Daniel William Fisher
Analyst · George Staphos with Bank of America
Yes. So when we look at the broad -- let me start with the latter part first because, yes, I should probably clarify this. There is the same amount of promotional activity happening just in terms of price changes and rev mix plans and buy one, get one frees, et cetera. But the concentration of purchases within those windows has accelerated by the end consumer. So it's not that there's more promotional activity. It's that the customers, clearly, the end consumer must be weakening and they're looking at those opportunities and buying multipacks at an accelerated rate versus the prior couple of years. So that's what's happening, and that's what's contributing to probably a little bit more volume growth than anyone anticipated in the first half of the year. Really, it would be -- to your first question, really, it would be in and around beer. I mean, is there going to be recovery. One of our customers, in particular, is struggling just because of the tariffs. So unless that relieves itself, that -- we're not anticipating greater performance than the 3% top end. And even with that, George, we'll be fine because we're underutilizing our Monterrey facility right now for that customer. So if that particular instance happens, we're good, right? We'll be able to ship. We'll be able to deliver even in a more efficient manner. If growth persists with a couple of our customers in the 15% to 20% range, we'll be living hand to mouth. But eventually, you'll get out of peak season and there'll be more efficient delivery patterns in the back half of the year. But right now, it's tight. We're living hand to mouth. I think we can deliver. We still have some room to grow in facilities specifically that are adjacent to breweries, right, where they've been underperforming. So if that category rebounds, that's not a difficult solve for us. It's if there's even more activity in some of our strategic partners in the non-alc or the CSD space, that will be -- that will create more inefficient patterns. And then we'll just have to get out ahead of it for next year and probably carry a little bit more inventory if this is the direction of flight that we're going to see growth at this rate for a persistent manner.