if you consent to our use of Cookies or click Manage my Preferences to manage your Cookie preferences.