The Jerusalem Post

Starbucks’ China rival Luckin Coffee plans first foray overseas

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BEIJING (Reuters) – Starbucks’s (SBUX.O) Chinese challenger, Luckin Coffee (LK.O), plans to open coffee shops in the Middle East and India, in its first move overseas.

Luckin, which raised $561 million in May in a US initial public offering, said on Monday that it signed a memorandum of understand­ing to set up a joint venture with Kuwait’s Americana Group to launch the business in the Greater Middle East and India regions, without providing further details.

“This collaborat­ion represents Luckin Coffee’s first step toward bringing its leading products from China to the world,” Luckin Coffee’s Founder and CEO, Jenny Qian Zhiya, said in a statement. Kesri Kapur, CEO of Americana Group which operates 1,800 restaurant­s and 29 food production sites in the Middle East, said the Greater Middle East and India regions provided promising prospects for expansion.

Luckin has been locked in a supercharg­ed expansion plan to unseat Starbucks as the No.1 coffee chain in the world’s second-largest economy and aims to open 2,500 stores in China this year. It has spent cash to offer lower prices, discounts, speedy delivery and promotions on social media, which in turn pushed Starbucks to form a tieup with Chinese tech giant Alibaba (BABA.N) to deliver coffee to customers.

Luckin has also expanded outside coffee, offering customers other beverages such as grapefruit cheese jasmine tea and food items, including Sichuan cold noodles with pulled chicken via its app.

 ?? (Jason Lee/Reuters) ?? A BARISTA packs coffee for online sales at a Luckin Coffee store in Beijing.
(Jason Lee/Reuters) A BARISTA packs coffee for online sales at a Luckin Coffee store in Beijing.

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