Starbucks (SBUX) stock ended Thursday’s regular session marginally lower and climbed only 0.1% in after-hours activity, hovering near flat territory, even as the coffee retailer made a pair of significant corporate announcements.
Starbucks Corporation, SBUX
The Seattle-based company finalized its partnership arrangement with Boyu Capital, an investment firm operating across China, Hong Kong, and Singapore. The completed transaction grants Boyu-managed funds a controlling 60% ownership in Starbucks‘ retail operations throughout China, while the coffee chain retains the balance at 40%. Additionally, Starbucks will continue providing brand licensing and intellectual property rights to the partnership.
The transaction was originally revealed to the public in November. Boyu’s founding team includes family ties to Jiang Zemin, who previously served as China’s President.
The partnership encompasses roughly 8,000 corporate-owned locations across China. The strategic vision calls for expansion to 20,000 stores over time.
China presents ongoing obstacles for Starbucks. According to Brady Brewer, CEO of Starbucks International, who spoke at the company’s January investor presentation, the typical Chinese customer consumes merely three cups of coffee annually. The American chain has also encountered aggressive rivalry from domestic competitors such as Luckin Coffee and Cotti, which have pursued aggressive pricing strategies.
Comparable store revenue in China and throughout the Asia-Pacific territory declined consistently during 2024 before showing improvement in the current year, based on FactSet information.
Also on Thursday, Starbucks revealed a fresh package of employment benefits targeting its American workforce. The company announced it would transition to weekly payment cycles for all U.S. employees, moving away from its previous compensation schedule.
The retailer also launched an incentive program allowing baristas and shift supervisors to collect up to $1,200 in additional annual earnings — distributed as $300 each quarter — contingent upon their location achieving predetermined sales volumes, operational benchmarks, and customer satisfaction standards.
Furthermore, employees will gain the ability to collect gratuities through mobile ordering systems and digital payments, plus a scan-and-pay feature at physical registers.
The corporation positioned these modifications as components of a comprehensive strategy to retain staff, recognize employee contributions, enhance service quality, and reconnect with customers who had reduced visits due to elevated pricing or disappointing store experiences.
The newly announced benefits include an important caveat. Starbucks indicated they “will be subject to collective bargaining as required by federal law” at approximately 5% of American locations where workers have organized, suggesting unionized employees might experience delays in receiving these enhancements.
Starbucks Workers United, the labor organization representing organized employees, indicated it was still evaluating the complete details. Through an official statement, the union characterized the announcement as a reaction to its organizing activities.
The union highlighted that the incentive payments and gratuities depend significantly on variables beyond individual worker influence, including customer patterns and performance measures established by corporate management.
Starbucks has not provided further elaboration beyond its original statements.
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