According to the opendatabot portal, in October 2023, entrepreneur Andriy Matyukha signed an agreement to purchase the VODA UA trademark. According to the agreement, all rights to the VODA UA trademark were transferred from the previous owner, Dmytro Nikiforov, to Andriy Matyukha.
In his commentary, the entrepreneur expressed his intention to develop business in Ukraine, create new jobs and support Ukrainian brands. Mr. Matyukha emphasized his readiness to invest in the country’s economy now, despite the current challenges.
VODA UA and VODA UA Carpathian Spring Highland are brands of table and medicinal waters obtained from various mountain water intakes and springs in the cleanest regions of the Carpathians. VODA UA waters are characterized by an optimal pH level of 7.4-7.6 and the absence of any physical or chemical influence, which makes them perfect by nature.
The amount of the deal remains undisclosed.
In April 2023, owner and founder Dmytro Nikiforov announced in an interview with Interfax-Ukraine that he would invest $600,000 in the production of a drink made from kombucha tea mushrooms.
Voda UA is a group of companies engaged in the extraction of Carpathian highland waters under the trademarks Voda UA, Goryanka, and Carpathian Spring Highland.
Andriy Matyukha is the founder of FAVBET betting company.
“AT Market” LLC (Kiev), specializing in bottling Carpathian highland water under Voda UA trademark, has invested $600 000 to expand its product line and launched production of a beverage made from the tea mushroom – kombucha.
“We built a factory in Irpen before the war. During occupation of Irpen the plant suffered, but it was quickly restored”, – said the owner and founder of the company Dmitry Nikiforov to the agency “Interfax-Ukraine”.
According to him, while making decision about investments the company was guided by the absence of real kombucha on Ukrainian market. “There are some surrogates and tea-based lemonades,” Nikiforov claims.
He noted that the company has decided to produce “the right product”, that is why the process is managed by a “super technologist” and everything is done technologically very right.
According to his information the plant may produce 2 tons of kombucha per day, which will be sold in 0.33 glass bottles under Kombucha uno trademark. It is planned to involve 800-850 HORECA outlets, as well as 5-6 retail chains. In May 2023 the producer plans to start producing flavored Kombucha with 5-6 different flavors.
Nikiforov indicated that he expects the popularity of kombucha to grow in Ukraine following the world as “a healthy alternative to various kvasses and lemonades.
In Ukraine, the market for this drink has been doubling annually since 2019. In the military year 2022, the market capacity was estimated at 120 million bottles. In 2023, consumption is expected to increase by 150%, the company expects.
Voda UA also produces waters under trademarks Goryanka and Karpatska dzherelna visokogirna.
According to opendatabot, the revenues of AT Market in 2022 decreased by 5.9% – to 26.78 million UAH, while net profit increased by 31% – to 0.58 million UAH.
The access of producers of mineral and mountain water to glass bottles for bottling water has become much more difficult due to the shortage of glass containers throughout Europe, it was caused by the full-scale invasion of the Russian Federation into Ukraine and the subsequent reduction in its production in both countries.
In this situation, AT Market LLC (Kyiv), which is engaged in bottling high-mountain Carpathian water under the Voda UA brand, plans to start producing water in Tetrapak packaging next month, the owner and founder of the company, Dmitry Nikiforov, told Interfax-Ukraine on Tuesday.
“Now all the factories are standing, so many of our and some European manufacturers have stopped producing water in “glass”, and are limited only to plastic. We, for our part, understand that all our manufacturers will run out of bottles in the foreseeable future, and in early August we will offer the market an alternative to glass is Tetrapak eco-packaging with a volume of 0.33 liters,” Nikiforov said.
He recalled that the situation with the availability of glass containers for producers of mineral and high mountain waters remains difficult throughout Europe, because a significant part of the bottles were produced in Ukraine and Russia.
