C2 The BulleTin • Sunday, March 28, 2021 COVID-19 Breweries Continued from C1 At Sunriver Brewing, with most of the company’s sales only in Oregon, the nine-year- old brewery sold slightly less sudsy brew in 2020 than the year before, according to the OLCC beer report. The com- pany hopes to sell more than 16,000 barrel this year, said Ryan Duley, Sunriver Brewing director of sales and market- ing. A barrel of beer is about 31 gallons. It’s been a big unknown when draft sales would ramp back up, Duley said. But since restaurants and bars have re- opened, draft sales have been steadily increasing in Sunriver, Duley said. The brewery sells about 60% of its beer in cans and 40% in kegs, he said. One of the biggest challenges for breweries has been find- ing employees as demand has grown, he said. It’s not a quick turnaround to make beer and get newly hired employees on board. “We’ve actually been on an upward growth since before COVID,” Duley said. “Obvi- ously sales dipped down early on, but we’re now staffing com- ing out of COVID.” Because of the employee shortage, Sunriver is shorting a couple of distributors for draft beer to maintain production in cans. The rationale is that they can get on tap in a month or two especially since tap handles are generally rotated. Keeping shelf space in front of the consumer is important to maintaining sales. “There’s strength in both draft and can sales,” Duley said. “We have an opportunity right now to get another product in a can. It was strategic in a way for us to release our rotation of seasonal beers in a can.” The rotational beers are rec- ipes the brewery had been de- veloping for draft in the pubs, Duley said. Now it’s in a can, a decision made in part because of COVID-19, but also a way to increase capacity. “The pandemic hasn’t af- fected too much,” Duley said. “We have always been able to zig and zag. We’re definitely set up for crisis aversion now and are prepared for something like that. We know we can ma- neuver when a disruption hap- pens.” e e Reporter: 541-633-2117, sroig@bendbulletin.com Whiskey Continued from C1 American whiskey makers have been caught up in the trans-Atlantic trade dispute since mid-2018, when the EU imposed tariffs on American whiskey and other U.S. prod- ucts in response to Trump’s decision to slap tariffs on Euro- pean steel and aluminum. Since then, American whis- key exports to the EU are down by 37%, costing whiskey distillers hundreds of millions in revenue between 2018 and 2020, the council said. Amer- ican whiskey exports to the UK, the industry’s fourth-larg- est market, have fallen by 53% since 2018, it said. The tariffs amount to a tax, which whiskey producers can either absorb in reduced prof- its or pass along to customers through higher prices — and risk losing market share in highly competitive markets. Amir Peay, owner of the Lexington, Kentucky-based James E. Pepper Distillery, said American whiskey has become “collateral damage” in the trade disputes. It’s cost him about three-fourths of his European business, and the looming 50% EU tariff threatens to drain what’s left. “That could possibly end our business in Europe as Wave of expected bankruptcies fell short BY LAURENCE DARMIENTO Los Angeles Times The pandemic produced the kind of fallout that gives economists night- mares. An initial drop in economic output that exceeded the Great Depres- sion. Sudden job losses that outpaced modern records. But there’s one economic bellwether that has seemingly painted an even rosy picture: bankruptcies, which have so far lagged behind their total in the year before the pandemic. Yes, the number of personal and business bankruptcies filed last year in the country fell by nearly 30% from 2019 despite COVID-19. The decline was largely driven by a roughly 31% fall in personal bankruptcies but also a nearly 5% slide in filings due to busi- ness debts, according to U.S. Bank- ruptcy Court statistics. The different outcomes are hardly atypical: Big companies that died have tended to go to Bankruptcy Court, while an unknown number of smaller businesses simply shut down. Business filings would have been even lower if not for a rise in Chapter 11 cases, which allow companies to reorganize. And many of those cases were filed in a handful of courts fa- vored by large corporations with com- plicated businesses that required sepa- rate filings for individual subsidiaries. Two-thirds of U.S. Bankruptcy Court districts saw no increase in Chapter 11 filings. The biggest bankruptcy last year was Hertz, which had amassed some $23 billion in debt after business and per- sonal travel screeched to a halt early on in the pandemic. Other notable bank- ruptcies included retailers J.C. Penney and Neiman Marcus — two retailers already struggling because of online rivals — and Chesapeake Energy, a vic- tim of depressed demand for oil and gas. There was one record set last year, which was by the 62 public and private companies that had assets of $1 billion or more before filing for bankruptcy. That topped the 58 in 2009, according to New Generation Research, a Boston firm that operates the BankruptcyData website. However, a broader measure of cor- porate distress was less dire: There were only 110 publicly traded com- panies — including smaller ones not traded on major exchanges — that filed for bankruptcy. That was more than the 64 in 2019 but well under the 211 in 2009 amid the Great Recession or the 263 in 2001 after the tech bust, we’ve known it over the years,” Peay said in a phone interview Thursday. He’s already curtailed some whiskey shipments to Europe as a hedge against the potential doubling of the EU tariff. His distillery’s signature bourbon and rye brand is James E. Pep- per 1776. Peay spent years and signif- icant money cultivating Eu- ropean markets, especially in Germany, France and the UK. He was planning to double his European business before the trade disputes hit. “The way things are going, everything that we invested to date looks like it could be de- stroyed,” he said. The tariffs have hurt spirits industry giants as well. “We estimate that our com- pany … has borne roughly 15% of the entire tariff bill lev- ied against the U.S. in response to steel and aluminum tariffs,” Lawson Whiting, president and CEO of Louisville, Ken- tucky-based Brown-Forman Corp., said recently. “They have become a big problem for us and it’s imperative that we get it resolved as soon as pos- sible.” Brown-Forman’s lead- ing product is Jack Daniel’s Tennessee Whiskey, a global brand. For Kentucky bourbon pro- David Tonelson/Dreamstime After the pandemic hit, Garden Fresh Restaurant Corp., owner of the Souplantation chain, decided to