Philip Morris International tries risky move of making cigarettes extinct

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Despite sitting atop a tobacco behemoth that is very often the butt of endless criticism from government officials and public health advocates, Philip Morris International CEO André Calantzopoulos doesn’t think his job is too different from other leading executives.

“Look, I don’t think there is any business that isn’t tough. Business is about change and dealing with unknown things and I don’t think I have the unique privilege of being in a different position than my fellow CEOs,” Calantzopoulos explained in an interview with Yahoo Finance when asked about his seemingly challenging role.

Philip Morris International CEO André Calantzopoulos
Philip Morris International CEO André Calantzopoulos

Perhaps.

But that doesn’t mean Calantzopoulos’s grand vision of creating a world without cigarettes – one he calls a “smoke-free future” – will be easy to execute for the Marlboro seller. After all, navigating the watchful eyes of governments globally with new products and surviving the 24/7 attacks from TV ads on traditional cigarettes will be vastly more difficult than launching a new clothing line on the web and seeing it take off overnight. (Philip Morris International was spun off from Altria in 2008, and licenses names such as Marlboro to sell overseas. Philip Morris USA, a division of Altria, is based in Virginia and sells Marlboro, Virginia Slims and L&M in the U.S.)

Seeing news Tuesday of a government raid on the headquarters of vaping company Juul Labs doesn’t make Philip Morris International’s turnaround efforts any easier, either.

Adapting to a cigarette-less world

So far, Philip Morris International has seen some momentum behind the push to evolve in an increasingly anti-cigarette world. And company executives used their pulpit at a Sept. 27 investor day to try and persuade an anxious Wall Street that progress is being made.

The company says that 5.8 million adult smokers have quit their bad habit and switched to a new “reduced risk” product called IQOS. Philip Morris wants to use its new IQOS device, which heats tobacco without combustion, to convert the 1 billion people worldwide still puffing away on cigarettes.

IQOS is marketed in Europe, Japan and other international markets primarily under the HEETS label.

A man uses a Philip Morris iQOS e-cigarette in Tokyo. (REUTERS/Issei Kato/File Photo)
A man uses a Philip Morris iQOS e-cigarette in Tokyo. (REUTERS/Issei Kato/File Photo)

Two applications are pending with the FDA regarding the sale of IQOS in the U.S. If approved, it would be a big boost for Philip Morris in the U.S. market.

While IQOS shipment volume rose 5.5% in the second quarter in the key market of Japan, market share fell sequentially, by 0.3%, for the first time. And IQOS market share rose a modest 0.7% sequentially in Korea amid a barrage of negative ads on the health concerns of reduced risk products.