Western Daily Press (Saturday)

Starbucks UK slumps to £41m loss

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STARBUCKS slumped to a £41 million loss in the UK in the past year as the Covid-19 pandemic took its toll on the coffee shop chain.

The company published its latest results with Companies House, which showed revenues in the year to September 2020 fell £243 million, down 32.7% due to the heavy restrictio­ns imposed during much of the year.

But despite the pandemic, Starbucks continued to pay its staff in full and did not take any government furlough money for its nonfranchi­sed stores, which account for around 30% of all sites in the UK.

There was some recovery for the company when stores were allowed to reopen in the summer, with UK city centres trading at 34% of levels the previous year, rising to 56% by September in 2020.

Bosses in the UK continued paying rents during the entire pandemic period covered by the results, although they did enter into lease negotiatio­ns to agree reductions where possible.

They also invested heavily to support delivery platforms including companies like Uber Eats and Just Eat to tap into the home delivery market alongside an accelerati­on of a store portfolio review.

Starbucks did not make any redundanci­es during the period and has subsequent­ly hired 400 new staff across the UK.

Its financial position was also helped by the waiving of royalties to its parent company, although the coffee chain took a £1.8 million hit from permanentl­y closing three stores and a further £10.4 million charge against 35 underperfo­rming ones.

Across its European, Middle East and African estate, the business revealed sales fell 32% overall to 168 million dollars (£121 million), with 86% of stores closed during the peak of the pandemic in April 2020.

The Middle East and Turkey was particular­ly strong, with 167 new stores opening and the rollout of drive-thrus boosting sales by 24%. But strict lockdown measures across Europe hit revenues there by 71%, the company added.

Looking forward, the company said: “Starbucks is continuing to assess and respond to government-mandated rules on social distancing and operationa­l practising, navigating local and national lockdown rules in the UK and EMEA (Europe, Middle East and Africa).

“The region continues to be supported by Starbucks Corporatio­n, given the strategic importance of the UK market to trial new initiative­s in coffee, food service and point of sale.

“The business expects a continued shift of consumer behaviour which will drive further evolution of its stores, locations and offerings in the future.”

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