Earlier, Nikiforov said in an interview with the agency that AT Market can produce glass containers for bottling water under the Voda UA trademark only at the Vetropack plant in Gostomel (Kyiv region), since the necessary presses remained at the plant that was under Russian occupation for some time -forms. In May, the head of the company noted that the batch of bottles produced before the war on the order of AT Market was not damaged, and it could be picked up within a month.
“Unfortunately, the plant will not be launched in Gostomel. We bought the remaining bottles that survived, and that’s all for now,” Nikiforov stated.
At the same time, he stressed that the AT Market water bottling plant, located in the Ivano-Frankivsk region, is now working in two shifts.
Voda UA is a group of companies engaged in the extraction of Carpathian high-mountain waters under the trademarks Voda UA, “Goryanka”, “Karpatskaya dzherelna vysokogirna”.
DRINKING WATER, HORECA, MINERAL WATER, TETRAPAK, VODA UA, НИКИФОРОВ
An exclusive interview with Dmytro Nikiforov, the owner of AT Market (Kyiv), which bottles Carpathian high-mountain water under the Voda UA brand, about the situation in the industry and the business environment that has developed after the invasion of Ukraine by Russia.
– Let’s first speak about the indicators, pre-war and post-war market shares, sales volumes.
– Our market share in percentage is insignificant. Today, I will estimate it at up to 1.5%. But at the same time, with such a market share, we are the 11th or 12th producer in the country in terms of quantities consumed out of more than 150 legal water producers. This place in the market indicates how this market is monopolized, that it is not a market-based one, and that there is no such imbalance in any country in the world.
— This is not caused by administrative difficulties in obtaining license to develop water sources, right?
– No, only with the difficulties of marketing. There is one gigantic company in Ukraine that has “concreted” its place in the market by market-based and non-market methods, which makes it very difficult to gain a market share. With only 1.5% of the market, we are barely in the top 10 manufacturers, so you can see how the situation is with the 140 other manufacturers that are not in the top 10. However, everyone survives somehow. At the same time, we occupy the second place in the HoReCa market. That is, there is a huge distance between the first and second place, but we managed to gain a foothold within the country in second place in this segment. This is, as it were, a great success. Unfortunately, we are unlikely to replace the leader, but we intend to expand. The second place among almost 160 manufacturers is a good indicator that the product is in demand, and it is a matter of technique to develop it and we are pretty much working for this.
– Do you expect the nationalization of companies from the industry with Russian owners after the military invasion of Ukraine by Russia?
– It’s hard for me to predict, because there are actually a huge number of them, and as far as I know, nothing has been nationalized. It is unknown how these processes are going to take place, since companies with Russian capital, owning assets in Russia and operating in Ukraine, this is not normal in today’s conditions. It is clear that this situation will somehow change, but I do not know how it will change.
– What kind of contacts with the Russian Federation did you have before the war?
– If you google “drinking water Voda UA buy Moscow,” then there are many links where it was sold or its shelf stocks are being sold. Russia was not a priority market for us, because they did not have a very loyal attitude towards Ukrainian manufacturers and Ukrainian brands. There were shipments there, but I would not call them large. For us, the loss of this market means absolutely nothing, so we painlessly said goodbye to them.
– And from the point of view of Russian water imports, how will the market be freed up if its trademarks are removed?
– I do not know of any Russian water that would be sold here, except for water for healing Essentuki, which has not been seen here for a long time.
– Do you deal with data on the dynamics of sales after the start of the war?
– I must state the decline in sales during the war period, despite the fact that our brand exposure at points of sale has increased significantly, since we were one of the first to manage the logistics of water from western Ukraine to regions of the country that were unsafe at that time. But, in the domestic market itself, we have a decline in sales, even in the case with the same period last year.
– How are you going to compensate for this decline?
– The central area of focus we are currently working on is export supplies to the EU, since our major production facilities are located 150 km from the nearest border. We believe that the Western consumer should be aware of the existence of Ukrainian products and will have an incentive to buy them not only because of their quality, but also in solidarity with Ukraine and to help Ukrainian businesses.
