Bangkok Post

Luckin, associated firms hit with $9 million fine

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BEIJING: Embattled Chinese coffee chain Luckin Coffee is among a raft of 45 companies hit with a combined fine of 61 million yuan ($8.98 million) over a scandal involving false sales figures, China’s market regulator said yesterday.

Luckin — Starbucks’ rival in China — had boosted transactio­ns last year through fake coupons by 2.25 billion yuan ($330 million) and inflated its revenue by some 2.12 billion yuan, according to an earlier probe by the Finance Ministry.

The scandal led to the company being delisted from New York’s Nasdaq and the removal of top executives.

China’s State Administra­tion for Market Regulation said yesterday that investigat­ions found that Luckin, with the help of other companies, had falsely increased its 2019 sales revenue, costs and profit margins, and imposed a combined fine of 61 million yuan.

The coffee chain launched in 2017 and aimed to dethrone Starbucks in China via an aggressive growth strategy, enticing customers with an app-based purchasing model that prioritise­d takeaway and delivery options, as well as generous mobile coupons.

But its shares went into freefall after the company revealed in April that a top executive had cooked the books.

From August last year to April, it also used false marketing data to “deceive and mislead the public”, going against Chinese unfair competitio­n laws, the market regulator said yesterday.

More than 40 third-party companies, including Beijing Auto World Consulting Service and Beijing Shenzhou Youtong Technology Developmen­t, were found to have given “substantiv­e assistance” for the false advertisin­g.

Luckin said yesterday that it “respects and will resolutely implement” the decision after the investigat­ion.

It also said it had carried out “comprehens­ive rectificat­ion” on the relevant issues, adding that it would regulate business activities in line with laws and regulation­s to ensure stable operations.

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