Posted on 03/21/2015 1:15:43 PM PDT by SamAdams76
Starbucks Coffee is getting creamed by New York City rents.
The java giant may get priced out of its premier and larger Manhattan locations as some of the companys earliest stores approach renewal after 15 to 20 years.
Its likely that itll be very difficult to renew a number of those leases, said retail broker Joanne Podell, a vice chairman at Cushman & Wakefield, who does not represent Starbucks. She noted that the stores with superb locationsi.e., on busy streets with well-trafficked storefrontsare expiring and the chain was paying much, much less per square foot than todays rents. The average Manhattan Starbucks is 1,600 square feet.
There are more than 200 Starbucks locations in Manhattan, and more of the locations are coming up for renewal now as Starbucks, the largest coffeehouse company in the world, first entered the New York City market in 1994, with four or five opening that year and a surge of openings in the following two years, a source said.
Starbucks lost its location at 334 Fifth Avenue at West 33rd Street recently because the coffee company couldnt get [the deal] done, a source with knowledge of the situation said. The taking rent at the location is apparently more than $1 million a year.
The coffee retailers 2,811-square-foot Lincoln Center store at 156 Columbus Avenue at the southwest corner of West 67th Street has hit the market after 15 years. A new tenant can take possession of the space on June 1, 2016, according to the CBRE marketing materials. The asking rent is $600 per square foot, another source said, speculating that Starbucks pays about half that today.
Its likely that itll be very difficult to renew a number of those leases. Joanne Podell, Cushman & Wakefield
At 41 Union Square West at East 17th Street and Broadway, the Starbucks space is about to hit the market with Newmark Grubb Knight Franks Jeffrey Roseman. The asking rent there is $650 per foot, and Starbucks is currently paying $325 per foot.
Landlords often want to stick with an existing tenant for a renewal rather than bring in a new tenant as with a renewal, you know what youre buying, one of the sources said. Good landlords, when they have a good tenant, will often do it for a little less.
As they say, its better the devil you know than the devil you dont.
Regarding the Union Square West location, Mr. Roseman said: Ownerships first choice would be to keep them, even at a lesser number than they can get from someone else, but the number still has to make good business sense, as it is one of the most desired corners in the market.
The Starbucks sublease at 1378 Madison Avenue at 96th Street was up for renewal and the landlord arranged a direct lease with the coffee house, along with an expansion into space previously occupied by K&D By the Glass, according to the landlords broker, Douglas Ellimans Faith Hope Consolo. Starbucks grew its space to 1,585 square feet from 1,300 in the new 10-year lease. The rent is $350 per foot, Ms. Consolo said.
But from the standpoint of Starbucks, closing and moving to a less popular location might not even matter. The royalty of roasting has seeped so far into the collective unconsciousremember the old New Yorker cartoon, Are we in this Starbucks or the one down the street?that it no longer needs choice locations to maximize sales.
In todays world of rising rents, especially on the high-profile corridors, likely Starbucks knows they can still be successful in smaller space and/or just off the main avenues, said retail specialist Robin Abrams of Lansco. (Plus, the fact that Starbucks is peddling an addictive product that its customers will go out of their way to track down, doesnt hurt.)
While Starbucks could pay new rents that are double its old rents, the chain may choose not to, Ms. Consolo said.
Starbucks is in the midst of a new blend, pun intended, that will include tea as well as coffee, and that may be changing their real estate needs, Ms. Consolo said. Fewer, more diverse locations may be the new strategy.
Starbucks is often able to open new locations nearby ones that close, as in the case of 545 Fifth Avenue between East 44th and East 45th Streets. Once the store shuttered, the chain opened a new spot at 25 West 45th Street between Fifth Avenue and Avenue of the Americas.
Public since June 26, 1992, Starbucks business is going strong. It saw a more than 10 percent increase in fourth-quarter 2014 revenues to a record $4.2 billion, according to published reports. Starbucks is planning to bring two new types of stores to Manhattan, a grab-and-go concept as well as a slow bar, Commercial Observer previously reported. The company hasnt found a location for either of the new concepts, one source said. Starbucks Manhattan broker, David Firestein of SCG Retail, declined to comment, as did Starbucks.
When they first opened, they could afford larger spaces enabling more seating/lounging, Ms. Abrams said. They also had competitors who had positioned in New York City before they arrived to open stores in our market. Most of those competitors have disappeared, although a host of others have opened, but mostly in smaller footprints, and certainly without the branding power of Starbucks. Their business is mostly grab-and-go, and that is what they seem to be focusing on now with smaller spaces that are less expensive to lease.
Have they considered coffee and taco carts in Harlem? Cheap and can go with the flow if the race discussions get out of hand!
$600 per square foot.
is that, per month, or per year?
Mc D’s a buck all sizes..if you “Actually” order coffee
I’s sure they will. But actually, I’d suspect that most of the baristas themselves would rather not do this. This is probably true of all the baristas, ranging from the hostile black baristas in the airports and some shops in NYC to the white liberal flakes spread throughout the country.
In the end, all the Starbucks employees want to do is go to work and make a living, and having their CEO (who is probably making a very comfortable living) take away from their livelihood and bog them down into something with which they may sympathize but which really isn’t why they go to work in the morning is not going to go down well with anybody.
I went into a Starbucks inside a Fry’s grocery store yesterday and asked the lady in back of the counter if she was going to lecture me on race. She had no idea what I was talking about. This race thing sounds like a flash in the pan. These food stores are very practical and know if they started to get into politics their business would evaporate.
A million bucks for rent? Why, that’s two or three cups of coffee.
SUrprisingly enough I just came back form a location...a small “outdoor mall” which since i visted the last time several years ago...now has a starbucks.
I didn’ stop in...but I was a tad shocked at the location as its not a starbucks sort of neighborhood necessarily.
If they close, where are we going to have conversations on race!
A million to the Rev. Will take care of the problem!
“A Starbuck’s on every block”...
It’s EXACTLY the same way in downtown Seattle.
I rarely buy “genuine” Starbucks coffee confections any more. Right in my neighborhood there is a yogurt store where they also whip up most of the Starbucks coffee creations-—for less money. I love to tell the little guy behind the counter to “surprise” me. And he never disappoints. My current favorite is a cup of cold coffee in a large plastic cup, with the instructions to “go fill it up with yogurt”. I fill it to the top with various types of coffee-compatible yogurt flavors, he whips it up, and I have the most delicious milkshake that wakes me up from the afternoon doldrums.
Where will I go to talk about race with a total stranger? The horror.
I actually like McD’s coffee more than Starbucks. Starbucks has good coffee. Chic Fil A with the artificial creamer is nasty.
I have a Starbucks at the end of my street.
I’m single and not dating now so I inquired and they are opening wine bars. I am, however, disheartened by their corporate choices of a bakery, for one.
i just bought a new home with no Starbucks so it looks like I’m going to have to develop an evening hangout in my new neighborhood.
So, if SBUX won’t come across, who stands ready to replace them?
BFL
The UD has twenty definitions of BFL ...
Starbucks coffee is decent, but for the life of me I can’t make a decent cup using their beans at home.
Around here anyway, it's not just that McDs coffee has a better flavor. At both the Starbucks and the Panera, I would sometimes get coffees which were brewed imperfectly. That never seems to happen at McD's.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.