Business World

China’s budding coffee culture propels Starbucks, attracts rivals

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SHANGHAI/LOS ANGELES — In Wu Qiong’s small café in downtown Shanghai, coffee beans nestle in glass jars on the bar while various brews bubble away behind the counter.

The café — one of thousands of trendy, artisan coffee shops in the city — reflects a growing café culture in China that’s driving growth for chains like Starbucks Corp. and attracting more competitio­n.

“There are many more choices for consumers in the coffee market here now,” said Wu, 35, who set up the store with her boyfriend this year, the couple’s second outlet. “People can choose chains or go for specialist coffee stores.”

Starbucks dominates in China where it has over 3,000 stores and is growing fast, even as in the US it comes under pressure from a “third wave” of boutique coffee sellers and cheaper rivals.

At a Shanghai launch event on Tuesday of its first overseas “Reserve Roastery” — an opulent flagship store with gourmet coffees and a bakery — executive chairman Howard Schultz said store numbers in China would hit 10,000 within a decade.

“China is going to be bigger than the United States in less than 10 years,” he told Reuters in an interview at the store.

Starbucks held a 54.8% share of China’s 25.2 billion yuan ($ 3.81- billion) specialist coffee shop market last year, far ahead of rivals like McDonald’s Corp.’s Mc- Cafe and Whitbread Plc’s Costa Coffee, Euromonito­r data show.

Unlike in the US, Starbucks’ challenge in China has been winning over traditiona­l tea drinkers to coffee, rather than fending off local rivals. That could be changing.

“Right now we notice an increasing number of small brands and independen­t coffee shops. They are registerin­g explosive growth rates,” said Shanghai-based Euromonito­r analyst Yu Limin.

GROWING CAKE

Shanghai alone has an estimated 6,500 coffee houses, with small chains, independen­t stores and bakeries battling for a slice of a market that Mintel says could grow to 79 billion yuan by 2022 from 60 billion yuan this year.

Convenienc­e stores, which already offer hot food popular with breakfast crowds, are also rolling out coffee.

“There are a lot of new players and the cake is getting bigger,” said Lawrence Ge, founder of Single Patch Coffee, who runs coffee workshops and cafés in Shanghai and Suzhou.

Internatio­nal coffee chains are now looking to get in on the act, too — despite Starbucks having a big head start.

Peet’s Coffee, a craft chain that rivals Starbucks at home, opened its first China store last month, and has brought in local help from investment firm Hillhouse Capital and Sam Su, ex- China head of Yum Brands, Inc., who drove impressive growth for KFC and Pizza Hut in China.

“China is top of my priorities for 2018,” Pascal Heritier, chief operating officer of Italian coffee company Massimo Zanetti, told Reuters, adding the firm, which sells Boncafe and Segafredo coffee, was in talks with local partners about expanding its presence.

“It’s not only for us, but the whole industry. It’s something that is booming... So for actors in the coffee industry, China will be a country to look at in the future.”

CRAFT COFFEE

Starbucks itself is doubling down on China, where in the latest quarter it saw 8% same-store sales growth and said it would buy out its joint venture partner in east China for $1.3 billion.

As well as its new Shanghai coffee “roastery,” Starbucks has rolled out higher-end coffee bars in China, is looking to improve its food offering, and has leveraged popular mobile payment platforms from Alibaba Group Holding Ltd and Tencent Holdings Ltd.

That premium push may be too late to win back consumers like Zhou Hanwen, a market analyst in Shanghai who says she’s a “serious coffee user,” but has switched from Starbucks’ lattes to smaller, trendy coffee houses.

“I like quieter venues and so usually go to rather arty, yuppie places,” she said, while sipping a brew at downtown Mellower Coffee, which has coffees with names like “sweet little rain” — an Americano with a “cloud” of candyfloss.

Ms. Zhou added she also now more often makes coffee at home — another trend analysts say is challengin­g physical stores.

For now at least, China’s developing café culture is likely to be more a boost than burden for big names like Starbucks.

“I think the more people who are successful with coffee in this market the better it will be for Starbucks because more people will be educated around the product,” said Mr. Schultz.

“There’s always competitio­n,” he added. “We have competitio­n all over the world.” —

 ??  ?? A VIEW of the new Starbucks Reserve Roastery in Shanghai, China, Dec. 5.
A VIEW of the new Starbucks Reserve Roastery in Shanghai, China, Dec. 5.

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