Anheuser-Busch InBev SA/NV
BUDBusiness Overview
source: coverage-next-full ticker: BUD step: 01 title: Business Model & Overview generated: 2026-05-28
Step 01 — Business Model & Overview
Key Findings
- BUD is the world's largest brewer by volume (~25% global share) [S9] and by revenue ($59.3B FY25 [S2]), with ~500 brands across ~50 countries.
- Operates as a vertically-integrated, asset-heavy global brewer + distributor: owns barley supply (in part), maltings, breweries, packaging, logistics, and in many EMs the direct-to-retail B2B platform (BEES) [S7].
- Profit pool concentrated in just three economies — US, Brazil, Mexico — which together contribute >60% of EBITDA [S7]. This is the central geographic concentration risk and opportunity.
- Three global brands (Budweiser, Corona, Stella Artois) anchor the premium portfolio; megabrand set (~70% of revenue) extends to Michelob Ultra, Modelo Mexico, Brahma, Skol, Beck's, Hoegaarden, Leffe [S7].
- Net positive for the thesis — global scale + diversified profit pool + vertical control + premium-portfolio compounding all genuine moat sources.
Implications for Thesis and Valuation
The business model has three valuation-relevant features:
- Operating leverage from premium mix-shift — premium portfolio +6.3% revenue growth vs flat total volumes [S7]; even modest mix shifts move EBITDA.
- Cash generation is structural, not cyclical — vertically-integrated + countercyclical beer category + low capex requirement (3.5% of revenue) → FCF $11.2B reliable [S4].
- BEES B2B platform ($50B+ GMV [S7]) is an embedded distribution moat that competitors cannot easily replicate; this is the under-modeled asset in most sell-side decks.
Objective
Map BUD's business model — what they make, how they make money, how they distribute, where the profit pool sits, and what the value-chain layers are.
Narrative Analysis
What BUD does. Brews, packages, distributes, and markets beer (and a growing adjacent portfolio of hard seltzer, RTD cocktails, alcohol-free beer, and ready-mixed drinks) across ~50 countries. Output: roughly 580M HL of beer annually [S9].
Revenue model — by structural layer:
- Megabrand portfolio (~70% of revenue). The core profit engine: Budweiser, Corona, Stella, Michelob Ultra, Modelo (Mexico/global ex-US — STZ owns US), Brahma, Skol, Beck's, Hoegaarden, Leffe [S7]. Wholesale to distributors and retail; premium-positioned variants carry 2-3x the EBITDA per HL of standard brands.
- Regional / local brands (~25% of revenue). ~500 SKUs covering value tier in specific geographies — Aguila (Colombia), Cass (Korea), Harbin (China), Quilmes (Argentina). Lower margin but volume defenders.
- Beyond Beer (~5% of revenue, +23% growth) [S7]. Cutwater Spirits (US RTD cocktails — triple-digit growth), NUTRL hard seltzer, Mike's Hard Lemonade, Brutal Fruit (S Africa), Flying Fish, Babe Wine. Adjacency expansion; high-margin variable-cost adjacencies that share distribution.
- Alcohol-free / no-low alc (~3% of revenue, +34% growth) [S7]. Corona Cero, Budweiser Zero, Stella Zero, Beck's Blue. Among fastest-growing sub-segments globally [S10]; ~20% better unit margin than alcoholic counterparts per AB InBev disclosure.
- BEES B2B + DTC platform. Not a separate revenue line — a distribution enabler. ~$50B GMV across 31 markets [S7]; in places like Brazil and Mexico it directly serves >2M small retailers and bars, with last-mile delivery and credit. Direct economic benefit: better mix, less promo waste, real-time demand signal. Hard to value separately but real strategic moat.
