China Daily (Hong Kong)

Summer helped, but pandemic still hurt

- By LUO WEITENG sophia@chinadaily­hk.com

This summer j ust rolled around for another hot season of the sparkling milk tea drinks, but the impact of the coronaviru­s pandemic could still be felt.

As Heytea and Naixue’s Tea raised the prices of several drinks to over 30 yuan ($4.6), citing the soaring cost of raw materials and labor during the pandemic earlier this year, more affordable brands like CoCo and Mixuebingc­heng, whose beverages can be priced as low as a few bucks, have come under a brighter spotlight.

“You get what you paid for. True enough. But the pandemic just pours cold water on the rise of mass consumeris­m in China and leads to the budgeting mindset,” said Yang Lu, a 29-year-old projec t manager at a Beijingbas­ed telecommun­ications company. “Before digging deeper into their pockets for a cup of drinks, even some milk tea addicts may ponder whether the beverage is worth that much and should be priced that high.”

Such a budgeting mindset has prompted Chinese consumers to refocus on instant milk tea brands, which paved the way for the dizzying growth of the trendy milk tea beverages in earlier years.

To be sure, the tea market in the world’s second-largest economy is by far the biggest on Earth, boasting a retail value of $78.7 billion and a 9.3 percent growth rate in 2020, projected by Daxue Consulting.

T hir ty-eight percent of its value comes from the instant tea category. One of the top segments of the instant beverage market in China is milk tea and bubble tea.

U-loveit and Xiangpiaop­iao stand out as dominant brands. The former is famous for its celebrity endorsemen­t by renowned s i n g e r - s o n g w r i t e r Ja y C h o u , while the latter — the country’s first listed milk tea company — impresses consumers with its successful advertisin­g slogan: “As many as one billion cups of Xiangpiaop­iao have been sold in one year. All the cups connected together can wrap around the globe three times.”

With more players joining the fray, the crowded bubble tea market shows signs of saturating and critics warn a classic bubble is here: By the end of June, the number of tea stores in China hovered around 480,000. Last year, however, the country was home to nearly 500,000 milk tea shops, data from Shenzhen-based For ward (Q ianzhan) Industr y Research Institute shows.

Heytea entered Hong Kong in late 2018 and had eight stores in the city at its peak. The aspiration­al brand put the brakes on its overseas expansion plans and withdrew quietly from the overcrowde­d local market this year, shutting down most of its outlets with only one store at Times Square in Causeway Bay still open.

Yet with the perpetual hunger for trendy beverages and sparkling drinks, Peter Wong, an analyst at market research provider Euromonito­r Internatio­nal, said the so-called “down-trading would be a temporary phenomenon before the premiumiza­tion trend picks up its momentum again in China”.

“There is a fundamenta­l shift toward consumptio­n sophistica­tion, as there is a positive correlatio­n between wealth and taste sophistica­tion, as seen in many countries in the West,” Wong noted. “As a result, once the Chinese economy fully recovers from the pandemic, it will not be surprising to see middle-class Chinese consumers going back to their premium bubble tea consumptio­n routine, same as they would for resuming traveling once the pandemic is truly controlled.”

M o r e o v e r, v e n t u r e c a p i t a l firms seem to have sustained trust in the potential of leading milk tea brands to rival big-name internatio­nal beverage brands like Starbucks. Heytea, backed by Tencent and valued at more than $1 billion, closed its new round of funding with an undisclose­d amount of investment in May. Pr e v i o u s l y, t h e c o m p a ny h a d completed two rounds of funding totaling 500 million yuan.

Naixue’s Tea, whose valuation rocketed nearly 80 percent in less than a year to $2.42 billion, closed its latest round of $100 million financing in June. The company reportedly filed confidenti­ally for a $400 million IPO in February, but the listing venue is said to have been changed from the United States to Hong Kong.

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