Starbucks Corp is exploring options for its Chinese operations including the possibility of selling a stake in the business, according to people with knowledge of the matter.
The coffee chain has been speaking to advisers about ways to grow its operations in China including the potential introduction of a local partner, the people said, asking not to be identified because the information is private. It has informally gauged interest from prospective investors, including domestic private equity firms, the people said.
A stake sale could also attract interest from Chinese conglomerates or other local companies with experience in the industry, some of the people said. Starbucks is still evaluating its options and hasn’t made a decision about whether to proceed, the people said.
Photo: Qilai Shen, Bloomberg
Shares of Starbucks were little changed in early trading before the New York market opened. The stock is down about 5 percent in the past 12 months through Wednesday’s close.
Starbucks has faced pressure from activist Elliott Investment Management LP, which wants it to commit to reviewing its Chinese business, Bloomberg News has reported. In previous years, McDonald’s Corp and Yum! Brands Inc have carved out their Chinese operations and sold stakes to private equity firms to tap more growth and better cater to local tastes.
China is the second-biggest market globally for Starbucks and generated about US$3 billion of net revenue in the most recent financial year, when the company increased its store count in the country by 12 percent. But local upstarts such as Luckin Coffee Inc (瑞幸咖啡) are increasingly challenging their position.
New Starbucks chief executive officer Brian Niccol told analysts last month that he’s working to better understand the company’s Chinese operations, noting that the competitive environment seems “extreme” and the macro environment is “tough.”
Starbucks needs to figure out how to expand in the market and is continuing to explore strategic partnerships that could help it over the long term, Niccol said at the time, without providing further details.
“We are fully committed to our business and partners, and to growing in China,” a spokesperson for Starbucks said in response to Bloomberg News queries this week. “We are working to find the best path to growth, which includes exploring strategic partnerships.”
Niccol, the former CEO of Chipotle Mexican Grill Inc, took the reins at Starbucks in September after his predecessor Laxman Narasimhan failed to revive its flagging fortunes and was abruptly ousted. Niccol has vowed to redouble efforts to improve Starbucks’s physical locations and speed up service times.
Starbucks had 7,596 outlets in China as of late September, accounting for about 19 percent of the global total. Same-store sales fell 14 percent in China last quarter.
Other Western chains have also sought local tie-ups in China after struggling to catch up with more nimble rivals. In 2016, KFC operator Yum sold a stake in its Chinese operations to Primavera Capital Group (春華資本), a private equity firm led by former Goldman Sachs Group Inc rainmaker Fred Hu (胡祖六), and tech billionaire Jack Ma’s (馬雲) Ant Financial Services Group (螞蟻金融服務集團). That set the stage for it to spin the business off in a separate listing, which came after pressure from activist investor Corvex Management LP.
The following year, McDonald’s sold a controlling stake in its China and Hong Kong operators for US$1.7 billion to a group of investors including state-backed conglomerate Citic Ltd (中國中信集團), domestic buyout firm Citic Capital Holdings Ltd (中信資本) and Carlyle Group Inc.
Taiwan’s long-term economic competitiveness will hinge not only on national champions like Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. (TSMC, 台積電) but also on the widespread adoption of artificial intelligence (AI) and other emerging technologies, a US-based scholar has said. At a lecture in Taipei on Tuesday, Jeffrey Ding, assistant professor of political science at the George Washington University and author of "Technology and the Rise of Great Powers," argued that historical experience shows that general-purpose technologies (GPTs) — such as electricity, computers and now AI — shape long-term economic advantages through their diffusion across the broader economy. "What really matters is not who pioneers
In a high-security Shenzhen laboratory, Chinese scientists have built what Washington has spent years trying to prevent: a prototype of a machine capable of producing the cutting-edge semiconductor chips that power artificial intelligence (AI), smartphones and weapons central to Western military dominance, Reuters has learned. Completed early this year and undergoing testing, the prototype fills nearly an entire factory floor. It was built by a team of former engineers from Dutch semiconductor giant ASML who reverse-engineered the company’s extreme ultraviolet lithography (EUV) machines, according to two people with knowledge of the project. EUV machines sit at the heart of a technological Cold
TAIWAN VALUE CHAIN: Foxtron is to fully own Luxgen following the transaction and it plans to launch a new electric model, the Foxtron Bria, in Taiwan next year Yulon Motor Co (裕隆汽車) yesterday said that its board of directors approved the disposal of its electric vehicle (EV) unit, Luxgen Motor Co (納智捷汽車), to Foxtron Vehicle Technologies Co (鴻華先進) for NT$787.6 million (US$24.98 million). Foxtron, a half-half joint venture between Yulon affiliate Hua-Chuang Automobile Information Technical Center Co (華創車電) and Hon Hai Precision Industry Co (鴻海精密), expects to wrap up the deal in the first quarter of next year. Foxtron would fully own Luxgen following the transaction, including five car distributing companies, outlets and all employees. The deal is subject to the approval of the Fair Trade Commission, Foxtron said. “Foxtron will be
INFLATION CONSIDERATION: The BOJ governor said that it would ‘keep making appropriate decisions’ and would adjust depending on the economy and prices The Bank of Japan (BOJ) yesterday raised its benchmark interest rate to the highest in 30 years and said more increases are in the pipeline if conditions allow, in a sign of growing conviction that it can attain the stable inflation target it has pursued for more than a decade. Bank of Japan Governor Kazuo Ueda’s policy board increased the rate by 0.2 percentage points to 0.75 percent, in a unanimous decision, the bank said in a statement. The central bank cited the rising likelihood of its economic outlook being realized. The rate change was expected by all 50 economists surveyed by Bloomberg. The