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News / Business

Starbucks posts big jump in sales, earnings

By Angel Gonzalez, The Seattle Times
Published: January 21, 2016, 4:27pm

SEATTLE — Starbucks posted another steamy quarter, slightly beating Wall Street earnings expectations amid big increases in store traffic but narrowly missing sales estimates as the strengthening of the U.S. dollar took out some of the revenue made in foreign markets.

The mammoth Seattle-based coffee purveyor brought home $5.37 billion in sales, up 12 percent from the same period last year, and 46 cents per share in earnings, both record numbers. Analysts had forecast revenues of $5.39 billion and profits of 45 cents per share.

So-called comparable store sales, which measure sales in stores that were open a year ago, jumped an eye-popping 8 percent across Starbucks’ global empire. About half of that increase came from additional store visits.

Chief financial officer Scott Maw said in an interview that the company had a “very strong performance globally,” but added that foreign exchange effects had a bigger impact than in previous quarters.

The results show continued momentum for the company, which has bet big on online efforts such as a mobile ordering and payment tool, and reward deals with partners such as Spotify and The New York Times, in order to keep drawing in new customers.

But the outcome also shows how turmoil abroad has an increasing impact on Starbucks’ increasingly global operations.

At home, things were pretty good: Comparable sales in the Americas rose 9 percent, outpacing global growth. But in China-Asia Pacific, the company’s most promising market, sales rose only 5 percent, driven by a 4 percent increase in traffic. That’s down from the red-hot 8 percent increase seen during last year’s holidays.

In Europe, sales were up a tepid 1 percent, also much lower than the 4 percent seen last year.

Part of the reason is the strengthening of the U.S. dollar versus foreign currencies as Europe and China deal with economic issues. But political instability also plays a role. Chief operating officer Kevin Johnson said in an interview that the November terrorist attacks in Paris had a chilling effect on traffic for a time.

“In some of Western Europe’s largest cities we saw some declines in transaction during that period,” Johnson said.

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