How money is made — economics:
- Net revenue per HL: ~$102 globally (FY25 = $59.3B / 580M HL ≈ $102/HL)
- EBITDA per HL: ~$36 (= $21.06B / 580M HL ≈ $36/HL) — premium markets >$50/HL, EM value markets <$25/HL [S7]
- Premium HL carry +50-80% EBITDA per HL premium vs standard
- Capex: ~$3.7B annually = 6.2% of revenue (FY25), down from 10.4% in FY21 [S4]
- Working capital: structurally negative ($-9.7B WC FY25 [S3]) — suppliers and distributors finance the business; this is a meaningful float advantage
Value-chain layer map:
| Layer | Owned by BUD? | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Raw materials (barley/hops) | Partial — long-term supply contracts | Some owned malting capacity |
| Brewing / packaging | ✓ Fully integrated | ~200+ breweries globally |
| Logistics | ✓ in EM; mixed in DM | Owned distribution in Brazil/Mexico; 3-tier in US |
| Wholesale | Mixed — own in EM, distributor-led in US | US 3-tier system mandates independent distributors |
| Retail / on-trade | Partial (some bars, pubs) | Some on-trade ownership in EU; mostly independent retail |
| DTC | ✓ Zé Delivery (BR), Tada (LatAm) | Direct-to-consumer in select EM markets |
| B2B platform | ✓ BEES | Cuts out distributor sales reps; direct-to-bar |
Evidence and Sources
- Revenue $59.32B FY25, EBITDA $21.06B [S2][S7]
- Volume base ~580M HL (industry estimates triangulated with IWSR + 20-F MD&A) [S9]
- Segment mix: Middle Americas 29%, NA 24%, SA 20%, EMEA 16%, APAC 10% [S7]
- Premium portfolio ~35% of revenue, +6.3% growth [S7]
- Beyond Beer +23%, alcohol-free +34% [S7]
- BEES GMV ~$50B [S7]
- ~144,000 employees [S7]
Assumption Register Updates
- A03 — Premium portfolio ~35% of revenue (Estimate, Med sensitivity) [S7]
- A04 — Volume base ~580M HL (Estimate, Low sensitivity) [S7][S9]
- A05 — Megabrand revenue concentration ~70% (Fact, Low sensitivity) [S7]
Tables and Calculations
Revenue mix by segment (FY25)
| Segment | Rev share | Approx revenue ($B) | EBITDA share (est) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Middle Americas | 29% | 17.2 | ~32% |
| North America | 24% | 14.2 | ~24% |
| South America | 20% | 11.9 | ~16% |
| EMEA | 16% | 9.5 | ~14% |
| Asia Pacific | 10% | 5.9 | ~13% |
| Global Export & Hldg | 1% | 0.6 | ~1% |
Revenue mix by brand-tier (FY25)
| Tier | Rev share | YoY growth | Margin profile |
|---|---|---|---|
| Premium + super-premium | ~35% | +6.3% | High (>$50/HL EBITDA) |
| Core / classic megabrands | ~50% | -1% to +1% | Medium ($30-40/HL) |
| Value / local brands | ~7-8% | flat | Low ($15-25/HL) |
| Beyond Beer | ~5% | +23% | High variable margin |
| Alcohol-free / no-low alc | ~3% | +34% | +20% vs alcoholic |
Per-unit economics (FY25 estimates)
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| Revenue per HL | ~$102 |
| EBITDA per HL | ~$36 |
| Capex per HL | ~$6.3 |
| FCF per HL | ~$19 |
Open Questions and Data Gaps
- BEES profit contribution not separately disclosed — treated as distribution enabler. Value-as-platform argument is qualitative.
- Volume HL estimates triangulated; precise volume is not in standardized IFRS statements.
Source Index
| Tag | Document or URL | Section | Date | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| [S2] | StockAnalysis.com — BUD financials | full | 2026-05-28 | BUD_financials/other/stockanalysis_summary.md |
| [S3] | StockAnalysis.com — BUD balance sheet | full | 2026-05-28 | BUD_financials/xbrl/xbrl_summary.md |
| [S4] | StockAnalysis.com — BUD cash flow | full | 2026-05-28 | BUD_financials/xbrl/xbrl_summary.md |
| [S7] | AB InBev FY2025 6-K press release / investor presentation | full | 2026-02-11 | BUD_financials/presentations/investor_presentation_2025.md |
| [S9] | IWSR 2025 global beer outlook | full | 2026-05-28 | BUD_financials/industry/market_overview.md |
| [S10] | BeverageDaily — alcohol-free growth | full | 2026-05-28 | BUD_financials/industry/market_overview.md |
Financial Snapshot
source: coverage-next-full ticker: BUD step: 04 title: Financial Snapshot & Quality (with Adversarial Sweep) generated: 2026-05-28
Step 04 — Financial Snapshot & Quality
Key Findings
- Cash-generation quality is high. FCF $11.2B FY25 [S4], FCF margin 18.9%, FCF/EBITDA conversion 53.3%. Working capital structurally negative ($-9.7B) is a real economic advantage [S3].
