Author: Marissa Dean

  • Former STMA Leader Under Investigation

    Former STMA Leader Under Investigation

    Image: Alexander | Adobe Stock

    Chinese authorities are investigating Zhao Hongshun, former deputy chief of the State Tobacco Monopoly Administration, for corruption, reports Xinhua News

    In a statement, the Communist Party’s Central Commission for Discipline Inspection and National Supervisory Commission said that Zhao “had lost his ideals and convictions, defied Party discipline and laws, was disloyal and dishonest to the Party and resisted investigation.”

    Taking advantage of his posts, Zhao sought benefits for others in personnel promotion, consorted with illegal private enterprise owners, traded power for money and received gifts and money, according to the accusations.

    Zhao allegedly also engaged in profit-driven activities against Party rules, and illegally owned shares of companies.

    Authorities said Zhao’s illicit gains would be confiscated and the suspected crimes will be transferred to the procuratorate for further investigation and prosecution.

  • Vietnam Wants to Ban New Tobacco Products

    Vietnam Wants to Ban New Tobacco Products

    Image: Faraz | Adobe Stock

    Vietnam’s Ministry of Health has called for a ban on all new tobacco products following the publication of a study suggesting that youth vaping has led to more hospitalizations for psychosis, hallucinations or respiratory failure, reports VietnamPlus.

    A recent study found that the e-cigarette smoking rate among students increased to 3.5 percent in 2021 from 2.6 percent in 2019, according to Nguyen Thi Thu Huong, an official from the Vietnam Tobacco Control Fund at the Ministry of Health.

    “E-cigarette devices that look like USB drives, pen or pen boxes are making it tough for parents to detect and keep their kids from vaping,” said Nguyen Huu Hoang, a lecturer from the Medical Education Center at Ho Chi Minh City’s University of Medicine and Pharmacy. “They also make young people curious and excited by their eye-catching, fashionable and modern designs.”

  • Menthol and Nicotine Timelines Accelerated

    Menthol and Nicotine Timelines Accelerated

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    The Biden administration released its Unified Agenda and Regulatory Plan for fall 2022, which includes moving forward the timeline for a federal ban on menthol-flavored cigarettes, reports The Winston-Salem Journal.

    There are eight rules that address the tobacco industry, and three have “notable changes” from the spring 2022 plan, according to Jain Gaurav, a Barclays analyst. These include: Rules on a menthol ban in cigarettes and flavored cigars have moved to the “final rule stage” versus the “proposed rule stage”; rules to ban characterizing flavors in cigars have also progressed to the final rule stage; and the nicotine cap proposed standard development has been moved from May to October.

    “We continue to believe the Food and Drug Administration’s focus is going to revolve around the evaluation of premarket tobacco [product] applications of deemed products, notably e-cigarettes, in the next few months,” Gaurav said.

    “The FDA intends to publish a final (menthol) rule by August 2023. We expect a two-[year] to three-year cycle from the day FDA passes any rule to the time such rule survives the inevitable court challenges.

    “We don’t expect a menthol cigarette ban from the FDA implemented (if it were to pass) at least until 2026.”

    A cigarette menthol ban could have negative impacts on tobacco stocks with a significant U.S. presence, according to Gaurav and other tobacco industry analysts. Menthol cigarettes account for 35 percent of cigarettes sold in the U.S.

    “While there is some risk, a federal ban on menthol cigarettes could reduce smoker initiation and potentially be a catalyst that prompts a number of smokers to quit, thereby having some negative impact on cig volumes,” said Bonnie Herzog, Goldman Sachs analyst, “we continue to believe a more likely scenario is for menthol cig users to convert to nonmenthol cig products or to reduced-risk products that have a menthol variant, such as e-vapor.”

    It is expected that the FDA will face lawsuits from tobacco manufacturers and anti-smoking groups if the ban goes through because Congress exempted menthol from banned flavorings in traditional cigarettes in the federal Tobacco Control Act in 2009.

    In June, the FDA issued its proposal to reduce nicotine content in traditional cigarettes to minimal and potentially nonaddictive levels as early as May 2023.

