Joe Nocera, Columnist

A Pandemic Smoke Break Bodes Ill for Big Tobacco

A plateau in cigarette sales is a short-term boon. A decline in vaping is more problematic.

Vaping is out of favor.

Photographer: Joe Raedle/Getty Images

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A year into the pandemic, it’s no secret which companies have been the big winners. Netflix Inc. had its biggest year ever, adding 36.6 million subscribers and ending 2020 with more than 200 million subscribers worldwide. Amazon.com Inc.’s stock rose 76%, cementing Chief Executive Officer Jeff Bezos as the richest man in the world. Peloton Interactive Inc., which went public in September 2019, was a $20 stock when the pandemic took hold in mid-March. Its shares now trade above $100.

Oh, and one other big winner: Altria Group Inc., the maker of Marlboro cigarettes. It turns out that in addition to streaming, shopping online and exercising, a lot of people have spent the pandemic smoking. And not just Marlboros either. British American Tobacco Plc, whose subsidiary, Reynolds American Inc., makes Camel and Newport cigarettes, and Liggett Vector Brands, which sells discount cigarettes, also had strong U.S. sales.