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Tata to rethink Starbucks' outlet expansion strategy amid lower footfall

VCCircleVCCircle · 10m ago
Tata to rethink Starbucks' outlet expansion strategy amid lower footfall
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Tata to rethink Starbucks' outlet expansion strategy amid lower footfall An employee takes a customer's order at a Starbucks' outlet in New Delhi | Credit: Reuters India's Tata Consumer Products "will calibrate" its plans to open Starbucks stores in the near term at a time when fewer customers are walking into its cafes in the world's most populous country, its top boss said on Monday. City dwellers in India are cutting spending on everything from cookies and coffee to fast food as persistently high inflation squeezes middle class budgets, with wages failing to keep pace. Tata Starbucks, a joint venture between U.S. coffee brand Starbucks SBUX.Oand the Indian conglomerate, operates the largest cafe chain in the country with more than 450 outlets. Advertisement Starbucks has more than 40,000 stores globally. "We will calibrate for the short term ... In the near term there will be pressure," Tata Consumer CEO Sunil D'Souza told Reuters, adding that its Tata Starbucks joint venture is still focused on reaching its 2028 goal to operate 1,000 stores by 2028. However, Tata Consumer's CEO still expects its bet on coffee to pay off in the longer run as the country's coffee culture grows and cafe density is still low compared with other Asian countries such as Indonesia, Vietnam and the Philippines. Advertisement Separately, D'Souza also said Tata Consumer's revenue would increase in the double-digit percentage range in the second half of the financial year, with profit coming under pressure due to higher prices of raw materials, including tea. Share article on Leave Your Comments

Hunger Inc raises Rs 215 Cr from Lighthouse and DSG Consumer Partners

EntrackrEntrackr · 19d ago
Hunger Inc raises Rs 215 Cr from Lighthouse and DSG Consumer Partners
Medial

Hunger Inc raises Rs 215 Cr from Lighthouse and DSG Consumer Partners Hunger Inc, the parent company of Bombay Sweet Shop and restaurant brands Bombay Canteen, Veronica’s, O Pedro and Papa’s, has raised Rs 215 crore (nearly $25 million) in a new funding round from Lighthouse and DSG Consumer Partners. The round also saw some of its early investors, including CP Gurnani and a few angels, exit via secondary deals. The Mumbai-based company had previously raised $1.69 million in a seed funding round. The Godrej family office is an existing backer of Hunger Inc. The proceeds will be used to expand its production and supply chain capabilities as it looks to increase its footprint outside Mumbai, Hunger Inc said in a media statement. Founded in 2014 by Sameer Seth, Floyd Cardoz, and Yash Bhanage, Hunger Inc operates restaurants, a food magazine, and promotes a team-oriented work culture. Bombay Sweet Shop, its retail brand for Indian sweets, chocolates, and confectionery, now contributes over half of the group’s total revenue. In fiscal 2025, the company clocked Rs 115 crore in revenue with a 9% Ebitda margin and it is expecting to post a topline of Rs 150 crore in FY26. Bombay Sweet Shop is tracking Rs 8-9 crore in monthly revenue. Currently present only in Mumbai, Hunger Inc is planning to expand to Delhi and set up a flagship Bombay Sweet Shop there over the next 12-18 months. At present, the brand has five retail outlets and 18 dark stores, through which it makes direct deliveries from its own website and also through aggregators Swiggy and Zomato. Hunger Inc aims to scale its business-to-business (B2B) and institutional sales. The company supplies to cafe chain Starbucks as well as Oberoi Hotels. Bombay Sweet Shop also recently onboarded IndiGo for in-flight items in the international business class.

Starbucks India posts Rs 1,218 Cr revenue in FY24; losses surge 3.2X

EntrackrEntrackr · 1y ago
Starbucks India posts Rs 1,218 Cr revenue in FY24; losses surge 3.2X
Medial

Starbucks India has emerged as the largest coffee chain in the country as the company left Coffee Cafe Day behind in terms of revenue during the fiscal year ending March 2024. However, the firm barely managed double digit growth in the said fiscal year and at the same time, its losses widened over three-fold. Tata Starbucks’ revenue from operations increased 12.05% to Rs 1,218 crore in FY24 from Rs 1,087 crore in FY23, its standalone annual financial statements filed with the Registrar of Companies (RoC) show. Starbucks For background, Starbucks India is a joint venture between Starbucks Coffee Company and Tata Consumer Products Limited. Launched in 2012, Tata Starbucks now operates in over 390 stores across 54 Indian cities, with approximately 4,300 partners. Its nearest competitor Coffee Cafe Day’s revenue stood at Rs 1,013 crore in FY24. As of March 2024, it had 450 stores. Starbucks also competes with several new-age coffee startups including Blue Tokai, Rage Coffee, Third Wave Coffee Roasters, Slay Coffee, Sleepy Owl, and Seven Beans Co among several others. Coming to Tata Starbucks revenue, the sale of coffee and related products formed most of its revenue. The rest of the income came from the loyalty program called My Starbucks Rewards where the customers earn loyalty points (Stars). For a coffee-selling company, the procurement of coffee beans, and other related products accounted for 26% of the total expenditure. To the tune of scale, this cost increased 8.5% to Rs 343 crore in FY23. Its employee benefits, rent, electricity, advertisement cum promotion, royalty, transportation, and other overheads took the firm’s overall expenditure to Rs 1,320 crore in FY24 from Rs 1,140 crore in FY23. See TheKredible for the complete expense breakup. Along with flat scale, Starbucks India’s losses surged 3.2x to Rs 80 crore in FY24 from Rs 25 crore in FY23. Its ROCE and EBITDA margin stood at 0.4% and 18%, respectively. On a unit level, the firm spent Rs 1.08 to earn a rupee in FY24. FY23-FY24 FY23 FY24 EBITDA Margin 19% 18% Expense/₹ of Op Revenue ₹1.05 ₹1.08 ROCE 3% 0.4% Coffee chains, by their very nature seek upscale locations, which means rental costs can be very high. Starbucks India, which is still in expansion mode with a possible target of 1000 stores by 2028, faces that challenge, besides the more obvious one of finding customers for its pricey offerings. Multiple startups encroaching in the same segment has not helped, as unlike the humble tea, coffee snobs are a very real thing, and many of the new upstarts have built a following accordingly. More than losses, Starbucks India will possibly be more focused on metrics like same store sales growth and footfalls for now, as its menu offerings have enough margins to deliver handsomely if footfalls increase significantly. The question is, will premium coffee find a deep enough market, or will it run up against the by now famously shallow middle class market?

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