file for federal bankruptcy protection, selling off its assets and han- dling its creditors in court. the BankruptcyData numbers show. “For a while, I was very convinced that (filings) were going to pop down the line, but 12 months into this they haven’t,” said Ed Flynn, a consultant with the American Bankruptcy Insti- tute, who notes national filings were still down in the middle of March by some 45% compared with the same pe- riod last year when the pandemic-re- lated shutdowns started. “They are down to levels we haven’t seen since the mid-1980s,” he said. There are some obvious reasons that help explain the counterintuitive trend, especially the deluge of cash the U.S. government has pumped into the economy to help keep entire indus- tries and businesses afloat — and put money directly into consumers’ pock- ets through higher unemployment benefits, as well as stimulus checks showered on even middle-class fami- lies, including the $1,400 that landed this month. Other measures to protect individ- uals from the pandemic turmoil also have probably lowered the rate of per- sonal bankruptcies, including eviction bans, foreclosure moratoriums and federal student-loan payment freezes — which were extended by the Biden administration but are still set to expire this year. “Clearly people, mainly through government actions, have not yet felt the pain, and have not had the type of event that would precipitate a bank- ruptcy. They may not be paying their rent or their mortgage, but they are not being foreclosed on yet,” Flynn said. ducers, tariffs slashed their exports by 35% in 2020, with shipments to the EU plummet- ing by nearly 50%, the Ken- tucky Distillers’ Association said. The EU had traditionally been the largest global market for Kentucky distilleries, ac- counting for 56% of all exports in 2017. It’s now about 40%, the association said. “Our signature bourbon in- dustry has sustained significant damage for more than two years because of a trade war that has nothing to do with whiskey,” KDA President Eric Gregory said. “And it will get much worse if we can’t deesca- late this dispute.” Kentucky distilleries craft 95% of the world’s bourbon supply, the association esti- mates. The thaw in the U.S. dis- putes with the EU and UK were part of an effort to resolve a longstanding Airbus-Boeing dispute. The tariff suspensions applied to duties that had been imposed on some spirits pro- ducers on both sides of the At- lantic. But the breakthroughs left plenty unresolved, includ- ing disputes that led to the retaliatory tariffs still hitting American whiskey. The suspended tariffs mean some European spirits produc- ers can ship their products into And for those debts not subject to any governmental restraint on collec- tions there have been practical consid- erations, including a pandemic-related backlog in California state courts that have made it challenging for creditors to get judgments, L.A.-area bankruptcy attorneys say. Unless debtors are facing an imme- diate threat — such as a seizure of as- sets or garnishment of a wage — they will often avoid bankruptcy, which is costly and time-consuming in itself. Still, that doesn’t mean there hasn’t been economic pain that has stretched for months. However, the damage was mostly felt at the lower end of the labor mar- ket, as 80% of 9.6 million net jobs lost were occupied by workers in the bot- tom quartile of wage earners, accord- ing to a report by the Economic Policy Institute. Those are the kinds of jobs offered by the hard-hit hospitality and restau- rant industries, where workers typi- cally don’t file for bankruptcy. Flynn notes that personal bankruptcy fil- ings are often made by middle-class people seeking to protect homes and other assets, as opposed to those with less wealth, who may have few assets to protect and less ability to cover the costs of the process. The National Restaurant Association estimated in December that more than 110,000 restaurants had closed either temporarily or permanently. Coresight Research reports there were 8,736 an- nounced store closures last year and only 3,300 announced openings — the U.S. duty free, while Amer- ican whiskey makers are still subject to tariffs, Whiting said. “We just want a level playing field for American whiskey,” he said. with about 1,500 of the new stores in the dollar store category. Yet, there has been a well-docu- mented boom in online sales, and new business formation dropped only 14% during the first year of the pandemic, according to Yelp, with about 487,500 new business openings from March 11, 2020, through March 1 of this year. About 76,000 were restaurant and food businesses, while nearly 287,000 were professional, local, home and auto businesses, down only 1%. Comprehensive numbers on total business closures, either permanent or temporary, are hard to come by for some of the same reasons that Bank- ruptcy Court filings may not reflect the true extent of the damage suffered by business owners. Economist Chris Thornberg, founder of Beacon Economics in L.A., thinks a key reason there has been no bankruptcy tsunami is simply that the extent of the economic damage has been overstated. Unlike the lead-up to the Great Reces- sion, when the housing market collapsed amid unsustainable debt loads, he notes that personal debt loads were at historic lows early last year, even for low-income workers. He estimates that perhaps 7 million people have been absorbing the brunt of the economic pain during the pandemic, while the huge stimulus has thrown off so much cash that better-off Americans have paid down debts or dumped it into the stock and housing markets, which have taken off. “The vast majority of people who are screaming ‘End of the world,’ ‘Sky is falling’ were using the lens of the Great Recession,” he said, noting that slow- down dragged on for years. By contrast, 12 months after the pandemic started, the forecast this year is for strong economic growth, with the Federal Reserve this month boost- ing its estimate to 6.5%, up from its 4.2% forecast in December. In December, Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody’s Analytics, fig- ured that the government’s support to the economy was simply kicking the problem down the road. He went so far as to say it was like “morphine that will wear off at some point” and that “there will be pain.” He expects bankruptcies will rise and credit problems will emerge once the moratoriums are lifted and the government support is depleted, but strong economic growth should return bankruptcies to normal levels. “It will be very modest in the grand scheme of things,” Zandi said. 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