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Starbucks to sell Tazo tea brand to Unilever for $384 millionStarbucks to sell Tazo tea brand to Unilever for $384 million

Coffee chain to focus on selling a single tea brand inside its stores

Jonathan Maze, Senior Financial Editor

November 3, 2017

2 Min Read
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Starbucks Corp. said Thursday that it has agreed to sell its Tazo tea brand to Unilever PLC for $384 million in a deal that will enable the coffee giant to focus on a single brand of tea, Teavana.

Unilever will acquire Tazo’s recipes, intellectual property and inventory. Starbucks acquired the brand in 1999 for $8.1 million, five years after Tazo was founded.

Tazo is primarily sold in grocery, convenience and mass merchant stores.

The deal for Tazo comes months after Starbucks said it would close all 379 of its Teavana locations and would focus on selling Teavana inside its coffee shops, rather than at stand-alone retail locations.

Starbucks said that, by selling Tazo, it would “sharpen its focus on its up-level tea strategy with Teavana.” The company plans to invest in growth, innovation and development of Teavana.

Tea sales inside of Starbucks locations are growing at double digits annually, particularly as the chain expands in Asia and other markets where tea is popular. The company believes the Teavana business could be worth more than $3 billion in five years, and over the past 12 months the company has sold $1.6 billion worth of Teavana beverages inside its stores.

“With our growth strategy for premium tea exclusively focused on Teavana, we are pleased to transition our Tazo business to Unilever,” Starbucks CEO Kevin Johnson said in a statement.

The company also announced that it generated $5.7 billion in revenue in the company’s fiscal fourth quarter ended Oct. 1. The company also reported narrower operating margins and earnings per share of 54 cents. The numbers fell below investors’ expectations, and the company’s stock was down about 6 percent in after-hours trading Thursday.

Same-store sales increased 2 percent globally, the company said, including a 1-percent increase in transactions.

U.S. same-store sales increased 2 percent, including a 1-percent increase in the number of customers. Starbucks said same-store sales would have increased 3 percent without the impact of hurricanes Harvey and Irma.

Contact Jonathan Maze at [email protected]

Follow him on Twitter: @jonathanmaze

About the Author

Jonathan Maze

Senior Financial Editor, Nation's Restaurant News

Jonathan Maze covers finance for Nations Restaurant News, as well as restaurant chains based in the Midwest.

Jonathan came to NRN in 2014 after seven years covering restaurants for Franchise Times Magazine and the Restaurant Finance Monitor. There, he created an award-winning blog that reported on and analyzed the restaurant industry. He is routinely quoted in various mainstream press articles, including the Associated Press, Washington Post, Orlando Sentinel, Denver Post and Yahoo! Finance. He lives in a suburb of Minneapolis with his wife, two children and their cat.

Reach Jonathan at [email protected], or by phone at 651 633-6526.

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