Starbucks China attracts bids at up to $10 billion valuation, CNBC reports

(Reuters) -Starbucks’ China business has attracted offers for a potential stake sale, valuing the coffee chain unit at up to $10 billion, CNBC reported on Wednesday, citing people familiar with the matter.

Asia-based private equity firms Centurium Capital, which holds a stake in Starbucks’ competitor in China, Luckin Coffee, and Hillhouse Capital are among the contenders vying for a stake in the business, the report added. U.S. peers Carlyle Group and KKR & Co are also potential suitors, CNBC said.

Shares of Starbucks were up about 1% in premarket trading in New York on Wednesday.

Starbucks, Hillhouse, Carlyle and KKR did not immediately respond to Reuters requests for comment, while Centurium declined to comment. Reuters could not immediately verify the report.

The coffee chain has been working to turn around its business globally under CEO Brian Niccol. In China, it has been exploring options such as strategic partnerships and joint ventures after losing ground to lower-priced local rivals like Luckin Coffee and Cotti Coffee.

Last month, Starbucks lowered prices in China on some products and said it was not currently considering a full sale of the local unit.

There is a possibility Starbucks may retain a 30% stake, with the rest split among a group of buyers, each holding less than 30%, the CNBC report said.

The company was evaluating offers from about 30 domestic and foreign private equity firms in China, the report said.

Bidders could be shortlisted within two months, but the deal is unlikely to be completed this year, as per CNBC.

Starbucks operates 7,594 stores in China, as per its 2024 annual filing.

In its most recent quarterly results, sales in China, its second-largest region, were flat compared to a year ago, pausing four straight quarters of decline.

(Reporting by Juveria Tabassum and Anusha Shah in Bengaluru; Editing by Mrigank Dhaniwala and Leroy Leo)

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