The Borneo Post

Ramen chain looks outside Japan for growth

- By Lisa Du & Grace Huang May 21, 2017

TO BRING savoury noodles to locales around the world, the operator of ramen chain Ippudo has had to adapt one of Japan’s best-known specialtie­s.

It took almost half a year to get the rich tonkotsu pork broth right in Europe because of the harder water. In western countries, noodles are made shorter so it’s easier for the locals to eat. Chikaranom­oto Holdings Co. may face its hardest challenge yet — bringing Japan’s iconic noodles to some of the world’s toughest foodies.

It plans to open its first Ippudo outlets on the US West Coast this year in San Francisco and the nearby suburb of Berkeley, both home to competitiv­e restaurant scenes. The company’s March initial public offering raised enough to fund the cost of roughly two overseas restaurant­s, yet the chain is targeting the US in a global push that will quadruple overseas shops in 20 countries in less than a decade, said President Toshiyuki Kiyomiya in an interview.

“The primary focus will be America,” said Kiyomiya, who also serves as chief operating officer, from his office in Tokyo. “If we don’t plant a big flag, we won’t be able to see the direction of our business.”

Chikaranom­oto’s ambitions are bold, given that few Japanese chain restaurant­s beyond rice bowl operator Yoshinoya Holdings have a US following. It’s leveraging the growing popularity of Japanese cuisine around the world as increasing numbers of tourists visit the island nation.

“As tourists come into Japan and they try the food and they like it, it’s creating an opportunit­y for restaurant­s in Japan to expand overseas,” Bloomberg Intelligen­ce analyst Thomas Jastrzab said.

The company held a US$6.1 million (RM27.4 million) initial public offering in March. After deducting shares sold by the founder and adviser fees, net proceeds totalled about 400 million yen, according to Kiyomiya. It costs as much as 200 million yen to open a restaurant overseas, and the company hasn’t made any decision on raising additional funds at the moment, he added.

Net income more than doubled in the year ended March to 271 million yen, while sales rose 7.5 per cent, the company reported last week.

The chain also plans to open two more restaurant­s in New York City, bringing the total in the metropolis to six. The next three years are critical for the company’s overseas expansion, said Kiyomiya. The locations aren’t fixed and success will depend on carefully picking locales, he added.

“As the state of the world becomes more volatile, we don’t want to be too detailed on shop locations and then have to revise our plans,” Kiyomiya said.

Southeast Asia is another internatio­nal market Chikaranom­oto plans to tap as it looks for emerging market opportunit­ies, he said.

The company also runs a fastfood ramen chain called Kuro-Obi, which is focused on chicken broth offerings. It plans to position the concept in predominan­tly Muslim countries in Southeast Asia where consumers don’t eat pork, such as Indonesia and Malaysia.

The noodle operator is targeting to have 300 locations outside the country by 2025 from its current 65.

The company operates some 130 restaurant­s in Japan and has shops in about a dozen other

The primary focus will be America. If we don’t plant a big flag, we won’t be able to see the direction of our business. — Toshiyuki Kiyomiya, president of Chikaranom­oto Holdings

countries, including China, France, Singapore and Myanmar.

It partnered with Panda Restaurant Group Inc., which operates Chinese fast-food chain Panda Express, to expand Ippudo outlets in the US.

Experiment­ation is a key part of the business, said Kiyomiya. The menu in Ippudo’s New York locations changes every two weeks with new food items. The company is also considerin­g starting a cooking school.

“Our company principle is ‘To not change, we have to keep changing,’ “Kiyomiya said. — Bloomberg

 ??  ?? A bowl of ‘Akamaru Shin-aji’ ramen sits on a table inside an Ippudo restaurant operated by Chikaranom­oto Holdings. — WP-Bloomberg photos by Shiho Fukada
A bowl of ‘Akamaru Shin-aji’ ramen sits on a table inside an Ippudo restaurant operated by Chikaranom­oto Holdings. — WP-Bloomberg photos by Shiho Fukada
 ??  ?? A chef prepares ramen inside an Ippudo restaurant operated by Chikaranom­oto Holdings.
A chef prepares ramen inside an Ippudo restaurant operated by Chikaranom­oto Holdings.
 ??  ?? A bowl of “Akamaru Shin-aji” ramen sits on a table inside an Ippudo restaurant.
A bowl of “Akamaru Shin-aji” ramen sits on a table inside an Ippudo restaurant.

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