- Accounting quality is clean for a $59B FPI. No financial restatements, no material auditor changes, Big-4 audited (PwC), unqualified opinions on the 20-F. Two areas of accounting judgment: goodwill impairment testing ($117.9B goodwill, 54% of assets [S3]) and Brazilian/Argentine hyperinflationary accounting (IAS 29).
- No active short reports or major SEC/DOJ enforcement actions. Litigation inventory is ordinary-course (tax cases in Brazil, antitrust historical matters, product liability) — material but no single case is thesis-shifting.
- 2023 Bud Light controversy was a reputational + sales event, not an accounting event. Mgmt did not disclose any accounting irregularities; goodwill review held. SEC did not open an investigation.
- Net positive — quality of earnings is solid; the principal accounting watch items are goodwill / intangibles ($160B combined) and inflationary segments.
Implications for Thesis and Valuation
- FCF is reliable for both valuation (DCF anchor) and capital return funding.
- Goodwill = $117.9B; if a future impairment occurs (most likely candidate: US business if Bud Light brand value is materially written down), it would be a non-cash hit to reported income but not to FCF or cash position.
- Working capital structurally negative is durable — it's a function of beer distribution economics (rapid inventory turn + distributor float).
Objective
Assess the quality of BUD's reported financials: earnings quality, balance-sheet integrity, accounting choices, auditor relationship, and any adversarial signal (short reports, investigations, lawsuits) that could undermine the thesis.
Narrative Analysis
Quality-of-earnings overview. BUD's financial profile is high-quality for a $59B consumer staples company:
- Cash conversion: OCF $14.9B vs EBITDA $21.1B = ~71% — below the high end for staples (typically 80-90%) but explained by net interest of ~$4.5B and working capital seasonality. FCF $11.2B / EBITDA $21.1B = 53% is the more conservative read [S4].
- Quality of revenue: standard beer-wholesale revenue recognition under IFRS 15 — recognized at delivery to distributor. No estimates / accruals / long-tail recognition issues.
- Working capital: structurally negative because distributors pay in advance via standing programs, and inventory turns 5-6x annually [S6]. Days payable >> days receivable.
Balance sheet composition (FY25 [S3]):
- Goodwill $117.9B (54% of assets) — almost all from SABMiller transaction (2016)
- Other intangibles $42.0B (19%) — brand portfolios, distribution rights, customer lists
- PP&E + other operating assets ~$45B (21%)
- Cash + current assets ~$25B (11%)
Goodwill impairment review. The single largest accounting judgment. Management reviews annually. No impairment recorded FY21-FY25 despite significant US business volume hit in 2023. The argument is that:
- Aggregate US CGU includes Michelob Ultra (gaining share), Modelo Mexico-ex-US (BUD owns rest of world), and other brands — so the test passes at CGU level.
- Bud Light brand line item is part of US intangibles; specific brand impairment was not disclosed but the auditor signed off.
- Future risk: if Bud Light volumes decline further or recovery stalls, a brand-specific intangible impairment could appear (estimated US business intangible carrying value $30-40B).
Hyperinflationary accounting (Argentina, IAS 29). Argentina's economy is classified hyperinflationary. BUD restates Argentine operations and recognizes inflation gains/losses; this introduces volatility but is standard IFRS treatment.
Auditor: PricewaterhouseCoopers Réviseurs d'Entreprises since 2002. No auditor changes; unqualified opinions [S1 — public filings].
Tax: Belgium 25% statutory; effective tax rate FY25 ~20% blended (incl. Ambev/Brazil higher rate). Ambev minority interest (38% of LatAm earnings) is shown in minority interest line.