    “We think it will take a decade or longer for the FDA to introduce nicotine caps due to the long nine-step process at the FDA, the inevitable litigation and then the one year given to retailers to get rid of the excess inventory,” Gaurav said.

  • Altria Seeks Juul Settlement Details

    Altria Seeks Juul Settlement Details

    Image: Tobacco Reporter archive

    Altria Group has requested that a federal judge order Juul Labs to turn over details of its settlement with about 10,000 plaintiffs seeking to hold Juul Labs responsible for a youth vaping “epidemic,” reports Reuters.

    Altria stated that the settlement was “shrouded in secrecy” and that Juul refused to share the information with Altria, which in 2018 took a 35 percent stake in the company.

    Altria was not part of the settlement and remains a defendant in mass tort litigation consolidated before U.S. District Judge William Orrick. Plaintiffs allege Altria took part in shaping Juul’s strategy to market e-cigarettes to minors.

    Altria stated that it needs to see the details of the settlement and the negotiations leading up to it in order to evaluate its potential remaining liability and explore potential claims against third parties. Juul’s refusal to share the information “goes far beyond the protections needed to address those concerns, lack[s] any legal basis and would severely prejudice” Altria.

    In a separate motion, Altria requested that Orrick put a hold on a class action suit seeking refunds on behalf of all Juul purchasers nationwide while Altria appeals the order certifying the class. The company said that it would be heavily burdened by continued discovery related to the suit.

  • Ohio Local Tobacco Rules Ban Vetoed

    Ohio Local Tobacco Rules Ban Vetoed

    Image courtesy of Ohio Office of the Governor

    Ohio Governor Mike DeWine vetoed legislation Thursday that would have prevented individual Ohio cities from regulating tobacco, reports AP.

    “We’re dealing now with young people’s lives, and when a local community wants to make a decision … to protect their children, we should applaud those decisions,” DeWine said.

    Lawmakers passed the legislation during the lame duck session of the Ohio General Assembly days after Columbus officials voted to ban the sale of flavored and menthol tobacco products in the state’s largest city starting in 2024.

    During the debate session last month, lawmakers argued that allowing cities to make tobacco rules could cause cities like Cleveland, Cincinnati and Columbus to ban anything considered unhealthy. Matt Huffman, Republican Senate president, argued that tobacco sales are a statewide issue because the restriction would affect income of the state.

    Opponents argued that the state proposal would have acted as a broader “preemption” law, stopping cities from passing local ordinances beyond state law on new fees or taxes on tobacco products or raising the age to buy them, according to Cleveland.com.

    Advocates from anti-tobacco organizations and the American Cancer society said that preventing cities from making their own rules would have given the tobacco industry more power and would have been especially detrimental to children susceptible to advertising efforts. Democrats also called the measure “a stripping of home rule,” saying that not allowing local communities to govern themselves violates Ohio’s Constitution.

    As of September last year, 24 states have laws preempting local ordinances restricting sales of tobacco to young people, according to the CDC. Both state and federal law prohibit vendors from selling tobacco products to anyone younger than 21.

  • Pyxus Commences Exchange Offer

    Pyxus Commences Exchange Offer

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    Pyxus International’s wholly owned subsidiary, Pyxus Holdings, has commenced a private offer to exchange any and all of the issuer’s outstanding 10 percent senior secured first lien notes due 2024 for an equal principal amount of new 8.5 percent senior secured notes due 2027 to be issued by the issuer, according to the company.

    In conjunction with the exchange offer, the issuer is soliciting consents from the holders of the existing notes to amend the indenture, dated as of Aug. 24, 2020, among the issuer, the guarantors party thereto and Wilmington Trust, National Association, as trustee and collateral agent, the existing notes and the related intercreditor and security documents as necessary to, among other things, eliminate most of the restrictive covenants and certain of the affirmative covenants applicable to the existing notes; eliminate the change of control repurchase obligation in the existing notes indenture and the existing notes; subordinate in right of payment the existing notes to the issuer’s existing and future senior indebtedness, including the new notes, the new term loans, the existing term loans and the ABL credit agreement; and eliminate certain events of default and release all of the collateral securing the existing notes.

    This follows Pyxus’ previous announcement of its agreement with creditors.

