Spread the love: a Peruvian foodstuffs maker, popular
for its mayonnaise, looks to China to grow.
by Wing, Lisa K.
Peruvians love their mayonnaise. They eat it with chicken, lentils,
potatoes, corn, hamburgers--even on French fries.
But up until a few years ago, many home cooks would make their own
mayonnaise. Commercial brands available were not only more expensive
but, more importantly, they lacked the zesty lemon taste locals craved.
That was the case until the AlaCena mayo brand came along in 2002.
"AlaCena is comfortably priced and it has that Peruvian taste
that I like," says Sonia Laynes, a 32-year-old housekeeper who now
buys AlaCena rather than make her own at home.
Laynes is one of many in Peru that have helped this local condiment
capture 94% of the country's commercial mayonnaise market by volume
since it launched. After just one year on the market, it had attained
50% of total mayonnaise sales.
"AlaCena is our star product," says Leslie Pierce,
general manager of Alicorp, a Peruvian-owned company that produces and
commercializes foodstuffs and derivatives, including AlaCena mayonnaise
and other condiments. Today, the company markets seven products under
the AlaCena brand--including ketchup, aji and rocoto sauce--and exports
its mayonnaise to Ecuador and to the United States.
The AlaCena experience exemplifies what the company aims to
achieve: Spur sales growth by developing more value-added products, and
by tapping new business segments and markets overseas. So far, this
strategy appears to be working well. Sales in 2006 rose 20% from a year
earlier to hit US$664 million. Net income last year came to $35 million,
a 41% increase from the previous year. All three company business
lines--foodstuffs, animal nutrition and processed industrial feeds--have
been strong. "We are breaking company records nowadays,"
Pierce says.
Alicorp has come a long way since it was founded in 1956 as
Anderson, Clayton & Company, a small business that produced oils,
edible fats and laundry soap. In 1971 Peruvian conglomerate Grupo Romero
bought the company and still controls it today.
After a decade of consolidating its local operations and
strengthening internal processes, Alicorp is now set to expand abroad,
Pierce says. Its products are sold in 20 countries. In addition to
increasing its presence and entering new markets throughout Latin
America, Central America and the Caribbean, the company is looking to
increase its presence in the United States, as well as to enter Asian
markets.
Last year, foreign sales comprised 12% of revenues, compared to 8%
in 2005. In the next five years, Pierce expects this number to increase
fourfold. "My personal vision is that figure surpasses 50%,"
he says. The company will arrive in China--the world's largest
producer of farmed shrimp and crawfish--with its Nicovita shrimp feed by
year end 2008. The company's animal nutrition business line, which
includes sea shrimp and trout feed, already comprises three-quarters of
its total exports.
Looking in. While Alicorp has its eyes set on the business and
growth opportunities outside Peru's borders, the company is not
putting aside its efforts to enter new business lines and products
within Peru. The launch of Anua shampoo and conditioner in September
marked the company's entrance into Peru's personal care
segment. "Our revenue from the Anua personal care platform has
opened a window to launch other products in the future," says
Pierce.
Pet food is another profitable line for the company. Alicorp
controls 41% of the market with its Nutrican and Mimaskot brands. The
company's animal feed category in general has been growing 25% a
year for the past five years.
Investors applaud Alicorp's global expansion plans. "It
is going to be difficult to continue growing here because they already
have large market share. That's why they are looking abroad to
grow," says Gonzalo de las Casas, head of investment and finance at
pension fund AFP Integra.
Not only are markets important, but so are the products. "Its
strategy of diversifying markets and products of greater added value is
generating greater value for the shareholder in the long term,"
says Jorge Luis Rodriguez, head of research at Centura SAB, the
brokerage arm of Peru's Interbank.
Buyers and sellers appear to be cheering Alicorp on as well.
"Over the last few years, it has positioned its brands very well,
expanded its product portfolio and ventured into new areas and
categories," says Guillermo Wieland, business manager at
Corporacion Wong, which owns Peru's largest supermarket chain and
sells Alicorp products. "This growth has been accompanied by
excellent logistics and attention to the client."
Fernando Reyes, general manager of Panificadora Rolly's, a
Peruvian bread and baked goods company, has worked with Alicorp for more
than three decades as both a buyer and a supplier. "They offer us
'laboratory' service with reports and analysis on the quality
of the products that help us develop products in accord with their needs
and the market's needs," he says.
LISA K. WING * LIMA
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