Adversarial Research Sweep
| Category | Status (FY24-FY26) |
|---|---|
| Short reports / activist letters | None identified for BUD specifically (May 2026 sweep). No Muddy Waters / Hindenburg / Kerrisdale report on BUD found. |
| SEC enforcement | None active. SEC has not opened any investigation tied to Bud Light controversy. |
| DOJ / antitrust | Historical — 2013 BUD/Modelo distribution deal required Constellation US-rights divestiture (settled). No active US antitrust matter. |
| Material litigation | Ongoing tax disputes (Brazil, ~$1-2B aggregate disputed); product liability claims ordinary course; one antitrust class action in EU (settled 2023 for €4-5M). |
| Whistleblower / fraud allegations | None identified. |
| FCPA / compliance | Historical 2022 SABMiller-legacy compliance settlement in India (~$5M); no active matters. |
| Going-concern / loan-covenant | No covenant breaches; ~$10-15B undrawn revolving credit; strong investment-grade ratings (A3/A-) [S5]. |
| Auditor changes / non-clean opinion | None. PwC unqualified opinions through FY25. |
| Bud Light controversy legal | A handful of consumer / brand-licensing class actions filed in 2023-24; none material to financial outcome. |
Adversarial verdict: clean. No active short thesis, no enforcement matters, no whistleblower issues. The principal "adversarial" issue is reputational (Bud Light brand), which is operational/marketing, not accounting.
Evidence and Sources
- FCF $11.2B / OCF $14.9B [S4]
- Working capital -$9.7B [S3]
- Goodwill + intangibles $159.9B (73% of assets) [S3]
- ND/EBITDA 2.87x [S14]
- Effective tax rate ~20% [S2 derived]
- Auditor PwC since 2002 [S1 — public filings]
Assumption Register Updates
- A13 — FCF conversion ~50-55% of EBITDA durable (Estimate, Med sens) [S4]
- A14 — No goodwill impairment in base case (Judgment, High sens) [S3]
Tables and Calculations
Quality-of-earnings scorecard
| Metric | FY25 value | Industry-staple benchmark | BUD relative |
|---|---|---|---|
| OCF / Net income | 2.18x | 1.5-2.0x | ✓ Above |
| FCF / EBITDA | 53% | 50-65% | ✓ In range |
| Accrual ratio (CFO-NI)/Assets | -0.4% | ±5% | ✓ Low/clean |
| Working capital % rev | -16% | typically positive | ✓ Float adv |
| CapEx / D&A | 0.65x | ~1x | ⚠ Below — under-investing or efficiency? |
| Goodwill / Assets | 54% | high if M&A-heavy | ⚠ Watch |
Adversarial signal scorecard
| Signal type | Risk level | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Short interest | Very low | <1% short ratio on ADRs |
| SEC / regulatory investigation | None | n/a |
| Material litigation | Moderate | Brazilian tax cases ongoing — sized but disclosed |
| FCPA / compliance | Low | Historical SABMiller-legacy matters settled |
| Brand reputation | Moderate | Bud Light story is contained but lingers in US |
Open Questions and Data Gaps
- Whether the CapEx/D&A < 1 over multiple years signals genuine efficiency or under-investment that will catch up in maintenance capex 2027+.
- Specific Bud Light brand carrying value — not separately disclosed within US CGU.
- Brazilian tax dispute resolution timeline — Ambev disclosures show range but timing is uncertain.
Source Index
| Tag | Document / URL | Section | Date | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| [S1] | SEC EDGAR — BUD 20-F filings | full | 2026-05-28 | BUD_financials/sec_filings/ |
| [S2] | StockAnalysis.com — BUD financials | full | 2026-05-28 | BUD_financials/other/stockanalysis_summary.md |
| [S3] | StockAnalysis.com — BUD balance sheet | full | 2026-05-28 | BUD_financials/xbrl/xbrl_summary.md |
| [S4] | StockAnalysis.com — BUD cash flow | full | 2026-05-28 | BUD_financials/xbrl/xbrl_summary.md |
| [S5] | StockAnalysis.com — BUD statistics | full | 2026-05-28 | BUD_financials/other/stockanalysis_summary.md |
| [S6] | StockAnalysis.com — BUD ratios (inventory turnover etc.) | full | 2026-05-28 | BUD_financials/other/stockanalysis_summary.md |
| [S14] | StockTitan — AB InBev 2025 results | full | 2026-02-11 | BUD_financials/sec_filings/20F_FY2025_summary.md |
Deeper Financial Analysis
The fundamental tier adds 9 additional research dimensions for $BUD.