It’s been more than a year since a major food safety scare hit western fast-food operators in China, so we were probably overdue for the latest scandal that is now consuming leading chains KFC (NYSE: YUM) and McDonald’s (NYSE: MCD). Frankly speaking, Chinese consumers are probably so jaded about food safety scandals by now that I don’t know if these latest 2 will really have much long-term impact on either company.
The most disgraceful element this time is the fact that the supplier at the heart of the latest scandal is a foreign-owned firm. Up until now, most of the suppliers who provided tainted food to big foreign supermarkets and restaurant chains were domestic Chinese firms, which usually have lower quality control standards. Thus this latest scandal could really do some damage to the broader image of foreign-owned companies, which are generally seen as more trustworthy than their Chinese peers. Read Full Post…
The latest news is decidedly cloudy from 2 of the world’s biggest food and beverage operators in China, with beverage leader Coca Cola (NYSE: KO) and fast-food giant Yum Brands (NYSE: YUM) fighting battles on different fronts. Yum has just reported financial results that show a nice jump in same-store sales for its flagship KFC restaurants during the second quarter. But the year-ago figures were extremely depressed due to several one-time factors, meaning current same-store sales are probably still below levels from 2 years ago. Meantime, media reports say Coke is offering generous incentives to attract foreigners to work in Beijing due to the city’s heavy air pollution, reflecting a recent broader problem faced by many multinationals. Read Full Post…
Two new deals in the food and beverage space are casting a spotlight on China’s growing hunger and thirst for foreign products, and also its desire to import better practices to combat a nonstop stream of domestic food safety scandals. The bigger of the deals will see Hony Capital, one of China’s largest and oldest private equity firms, pay $1.6 billion for British fast-food chain PizzaExpress, which is in the process of expanding in China. The other deal will see the owner of the Red Bull brand of energy drinks for China buy a stake in the parent of Vita Coco, and bring the US company’s flagship coconut flavored drinks to China. Read Full Post…
Several news bits from the electronics retailing space are in the headlines today, reflecting the volatile state of a highly competitive sector where margins are razor thin. US retailing giant Best Buy (NYSE: BBY) leads the headlines, with word that it’s mulling a sale of its China business 3 years after closing most of its own-brand stores in the market. Leading e-commerce firm Amazon (Nasdaq: AMZN) is also reportedly eying a retreat in the China home appliance market, while homegrown player Aisidi (Shenzhen: 002416) is moving in the other direction with its purchase of one of the nation’s top online cellphone retailers. Read Full Post…
China’s homegrown traditional liquor industry has been plunged into turmoil over the last 18 months, and now the shakeup may have claimed its first victim with word that Jiugui Liquor (Shenzhen: 000799) is retreating from the national market. Of course the big question will be whether other makers of baijiu, the traditional Chinese liquor, will follow Jiugui’s lead, and whether Jiugui itself will survive as an independent company. I suspect the answer is that some limited and much-needed consolidation will finally begin to occur in this crowded and money-losing sector. But the process may be difficult, since regional stakeholders will be reluctant to give up control of liquor brands that are often closely tied with the identities of many smaller cities and towns throughout China. Read Full Post…