Bottled Water Next Generation Commodity
Post on: 7 Август, 2015 No Comment
Bottled Water, Next Generation Commodity
The stock exchange defines a commodity as any unprocessed or partially processed good. Wikipedia defines a commodity as anything for which there is demand, but which is supplied without qualitative differentiation across a given market. When we think of commodities or check the current prices of various commodities, we think of oil, natural gas, soybeans, corn, gold, silver, and other precious metals. Water, wind, and solar power are not considered commodities and cannot be publicly traded, but they are things that there are major demands for in our quickly developing world. Companies like First Solar. SunPower Corporation. and Suntech Power help provide megawatts of power through solar energy. Enercon and REpower manufacture the worlds largest wind turbines and take advantage of wind power to create energy. Finally we all pay water bills, we see Aquafina commercials on TV, and drink water out of public drinking fountains, yet the average person does not comprehend the demand for bottled water in this country. I guess its not just general water that is in demand, but the method of how we drink water and that Americans have a preference for the types of water they want and will pay for.
Within the last four quarters, Apple has reported Ipod revenue of 9.21 billion dollars with much help from the Ipod Touch and new versions of the Ipod Nano. 2007 movie tickets sales in the US totaled 9.66 billion dollars with blockbuster movies such as Spider Man 3, Shrek the Third, and Transformers all released last year. Also in 2007, Major League Baseball almost caught up to the National Football League in revenue with a little over 6 billion dollars. While all this revenue for MLB, Ipods, and movie tickets were quite impressive for 2007, what beat all those industries was bottled water. The United States contributed over 15-billion dollars to the bottled water industry last year!
Interesting bottled water statistics:
- Americans drink more bottled water than coffee, milk, or beer. (Dont go rushing to sell your Starbucks or Anheuser-Busch shares quite yet though)
- In 1976, the average American drank 1.6 gallons of bottled water per year. Just last year in 2007, the average American drank over 28 gallons of bottled water. In over thirty years, we have increased our bottled water consumption by over seventeen times.
- Fiji Water produces 1-million bottles/day while 50% of the residents in Fiji dont even have reusable drinking water.
- The only drink that outsells bottled water is carbonated soft drinks which totals to an annual consumption of 52.9 billion gallons.
- Bottled water is a 50-billion dollar industry worldwide with bottling companies like Arrowhead, Poland Springs, Crystal Geyser, and Saratoga Springs.
- 24% of US bottled water is tap water purified and repackaged by Coke & Pepsi (aka purified municipal water).
- Pepsis Aquafina is the #1 selling bottled water with 13% market share while Cokes Dasani bottled water is #2 with 11% market share.
This doesnt mean that people are completely halting their consumption of carbonated beverages, but it means consumers are adding a lot more bottled water to their drinking options. Coke (KO ) and Pepsi (PEP ) realize that consumers are considering a cold bottle of water over a cola, and almost a quarter of the US bottled water industry is derived from those two companies. Just because the bottled water industry is flourishing. it doesnt make Coke and Pepsi good investment options. At the same time they generate much revenue from their bottled water brands, they also rely on huge revenues from their carbonated drink options. I honestly dont know of any good way to profit in the stock market from the large growth of the bottled water industry. There are much better deals in the market right now with better long-term growth than these two beverage companies.
For me, its just a major eye opener on how much Americans spend on purified municipal water when we can just boil and bottle our own tap water at home. If were paying a premium for bottled water, Id think that wed at least want some spring water to get our moneys worth. We tend to pay a very high price for convenience in this country. If gasoline starts to cost $4/gallon this coming summer and a gallon of milk rises to $6, then it may be prudent to bottle our own water sooner rather than later.