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Wine Report of October 13, 2025

on the main news in the world of wine and wineries, with a strategic eye for those working in the sector.

Highlights

  • In Italy, the 2025 harvest is estimated at 47.4 million hectolitres , 8% compared to 2024, with healthy grapes and positive quality prospects.
  • The bulk wine market is holding up: the value remains at ~€1.2 billion, with an average price increase of 2.1% (€0.78/litre) despite declining volumes.
  • Globally, Q1 2025 wine exports are down ‑4.4% in volume, but the pace of recent shipments signals an ongoing recovery.
  • In France, the 2025 production forecast has been reduced to 36 million hectolitres (-1% year-on-year, -16% compared to the five-year average), due to summer heat waves.
  • Australian company Treasury Wine Estates has suspended its A$200 million buyback and withdrawn its 2026/27 guidance, citing sales difficulties for the Penfolds brand in China and operational issues in the US.
  • A regeneration of packaging and distribution models is underway: “bag-in-box” is experiencing strong growth in the UK and other markets, both for its convenience and its sustainable profile.
  • On the technological front, new research shows advanced applications of artificial intelligence for viticulture, spectral analysis of wine (classification, prediction), and personalized wine tourism.

M&A Radar

Deal / RumorParties involvedSize (if known)Geography / focusSource & date
Transactions in the beverage sector (overall)various operators in the alcohol sector31 transactions in the first half of 2025global (wine, spirits)
Treasury Wine Estates – Operational Difficulties / ReorganizationTWEA$200M buyback suspensionAustralia / global

Prices & Harvest (mini box)

Region / varietyEstimated price / notesTrend vs previous year / weekNotes on yield / climate
Italy, average bulk wineapprox. €0.78/litre2.1% on average prices (WBWE)volumes slightly down but value stable
Italy, table wines / white wines4% (white)general segments in moderate growth
Italy, DOC / DOCG wines (red)-2% vs 2024slight weakness for reds compared to whites
Lombardy15% of production estimated compared to 2024significant quantitative increaseearly harvest, healthy and aromatic grapes
Tuscany / Chianti DOCGestimated volume cuts −10/15%qualitative enhancement precautionscontainment policies implemented to defend the brand

Additional Notes:

  • Some areas have already harvested more than 75% of the expected potential; but in marginal areas yields are falling short of original forecasts.
  • In France, the summer heat accelerated ripening but penalized volumetric development, pushing estimates downwards.
  • The use of remote sensing techniques (SAR radar combined with optical indices) is gaining ground for monitoring biomass and phenological stages in the cellar with consistent data that is less sensitive to weather conditions.

Wine Report of October 12, 2025

on the main news in the world of wine and wineries, with a strategic eye for those working in the sector.

Recent Updates (5–7 points)

  • In Italy, the estimate for the 2025 harvest converges on ~47.4 million hectolitres (8% vs 2024) and “very good / excellent” quality.
  • However, Legacoop reports that final volumes could be lower than initial forecasts (~44 million hl) due to adverse weather conditions and reduced yields.
  • The bulk wine market remains resilient: in the first six months of 2025, total world exports were 16.5 million hl (-2.3% on 2024), with the value stable at €1.2 billion thanks to an increase in average prices (2.1%).
  • In Italy, wine exports in the first half of 2025 exceeded €2.8 billion, with an increase of 1.5% in value and 2.1% in volume.
  • In the acquisitions segment, The Wine Group completed the acquisition of six brands (including Meiomi, SIMI, Woodbridge) and vineyards from Constellation Brands, strengthening its infrastructure capabilities.
  • The macroeconomic environment is pushing wineries to adopt digital tools and innovations: research has emerged on the application of Artificial Intelligence in viticulture, production, and wine tourism to optimize sustainability and operations.
  • In Tuscany, consortia (e.g. Chianti DOCG) have decided on yield reduction policies of 10–15% to protect the quality positioning of the brand.

M&A Radar

Operation / RumorParties involvedValue / noteGeography / focusSource & date
The Wine Group → acquisition by Constellation BrandsThe Wine Group & Constellation Brandsnot disclosedUSA / California & North America
Vinovento / Argea / Herita / Italian operationsHerita Marzotto Wine Estates acquires Marsh Estate (USA); Argea acquires US importer; acquisitions in Oltrepò Pavese, Friulinot always knownItaly USA
Oniwines / VeronesiVeronesi plans acquisitions in Piedmont and Northern Italynot disclosedItaly
Campari → sale of Cinzano and FrattinaCampari → Caffo Group 1915~ €100 millionItaly / aperitif and wine brands

Prices & Harvest (mini box)

Region / varietyIndicative price per quintal / hlTrend vs previous year / notes
Veneto / local DOCs~ €40-60 / quintal for DOC grapesstable / slight increase for organic grapes
Pavia / Barbera DOP~ €48 / quintal (var. 40–55)moderate downward trend or stability
Tuscan bulk wine (red)~ €200 / hlhigh supply, downward pressure
Bolgheri Vermentino (bulk)~ €320 / hlpremium level
Italy, medium bulk market~ €0.78 / liter for exported bulk wine2.1% average price vs 2024

Harvest notes / agricultural conditions:

  • In many regions, the harvest is more than 75% complete; some areas are seeing lower yields than initially forecast, contributing to a rebalancing of supply.
  • In Tuscany, a drop from 2.7 to 2.4 million hl is expected for strategic reasons.
  • In Veneto, an increase in production is expected: an estimated 100,000 tons compared to 2024.
  • Variable climate: areas like Friuli report contrasting conditions but with promising aromatic results (low yields, balanced acidity).

