Remy Martin cognac maker Remy Cointreau and Chivas Regal whisky maker Pernod Ricard may suffer more than rivals because of their high exposure to the Chinese market and especially after celebrations were canceled for the Chinese New Year, one of the busiest periods for alcohol consumption.

China is one of the world's largest drinkers of liquor, consuming 26% of global alcoholic beverage volumes, according to the report from credit rating agency Moody's Investor Service.

Remy gets 20% of its sales from China, while Pernod pulls in 10%. Diageo, the world's biggest spirits company, takes in 5% from China, the report said citing Euromonitor data.

"Because of travel restrictions and quarantine measures to contain the infection, we expect alcohol consumption to slump and this will hit quarterly earnings," Moody's said in the report released on Tuesday.

The impact could be felt the most in the coming months as it takes longer for distributors to replenish stock than when they were able to before the festive season, Moody's said.

The combination of an extended Lunar New Year holiday and the rapid spread of coronavirus that has killed over 420 people has jamm
ed logistics channels into and across China, Reuters reported on Tuesday. (https://reut.rs/2v2Npp7)

The clampdown on travel from and to China will also have a knock-on effect on duty-free sales, which has been growing in the high-single or double-digit percentages, mainly due to strong air passenger volumes and steady spending from Chinese customers.

However, if the Coronavirus outbreak follows a similar pattern to the Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS) outbreak in 2003, the reduction in companies' earnings - though significant - could probably be short-lived, the report said.

During SARS, Remy flagged a 23% decline in quarterly global cognac sales between April and June 2003, which was then followed by a rebound in the following quarters. Similarly, Pernod and Diageo's impact from SARS was fully offset within a year, Moody's said.

However, Moody's noted that the SARS episode is not a perfect comparison to Coronavirus as the size of the Chinese alcohol market was much smaller in 2003, when the contribution of Chinese operations to these companies' group profits was more modest.

(Reporting by Siddharth Cavale in Bengaluru; Editing by Bernard Orr)