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All's Fair in Coffee and Sugar

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By Dian L. Chu, EconMatters

You might recall that bitter coffee divorce from last December when Kraft Food (KFT) took Starbucks (SBUX) to court to prevent Starbucks from unwinding a 13-year packaged coffee distribution partnership. Well, that food fight has finally come to close with the partnership officially dissolved on March 1 after Kraft lost the court battle, although Kraft and Starbucks are still in arbitration to settle financial and some other outstanding matters.

So, how’s life otherwise like after the corporate divorce?

In my earlier analysis, I mapped out the logical course post-breakup for each company as follows:

“With the breakup, it is a low risk proposition for Starbucks to form a partnership with Green Mountain Coffee Roasters single serving Keurig, a primary rival of Kraft’s Tassimo.“

“With the potential of facing Starbucks on multiple fronts, longer term, Kraft needs to either find another premium brand partner to bolster its existing lineup, or need a serious makeover of market differentiations in order to compete in the supermarket coffee isle.”

So far, it looks like both Kraft and Starbucks are right on track.    

In March 2011, Starbucks struck a deal with Green Mountain Coffee Roasters (GMCR)to sell packs of Starbucks, and Tazo coffee and tea for use in Green Mountain’s Keurig single-cup brewers. Starbucks will sell those single-serving coffee and tea packs at its own stores as well as at other North America retailers, starting this fall.

Starbucks is also trying to move beyond café and into consumer products via a planned aggressive expansion of branded consumer product lineup to be distributed through food retailers. And true to its NASDAQ listing, Starbucks has also dabbled in technology by pushing out a cool smart phone mobile payment app in January.  The Starbucks Card Mobile app, available for Apple (AAPL) iPhone, RIM Blackberry, and Google's (GOOG) Android, is linked to a prepaid Starbucks card, and lets customers scan and pay using their smart phones. 

In less than three-month time, Starbucks (SBUX) announced that more than 3 million people have used the nifty app to pay for their grande lattes.  Starbucks addicts can earn rewards through the Starbucks prepaid card, but may potentially get even more bang for the buck by funding the prepaid card with some of the best credit cards programs that offer cash back, among other rewards.  The success of the Starbucks mobile payment app has already prompted some people predicting that a whole new next gen retail payment network 2.0 in the near future.

At the same time, Kraft has moved on as well by announcing it will replace Starbucks with its premium Swedish coffee brand Gevalia at U.S. supermarkets and mass retailers. Kraft said Gevalia will be available in 10 varieties in August, which will get Kraft back into the U.S. premium grocery coffee business.

But Kraft declined to say how long it would  take for sales of Gevalia to match the $500 million a year revenue the bagged Starbucks used to generate for Kraft.  Gevalia, now sold only online or through mail order in the U.S., is a nearly $400 million brand, and part of Kraft's $5 billion global coffee business, but it is nevertheless still unproven in the supermarket retail channel. 

From the stocks comparison chart above, it looks like Green Mountain Coffee Roasters (GMCR) is clearly the one that has benefited the most from the breakup between Kraft (KFT) and Starbucks (SUBX), while both Kraft and Starbucks might need some time to develop and adjust to their respective new partner and business model.

Now, FT.com on April 20 reported that coffee prices have surged through $3 a pound level for the first time in more than 34 years.  Supplies of arabica beans are getting scarce because of lower-than-expected crops in Columbia, Mexico and some other producing regions.  Inventories are currently at 50-year low and unlikely to build up this year, according to International Coffee Organization, the industry trade group.

 
Chart Source: FT.com

 

Arabica coffee prices have surged 23.6% this year and 117.2% since January 2010, and is expected to rally further, while sugar prices in New York also touched a 30-year high in February, but have since dropped 36%. (See Chart) 

So, near term, cost and margin pressures are building at Starbucks, Kraft and their competitors such as J.M. Smucker Company, and Peet's Coffee & Tea, as these companies may have difficulties passing  through the raw material cost increases of coffee and sugar, for example, to consumers.

Longer term, since McDonald's still has twice as many locations worldwide as Starbucks, the buck probably does not stop here for Starbucks, as long as the company keeps innovating, successfully executes the right mix of growth and new region entry strategy, all without repeating its past 'growing pains.'

EconMatters, April 21, 2011 | Facebook Page | Post Alert | Kindle

 

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Sat, 04/23/2011 - 14:53 | 1199463 Rainman
Rainman's picture

Why spring for a cup of chocolated mud at Fivebucks when you could amp up with a shot of good whiskey for the same price ?? These humans make no sense to me anymore.

Sat, 04/23/2011 - 13:58 | 1199378 Jack Sheet
Jack Sheet's picture

With all those hyperlinks, where are the boobs? Where's Money McBags?

Sat, 04/23/2011 - 12:52 | 1199229 EvlTheCat
EvlTheCat's picture

You are becoming the Leo Kolivakis of coffee.

Sat, 04/23/2011 - 12:41 | 1199203 css1971
css1971's picture

Kraft coffee? Starbucks coffee?

Buy a cafetiere, beans and a grinder. Good coffee in the time it takes to boil the water.

 

Sat, 04/23/2011 - 12:40 | 1199200 MarketTruth
MarketTruth's picture

Oh why oh why another Starbucks article on ZH? i mean, really, their coffee products are crap and anyone who has a clue about what great coffee should be like knows it.

Sat, 04/23/2011 - 12:04 | 1199104 2DollarBill
2DollarBill's picture

Never understood why the industry is going towards expensive single-serve K-cups.  Eventually people will go back to grinding their own beans...hardly a business model with any growth.

Sat, 04/23/2011 - 12:35 | 1199187 css1971
css1971's picture

Why would you ever do anything else?

 

Sat, 04/23/2011 - 11:48 | 1199061 dalkrin
dalkrin's picture

Must be those evil speculators bidding up the price of coffee and sugar.  Better call up the Federal Reserve, they will flood the system with extra dollars, which will ensure a plentiful supply of these basic American staples.  Let the mighty Obama proclaim from his pulpit, that on his watch, no American will suffer the indignity of paying exorbitant prices for a grande latte enema.  While wearing his cornflower blue tie.

Sat, 04/23/2011 - 11:47 | 1199051 Hedgetard55
Hedgetard55's picture

Buy green beans and roast them yourself - it is so simple, Barry Soetoro could do it.

Fri, 04/22/2011 - 21:17 | 1198058 Cammy Le Flage
Cammy Le Flage's picture

Our earth is absolutely filthy and dirty like a ghetto house and we discuss coffee divorces.  Well allrighty then.  Just cause ya can't see it don't mean it ain't filthy. 

Sat, 04/23/2011 - 10:13 | 1198875 LowProfile
LowProfile's picture

Why don't you just ignore the articles you don't think are worthy of our attention?  This really doesn't help you to win an internship as a Jr. ZH editor in training!

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