With a $7 billion deal, Swiss firm buys rights to sell coffee
chain's products in stores
By Brian Blackstone and Julie Jargon
This article is being republished as part of our daily
reproduction of WSJ.com articles that also appeared in the U.S.
print edition of The Wall Street Journal (May 8, 2018).
Starbucks Corp. is betting its future on its coffee shops.
To do that, the Seattle-based company has removed a distraction
by selling the rights to offer its coffee and tea in grocery and
retail stores to Nestlé SA for more than $7 billion.
Coffee sellers from Dunkin' Brands Group Inc. to McDonald's
Corp. have crowded supermarket shelves with branded bags of ground
and roasted beans. Starbucks products will give Switzerland-based
Nestlé a bigger stake in that fight without having to introduce a
new brand to U.S. consumers.
For Starbucks, the consumer packaged-goods business generated
$1.8 billion in revenue in fiscal 2017, just 8% of Starbucks's
total.
"While consumer packaged goods is an important and highly
profitable business, it's small," said Michael Schaefer, head of
Euromonitor's global food and beverage practice.
Sales have been slowing at Starbucks coffee shops in the U.S. as
mall traffic declines and competition increases. Starbucks has
opened higher-end stores under brands called Roastery and Reserve
to compete with independent coffee shops and small chains that have
grabbed sales from customers willing to pay more for specialty
drinks and pastries. There are nearly 33,000 coffee shops in the
U.S., according to market-research firm Mintel, up 16% from five
years ago.
Starbucks also wants to open more coffee shops in China, a
market the Seattle-based company said will eventually overtake the
U.S. as its largest. The company recently opened its first Roastery
store in Shanghai.
"Our retail business in the U.S. and China are our two big
growth engines," Starbucks Chief Executive Kevin Johnson told
investors on a call about the deal Monday.
Starbucks has dropped other ancillary businesses recently to
focus on its coffee shops. Last fall, Starbucks sold its Tazo tea
brand to Unilever for $384 million. The company recently closed its
mall-based Teavana stores because of weak traffic.
Starbucks shares fell 23 cents to $57.45 on Monday, and are down
about 3% in the past year. Nestlé shares rose 1.6% on Monday.
The deal gives Starbucks an upfront infusion of cash that it
plans to return to shareholders through share buybacks. Starbucks
said it planned to give $20 billion to shareholders over three
years in buybacks and dividends. That might assuage some
shareholder concerns as Starbucks works to boost sales growth.
Nestlé said it will pay Starbucks $7.15 billion as well as
continuing royalties on all sales. Mr. Johnson said the partnership
will raise familiarity with the Starbucks brand by getting its
ground and whole bean coffee into international markets where it
isn't currently sold.
Nestlé, meanwhile, hopes more coffee sales can offset flagging
sales of some of its other packaged-food businesses. As part of the
Starbucks deal, Nestlé will add Starbucks Reserve, Seattle's Best
Coffee and Teavana to a portfolio that includes the Nescafé and
Nespresso brands. Nestlé will also now manage the business of
distributing Starbucks K-Cups, the single-serve coffee pods used in
Keurig brewers in North America.
Mr. Johnson said Starbucks is the No. 1 coffee brand on the
Keurig system. "We intend to keep that," he said.
The transaction doesn't include any fixed assets and excludes
Starbucks's ready-to-drink products. Starbucks has partnerships
with PepsiCo Inc. and Anheuser-Busch InBev SA to produce, bottle
and distribute its ready-to-drink coffee and Teavana teas. The deal
also doesn't include sales of products at Starbucks coffee
shops.
About 500 Starbucks employees will join Nestlé. Starbucks must
approve any new products to be sold under the label.
The deal comes as JAB, a European holding company, has moved
aggressively into the American coffee business. The company
considers the U.S. to be poised for breakneck growth as consumers
shift away from soft drinks. JAB and Nestlé view each other as top
competitors.
"The coffee market is huge and growing and offers lots of space"
for competition, Nestlé Chief Executive Mark Schneider said in an
interview.
The Starbucks deal will bolster Nestlé's reach in the U.S. as
that fight picks up, said Vontobel Research analyst Jean-Philippe
Bertschy.
Nestlé has highlighted coffee as a priority, along with bottled
water, pet care and infant nutrition. Nescafé generates about 10
billion Swiss francs, or roughly $10 billion, of Nestlé's nearly 90
billion francs in annual sales. Nespresso's annual sales are more
than five billion francs. Last September, Nestlé bought a majority
stake in specialty U.S. roaster and retailer Blue Bottle
Coffee.
Nestlé has been shaking up a product mix that stretches from
DiGiorno frozen pizza and Perrier bottled water to Maggi noodles
and medicinal foods. That has taken on more urgency since American
activist investor Dan Loeb took a big stake in Nestlé.
In addition to the Blue Bottle deal, Nestlé last year bought
California-based Sweet Earth, which makes vegan and vegetarian
products. In June, it bought a minority stake in startup Freshly,
which sells prepared meals directly to U.S. consumers.
Earlier this year, Nestlé sold its U.S. confectionery business,
which includes the Butterfinger and Baby Ruth brands, to Italian
candy maker Ferrero International SA for $2.8 billion in cash.
Like other large consumer-goods companies, Nestlé has struggled
with competition from local upstarts and a rapid shift in consumer
tastes toward locally grown, organic food. The company has also had
trouble raising its prices.
This isn't the first time Starbucks has outsourced the sale of
its packaged coffee in grocery stores. In 1988 the company agreed
to let Kraft Foods distribute and market Starbucks brand coffee in
U.S. grocery stores and, later, overseas. But Starbucks tried to
terminate the agreement in 2010 when it alleged that Kraft was
selling outdated coffee and wasn't doing enough to stock and
promote its brands.
Kraft rejected Starbucks's termination offer, beginning an
arbitration process that ended in late 2013 with Starbucks being
ordered to pay Kraft nearly $2.8 billion. Starbucks was allowed to
take back control of its packaged-coffee business during
arbitration.
Mr. Johnson said working with Nestlé is different, because
Nestlé has more experience selling premium coffee. "The
complementary nature of what we both bring to the table is
powerful," he said in an interview.
--Zeke Turner and Annie Gasparro contributed to this
article.
Write to Brian Blackstone at brian.blackstone@wsj.com and Julie
Jargon at julie.jargon@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
May 08, 2018 02:47 ET (06:47 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2018 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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