Just an article from the Sunday Telegraph about the boom in sub-$10[AU] wine in Australia.

A bargain in a bottle By Rhys Haynes March 20, 2005 From:

SALES of table wine under the $10 mark have boomed over the past five years as bargain-hunters have entered the Australian market. The most recent AC Nielsen data shows that sales of table wine under $10 grew seven per cent during that period, compared with wines over that price which saw sales increase four per cent.

The increase in sales of wine under $10 is concentrated on 530 brands, or about 30 per cent of the Australian wine market of $2.75 billion in the year to April, 2004.

NSW Liquor Stores Association general manager Jayson Westbury said consumers were using the $10 price tag as an important psychological benchmark for what they consider a "good" bottle of wine. Advertisement:

"The consumer is becoming far more savvy in terms of what a value proposition is, and I think a lot of people do buy wine on the basis of its price point," he said.

"I think there is anecdotal evidence to suggest that, when a wine is under $10, the consumer's expectation of that wine is completely different to when the wine is above $10."

But consumers should not necessarily expect less by paying less, McGuigan Wines managing director Brian McGuigan said.

In the past five years, the market has changed dramatically in favour of the under-$10 wine buyer, Mr McGuigan said.

"A lot of products which are $9.99 used to be as high as $14.99, but there has been a decrease in the price of those premium products down to that level.

"For the consumer, Australian wine offers great value at the $10 mark, and Australian consumers can buy terrific wine at an attractive price," Mr McGuigan said.

Mr Westbury says consumers are slowly learning that there are plenty of good wines under $10.

"People obviously have a palate expectation, for whatever reason, that when something is under $10 it is more than likely to be a bit of a quaffer," he says.

"But once a wine arrives to market and word gets out among consumers that it's a good drop, and it has a price under $10, it will become a screamer."

CommSec senior analyst Craig James said consumers are happy to buy lower-priced wine, if the occasion suits.

"It is wine for purpose-buying - some people only want a wine to go with a barbecue and there's a fair bit of competition at that lower end," he said.

"But if you are going out to a good restaurant, you don't want it spoiled by a bad bottle of wine. It comes down to research - people try and buy, and once they have found something they like they stick with it."

So there's no easy answer to finding a wine you like - just do your research and keep your ears, and mouth, open. Tastings are a good opportunity to let the wine do the talking, Mr Westbury said.

"A lot of smart retailers provide tastings because, so often, people perceive that if the wine is under $10 it will be average, but once they taste it they think, 'Gee! That's like the other wine we've sometimes bought which is $12 or $13, so we've discovered a good buy ... and I'll have a case.'

"There are plenty of wines under $10 that I'm aware of that are very good drinking wines, and there are plenty in that $10-$15 range that are also very good, so the consumer needs to take a broad-brush approach," he said.

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