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Pernod Ricard warns Iran war to hit full-year sales despite Q3 rebound

By Thomson Reuters Apr 16, 2026 | 12:36 AM

By Dominique Vidalon

PARIS, April 16 (Reuters) – Pernod Ricard, which is in talks to merge with U.S. rival Brown-Forman, reported a stronger-than-expected 0.1% rise in sales for the third quarter but warned the decline in tourism due ​to the war in Iran would hurt its travel retail business and ‌impact full-year sales.

The second-biggest Western spirits group behind Diageo, Pernod Ricard said it expected group organic net sales to decline by between 3% and 4% in the current fiscal year that started July 1.

It is the latest company to report a significant hit to sales from the conflict in the ‌Middle ​East, after France’s luxury groups all pointed to weaker ⁠sales in the first three ⁠months of the year following a sharp slowdown in shopping in the region.

Duty-free stores selling premium perfumes and spirits are also feeling the pain from shuttered airports and curbs on travel to the region.

Travel retail accounted for 6% of Pernod’s net ​sales in 2025.

The maker of Martell cognac and Absolut vodka reported sales of 1.95 billion euros ($2.30 billion) in the three months to March 31, a like-for-like rise ⁠of 0.1%.

This compared with average expectations of a ⁠0.7% decline in a company-compiled poll of analysts.

The performance was an ​improvement from a 5% contraction in the second quarter as markets in India and ​global travel retail sales improved, offsetting persistent weakness in consumer demand in ‌the United States and China.

The company also reaffirmed guidance of between 3% and 6% sales growth between 2027 and 2029 despite an industry-wide slump in alcohol demand.

Spirits companies are battling a multi-year slump in sales that has prompted valuations to slide, CEOs to ⁠exit and companies to sell assets and cut costs. In the key U.S. and Chinese markets sales have dropped amid tariff threats, destocking and a sluggish Chinese economy.

Pernod did not ⁠comment in a statement ‌on the ongoing merger talks with Brown-Forman, which would create ⁠the world’s No. 2 spirits maker by sales behind London-based Diageo.

Analysts ​say ‌it could save the combined company as much as $450 million ​a year, helping ⁠offset the decline in alcohol consumption from pandemic-era highs. Over the last five years, shares of the two companies have both lost roughly 60% of their value.

U.S. spirits group Sazerac has also offered to buy Brown-Forman for about $15 billion, a source familiar with the matter said on Wednesday, complicating the talks.

($1 = 0.8467 euros)

(Reporting by Dominique Vidalon; Editing by Dominique ​Patton and Kim Coghill)