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BornAgain123
July 30th, 2008, 07:19 PM
http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20080730/ts_nm/starbucks_results_dc

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Starbucks Corp laid out detailed plans on Wednesday for closing U.S. stores this year and next, cheering investors who felt the coffee company overbuilt at home and sending its shares up 4 percent.

Still, the ubiquitous chain posted its first-ever quarterly loss as it took charges for stores closures.

Starbucks has already announced it will close 600 U.S. stores and 61 in Australia. The company expects to make 200 of the U.S. store closures in the fourth quarter and the remainder in fiscal 2009, beginning in October.

The coffee chain reaffirmed its fiscal 2009 forecast for adjusted earnings of 90 cents to $1 per share and said it now expects to have a net decrease of 60 stores in the United States in that period.

"It looks like the F09 guidance reiteration of $0.90-$1.00 may be achievable," RBC Capital Markets analyst Larry Miller told Reuters in an e-mail, who said the news could put a floor on company shares that have lost nearly half of their value over the last year.

Starbucks reported a fiscal third-quarter net loss of $6.7 million, or 1 cent per share, its first since the company went public in 1992. In the year-earlier quarter its net profit was $158.3 million, or 21 cents per share.

Excluding 17 cents per share in charges primarily related to store closures and restructuring, Starbucks had a per-share profit of 16 cents, lagging the 18 cents average Wall Street target, according to Reuters Estimates.

Total revenue rose a slower-than-expected 9 percent to $2.6 billion from $2.4 billion, as U.S. business deteriorated from the prior quarter and contributed to a mid-single-digit decline in sales at established stores.

Citing factors such as weak traffic and increased costs, Starbucks now expects full-year fiscal 2008 earnings in the mid-70 cent range, excluding the charges related to store closures and its restructuring.

The company lowered its U.S. store opening targets for fiscal 2008 to about 900 net new stores, evenly distributed between company-operated and licensed.

Internationally, Starbucks now sees about 825 net new store openings during fiscal 2008 -- including the closures in Australia.

Capital expenditures for fiscal 2008 are now expected to be about $1.0 billion, below the $1.1 billion previously forecast.

Internationally, Starbucks is planning to open about 900 net new stores in 2009. Two thirds of these stores are expected to be licensed.

For 2009, the company now sees capital expenditures of about $750 million, reflecting the reduced store targets for the U.S. and International segments.

Starbucks shares rose to $15.25 from their Nasdaq close of $14.67. Over the last year, Starbucks shares have lost more than 45 percent of their value.

(Reporting by Lisa Baertlein; Editing by Gary Hill and Andre Grenon)

WanttoKnow
July 30th, 2008, 08:25 PM
My DH knows someone who has worked for Starbucks for 11 years. She was fired in a 4 minute phone call yesterday.

KitKat
July 30th, 2008, 09:59 PM
There was an online video somewhere about the Logo for Starbucks but I could not locate it. Supposedly it is Isis and I think it has some kind of Globalist message. Does anyone know?

http://i322.photobucket.com/albums/nn434/stephi_loves_joe/starbucks.jpg

On her head she wears a crown, seemingly constructed from a "cut-up" sphere, or globe, and featuring, in a central position, a five-pointed star or pentagram. The pentagram with a single point facing upwards represents the world of Spirit, the upper point, as having dominion over the four elements, the four lower points. The pentagram drawn in this manner, like the number 5 itself, is the symbol of spiritual Man, the Kaballistic "Microcosm." The cut-up globe which surrounds the five-pointed star again symbolizes again the Macrocosm - the world. This crown could therefore be said to represent the presence of spirit hidden in worldly desire, or, alternately, spiritually-developed mankind emerging triumphant from a contorted and destructive global situation.

PrincessofHeaven
July 30th, 2008, 11:44 PM
yeah i heard something about the logo too

Freedbychrist
July 31st, 2008, 12:22 AM
Maybe they could save money if they didn't spend so much time over-roasting their beans. On a serious note, this is shocking. Starbucks has pretty much become the Wal-Mart of coffee. On the main street of our town, there are three, all within about 2 miles of each other. Ridiculous!

NewWorldOrder
July 31st, 2008, 09:06 AM
Starbucks went for the longest time showing profits, so they start building and opening new stores pretty much everywhere, saturating the market with coffee, and very expensive coffee which isn't all that great anyway. How long did they think it would last. So, suddenly, sales start to drop because people have to decide between a $5 cup of coffee or a $4 or $5 gallon of gas. You can make your own coffee at home for just a few cents, you can't make your own gasoline.

SumSam
July 31st, 2008, 02:12 PM
I read that Starbucks closed a lot of their stores in Australia because no one there wants to drink Starbucks coffee when local cafes brew much much better coffee - about the only folks going to Australian Starbucks are tourists and young Australians who've decided they'd rather hang out at that cool place they see in so many American movies and TV shows. :doh!

SumSam
August 3rd, 2008, 04:15 AM
(Aussie) Memo Starbucks: next time try selling ice to Eskimos (http://www.theage.com.au/opinion/memo-starbucks-next-time-try-selling-ice-to-eskimos-20080802-3oyp.html)

GLOBALISATION has pulled millions of people in developing countries out of poverty. It has sent goods, services and people around the world, linking humanity into a vast network of communications and commerce that has ultimately benefited everyone.

But, still. In the case of one American coffee giant, globalisation deserved to fail. Starbucks makes really bad coffee.

Starbucks is almost entirely pulling out of Australia — closing 61 of its 84 stores. In Melbourne, just five of the 16 stores are tipped to remain.

The secret of the company's success in the American market wasn't that it sold coffee. It sold coffee culture.

It is remarkable how alien quality coffee was to US consumers. As late as the 1980s, the National Coffee Association was producing advertisements just trying to convince people that coffee could keep them awake. And what small prestige the drink held in the US was occupied by the old "cup of joe" — cheap, stale and reheated sludge poured from a pot.

Who knew? :doh

JY11
August 3rd, 2008, 07:09 AM
Personally, I prefer the flavor of the $1.10 McDonald's cup of Joe to the $4.00 Starbucks version. And, I prefer to order Medium or Large, not "Tall" or "Grande." In my opinion, Starbucks is more about the "scene" than the coffee--and that "scene" I don't fit into well. Still, it is unfortunate that so many Starbucks staffers have lost their jobs. Prayerfully, they will soon find gainful employment elsewhere.

Patty13
August 3rd, 2008, 02:01 PM
I only drink their sweet dessert type of coffees. I'll treat myself every once in awhile. My husband loves their regular coffee..he can drink it black. We went from having no Starbucks in our area to like half a dozen. I hope they don't close the one that's closest to us. It's bigger than the other ones I've visited and they have a nice patio setup.