Wine Report of October 11, 2025

on the main news in the world of wine and wineries, with a strategic eye for those working in the sector.

Key Updates (5-7 points)

  • In France, the Ministry of Agriculture has revised downwards its estimated 2025 production to 36 million hectoliters , 1% less than 2024 and well below the five-year average, due to heat waves and summer drought.
  • In Italy, wine exports in the first half of 2025 grew in value (1.5%) and volume (2.1%), reaching €2.8 billion and ~703.5 million litres.
  • However, the Italian harvest is in its final stages: over 75% has already been harvested, and updated estimates place it at around 44 million hectolitres , slightly below initial forecasts.
  • In Tuscany, some consortia have approved a controlled reduction in yield (from 2.7 to 2.4 million hl), to protect the quality and positioning of the wine.
  • The European spirits/wine M&A market has seen a collapse in transaction volumes, reaching its lowest level in nearly 27 years.
  • A recent transaction: the Caffo group acquired the Italian Wine Brands plant (linked to the Cinzano brand) in a deal that reshapes part of the landscape of major national brands.
  • On the innovation front, a recent study highlights how AI can be applied in viticulture, production, and wine tourism to improve sustainability, efficiency, and customer engagement.

M&A Radar

Operation / RumorParties involved / notesSize (if known)GeographySource / date
Caffo purchases IWB / Cinzano plantCaffo Group acquires Italian Wine Brands’ Cinzano plantnot disclosedItaly
Transfer of Cinzano/Frattina from Campari to CaffoCampari sells its brands to Caffo for €100 million.~€100 m

Prices & Harvest (mini box)

Region / varietyNotes on performance / conditions / performancePrice (if reported) / comparative trend
Italy (overall)>75% harvest completed; lush quality, good health conditionsBulk wine prices signal downward pressure, due to surplus and weak demand
TuscanyStrategic choice to reduce yield from 2.7 to 2.4 million hl to protect quality
Veneto / Prosecco / Pinot GrigioPositive grape conditions, quantitative increases expected in some areas despite cautious trends
FranceEstimated production decrease due to summer heat effect / reduced yields

Wine Trends in Italy — Week 6–10 October 2025

From the economic situation to operational steps: what’s really happening and how to proceed now.

Trend of Italian and world wines.

Snapshot of the week

  • US administrative stalemate : shutdown halts TTB on COLA and COLA Waivers → delays on labels and halts entry of samples for trade fairs/tastings. Real risk of export promotions being blocked in Italy’s top wine market.
  • Growing tourist demand for family-run wineries : interest from international visitors is booming, led by US Gen Z ; authenticity and a personal welcome are the real drivers.
  • Fine Wine is in a “reset” phase : after the 2020–2022 boom, markets are recovering and becoming more experience-oriented (drinking, not just investing). Italy 100 is more resilient than other regions.
  • Vinitaly.USA (Chicago, October 5–6) : Strong participation from North American companies/consortia and buyers; practical focus on tariffs, trade, and Millennial/GenZ engagement.
  • HNWI migration to the EU : 46% of the super-rich consider relocation and investments in vineyards/olive groves as “hybrid” assets (lifestyle value); Tuscany tops the list among non-urbanites.
  • Italy–USA economic relationship : Italian wine generates ~$19 billion in impact on the US economy (out of a total of $144.4 billion), with a 38% share of foreign wines consumed.
  • EU structural overproduction : 13% of consumption in 2024/25, in line with the 20-year average → pressure on inventories/prices.
  • European consumption : 71% of consumers are cutting back on alcohol; 25% of 25-35 year-olds don’t buy at all. Low-/no-alcohol, functional, and non-alcoholic beverages are on the rise.
  • Italy at a crossroads : US tariffs at 15% (devaluation), declining domestic consumption, and high inventories; structural measures and innovation (including AI ) are needed.

Key insights

1) US Shutdown: immediate impacts on exports and promotion

  • COLA standard : manageable impact (long-term planning).
  • COLA Waivers : high criticality → impossible to ship samples for fairs/masterclasses.
  • Ripple effect on consortia and companies with promotional activities scheduled in the USA.

2) Wine tourism: the (global) choice goes to the family

  • Winery visits: top experiences for the US/UK/DE; family-run wineries beat out brand-name ones.
  • Gen Z USA : 82% want to visit; authenticity and hospitality = competitive advantage.
  • Next step: digital, multichannel promotion, AI for visibility and CRM; the role of specialized wine tourism consultants (revenue, omnichannel sales) to scale without losing brand identity.

