The Jerusalem Post

Lingering customers are just one hurdle for Starbucks China growth

- • By LISA BAERTLEIN and TERRIL YUE JONES (Jason Lee/reuters)

LOS ANGELES/BEIJING (Reuters) – Starbucks Corp. has ambitious expansion plans in China, but like any big new emerging market there are teething problems, not least of which is that customers love it so much they stay for hours and hours and sometimes don’t even buy a drink.

Chief executive Howard Schultz expects mainland China to overtake Canada as Starbucks’s second-largest market by 2014, and some analysts believe it could one day rival the United States as the company’s biggest market.

“The No. 1 opportunit­y for the entire company is China,” Schultz told about 300 Starbucks employees and their family members at a company forum in Beijing. “This is where we want to invest, where we want to grow.”

Starbucks has reorganize­d decision-making to transfer more responsibi­lity to its China unit from its headquarte­rs in Seattle.

“We now have a design team here, a real-estate team here,” Schultz said. “We recognize that the size of the opportunit­y and the size of the prize in China is the most significan­t opportunit­y we have as a company.”

The world’s biggest coffee chain is a symbol of Western affluence in a nation of tea drinkers. But the tendency for Chinese visitors to linger in cafes and their lower income levels means sales volumes are much smaller than the US and other markets where taking drinks to go is the norm.

“For a decade the core business was expats and tourists. Without question, the core business today is Chinese nationals,” Schultz told Reuters ahead of his trip to Beijing and Shanghai, where he is also meeting store managers.

Xu Baoli, 51, a stock trader in Beijing, said he visits Starbucks at least 10 times a month but doesn’t go for the coffee. He is taking a break, surfing the Internet and meeting with clients.

Observers note that Chinese customers will sometimes bring their own food to Starbucks, and Xu admits that JOHN CULVER, president of Starbucks Coffee Internatio­nal, passes a cup of coffee in a container with the new Starbucks logo to the first customer after the official unveiling ceremony for its new logo at the Solana store in Beijing in March last year. every so often he doesn’t bother to buy anything at all.

“I like the concept,” Xu said. “Chinese people used to think you needed a spoon and saucer to drink coffee. Now, walking around with a Starbucks cup in your hand has become a fashion statement for Chinese.”

‘Chinese people used to think you needed a spoon and saucer to drink coffee. Now, walking around with a Starbucks cup in your hand has become a fashion statement

for Chinese’

With the US market maturing, few prizes are as enticing as China and its population of more than 1.3 billion.

Starbucks entered China in 1999 and now has more than 570 stores in 48 cities. By 2015, it plans more than 1,500 stores in 70-plus cities, though that would still only account for about half of China’s major cities and would be just a fraction of the 10,800 stores in the US.

“It could very well be exactly what’s happening with Yum,” said Michael Yoshikami, chief executive of Destinatio­n Wealth Management, referring to KFC parent Yum Brands Inc. The US fast-food company got an early foothold in China and now gets more revenue from that market than any other.

And while Starbucks’s China cafes contribute less than 5 percent of company revenue, their store operating profit margins, at around 22%, are higher than US cafes because they charge essentiall­y US prices in a market famed for its low labor costs.

HURDLES TO GROWTH

But even with that big silver lining, there are big impediment­s to growth, including low incomes, rising costs and the fact that most Chinese don’t have a coffee habit.

The market is still small, with specialist coffee shops such as Starbucks booking sales of $358 million from mainland China in 2010. That was up from $104m. in 2005, according to Euromonito­r Internatio­nal. By comparison, the US accounts for $8 billion in revenue for Starbucks.

Consumers in China drink an average of just three cups of coffee per year, according to an industry study, and for many Starbucks prices are simply out of reach.

Based on average wages in China, it would take 1.3 hours of work in the more affluent east of China to buy a Starbucks tall (12-ounce) caramel macchiato. That goes up to 1.6 hours in the west and 1.9 hours in central China, according to Bernstein Research analyst Sara Senatore.

Affordabil­ity remains a top concern for analysts, who worry that as Starbucks’s expansion progresses beyond the country’s biggest cities, it will be less able raise prices to protect margins.

But CEO Schultz said income levels had not been a barrier to growth, adding that Starbucks’s shops in non-core markets perform “as well or better” than stores in cities such as Beijing and Shanghai, helped by pent-up demand.

Attracting quality employees when competitio­n for skilled workers is intensifyi­ng as other chains also expand is difficult, said Paul French, chief China analyst for Mintel, a market research firm.

To that end, Starbucks announced plans to launch a training program called Starbucks China University next year. It also unveiled a 1 million yuan ($158,700) fund that will provide emergency financial assistance for Starbucks employees.

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