Morning Report for September 12 2025

Recent Updates (Italy & Global).

  • Italy aims to regain the top spot in world production in 2025: estimated harvest of 47.4 million hectoliters (Italy), 8% vs. 2024, with vineyards generally in excellent condition, quality ranging from “good to excellent” in many regions.
  • Despite recovering production, the market is suffering from saturation: unsold stocks as of July 31st amount to approximately 39.8 million hl , and fears of oversupply after the harvest.
  • Italian exports in the first six months of 2025: slightly down (-0.4%) compared to the first half of 2024, with a volume of -3.1%. However, the USA and Canada recorded positive performances: Italian exports to the USA increased by 5.2%, and Canada by 12.8%.
  • Some regions show diverging trends: Tuscany is forecasting a double-digit reduction in production (≈ −13%) vs 2024; Veneto is experiencing strong growth (estimated at ~12 million hl, constituting almost 1/4 of national production) supported by favorable conditions.
  • France expects to produce around 37.4 million hl , despite modest increases vs 2024, but remains well below the 5-year average due to heat, drought, and reduced juice content in the grapes.

M&A Radar

Operation / Rumor Parties involved Value / size if known Place Source & Date
Italian Wine Group – GIV acquires 100% of Tenuta Rapitalà (Sicily) GIV acquires the remaining shares (10%) that it did not hold in Tenuta Rapitalà (already the majority share since 1999) Value not disclosed; Tenuta Rapitalà owns 176 hectares of organic vineyards in Sicily. Sicily, Italy
Campari sells the Cinzano and Frattina (sparkling/vermouth) brands to Caffo Group 1915 Seller: Campari; Buyer: Caffo Group 1915 ~ €100 million Italy (national portfolio movement)
Italian Wine Brands Acquires Svinando Wine Club Through Giordano Vini IWB acquires Svinando Wine Club through a subsidiary Undisclosed amount Italy

Prices & Harvest Mini‑Box

Region / Voice Current situation / available price Trends (vs week/year) / yields / climate notes
Table grapes / fresh bunches In Italy, the wholesale price for fresh black grapes, unspecified varieties, is ~ €4/kg (comparative data 2025). Stable prices compared to recent periods; but high variability by variety/quality; harvest early in many areas; risk of heat and drought in the South (Puglia, Sicily) if a very hot August/September could worsen the situation.
Generic wine grapes (bulk grapes) Current estimated price range between USD 1.19 − 5.46/kg for grapes in Italy (mixed varieties) Slightly downtrend compared to last year in some areas; high inventories exerting pressure; improved yields where irrigation and plant disease management have held up.
Expected yields / harvest volume Italy: 2025 harvest estimated at ~47.4 million hl; Southern regions 19% vs. 2024; Tuscany −13% vs. 2024; Veneto growing strongly; quality judged to be high overall. Climatic conditions: winter with good water reserves, mild spring; variable summer; some northern regions with problems of bad spring weather; late-season heat can affect acidity/organoleptic balance.

Strategic Observations

  • The global market is very attentive: US tariffs and subsidy/disincentive policies (e.g., the dismantling of vineyards in France) are factors that impact not only quantities/prices, but also market strategies, positioning, and investments.
  • The issue of high inventories (stocks) is a real risk: coordination in trade, targeted promotion, and possible forward agreements are needed to limit the risk of price erosion.
  • Quality as a competitive lever: excellent harvests offer opportunities for differentiation, to promote premium wines and strong denominations, but marketing must “storytell” effectively, even for new/distant markets.

Post ideas for professionals

  1. Title: “47.4 million hectoliters: how to transform 2025 abundance into added value without lowering prices” Corner: operational strategies to avoid the oversupply effect: forward contracts, partnerships with foreign bottlers, product diversification (premium / specialty), careful yield management, investing in branding and storytelling for high-margin segments.
  2. Title: “Italian Exports: USA & Canada Holding Firm, Europe and Asia Creaking – Which Alternative Markets Can Protect Ourselves from Tariffs?” Focus: In-depth country data, assessment of emerging markets with competitive gaps (e.g., South America, Africa, Southeast Asia), possible bilateral agreements, how to differentiate channels (online, HoReCa, retail), and institutional promotion policies.
  3. Title: “Niche M&A in Wine: Focusing on Territories, Organic Sustainability, and Brands with Strong Identity” Focus: Recent cases such as Rapitalà (organic, Sicily), strategies of groups like GIV, and Caffo’s acquisition of Cinzano/Frattina; assessing how these examples can serve as models for small/medium-sized wineries preparing for consolidation.