By Tess Stynes
Starbucks Corp. said its earnings surged as the coffee chain
reported stronger traffic and sales at its U.S. cafes for the
holiday quarter.
Shares rose 3.3% to $85.50 in recent after-hours trading.
Starbucks took steps to attract more customers to its U.S. cafes
during the holiday period, in response to Americans increasingly
turning to online ordering for holiday gifts, leaving
brick-and-mortar retailers suffering--including its cafes.
This year, in an effort to boost traffic during the holiday
season, Starbucks offered a chance to win free Starbucks coffee
drinks for 30 years to customers who used gift cards.
Chairman and Chief Executive Howard Schultz cited the promotion
and the chain's expanded holiday offerings as drivers of customer
traffic in the latest quarter.
Sales at company-operated stores in the U.S. open at least 13
months rose 5% during the latest quarter as traffic grew by 2% and
the size of the average ticket increased 3%. Starbucks's comparable
sales world-wide also rose 5%.
The amount of dollars loaded onto Starbucks cards jumped 17% to
$1.6 billion. Starbucks said one in seven Americans received a
Starbucks gift card in the holiday quarter, up from one in eight a
year ago.
The company recently said Chief Operating Officer Troy Alstead
was set to take an indefinite leave of absence, starting March 1.
However Starbucks at the time didn't disclose who, if anyone, would
fill Mr. Alstead's role as the coffee chain's second in command and
when he expects to return. The company didn't provide any
additional details in its earnings release Thursday.
For the period ended Dec. 28, Starbucks reported a profit of
$983.1 million, or $1.30 a share, up from $540.7 million, or 71
cents a share, a year earlier. Excluding a gain related to its
Japan Starbucks deals, earnings were 80 cents a share. The company
expected per-share profit of 79 cents to 81 cents.
Revenue increased 13% to $4.8 billion, matching analysts'
expectations.
Longer term, Starbucks's efforts to improve its sales include
plans aimed at drawing in customers later in the day with other
food-and-drink offerings. The company's strategy also includes the
addition of more locations domestically and abroad; new categories
such as tea stores; and a digital strategy that aims to allow its
cafes to handle more customers.
The company reaffirmed many of its financial targets for the
current fiscal year but tweaked its per-share earnings forecast.
For the year ending in September, Starbucks raised the lower end of
its per-share earnings estimate by a penny and now expects a range
between $3.09 and $3.13.
For quarter ending in March, the company forecast per-share
earnings of 64 cents to 65 cents. Analysts polled by Thomson
Reuters expected per-share profit of 68 cents.
Write to Tess Stynes at tess.stynes@wsj.com
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