On this occasion, we launched the “Support Ukraine, buy Ukrainian” project, and we are trying to reach out, first of all, to Eastern European large distributors in retail chains.
– How successful is everything going on?
– We have just started, the project is only two weeks old and so far we have only two responses. Well, that’s already encouraging.
– It is clear that you mainly have Eastern Europe in the export geography. What other regions do you work with?
– We had Kuwait for the export deliveries, but due to the ongoing events, this business was suspended, because it is not yet possible to develop logistics by sea. We primarily consider border countries with cheap logistics, as well as the UK, where, in our opinion, pro-Ukrainian sentiment is the strongest in Europe.
– How do you assess the current situation on the border, what kind of “bottleneck” has formed there?
– The biggest challenge is always to sell the product and find a market. We can handle the rest of the problems.
– How does the large share of bottled water impact logistics at its relatively low cost?
– The cost of water always has about 50% of transport costs. This is the specifics of the industry, since the product itself is inexpensive, but from the point of view of transportation, nothing can be worse than water in glass: you have volume and weight at the same time. For example, the cost factor of logistics in vodka will be about 10%, but in water it can be more than 50%. But the fact is that all water manufacturers in the world are in such conditions.
Yes, by supplying products to Poland, for example, we will still be more competitive than Vittel or Evian, or some other well-known European brands. It will take longer for them to reach Poland, and their cost factor of logistics will be even higher. Of course, they take by brand awareness, but the market conditions are the same for everyone – everyone transport water by trucks. Therefore, from this point of view, all manufacturers are on an equal footing, and we do not pay any increased premiums for logistics from Ukraine to Europe. There are no problems here, there are a lot of trucks, the market price and we do not pay inflated tariffs compared to other manufacturers.
– Many companies complained that after the start of the war, truck drivers of draft age were not allowed to go abroad, which forced them to stop exporting. Have you experienced this?
– No, we didn’t, because we don’t have exports to Europe today.
– How do you think the state could improve the situation with import-export?
– There are three key points here. We all understand that money today means much less than before the war: if you do not sow wheat, then you will not bake bread either. Now, thank God, access to money in Ukraine is quite simple. Now, the main thing is to preserve, restore and develop own production facilities.
The first is that not a single bank will give you a loan to restore destroyed factories and enterprises, because there is no collateral, it is destroyed. Therefore, the state needs to give targeted bank loans for the restoration of destroyed facilities and enterprises.
Secondly, the state is obliged to support business with money, namely working capital, because with the introduction of martial law, all debt obligations within the business were frozen, and therefore there is a huge problem with payments. That is, trading enterprises did not pay all their suppliers on absolutely legal grounds, thus the enterprises were left without profit, and many of them are shutting down. They are completely self-sufficient and have not suffered from shelling, but due to a lack of working capital, they simply halt. Therefore, the state should immediately open programs to finance working capital and secure bank loans.
Yes, some non-returns are possible, but these are all really trifles, these steps should be taken immediately.
And the third is the encouragement of exports. It is clear that products such as chicken or wheat do not need government support, the state must support the export of products, the share of which in deliveries abroad was nil or insignificant before the war. We need to introduce a new SKU to our export portfolio.
This support can be as compensation of 10% of the value shown in the export declaration. Then we can somehow compete with the Europeans and expand the range of export products. This is important because the domestic market has shrunk and for many, exports are their only salvation today. The state should think very hard about how to support the export of those products, the share of which was insignificant or it was absent abroad.
– Since the beginning of the war, most of the Ukrainian business supports the Armed Forces and the population. Will the additional “humanitarian” burden on it greatly affect its economic activity?
– Of course, the Ukrainian business itself will not be able to cope with this task. That is, it provides assistance in some issues, but it cannot globally settle this problem, because there is no such a resource. Business itself needs support, so it helps to the best of its ability. I do not think that today the share of business support of the general needs of the Armed Forces and those who are in need is high. Of course, business is doing what it can, but its efforts, even roughly, are not enough to solve the problems of supporting the Armed Forces and vulnerable groups of society.
