"The world of spirits is consolidating quickly and we're ready for even much bigger deals than we've completed so far ... in the future we'll need to conduct important operations," Kunze-Concewitz told Italian daily la Repubblica.

"We first needed to have a portfolio rich in foreign brands which we've finally built," he said.

Campari last week announced it had it had entered exclusive negotiations with privately-owned French company SARL FICOMA to buy 80% of the Lallier champagne brand founded in 1906 in the town of Ay.

If successful, the acquisition would turn the maker of the Campari red aperitif into the first Italian player to enter the French Champagne sector.

Kunze-Concewitz said it was too early to provide any figures on the impact of the coronavirus pandemic which is hurting the group's aperitif business due to shutdown of bars and restaurants, especially in Italy where they account for 50-60% of local sales.

"We started really well in January and February and things held up until mid-March, then we entered a phase of managing the emergency," he said.

"We held up better in countries where e-commerce is more mature. China has restarted but we're not back to past levels, we're still seeing a low two-digit drop," he said.

(Reporting by Valentina Za, editing by Louise Heavens)