# Baijiu%20Industry
Latest news and articles about Baijiu%20Industry
Total: 16 articles found

Rational Spirits: China’s Alcohol Giants Reclaim the Narrative in 2026’s 618 Festival
The 2026 618 e-commerce festival marked a strategic pivot for China's alcohol industry, moving from aggressive discounting to price stability and brand-led growth. Driven by a combination of the 2026 World Cup and the Dragon Boat Festival, major brands successfully defended their price floors while seeing a surge in demand from both traditional Baijiu drinkers and a growing demographic of younger, female consumers.

The Bitter Aftertaste: Regulatory Scrutiny Tightens on Gansu’s Liquor King
The CSRC has launched an investigation into Zhao Mantang, the billionaire controller of Huangtai Liquor, for disclosure violations. The news triggered a stock sell-off and coincides with a sharp financial downturn for the Gansu-based distillery.

From Chemicals to Baijiu: Wuliangye Taps Industrial Veteran to Navigate Sector Headwinds
Wuliangye has appointed industrial veteran Deng Min as its new chairman to lead the company through a period of market contraction. Deng, who brings decades of experience in chemical manufacturing and state-owned investment, replaces Zeng Congqin in a move that emphasizes operational reform over traditional political leadership.

A New Vintage for Wuliangye: Industrial Veteran Deng Min Takes the Helm Amid Baijiu’s ‘Deep Adjustment’
Wuliangye has appointed industrial veteran Deng Min as its new chairman, signaling a strategic shift toward operational efficiency and tighter state oversight. As an outsider to the spirits industry, Deng faces the daunting task of steering China's leading strong-aroma baijiu producer through a period of high inventory and shifting consumer demand.

The Tipsy Pivot: Why China’s Tea and Alcohol Giants are Swapping Playbooks
China's beverage industry is undergoing a structural shift as saturated tea brands and aging Baijiu distillers converge on the 'slight intoxication' market. Faced with slowing growth and demographic shifts, companies are blurring product lines to capture Gen Z consumers through lifestyle-driven, low-alcohol experiences.

The Death of a Phoenix: How China’s Most Notorious Shell Company Finally Ran Out of Lives
The delisting of *ST Rock (600696) marks the end of a 33-year history of market manipulation and shell survival on the Shanghai Stock Exchange. Long known as the 'undying phoenix' for its ability to avoid delisting through constant rebranding, the company finally succumbed to China's modernized, stricter regulatory environment.

The Fall of the A-Share Phoenix: China’s Tightening Noose Around ‘Shell’ Speculation
The Shanghai Stock Exchange has ordered the delisting of *ST Yan Shi (600696), a 33-year market veteran known for evading closure through frequent name changes and concept chasing. The move underscores China's shift toward stricter market-clearing mechanisms and the death of the 'shell company' speculative model.

Hangover in Huzhou: The End of an Era for China’s Baijiu Giants
China's baijiu industry faced a historic downturn in 2025, with Kweichow Moutai recording its first dual decline in revenue and profit in 24 years. The sector is struggling with massive inventory backlogs, leadership reshuffles, and a fundamental shift in consumer demand that has led to the first-ever delisting of a baijiu company.

Beyond the Bottle: Shanxi Fenjiu Bets on Ecosystem Health and Gen Z to Navigate China’s Baijiu Glut
Shanxi Fenjiu's Q1 2026 results highlight a strategic shift toward inventory health and digital channel governance. By prioritizing 'youthification' and de-stocking, the firm is successfully navigating a broader industry downturn while building a new consumer base among younger drinkers.

Moutai’s Moment of Truth: Why China’s Liquor King is Sacrificing Growth to Save Its Mythos
Kweichow Moutai has reported its first annual revenue and profit decline since 2001, signaling a major turning point for China's premier luxury brand. The company is responding with a 'market-oriented' reform, emphasizing direct sales and dynamic pricing to stabilize its market position amidst a broader industry slump.

Moutai’s Hangover: China’s ‘Bulletproof’ Spirits Giant Suffers First Double Decline in Decades
Kweichow Moutai has reported its first dual decline in revenue and profit since its 2001 IPO, marking a historic turning point for China's most valuable liquor brand. The results highlight a struggling secondary product line and the high costs of a transition toward direct-to-consumer sales amidst a cooling economy.

The Paradox of the Chaser: How China’s Soda King Got Trapped in the Baijiu Bottle
Mingren Soda, which built a 4-billion-yuan business as the primary companion for China’s baijiu drinkers, is now struggling to pivot away from its niche dependency. Facing a shrinking alcohol market and distributor unrest, the brand must reinvent its identity to appeal to younger, health-conscious consumers who view its products as outdated relics of traditional drinking culture.