– Who have you already helped, what has been done since the beginning of the war?
– Since the beginning of the war, we were among the first to arrange logistics and delivery of water to Vinnytsia and Kyiv regions, when Russian invaders were still standing near Kyiv. We have opened our warehouses for all those in need. We were given applications, according to which we shipped water for the Armed Forces of Ukraine, volunteer organizations, hospitals, bomb shelters and, in general, for everyone in need. That is, we gave away products worth about UAH 4.5 million. We shipped water from warehouses in Vinnytsia and Kyiv. We shipped not only water, but also tea, also our own brand.
– How else can your company provide assistance, as in the case of a broken water supply in Mykolaiv, for example?
– In this case, specifically our company cannot render the help, because it is unrealistic to compensate the water supply system interrupted in the city of Mykolaiv with bottles. Tap water cannot be compensated by the manufacturer of bottled water. The problem is solved by filling tanks in a nearby city and sending them there. We can compensate for the lack of drinking water in shelters, hospitals, cities and villages, but we cannot compensate for broken water pipes.
– Do you expect that the well-being of the population will decline and everyone will switch to cheaper alternatives, even to consumption of tap water?
– Yes, we are expecting this, especially because we work in the medium plus segment. Our water, a priori, cannot be cheap. This is Carpathian water. Ipso facto it will be more expensive than all the others, due to the logistics and the difficulty of obtaining it. We work in the medium plus segment, and it will take a large tumble. I predict that some of our fans and consumers will switch to cheaper bottled water, and consumers of cheap bottled water will most likely switch to filtered water in large part. It’s unavoidable. The contraction and reduction of the market will happen, because, as we understand without overstating the obvious, the well-being and purchasing power of people is declining, and the consumer will save as much as possible on all consumer goods.
– What is your “planning horizon”, for what period do you make calculations in the work: weeks, months or a season?
– We do not live according to the principle “the day has passed and thank God.” We are actively preparing to meet the summer season, we are trying to expand as much as possible in retail outlets within the country. We are negotiating cooperation with the largest distributors and are trying to use the tool and the possibility of exporting as much as possible, so we focus on such a medium-term perspective until the end of the year. We believe that the situation will not worsen, and perhaps it will improve. Therefore, we feel quite sovereign: we are engaged in planning and expanding as much as possible.
– Can you share the details of the biggest recent deals?
– In principle, we do not have such large transactions. We are present in almost all national retail chains. We are simply expanding our presence in these chains. That is, if there are 350 stores, and before the war we were present only in 50, then our task now is to expand at least two or three times. We are engaged in a purely routine, I cannot give any transaction as an example.
– What has changed at your plant since the beginning of the war?
– The plant is located in the Carpathian “nowheresville,” therefore, almost nothing has changed there. Yes, some workers were drafted into the Armed Forces of Ukraine to join territorial defense units, but, in principle, the plant has been working absolutely stably all this time, and martial law did not impose any special difficulties on its operation.
– Voda UA attended major government events last year. How did you manage to take this place, and will the current popularity of Ukrainian politicians abroad help support the export of your brand?
– We did not make any efforts to get on the tables of government bodies. There is no administrative resource for a water manufacturer to somehow enter there, it somehow happened by itself. That is, the Verkhovna Rada was the first client from government agencies, for which we made a special label with the symbols of the parliament. After that, all major government agencies began to purchase our water. Moreover, not only directly from us, but also from distributors. I think that this is largely due to naming, when you understand 100% which country’s water you are drinking.
All of these bodies have conducted independent water testing, according to which our water meets the highest quality standards, and in many ways it is significantly ahead of well-known world brands. As far as I know, we are the only ones in the country who produce mountain spring water. Water is extracted mainly from underground wells, while we extract from high-altitude water intakes at an altitude of 1,400 meters above sea level. Therefore, thanks to branding and unprecedented water quality, we are present at many official events and economic forums in government structures.
