Magic Rock sells out.... Called it last year

The Homebrew Forum

Help Support The Homebrew Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.
Unfortunately I fear this is something we will be seeing more often as the trend for supping ***** lager dies out and people decome more choosey about what they drink.


"Magic Rock is the latest British craft brewery to fall to the multinationals"
 
It's very similar to what happened in the US during the last decade. 'Big Beer' started buying up small, independent breweries to develop a portfolio of craft beer. They bought so many, hardly anyone knew who owned whom or what. And Big Beer didn't mind that customers were either ignorant, confused or both. A shower of greedy cnuts!
 
Last edited by a moderator:
I have no problem with big business buying up the smaller ones as long as they do not lower the quality of the beers the small one used to produce, the small breweries have the option not to sell.
 
I hadn't heard of Magic Rock so I had a look at their website. Their beers seem to be very "opportunistically" priced, shall we say. I'm not surprised they jumped to trouser the Aussie dollar!
 
I hadn't heard of Magic Rock so I had a look at their website. Their beers seem to be very "opportunistically" priced, shall we say. I'm not surprised they jumped to trouser the Aussie dollar!
Really? Most of them are £2.10 to £2.45 a can.
 
Give em long enough...they'll kill em.
They will mass produce relics of their former self,to "educate" the public to what "craft" beer tastes like and that they really should be drinking it...then it'll get squeezed to death for every last penny if profit and will taste like *****.
 
Give em long enough...they'll kill em.
They will mass produce relics of their former self,to "educate" the public to what "craft" beer tastes like and that they really should be drinking it...then it'll get squeezed to death for every last penny if profit and will taste like *****.

And this is the problem with big beer buying smaller breweries. They aren't buying them to produce the same volume of beer per year, they want more. Bigger volume could mean brewing at a different location, possibly BUL in a different country. When this happens, does the beer taste the same? Does it 'eck!

I don't begrudge someone selling a business for a huge profit. I dare say I would have done the same. But let's not kid ourselves that everything will be hunky dory and the beers from Magic Rock won't just stay the same but get even better.
 
I am hoping to start a brewery in a few years. If I were successful then offered big bucks by an international company I would jump at the chance. Could use the money to start another small brewery.... or retire early.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
I am hoping to start a brewery in a few years. If I was successful then offered big bucks by an international company I would jump at the chance. Could use the money to start another small brewery.... or retire early.
The general practice is a clause stopping you owning another brewery for 10 years
 

Latest posts

Back
Top