  • Pyxus Enters Agreement with Creditors

    Pyxus Enters Agreement with Creditors

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    Pyxus International and certain of its subsidiaries, including Pyxus Holdings, entered into a Support and Exchange Agreement with a group of creditors, including Glendon Capital Management, Monarch Alternative Capital, Nut Tree Capital Management, Intermarket Corporation and Owl Creek Asset Management, on behalf of certain funds managed by them and/or certain of their advisory clients as applicable, according to a company press release.

    Pursuant to the Support Agreement, the company and its subsidiaries intend to launch comprehensive exchange transactions offered to all qualified holders of its secured debt, by which such holders will be offered the opportunity to exchange all of their secured debt at par for newly issued secured debt, maturing on Dec. 31, 2027. If consummated, the exchange transactions will result in a significant portion of the secured debt being replaced with longer dated debt.

    “The company appreciates the support received from our lenders and noteholders, which demonstrates their confidence in our long-term strategy and the resilience of our business,” said Pyxus President and CEO Pieter Sikkel. “The exchange transactions will provide us with additional flexibility and extend near-term maturities to December 2027, allowing us to focus on the continued growth of our business and driving stakeholder value.”

    The support agreement and the exchange transactions were recommended by a special committee of the board of directors of the company comprising a majority of the disinterested members and approved by the board of directors of the company.

  • Holland and Belgium Tighten Vaping Rules

    Holland and Belgium Tighten Vaping Rules

    Image: Tobacco Reporter archive

    The Netherlands banned flavored e-cigarettes effective Jan. 1, reports The Brussels Times. Companies have until Oct. 1 to remove the flavored products from shelves; retailers can sell their current stock until that date, but new flavors may not be marketed.

    Belgium plans to tighten vaping regulation as well, according to Federal Health Minister Frank Vandenbroucke.

    “E-cigarettes contain some 1,800 different products of which we are far from knowing all the health consequences,” he said. “Maybe some people will switch from regular cigarettes to e-cigarettes, but maybe by using e-cigarettes, people will just end up smoking regular cigarettes.”

    A ban on flavors is not currently planned in Belgium, but a royal decree will soon be published imposing more restrictions on the sale of flavored e-cigarettes. “No more trendy names will be allowed to be given to those flavors, and lights will no longer be allowed on e-cigarettes either,” said Vandenbroucke.

    There will be a six-month transition period for the industry to adapt to the new rules and another six-month period to sell current stock.

  • Vaporesso Authorized to Sell in the UAE

    Vaporesso Authorized to Sell in the UAE

    Image: Tobacco Reporter archive

    The United Arab Emirates’ Ministry of Industry and Advanced Technology (MoIAT) has authorized Vaporesso, a subsidiary of Smoore International, to sell its products in the country, according to PR Newswire.

    The move makes Smoore the first vaping device manufacturer licensed to sell in the UAE.

    “We are thrilled by the MoIAT’s decision to grant our flagship products the marketing and sales authorization; this has boosted our confidence in obtaining the approval for [our] other seven premium products, including Luxe X and Gen PT Series, that are in the process of application,” said a spokesperson for Vaporesso’s Middle East team.

    Vapor companies operating in the UAE must meet Emirates Authority for Standardization and Metrology standards, which set out strict quality and safety requirements for e-cigarettes and related products, before placing them on the market.

    “The initial approval by the MoIAT, which allows the company to establish legal sales channels, both online and offline, for Vaporesso’s Xros NanoXros MiniXros 2 and Zero S across the UAE, is the testimony to the company’s commitment to offering market-leading vaping products with unmatched quality and functionality, allowing the global vapers to enjoy the fun and flavors unique in Vaporesso’s products,” Vaporesso wrote in a press release. “The market authorization also marks a significant step forward in its effort to further expand its presence in the Middle East.”

  • Montenegro Raises Cigarette Duty

    Montenegro Raises Cigarette Duty

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    Montenegro increased the excise duty on cigarettes, tobacco and e-cigarettes effective Jan. 1, according to SeeNews.

    Duty increased from €44 ($46.71) per 1,000 cigarettes to €47.50 per 1,000 cigarettes. Cut tobacco duty increased to €55 from €50, and smokeless tobacco duty increased to €145 from €100.