The Phnom Penh Post

Costco betting on internatio­nal appetite for its first Chinese store

- Lianchao Lan

THE US retail giant Costco is diving into the thorny area of food retail in China with its first store opening last week, but analysts warn it faces a tough ride as it looks to succeed where a series of internatio­nal retailers have failed.

The move also comes at a challengin­g time with Beijing and Washington engaged in a tense trade war that has seen them swap punitive tariffs on hundreds of billions of dollars of two-way trade.

China has proved a brutal battlegrou­nd for overseas food retailers in recent years, with many failing to understand consumer habits and tastes as well as local competitor­s building a stronger presence.

In June, French supermarke­t giant Carrefour agreed to sell 80 per cent of its China business to domestic giant Suning after repeated losses.

And German wholesaler Metro is in the process of selling its operations to a local bidder and British grocery giant Tesco pulled out of the Chinese market in 2014.

“The Chinese market is very complicate­d and requires retailers to innovate and localise,”

said Jason Yu, general manager of Kantar Worldpanel China.

But Costco thinks that it can avoid the malaise that has plagued others with its “nofrills approach” and bulk-buy strategy.

Local competitio­n

The retailer will throw open its doors on Tuesday, five years after making its first online foray into China through Alibaba’s cross-border e-commerce platform Tmall Global.

Richard Zhang, Costco’s senior vice-president for Asia, said they had a “conservati­ve” goal to sign up at least 100,000 new members for the new store, which is in a suburban district of Shanghai with a two million-strong population.

And Zhang said they had taken time to make sure that consumers in China knew their brand and the market was mature enough.

Costco will be targeting China’s affluent growing middle class, who know the brand from internatio­nal travels.

However, analysts warned that local competitor­s are stealing ground with popular homegrown retailers such as Alibaba’s bricks-and-mortar Hema stores integratin­g online and offline shopping.

“Local retailers are reaching out to customers via all distributi­on channels while foreign retailers are not so flexible to adapt to new situations,” Yu said.

“The old way of a large and all-inclusive hypermarke­t doesn’t work in China.”

Chih-yuan Wang, retail research director at Mintel China Reports, warned that many foreign retailers adapted too slowly and “still didn’t catch up with China’s rapid e-commerce craze where customers go shopping on mobile phones”.

“The cost of [later] building a home delivery service is very high and may affect Costco’s basic strategy to provide the lowest available prices,” he said.

Costco’s big rival, membership-based warehouse Sam’s Club from Walmart, has over two decades of history in China and is still on the expansion trail with plans to reach 40 stores by the end of next year.

But Zhang said the fact that Chinese consumers are already familiar with a membership supermarke­t model could work to Costco’s advantage.

“Chinese consumers are ready to pay for a membership card that grants them an exclusive privilege to buy at a warehouse store. It is not a new concept in the country,” Zhang said.

“A mature market saves us efforts in educating customers.”

While he is upbeat, Zhang says he has concerns over the impact of a bruising US-China trade war and tariffs, with around 50 per cent of their products from overseas.

“In order to keep our prices low, we’ve replaced some US importers of fresh produce with Australian importers,” Zhang said.

The trade feud has escalated with Donald Trump on Friday increasing existing and planned tariffs on a total of $550 billion in Chinese goods, in response to new titfor-tat levy hikes announced earlier that day by Beijing on $75 billion of US imports.

By the end of the year the feud will affect nearly all imports and exports between the two countries.

But ahead of Costco’s official opening, local residents were forming long queues to sign up for membership cards.

“I will definitely become among the first batch of Costco members,” said civil servant Julia Zhu, who says she used to ship in Costco goods from overseas markets.

 ?? AFP ?? Staff members pose for a group photo at a Costco store in Shanghai during a media day last week ahead of its official opening on Tuesday.
AFP Staff members pose for a group photo at a Costco store in Shanghai during a media day last week ahead of its official opening on Tuesday.

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