National Post

China Starbucks rival Luckin jumps after US$561M IPO

Shares closed up 20 per cent at US$20.38

- Liana Baker Yueqi Yang and

reta i l

NEW YORK • Luckin Coffee Inc., a challenger to Starbucks Corp. in the race to dominate China’s growing coffee culture, climbed in its trading debut after raising US$ 561 million in an expanded U. S. initial public offering.

The Xiamen- based firm, which opened at US$ 25, climbed as much as 53 per cent in New York trading Friday. Luckin sold 33 million American depositary shares Thursday for US$ 17 each, after marketing 30 million shares for US$ 15 to US$ 17. The shares closed up 20 per cent at US$20.38, valuing the company at US$4.8 billion.

The IPO topped earlier expectatio­ns of a share sale that people familiar with the plans said in February could raise about US$300 million.

Concurrent with the IPO, the company raised an additional US$ 50 million through a private placement with Louis Dreyfus Co., according to its filings.

Luckin is spending millions of dollars a year opening outlets to unseat Starbucks as China’s top coffee company. Since its inception in June 2017, Luckin has quickly expanded to 2,370 stores in 28 cities, with backing from investors including Singapore sovereign wealth fund GIC Pte and China Internatio­nal Capital Corp. By the end of this year, Luckin aims to become the largest coffee network in China in terms of number of stores.

It faces an uphill battle against Starbucks, which entered China 20 years ago and dominates with more than half of the market last year, according to Euromonito­r. Luckin held only a 2.1- percent share in 2018. Starbucks has more than 3,700 outlets in the country and is also expanding at breakneck speed, opening a new store roughly every 15 hours. It’s aiming to have 6,000 sites in China by 2023.

China may become an increasing­ly important market for coffee retailers due to the country’s low per- capita consumptio­n of the beverage and rising middle- class affluence, Bloomberg Intelligen­ce analysts wrote in January. Coffee consumptio­n is estimated to grow by about three per cent a year through 2023, according to Euromonito­r.

Luckin, with a focus on convenienc­e and affordabil­ity, is seeking to lure urban office workers who don’t need the big plush spaces offered by Starbucks. Many customers are initially attracted to the coffee chain by its free vouchers, and the company plans to keep investing heavily in discounts and deals.

Luckin’s outlets are cashless and designed for fast pick- up as well as delivery, with an app that rushes out deliveries in about 18 minutes. The company has a partnershi­p with internet giant Tencent Holdings Ltd. Starbucks only launched delivery in August, under a partnershi­p with Alibaba Group Holding Ltd.

Chasing the entrenched rival has been costly. Luckin said it’s burning through US$ 130 million a year and may continue to see losses in the future. The company reported a net loss of US$241 million for 2018, on total revenue of US$ 125 million. It lost US$82 million on revenue of US$ 71 million during the first quarter.

The offering was led by Credit Suisse, Morgan Stanley, CICC and Haitong Internatio­nal. Luckin trades on the Nasdaq under the symbol LK.

 ?? Victor J. Blue / Blomberg ?? Charles Zhengyao Lu, chairman and founder of Luckin Coffee Inc. and Jenny Qian Zhiya, chief executive, at the ringing of the opening bell during the company’s IPO.
Victor J. Blue / Blomberg Charles Zhengyao Lu, chairman and founder of Luckin Coffee Inc. and Jenny Qian Zhiya, chief executive, at the ringing of the opening bell during the company’s IPO.

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