Well, CA wines are, on the whole, ridiculously overpriced.
A lot of people moved in on that, making it not entirely unlikely that supply now outstrips demand?
Same thing happened in various regions in France at various points in time. The viable plots will be reclaimed at some point, and make some fine wines in the future, except possibly not at the price point the original owners had in mind...
California wines have had a poor price-to-quality ratio for many years when competing with ubiquitous wine imports from other countries. It is difficult to sell California wine when you can buy a better bottle from France for half the price. Outside of California, many restaurants preferentially serve European wine because the price disparities are so large, particularly for relative quality.
It benefitted from limited competition for a long time but that has not been the market reality for more than a decade.
I like how on side the growers are lamenting having to sell wine at less than 1$ a gallon and there is a lot of emphasis on "how exiting, less than 20$ per bottle!"
Bottle + cork + label can cost as low as 1-2$
Even at a median 5.5$ in 2022 for a gallon of wine that's still around 1$ of wine for bottle.
This happens from time to time everywhere, here is an article from my country 15 years ago [1]. I think I hear about a grape glut at least every 5 years or so in New Zealand and Australia.
Consumer habits change, producers are understandably cautious to react. Eventually they figure out what the market wants, or find new markets.
>"Our winemaker who sells wine to the BCLDB at $10 in this example then sees the BCLDB slap an $8.90 mark-up on the wine to come up with an $18.90 wholesale price. For retailers who need to add a 30 per cent margin, that wine then gets priced at $24.57."
TLDR: Americans are drinking less wine overall, especially on the low to mid market side, and small producers have been hit the hardest. People have been likely switching to things like hard seltzers and other alternatives. "Millennials are killing the wine industry" is more like "millennials are choosing less wine and higher end things when they do." Mid to high end market is doing find.
Sonoma is definitely slow right now, and Napa has less foot traffic.
They're feeling double pressure in the low to mid market because French and Italian wineries have started selling cheaper and cheaper bottles of wine into the American market. Trader Joes has always had the three buck chuck (née two buck chuck) which I consider barely drinkable but now they've got an Italian Pinot Grigio for $3.50 [1] which has been surprisingly good and hasn't run out of stock despite being very popular. They've also got a good $5 French rose and my friends have been praising some of their cheap reds.
Imagine how cheap it must be to produce if an imported bottle costs $3.50.
This isn’t meant to be a normative statement, but the French government subsidizes wine, cheese and other agricultural export production significantly.
Depends on how they manage distribution and market expectations to maintain a price floor. OPEC for artisanal delights. I agree care must be taken to not devalue overall product volume.
Yes, overall wine consumption in the U.S. is down 4.4%
Yes, “bulk” wine (about 90% of all production last time I checked) is loosing ground to hard seltzer, etc., reducing demand for ordinary wine grapes.
But, high-end wines (10%) has gotten very crowded, discouraging new boutique wineries from starting and reducing demand for high-end wine grapes as well.
Growers are facing reduced demand across the board. The market for wine grapes will correct as some of those growers leave the market, however it takes a few years and some cash to repurpose a vineyard, so many growers will wait and see before they make any rash changes.
Consumer spending isn't down, just this class of wine sales, and like the GP suggested, it looks like it's just being displaced to other products because different beverages (and inebriants) are in fashion.
Most people don’t prefer bone-dry wines, but are shamed into asking for them (example: “comically sweet”), so the vintners avoid calling anything “sweet” even when it does have a bit of sweetness.
Idk man, tell that to the market in Europe. I didn’t say sweet wine was bad, I said Napa wine is over priced and often sweet and juicy at the expense of more refined flavours - but still costs ridiculously more than nicer wines from elsewhere. But that’s America for you.
And, before you write me off as a pure US wine hater, I often stop into a shop here in London, Pacific Wines, which specialises in US stuff and buy things. As I said, not all US wines.
A lot of people moved in on that, making it not entirely unlikely that supply now outstrips demand?
Same thing happened in various regions in France at various points in time. The viable plots will be reclaimed at some point, and make some fine wines in the future, except possibly not at the price point the original owners had in mind...