Investors binge on China’s appetite for healthier snack
foods
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[November 10, 2017]
By Farah Master and Donny Kwok
HONG KONG (Reuters) - Chinese venture
capital and private equity funds are pouring hundreds of millions of
dollars into local start-ups serving up snack food products of the
healthier kind, and threatening the market share of larger Chinese and
global food companies.
Backed by savvy marketing and online promotions targeting the
increasingly health-conscious among China’s burgeoning middle class,
brands such as nuts seller Three Squirrels and Le Pur, a maker of Greek
yoghurt, are nibbling away at the sales of the big corporations in the
country's more than $500 billion food and beverage industry.
The start-ups are recording double and triple-digit sales growth leading
to rocketing valuations as they dominate the rapidly growing online
market in particular.
Investment by venture capital firms in China's food and beverage
start-ups is close to doubling to nearly $2 billion over the past two
years, said Wang Xiaolong, managing director of Hony Capital, one of
China's biggest private equity firms and owner of PizzaExpress, a global
pizza restaurant company.
"For local Chinese food and beverage brands to turn into international
brands, it is only a matter of time," Wang told Reuters, adding that the
trend was unstoppable.
Increasing numbers of Chinese taking up sport and exercise and a greater
awareness of lifestyle diseases like obesity and diabetes has helped to
accelerate the demand for healthier products, especially among the
millennial generation.
Scandals over tainted food in China in the past 10 years has also
contributed to the trend.
Local Chinese food and beverage brands are gaining in popularity as they
focus not only on health benefits of their offerings but the quality of
their production, said Nicholas Cator, executive director at Belgian
investment firm Verlinvest, which last year set up a $300 million joint
venture with Chinese state-owned conglomerate China Resources.
Cator said his firm is interested in investing in brands such as Three
Squirrels and Le Pur and would aim to help them with distribution, brand
building and technology.
"It's heating up ... branded food and beverage was lagging on the tech
and healthcare valuations but valuations in F&B have been increasing,"
he said.
Products such as Greek yogurt, nuts and probiotic drinks have seen big
gains in growth at the expense of those laden with sugar and
preservatives said analysts and food company executives.
Some specialty Chinese products or concepts, such as hot pot, chili
sauce and milk tea, have also recorded rising sales. Zhou Hei Ya
<1458.HK>, for example, is turning braised duck into a premium snack
food, emphasizing its quality.
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Packaged Hao Xiang Ni red dates are seen displayed for sale at a
supermarket in Xuchang, Henan province, China August 30, 2014.
Picture taken August 30, 2014. REUTERS/Stringer ATTENTION EDITORS -
THIS IMAGE WAS PROVIDED BY A THIRD PARTY. CHINA OUT.
Le Pur, Three Squirrels, dried fruit and nuts company Be & Cheery, which
was acquired by health food company Haoxiangni <002582.SZ> in 2016, and
Zhou Hei Ya did not respond to requests for comment for this story.
MOBILE CAMPAIGNS
Many of the niche brands have swiftly expanded their pool of millennial
customers through interactive online and mobile campaigns that place a
big emphasis on quality ingredients and showing customers their
production methods and supply chain networks, analysts said.
This has helped them to outpace traditional sector leaders such as
instant noodle maker Tingyi <0322.HK> and fried rice cracker producer
Want Want China Holdings Ltd <0151.HK>, which are both grappling with
lackluster sales.
Want Want Chairman Tsa Eng-Meng said in August the company had
introduced various healthy products, such as “premium high protein
Hot-Kid milk” and the “Aiyo buckwheat noodles”.
Tingyi announced a new noodle product in August, promoting it as a
"non-fried" healthy soup base option targeted at young families and
athletes.
A report by U.S. consultancy Bain & Company released in October said
chocolate, chewing gum and candy had all registered double-digit
negative volume growth in China in the first half of 2017.
Categories – such as yoghurt and packaged water – have been doing
“exceptionally well”, Bain said adding this as “evidence of Chinese
consumers’ continuing passion for health and wellness and their
rejection of products considered less healthy, such as chewing gum and
confectionery.”
U.S. chocolate giant Hershey Co <HSY.N> has been struggling for growth
in China. Its Chief Financial Officer Patricia Little told an earnings
conference call in October that it expects its China chocolate sales in
stores to be flat-to-slightly-up this year, though its online sales are
projected to rise 15 percent.
On Alibaba's online platform T Mall, which is China’s biggest retail
portal, some of the most popular food brands are Three Squirrels, Be &
Cheery, Yili Greek yogurt and Taetea, a specialty tea brand, rather than
major international confectionery brands.
(Reporting by Farah Master and Donny Kwok; additional reporting by Julie
Zhu;; Editing by Martin Howell)
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