We consider it incorrect to use the popularity of our politicians abroad for advertising purposes. Therefore, we never post photos of the president, prime minister or MPs with our water or against the background of our water even in social networks. We consider this wrong and do not consider this way of brand development.
– The Cabinet of Ministers has recently simplified the import of products with a label not in Ukrainian. Do you allow for the possibility of simplifying the label, changing containers from glass to plastic, or other forced changes in the appearance of your products?
– In addition to Voda UA, we have brands that are simpler, which we bottle in standard containers. As for Voda UA, 90% of the success lies in the design and packaging. Our glass bottle is even more like a vase that foreigners take with them as a souvenir from our country. That is, this is a business card, and it is thanks to it that we became the second in HoReCa. By simplifying the bottle, we will lose this sense of exclusivity and something completely distinct in the national identity. Therefore, for us, any simplification of the brand will inevitably be associated with a decrease in sales, and if there is a shortage of containers, labels or packaging, we will be forced to suspend the bottling of Voda UA until the situation is resolved and focus on the Karpatska Dzherelna Vysokohirna brand, which we bottle in standard containers. In principle, it is no different from Voda UA, but it costs less from the point of view of the brand, since its bottling is much simpler. Therefore, Voda UA will be bottled exclusively in its intended containers or will not be bottled at all.
– What is the situation with glass and plastic containers in the industry?
– To date, we do not experience problems with components. Yes, we had to change suppliers, because not everyone remained in service. We have new suppliers of labels, molds, and so on, but in fact, we have all of this, or all of this can be ordered in neighboring countries. The problem may be exclusively in glass bottles, because we can only make them at a factory where we have molds. It is impossible to transfer activities to another factory. Ordering new ones is very expensive and takes a long time, so we are tied to the Vetropack plant in Hostomel as for glass. Thank God, it did not suffer much from the Russian occupiers. Production there will be launched after mine clearance. Also, as far as I know, the stock of bottles they produced for us was not affected. I think that within a month we will be able to receive the shipment, so in our particular case there are no problems with the container.
– Now there is an opportunity for businesses to switch to the general taxation system at 2%. Have you taken advantage of this opportunity?
– My financial consultants and accounting department said that we remain on the same positions: 2% of turnover in today’s realities is not profitable for us.
– What initiatives would you recommend to the state in the field of taxation in your industry and for business in general?
– Apart from loans, business does not need to be supported, as well as there is no need to lower taxes. It is necessary to immediately beat this “hydra,” which is called the registration of tax invoices. This is the tool, thanks to which the thievish tax officials and MPs covering them wash out the turnover in the amount of VAT from the business. The state must immediately stop the practice of registering tax invoices, which does not exist anywhere in the world. This is the main problem of our entire tax system today.
Business suffers from this registration of tax invoices, all these criteria for classifying enterprises as risky should be removed immediately. They are simply killing business by washing away the working capital and this should be stopped immediately.
There is no need to lower taxes, they are feasible. In the net, VAT should be abolished in principle, and introduce understandable and clear turnover tax and sales tax, non-refundable. Because any refundable tax like VAT is a so-called square tax and creates corruption risks, but such people are getting benefits from this money flow that it is impossible to get this issue rolling.
Therefore, the abolition of VAT and income tax with their replacement for an exit capital tax is what the state should do for business. Without this, the business will not be cured, no matter how it is stuffed with loans. All funding is broken down into something that simply cannot work in the existing paradigm.
Due to the armed invasion of the Russian Federation into Ukraine and the shutdown of part of the country’s economy, a decrease in the welfare and purchasing power of the population is expected, due to which, in particular, consumers of high-mountain water will switch to cheaper bottled water, while consumers of bottled water will mainly switch to filtered tap water.
