What’s Really Behind the Starbucks Stock Breakout

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As my own view of Starbucks (NASDAQ:SBUX) has wavered, Starbucks stock has moved decisively from its June low of under $50 per share toward its 2018 high of $62.

The company recently announced a $5 billion buyback of stock  after activist Bill Ackman began nibbling on shares, along with plans for a reorganization and lay-offs at its Seattle headquarters  that could boost profit.

As a result, analysts are getting bullish.

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There is also hope that the situation with China could settle down, and that would provide the biggest boost of all. Starbucks is committed to China in a way we haven’t seen any U.S. company commit to it in decades — and if you’re buying Starbucks stock for the long term, you’re betting it’s right.

The China Play

While most fast food chains are moving toward a franchise model, Starbucks continues to own its stores. This means it takes operating risks, but also that it takes all the profit when those stores do well.

In China, Starbucks is opening a new store every 15 hours, with plans to have 5,000 there in 2021, about half as many as it has in the U.S. Under Belinda Wong, formerly with McDonald’s (NYSE:MCD), the company is even more innovative there than it is here, relying on a mobile app for 60% of its sales, in partnership with Alibaba Group Holding (NASDAQ:BABA) and Tencent (OTCMKTS:TCEHY), the fastest-growing retailers in the country.

The agreement with Alibaba is dubbed “new retail” and integrates the company into Alibaba’s Ele.Me delivery services, Alipay payment system and (perhaps, most importantly) Hema supermarkets, which are opening “Starbucks Delivery Kitchens” that could help it expand in food, where it’s weak.

The company fully committed to China last year by selling out of Taiwan and buying out its mainland partners, a $1.3 billion transaction. If any U.S. company is going to make a Chinese national its CEO, my guess is it will be Wong at Starbucks.

Back at the Ranch

Meanwhile, Starbucks is making smaller moves in the U.S. aimed at boosting the top line, tightening operations and keeping employees in a tight labor market.

Its latest effort to put food in stores that are the size of a small apartment is sous vide, packaging eggs in airtight containers that cook in hot water. It’s a mini-omelette that can be delivered in just 1-2 minutes.

Starbucks is planning layoffs, closing stores more aggressively and has hired a new finance officer from Hyatt to tighten operations. At the same time it is offering employees access to day care, through Care.Com, which goes alongside its existing perk of free online tuition.