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Starbucks closes China deal with Boyu, plans to expand stores

By Thomson Reuters Apr 2, 2026 | 4:04 PM

By Waylon Cunningham

April 2 (Reuters) – Starbucks has closed its deal with Boyu Capital to ​sell control of its China ‌operations, the Seattle-based coffee company announced Thursday.

The deal, whose outline was announced in November, is intended to ‌jump-start ​the chain’s growth ⁠in the world’s second-largest ⁠economy, where local rivals like Luckin and Cotti have gained market share with lower prices.

Funds ​managed by Boyu – whose founders include the grandson of ⁠former Chinese President ⁠Jiang Zemin – will hold ​a 60% stake in Starbucks’ stores in ​China, while Starbucks will retain ‌the remainder and will continue to license the brand and intellectual property to the venture, ⁠Starbucks said.

Molly Liu, chief executive officer of Starbucks China, said in a statement ⁠that ‌the deal would drive “hyper-localization” ⁠of the brand in ​the ‌country.

China currently has approximately ​8,000 Starbucks ⁠stores. The company’s plan is to expand that store count with Boyu to 20,000, it said.

(Reporting by Waylon Cunningham; editing by ​David Gaffen)