China's caffeine war: Fast-growing Luckin brews up a
threat to Starbucks
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[July 24, 2018]
By Pei Li and Adam Jourdan
BEIJING/SHANGHAI (Reuters) - Qian Zhiya may
be Starbucks’ worst nightmare.
The 42-year-old Chinese entrepreneur says she is betting that her
fledgling Luckin Coffee brand will eventually have more cafes in China
than Starbucks <SBUX.O>, and she has Singapore’s sovereign wealth fund
and other investors bankrolling her plan.
Luckin, which only officially launched in January, has opened more than
660 outlets in 13 Chinese cities thanks to a supercharged growth plan
based on cheap delivery, online ordering, big discounts and premium pay
for its staff.
Its assault comes at a crucial time for Starbucks, which has 3,400
stores in China – its second biggest market after the U.S. - and plans
to almost double that number by 2022.
And the speed of the attack is a warning to other established consumer
brands in China that they too could be vulnerable to a start-up’s
attempt to reinvent a market, brand consultants say.
Starbucks’ shares were pummeled in June after it warned same store sales
growth in China had plunged to zero or worse last quarter, against 7
percent growth a year earlier. Its fiscal third-quarter results are due
out on Thursday.
Starbucks said some new café openings were cannibalizing customer visits
at nearby stores and it also blamed a drop-off in orders through
delivery firms.

While it did not mention increased competition, investors and analysts
said it is clear that Luckin does represent a threat.
However, they also point out that Starbucks’ brand has been very
resilient to challenges from rivals around the world over the years,
largely because of the ambience of its stores, its service and the
consistent quality of the coffee served.
There is also no sign that Chinese consumers have turned against such a
very American brand as a protest over U.S. President Donald Trump's
imposition of punitive tariffs on Chinese exports.
BIG PROMOTIONS
Reuters spoke to 30 consumers in Beijing Yin tai Center, a shopping mall
that has a Starbucks, Costa Coffee and Luckin outlet, among others. Half
of those polled said they had tried Luckin; most said they liked it,
though more than two-thirds said their top choice remained Starbucks.
The majority drank coffee in-store or bought to take away, with only a
small number saying they had coffee delivered, a potential challenge for
Lucien's delivery-focused strategy. Taste, convenience and environment
were their top three priorities, more than price.
Luckin’s customers can order coffee via an app, watch a livestream of
their coffee being made, and have it delivered to their door in an
average of 18 minutes, the company says. A regular latte, roughly the
size of a Starbucks grande, costs 24 yuan plus 6 yuan for delivery (free
delivery for orders of more than 35 yuan), but can be half price after
promotions. A grande latte at Starbucks costs 31 yuan.
More than half of Luckin’s stores are larger "relax" outlets or pick-up
stores with some seating. The rest are delivery kitchens.
The speed of Luckin’s growth is extraordinary – it took Starbucks about
12 years to open as many stores. In many ways it echoes the way in which
some major Chinese technology firms, such as ride hailing platform Didi
Chuxing, have burned through cash to grab market share and been valued
highly as a result.
Qian, who was previously chief operating officer at Chinese ride hailing
firm Ucar, says Luckin’s focus now is all about increasing customers.
"I don't have a timeline for profit," Qian told Reuters at the firm's
Beijing headquarters as she sipped her third Luckin coffee of the day.
"For us, what we care about now is the number of users and if they are
coming back to us, whether they recognize us, whether we can take market
share."

The firm raised $200 million this month to help fund its expansion,
including an undisclosed sum from Singapore government fund IGCC, a
funding round which Luckin said valued the firm at $1 billion.
“In the future we will have more cafes than Starbucks,” she declared.
[to top of second column] |

A barista is pictured at a Luckin Coffee store in Beijing, China
July 17, 2018. Picture taken July 17, 2018. REUTERS/Jason Lee

One of the investors in the latest fundraising said it is the logical time for
there to be a shake-up of the coffee world in China.
“This model will appeal to young customers amid the country's consumption
upgrade,” said the investor, who asked not to be identified.
The use of online ordering and delivery should be enough to unnerve many
established brands, said Bruno Lannes, Shanghai-based partner with consultancy
Bain & Co.
"It's a big threat, that's why western brands need to pay attention," he said.
"FLASH MOB"
Still, not everyone agrees the internet model translates easily to the coffee
business, given the need for costly stores and quality control.
"It remains to be seen if they can really hook consumers in and create a
monopoly in the market, like those we see in sectors like cab-hailing," said Liu
Xingliang, president of tech consultancy China Internet Data Center.
And some of the consumers Reuters spoke to in the Beijing mall saw hurdles ahead
for Luckin.
Liu Xu, 23, an advertising professional, who compares Luckin to a “flash mob”
that came out of nowhere, said he tried the firm’s coffee out of curiosity but
prefers hand-drip single-origin coffee.
And Lian Yiheng, 22, a student, said she was attracted by Lucien's promotions
and the convenience of delivery, but felt it needed to improve its selection of
coffees and store decoration to lure people in the longer run.
Qian said the plan was to have more sit-in stores and reduce the proportion of
delivery-only outlets, which would require higher spending on setting up in
better locations and on décor. On the question of quality, she says that it uses
select arabica beans from Ethiopia.
Lucien's expansion comes as Starbucks’ global rivals, like Canadian chain Tim
Hortons, are also pushing hard in China. Tim Hortons plans to open 1,500 outlets
in China over the next 10 years, while smaller local chains are also popping up
fast.

As China’s middle class continues to increase in size and the coffee chains move
into many smaller towns and cities, the market is growing at 5-7 percent a year,
according to research firm Mintel.
Li Yibei, owner of Double Win Café, which has a chain of eight coffee shops in
Shanghai, said Luckin would have an impact on the market, but there was plenty
of space left.
"Maybe they will hit Starbucks to some extent, but remember Starbucks has many
die-hard fans. Maybe they can grab some followers from them, but I don't think
that many," she said.
Starbucks may also soon be moving more formally into online delivery in China.
Howard Schultz, Starbucks' departing executive chairman, said in Shanghai this
month that he was close friends with Jack Ma, the head of Alibaba Group Holding
Ltd <BABA.N>, which controls food delivery platform Ele.me., and suggested the
two could work together on Starbuck’s online delivery in China.
Schultz also said he isn’t wasn't worried about the China slowdown.
"The more good coffee and competition that comes into the market, the more the
Chinese people will be exposed to good coffee," he said. "Emerging new players
that are coming into the market will actually benefit Starbucks."($1 = 6.8142
Chinese yuan renminbi)
(Reporting by Pei Li in BEIJING and Adam Jourdan in SHANGHAI; Additional
reporting by Julie Zhu in HONG KONG and BEIJING newsroom)
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