Dmitry Nikiforov, the owner and founder of AT Market LLC (Kyiv), engaged in bottling high-mountain Carpathian water under the trademarks Voda UA, Goryanka, Karpatska Vysokogyrna, told Interfax-Ukraine about the inevitable narrowing and decline of the water market.
“Narrowing and shrinking of the market will occur, because we objectively understand that the well-being and purchasing power of people are declining, and the consumer will save as much as possible on all consumer goods,” he said.
“A priori, our water cannot be cheap. This is Carpathian water, which, by definition, will be more expensive than all the others, thanks to the logistics and complexity of its production. We work in the “medium plus” segment, and it will sag significantly. This is inevitable,” stated Nikiforov.
As reported with reference to the new forecast of the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development, the fall in Ukraine’s GDP in 2022 will be 30%. If large-scale efforts of the world community to restore the country’s economy take place, next year its economy is expected to grow by 25%. In March, the EBRD estimated this decline at 20% with an increase of 23% in 2023.
The state should immediately stop the practice of registering tax invoices in Ukraine, including the assessment of criteria for classifying enterprises as those with risky activities, and also replacing value added tax (VAT) with a tax on withdrawn capital.
Dmytro Nikiforov, the owner and founder of AT Market LLC (Kyiv), which is engaged in bottling high-mountainous Carpathian water under the trademarks Voda UA, Goryanka, Karpatska Dzherelna Vysokohirna, expressed such an opinion in an interview with the Interfax-Ukraine agency.
At the same time, he believes that the rate of taxes levied in the country is feasible for business and does not need to be reduced.
“We need to immediately kill this ‘hydra,’ which is called the registration of tax invoices. This is the tool by which thieving tax officials and MP who back them ‘wash out’ the turnover from businesses in the amount of VAT. The state must immediately stop the practice of registering tax invoices, which does not exist anywhere in the world,” Nikiforov said.
According to him, the practice of registering tax invoices and the procedure for determining the criteria for classifying the activities of enterprises as risky harm business, washing out its working capital, and should be stopped immediately.
“There is no need to lower taxes, they are feasible. By and large, VAT should be abolished in principle, and a clear and understandable turnover tax and non-refundable sales tax should be introduced. Because any refundable tax like VAT is a so-called square tax and creates corruption risks, but such people control this issue that it is impossible to move it,” the businessman specified.
“Therefore, the abolition of VAT and income tax with a replacement for a tax on withdrawn capital is what the state should do for business. Without this, business will not be cured, no matter how it is stuffed with loans. All funding is broken down by the fact that in the existing paradigm it simply cannot work,” Nikiforov added.
As reported, Finance Minister Serhiy Marchenko supports restoring the VAT administration system with automatic cash reimbursement, “even if it is painful and requires payment deferral.”
“For some reason, decisions were made that actually broke the current system of registering tax invoices, checking risks and automatic budgetary VAT refunds. In fact, since March, our system for registering tax invoices has not been working … I am a supporter of the system of automatic VAT refunds working, and business receiving funds,” he said in an interview with Interfax-Ukraine.
On February 28, the Cabinet of Ministers of Ukraine established the possibility of automatic registration of tax invoices for certain types of agribusiness and food industry enterprises, which will allow them to submit documentation without bureaucratic delays.
According to Roman Leschenko, who at that time was the Minister of Agrarian Policy and Food of Ukraine, after February 28, tax invoices of legal entities growing crops, farm animals and poultry, engaged in fishing, and processing milk, butter and cottage cheese are automatically registered.
In addition, the list includes all enterprises producing meat, fruit and vegetable juices, vegetable oil, animal fats, edible fats; products of the flour-grinding industry; bread and bakery products, flour confectionery, cakes and pastries; cocoa, chocolate, sugar confectionery; tea and coffee; spices and seasonings; prepared food and dishes; baby and dietary food; prepared feed for animals kept on farms; soft drinks and other bottled waters.