By Julie Jargon
America's coffee market is getting too crowded.
Consumers' hankering for caffeine and quality coffee has fueled
a big build out of cafes in the last five years, especially in
dense urban areas such as New York, San Francisco and Portland,
Ore. There are now nearly 33,000 coffee shops in the U.S.,
including those run by big chains such as Starbucks, up 16% from
five years ago, according to market research firm Mintel.
The boom in coffee shops is starting to hurt business owners.
Consumers are visiting traditional coffee shops less often when
there are a plethora of cheaper options. Everyone from McDonald's
Corp. to gas stations is hawking specialty coffee. Even grocery
stores are expanding the space devoted to bottled and canned coffee
drinks, which Mintel says poses a threat to coffee shops. Traffic
growth to large coffee chains such as Starbucks is slowing, while
traffic to small coffee chains and independent shops is declining,
according to NPD Group Inc.
At a Chevron gas station just north of Los Angeles, a 12-ounce
cup of coffee can be had for $1.49, while a specialty coffee drink
at a Starbucks less than a mile away can cost nearly $5. A
13.7-ounce bottle of Dunkin' Donuts iced coffee costs $2.89 at a
nearby grocery store.
The troubles facing the coffee business are similar to those
plaguing the broader food-retail and restaurant industries, which
have an oversupply of retail space that are competing against a
proliferation of new food options. In addition, coffee shop visits
are less frequent with people curtailing mall shopping and as they
work from home or spend more time in their offices during the
workday.
"I just don't see room for more coffee shops," said NPD analyst
Bonnie Riggs.
Coffee-shop owners, executives and industry experts now warn the
market is headed for a reckoning.
"Retail is crowded and not everyone will be around several years
from now," said Dave Burwick, chief executive of Peet's Coffee.
Dunkin' Donuts recently said it would scale back new-store
openings as it redesigns its shops to cater to on-the-go consumers.
Starbucks, which accounts for nearly 42% of coffee shops in the
U.S., said it isn't planning to slow the pace of new-store
openings, but cited the challenging retail environment as it
reduced its long-term sales and profit growth outlook last
week.
The total number of coffee shops in the U.S. is forecast to grow
by just over 2% this year, the slowest growth rate in the last six
years. In coming years, Mintel said, the annual growth rate will
fall even lower.
Large competitors have begun to swallow up smaller ones, and
more consolidation is expected.
JAB Holding Company, a privately held business group in Europe,
has been on a coffee-buying spree in the U.S. in recent years. It
owns Keurig Green Mountain and Peet's Coffee, which recently
acquired a majority stake in Intelligentsia Coffee & Tea and
Stumptown Coffee Roasters. Nestlé in September bought a majority
stake in Blue Bottle Coffee Co.
Small coffee shop owners who got into what was once a
high-margin business are particularly vulnerable in the packed
market. Many have found rising costs of real estate and labor to be
prohibitive, and are starting to close.
"Real estate costs are at a peak and the industry is getting
saturated," Mr. Burwick said, explaining that retailers have to be
careful about where they open new shops.
Alexis and Luke Shaffer, a married couple who opened 21st Street
Coffee and Tea in Pittsburgh's Strip District 11 years ago, are
trying to secure a new location because their landlord raised the
rent beyond what they could afford after their lease ended. They
have a second shop downtown.
"Bigger coffee chains can pay more in rent and can have
attorneys negotiate leases and get better locations," Ms. Shaffer
said.
The couple says they are turning a profit still and that sales
are stable, but that it is a tough business made harder by
increasing competition.
Larger chains have a big advantage in that they can more easily
cater to consumers' increasing demand for convenience with
sophisticated mobile apps, drive-through lanes and bottled coffee
drinks.
"People are getting more and more impatient and lazy, you could
argue," said Dunkin' Brands Group Inc. Chief Executive Nigel
Travis, who predicts there will be "a shakeout among smaller
chains."
Caleb Bryant, senior food service analyst at Mintel, said that
sales growth for many coffee chains or shops will have to come from
an existing base of coffee drinkers shelling out more money for
evermore complicated and expensive drinks.
Starbucks and Dunkin' are appealing to more affluent consumers
who can pay more for specialty drinks like nitrogen-infused cold
brew and vanilla chai. A 16-ounce coconut milk mocha Macchiato at
Starbucks, for example, costs $4.95 in the Los Angeles area while a
16-ounce cup of vanilla sweet cream cold brew costs $3.75.
Prices of brewed coffee and specialty coffee drinks have
increased at double-digit rates across the board in the last five
years, according to NPD.
Stumptown, Blue Bottle and Intelligentsia are offering
subscription services, selling their beans to hotels and
restaurants and getting packaged products into grocery stores as a
way to supplement their cafe business.
While all three companies say there is room to build more shops,
they acknowledge they will take a measured approach to expansion.
James McLaughlin, CEO of Intelligentsia, which has 11 stores now
said: "For us, opening a couple stores in a year is a big
deal."
Write to Julie Jargon at julie.jargon@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
November 07, 2017 07:14 ET (12:14 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2017 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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