Foodservice
Solutions®
Grocerant Guru® thinks that all in all Starbucks did just fine last this week when
they reported a 7-percent increase in same-store sales for the
Americas region during the March 27-ended second quarter. Starbucks is a food
merchant first, a coffee shop second according to Foodservice Solutions® Grocerant Guru®.
Coffee
is the fuel for retail food sales “2015 and early 2016 have been dynamic times
for global specialist coffee shops, with consistently growing demand for modern
café experiences driving rapid innovation and growing competition in the
category all over the world according to Euromonitor’s new 2016 edition of
consumer foodservice data from 54 global markets. Let’s see what Euromonitor found:
Coffee shops are the fastest growing
restaurant category
In
2016, specialist coffee shops were the fastest growing major restaurant
category in terms of global sales, increasing 9.1% from 2014-2015 according to
Euromonitor International data. This bests the international restaurant
industry as a whole, which grew at 5.7%, and was stronger even than global fast
food, at 5.8%, despite historically being one of the primary drivers of chained
restaurant growth world-wide.
Perhaps
even more notable is the fact that this growth was consistent across all world
regions, including those that are considered emerging market regions as well as
those that are highly mature. Western Europe for example, despite seeing just
1.5% sales growth in the industry as a whole, and negative growth in some
similar categories like traditional cafés, recorded 10.8% in specialist coffee
shops driven by growing interest in chained café concepts and increasing
acceptance of modern, international coffee-drinking culture as a whole.
The largest growth opportunities will
be in Asia
While
all regions will see strong growth in the category, Asia Pacific will be home
to the largest sales increase in specialist coffee shops, totaling over US$3.7
billion dollars in new value growth from 2016-2020. This is as compared to
North America, at US$3.3 billion in growth, as well as another US$1.7 billion
from Western Europe over the same period.
As
much as US$2.2 billion of this growth will come from China alone, where Starbucks is leading the
charge for a rapidly growing, Western-style tradition of drinking premium
takeaway coffee and socializing in coffee shops; however, many smaller Asian
markets will see impressive growth in the category as well. South Korea will
contribute another US$715 million in new specialist coffee shops growth from
2015-2020, driven in large part by local chains rather than international
brands alone.
Competition is growing quickly, leading
to rapid diversification
This
move toward a highly diversified playing field is a global phenomenon as well.
Though Starbucks and McCafe are some of the only chains to have achieved a
truly broad presence in terms of geographic coverage, a number of international
brands are now taking steps toward becoming viable multi-regional competitors.
The UK-based Costa Coffee has made significant progress toward a presence in
Eastern Europe, Asia Pacific and the Middle East, while Japanese chain Doutor
Coffee has begun expanding across other Asian markets like South Korea and
Taiwan. South Korean chain Caffe Bene has cast its net even wider, expanding
into China and the US, capitalizing on its ties to Korean pop-culture
entertainment and targeting markets where interest in Korean entertainment is
growing.
Top Ten Global Specialist Coffee Shop
Chains by 2015 Sales (US$ mn)
Brand
|
Operator
|
2015
Sales (US$ mn)
|
2015
Outlets
|
Starbucks
|
Starbucks
Corp
|
21,095
|
22,557
|
Costa
Coffee
|
Whitbread
Plc
|
1,809
|
3,036
|
McCafe
|
McDonald’s
Corp
|
1,462
|
5,044
|
Doutor
Coffee Shop
|
Doutor
Nichires Holdings Co Ltd
|
718
|
1,108
|
Coffee
Bean & Tea Leaf, The
|
International
Coffee & Tea LLC
|
520
|
925
|
Caffe
Nero
|
Caffe
Nero Group Ltd
|
442
|
683
|
Tully’s
|
Tully’s
Coffee Corp
|
440
|
605
|
Ediya
Espresso
|
Ediya
Co Ltd
|
361
|
1,240
|
Caribou
Coffee
|
Caribou
Coffee Co Inc
|
311
|
522
|
Gloria
Jean’s Coffees
|
Retail
Food Group
|
303
|
666
|
Competitive
dynamics in the coffee shop market are changing at the local level as well. In emerging
markets, this has meant an increasingly large number of brands competing for
share, many of which are going to creative new heights to differentiate
themselves. In South Korea this has manifested in the form of a vast array of
themed cafes, from mango desserts to cookie decorating or cats, whereas in
Western Europe many coffee shops have been experimenting with adding alcohol
offerings to bring in evening traffic. Likewise, some more traditional
bars/pubs have even been experimenting with adding coffee offerings and
breakfast or lunch menus, resulting in a blurring of the definition lines
between beverage-based concepts and even greater competition for coffee and tea
occasions.
In
developed markets competition has been increasing too, though in a slightly
different form. In the US, competition has become a regional and even
city-level game, with large numbers of independent, third-wave cafés and
boutique chains like Blue Bottle Coffee and Intelligentsia popping up to
compete with larger brands. Over the long-term, this kind of movement toward a
highly diversified, highly fragmented, and most of all highly competitive
global coffee shop market is only expected to continue. Operators all over the
world have all taken note of the rapidly growing demand in coffee shops, and
everyone is looking to get in on the opportunity before it’s too late.
Invite
Foodservice Solutions® to complete a grocerant program assessment, grocerant
scorecard, brand, or product placement assistance. Since 1991 www.FoodserviceSolutions.us of
Tacoma, WA has been the global leader in the Grocerant niche. Contact: Steve@FoodserviceSolutions.us or 253-759-7869
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