Masan, owned by billionaire Nguyen Dang Quang, Novaland of Bui Thanh Nhon and
Tran Kim Thanh's Kido have all heated up the billion-dollar market by entering
recently.
In May, The Sherpa, a company owned by Masan, purchased 20 percent of Phuc Long
Joint Stock Company, which owns the Phuc Long brand, one of the country's most
famous tea and coffee chains. As the firm spent US$15 million on the deal, the
Phuc Long chain was valued at 75 million USD, a number that surprised many
people, according to some insiders.
Set up in Bao Loc city, Lam Dong province in 1968, Phuc Long expanded into the
retail beverage business in 2012 from its three traditional stores in Ho Chi
Minh City in the 1980s. Currently, the firm has 60 stores in HCM city and seven
in other localities.
After the deal, VinCommerce, another Masan member company, will set up a kiosk
serving Phuc Long’s products at its chain VinMart , which has more than 2,200
stores across the country.
Earlier, realty firm Novaland Group launched a new ecosystem of Nova Consumer to
develop the food, beverage and nutrition segment with a closed food production
chain from farm to fork. The group has invested more than 200 million USD to
bring together many famous consumer brands in its ecosystem, including PhinDeli
coffee.
Last year, Vietnamese people spent about 53 trillion VND (2.28 billion USD) on
tea and coffee, a growth rate of about 10 percent annually, an extremely
attractive number for chains.
Local brand The Coffee House opened 24 stores in the first quarter of this year
and plans to open at least another 50 this year to increase its total nationwide
to nearly 230 at year-end and 1,000 by 2025.
Dinh Anh Huan, chairman of The Coffee House, told Viet Nam News: “Creating
delicious coffee products to serve the local Vietnamese is key to developing the
business.”
Huan said maintaining customer relationships was extremely important for the
firm so it focused on developing the customer experience. With savvy, young
customers, the firm has built and worked with delivery apps to offer convenient
services.
He added during the fourth outbreak of COVID-19, though it had to limit and then
stop serving customers in-store, online platforms had enjoyed a lot of use.
Besides its 'Legend' brand, Trung Nguyen Coffee is trying to expand its E-Coffee
franchise chain, a small coffee stall targeted at takeaway customers, and plans
to open 16 more stores nationwide.
Most recently, confectionery firm Kido said it was also about to enter the
coffee market. Though Kido did not reveal which coffee segment it would join,
the firm announced it would start offering coffee products this year.
Foreign firms have also shown interest in the local market.
Previously the largest local brand with about 340 coffee shops across the
country alongside the most revenue and profit, Highlands Coffee is now owned by
Jollibee Group, a Filipino giant in the chain restaurant business.
Other foreign names in the local market include Starbucks, The Coffee Bean and
Tea Leaf and Thailand's Café Amazon.
With a plan to expand its stores in Vietnam, Café Amazon told local media that
Vietnam was one of 10 markets outside Thailand where the parent company was
expected to spend up to 2.5 billion USD to expand in the next five years.
Among the chains, Highlands Coffee led the market in term of sales with 2
trillion VND in 2019, followed by The Coffee House with 863 billion VND, then
Starbucks with 783 billion VND, Phuc Long with 779 billion VND and Trung Nguyen
with 409 billion VND.
Due to the growing middle class in Vietnam, Euromonitor Worldwide valued the
local coffee and tea retail market at more than 1 billion USD. The Vietnam
Coffee and Cocoa Association reported the rapid increase in the number of coffee
chains has boosted their consumption to more than 10 percent of the country’s
coffee output.
As the per capita coffee consumption in Vietnam is only a third of the global
average, the association sees the market as very attractive for both domestic
and foreign businesses.
Source: VNA