3) Fine Wine: From the Covid bubble to the return to the glass

  • World production in 2024 at its lowest since 1961; consumption down to 214 mhl .
  • Indices: Liv-ex 100 −4.9% YTD (Jun ’25); Fine Wine 50 −7.4% YTD; Burgundy 150 −30.2% in 2 years; Italy 100 −3.0% YTD but 12.2% at 5 years.
  • New focus: ready-to-drink, mature wines , and attention to storage costs. The focus shifts back to provenance, authenticity, and drinkability .

4) Vinitaly.USA Chicago: strategic presence

  • 250 exhibitors, a strong presence of consortia and top brands; >1,500 operators expected, with over 2,200 in the final estimates.
  • Program: masterclass, talks, and wine2wine Business Forum ; focus on tariffs, North America, and wine tourism .
  • Sentiment: Fewer tariff scares at meetings, greater openness of importers/distributors to sales programs and new projects.

5) Olive grove-vineyard capital: Europe attracts HNWIs

  • Push for premium agricultural assets (organic/terroir, integrated experiences).
  • Hot areas for Italy: Tuscany, Piedmont, Puglia (wine and oil).
  • “Hybrid” returns: lifestyle income and asset appreciation.

6) Italy–USA: economic symbiosis

  • Italian exports 2024: $2.2–2.3 billion ; US share ~ 24% of Italian wine export value.
  • Every $1 spent on EU/IT wine → $4.5 in value in the US economy.
  • 15% tariffs starting in August: pressure on prices and mix; economic diplomacy and channel strategies needed.

7) EU supply and falling demand: the structural issue

  • EU self-sufficiency 113.6% : chronic surplus → inventories and cash flow under stress.
  • In Europe, alcoholic beverages −1.8% vs. non-alcoholic beverages 5.1%; no/low-fat and functional beverages ~60% of the beverage category.

8) Italy: critical issues and levers of sectoral policy

  • 30,000 processing companies, 250,000 agricultural companies; €16 billion turnover; world’s leading producer.
  • Operational proposals (safeguard package):
    • Revision of the Consolidated Law : yields per hectare, alignment of yields with five-year data, management of surpluses, simplification of controls, labelling (ingredients & nutritional information).
    • Planting/replanting permits : suspension of fines for unused permits (pre-Jan 2025); validity extended to 8 years .
    • Anti-tariff measures : temporary compensation for sub-marginal profits; proposed reduced VAT on wine served with meals in restaurants to stimulate domestic demand.
    • Finance & Operations : Business unit lease; joint venture/newco for technologies and new markets (e.g., dealcoholized products); revolving lien on inventory for liquidity.
    • End-to-end Artificial Intelligence : vineyard (targeted dosages), winery (fermentations/blends), marketing (segmentation/CRM), sales (dynamic pricing), supply (demand forecasting).

What to do now (essential playbook for wineries and consortia)

  1. Mitigating the US Shutdown
    • Reschedule your export promotion calendar: move activities requiring COLA Waivers to alternative markets in the next 6–8 weeks.
    • Prepare a documentation pipeline ready for TTB reopening; maintain standard COLAs in progress (even if not reviewed).
    • Activate B2B digital tastings , domestic shipments via importers with stock already cleared through customs.
  2. Portfolio repositioning
    • Increase the white/sparkling/rosé mix (GenZ hookup & multi-cuisine pairing).
    • For reds, focus on ready- to-drink vintages ; storytelling on origin and sustainability .
    • Introduce a no/low test line on 1–2 SKUs in selective large-scale retail or DTC.
  3. Wine tourism as a marginal channel
    • Family-Hosted format with digital booking, dynamic ticketing, and add-ons (vertical, food pairing, olive grove tour).
    • CRM with lead magnets (photo tours, home recipes, playlists) and automations (welcome → cross-sell → wine club subscription).
  4. North American exports, beyond tariffs
    • Net Pricing : Protect top placements with value-adds (bundles, library releases, magnums).
    • Channels : Strengthens specialized e-retail, clubs, and premium Italian restaurants; serves as a buffer in Canada and Mexico .
  5. Finance and liquidity
    • Activates a revolving lien on slow-moving inventory; evaluates a joint venture for third-party dealcoholization/bottling plants.
    • Review delivery/yield contracts to align production with actual demand.
  6. AI & Operational Data
    • Vineyard: sensors/vision algorithms for targeted treatments (less input, higher quality).
    • Winery: Predictive fermentation models; blends assisted by a human validation panel.
    • Go-to-market: elastic pricing by market/segment; look-alike campaigns targeting GenZ/Millennial audiences.

Conclusion

2025 marks an active selection process : less dispersion, more focus on high-margin markets/channels and authentic experiences. Amid tariffs, shutdowns, and shifting demand , the winners are wineries capable of three key moves: diversifying , rethinking their portfolio (including low/no), and monetizing wine tourism with digital and AI. Italian wine leadership begins here: consistent quality, authentic storytelling, and financial discipline. The rest is just background noise.

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