The Star Malaysia

New tea businesses bubble up toward a boom

Strong demand pushes numerous brands to expand

- Beijing:

With China fully unleashing the vitality of its consumptio­n sector, businesses offering hundreds of new-age teas are fast evolving toward a boom.

Zhang Shuai, head of a franchised milk tea store in Cangzhou, Hebei province, said the fourth-tier city is already home to a bunch of milk-tea brands.

Attracted by strong consumer demand, Zhang joined a franchised milk-tea chain. Ever since the opening of his franchised store in February, business has been substantia­l. In the first month, sales surpassed 500,000 yuan.

Zhang’s milk-tea outlet is one of more than half-a-million such stores across the country that are tapping into the prospects unlocked by the new-style tea-beverage sector.

According to a report jointly released by the tea and new-beverage committee of the China Chain Store and Franchise Associatio­n and the Meituan Research Institute, as of Aug 31, there were roughly 515,000 new-style tea-beverage outlets in the country, up 36% from the level at the end of 2020.

That piece of data disproved rumours that the sector is waning. In 2023 alone, 12,421 new tea beverage-related firms were establishe­d, corporate data provider Qichacha said.

Furthermor­e, Askci Corp, a Shenzhen, Guangdong province-based market consultanc­y, estimates that China’s freshly made tea-beverage market will rake in 257.8 billion yuan in revenue by the end of this year.

“Within five years of its developmen­t, China’s new-style tea-beverage sector is entering a stage where large, medium and small enterprise­s can all flourish. The consumptio­n structure is comprehens­ive and multi-dimensiona­l.

“As a result, consumers’ diversifie­d needs are further met,” said Zhu Danpeng, an independen­t food and beverage analyst based in Guangzhou, Guangdong province.

The 2023 financial report of Shenzhenba­sed milk-tea chain brand Naixue showed its sales revenue surged 20% to nearly 5.2 billion yuan. Operating profit grew 76% to 829 million yuan, while operating profit margin was nearly 18%, 5.9 percentage points higher than the previous year.

Naixue owes its strong performanc­e to profits earned by outlets in third, and lower-tier cities. During this year’s Spring Festival, sales revenue of Naixue’s franchised outlets in Shishi and Longyan in Fujian province both surpassed 450,000 yuan.

On Women’s Day (March 8), a Naixue outlet in Haibowan district of Wuhai, Inner Mongolia autonomous region, notched up sales of nearly 100,000 yuan.

While leading enterprise­s have started to penetrate lower-tier cities, medium-sized firms, including Chagee, Auntea Jenny and Guming, have been opening new stores in the same cities as well, aiming to consolidat­e their market share.

According to a nationwide survey conducted by National Business Daily in March, among the surveyed consumers ranging from top tier cities to grassroots-level areas, 86.7% said they saw new tea beverage chain brands entering their cities in the past year. More than 12% saw more than five new brands emerge in their city or town.

“Some foreign media reports said China’s consumptio­n – with beverage consumptio­n being one of the pillars – is weak. However, they do not fully reflect the real situation of China’s consumer market.

The consumptio­n market in China is still large and dynamic, and it contains great potential and vitality,” said Zhan Junhao, founder of Fujian Huace Brand Positionin­g Consulting.

With the constant expansion and upgrade of the consumptio­n sector, the new-style tea-beverage sector is expected to embrace a broader developmen­t space, Zhan said. — China Daily/ann

 ?? — Bloomberg ?? Popular choice: a bubble tea store in Shanghai. Last year, 12,421 new tea-related companies were establishe­d in China.
— Bloomberg Popular choice: a bubble tea store in Shanghai. Last year, 12,421 new tea-related companies were establishe­d in China.

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