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Arturo Lomeli is transforming his super premium tequila brand into Mexico’s first luxury house—including hotels and boutiques—while maintaining the brand’s independence.

Read the full story on Forbes: https://www.forbes.com/sites/chloesorvino/2024/12/20/how-clase-azul-tequila-founder-arturo-lomeli-built-a-billion-dollar-brand/

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Transcript
00:00Today on Forbes, how Clase Azul built a billion dollar tequila business beyond the top shelf.
00:08Inside his modern home in the hills of Guadalajara, Mexico, Arturo Lomeli is eating one of his
00:14favorite foods, taquitos, piled high with crema, salsa, and guacamole, as tequila is
00:20poured into crystal flutes around the table.
00:23The blue and white hand-painted ceramic bottles that Lomeli's brand, Clase Azul, has become
00:28famous for dot the room.
00:32Next up are mezcals, in decanters painted a matte black, red, or teal.
00:37And then there's the special edition Añejo tequilas, featuring artisans from around Mexico.
00:43To the right of the overflowing lunch table, Lomeli starts pulling out more bottles from
00:47his bar, where a large surrealist-style portrait of Clase Azul's founder and CEO with a bird
00:52on his shoulder watches over his personal collection.
00:56Lomeli, who is 52 years old, says, quote,
01:00My spiritual soul was chosen to protect it.
01:03I'm the guardian, a Mexican messenger.
01:06Meanwhile, sips of the $1,500 Dia de los Muertos Collection 2024 release, in a purple bottle
01:13featuring a metal skeleton playing an accordion, make the rounds for everyone but Lomeli.
01:19He gave up drinking a few years ago, he says, partly because he wants to live past 100.
01:25That doesn't stop him from running his super-premium tequila brand that's exported to 92 countries.
01:31Over the past three decades, Lomeli has perfected a playbook that relies on authenticity, from
01:37the distillation process to keeping the business Mexican-owned.
01:41He takes a long-term view and has invested vertically even where it might seem absurd.
01:46For example, one of the most recent additions to his sprawling bottling plant in the state
01:51of Jalisco, where a team of 50 artisans each glaze 100 signature ceramic decanters per
01:56day, five days a week, is a box-making facility pumping out custom packaging as fast as 18,000
02:03sheets per hour.
02:05Clase Azul even manufactures the metal caps for its decanters at a rate of 476 caps per hour.
02:13This strategy of going deep has created one of the hottest tequila brands ever sold.
02:19Wayne Chaplin, CEO of the $26 billion in annual sales Southern Glazer, which has distributed
02:25Clase Azul for two decades, says, quote,
02:28They've carved out a niche.
02:30Arturo's got this vision that is very different than all the other tequilas.
02:34Sometimes people are very anxious to sell more, quicker.
02:38He's not willing to compromise the luxury aspirations for his brand to get additional sales.
02:44Analysts in the food industry say that if Clase Azul were to ever sell, the deal would
02:49be in the billions, which says as much about the sky-high multiples that spirits trade
02:54at these days as it does about the strength of Lomeli's business.
02:58Clase Azul says it keeps its financials private.
03:01From 200,000 accounts globally, Clase Azul has estimated annual revenue of $150 million,
03:08surpassing the sales Casamigos had when Diageo purchased it in 2017 for $1 billion, or a
03:15deal value of 10 times revenue.
03:18Forbes estimates Clase Azul could be worth more than $1.5 billion.
03:23That's using a multiple of 10 times sales, which is on the lower end of today's market,
03:28particularly for a tequila brand.
03:30Beyond the Casamigos sale, Bacardi acquired Patron in 2018 at 8 times sales for a total
03:36of $5.1 billion.
03:39In 2022, actor Dwayne The Rock Johnson's Terramana Tequila sold a minority stake to
03:45Jagermeister in a deal industry insiders peg as high as $4 billion, or as much as 25 times
03:51estimated sales.
03:54Other spirits acquisitions are just as high.
03:57In 2020, actor Ryan Reynolds' Aviation Gin, for example, sold for $610 million, or an
04:03estimated 24 times revenue.
04:06Those high multiples match the profitability.
04:09Clase Azul's net income margins are estimated above 30%.
04:14Gross margins approach 70%.
04:17That tops publicly traded spirits conglomerates like $9 billion-in-sales Constellation Brands
04:22or $20 billion-in-sales Diageo.
04:26But don't expect an acquisition or public offering anytime soon.
04:30Lomelli says Clase Azul will remain independent, as well as 100% Mexican-owned.
04:36Lomelli is the brand's majority shareholder.
04:38A minority stake is owned by his brother-in-law from his first marriage, Juan Sanchez, who
04:43advised Lomelli as a banker based in San Francisco before starting full-time in 2003.
04:50For full coverage, check out Chloe Sorvino's piece on Forbes.com.
04:56This is Kieran Meadows from Forbes.
04:58Thanks for tuning in!

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