Starbucks is replicating its fast U.S. growth in China

starbucks china

Customers hang out at Starbucks in Beijing in May. The Seattle-based coffee giant is opening a location in China about every 15 hours, with an ultimate goal of adding about 600 new cafes this year to its current count of 4,125. (Ng Han Guan / AP)

When Starbucks took its American playbook to China two decades ago, that included a controversial chapter: grow extra fast and cannibalize your own stores’ sales.

After snagging enviable 5% growth in the key country in the latest quarter, the coffee giant warned again Tuesday that its China comparable sales could rise as little as 1% this fiscal year. The 1% to 3% growth expected in China would be slower than the 3% to 4% expansion expected in the U.S., despite saturation at home.

“We have picked up the pace of new-unit development, and with that comes cannibalization,” Chief Financial Officer Patrick Grismer said during an investor conference hosted by Morgan Stanley.

“We’re effectively doing it to ourselves; we’re doing it intentionally in the interest of growing total transactions and total sales,” he said, while adding that rising competition and slowing economic growth are also having an impact.

The company is opening a location in China about every 15 hours, with an ultimate goal of adding about 600 new cafes this year to its current count of 4,125.

Starbucks over the past several years followed a similar pattern in its home market by opening too many stores too quickly. Sales couldn’t keep up with the openings, and the chain closed about 150 stores in densely penetrated U.S. areas in the previous fiscal year.

With slower growth in the U.S. — especially urban areas — Starbucks has started opening smaller pick-up-only locations. It’s also focused more on rural and suburban real estate with drive-thrus, especially across the Sun Belt region. Performance in the U.S. has shown signs of rebounding.

Starbucks, which has identified the U.S. and China as its key areas of focus, has called out slower growth in China over the past 18 months and reported a rare negative comparable sales quarter there in 2018. To combat rising competition from brands like Luckin Coffee, Starbucks has been expanding delivery and increasing its advertising.

Source: Seattle Times

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