Wednesday January 07, 2009

Doughnuts take bite from Asia fast-food market


Tuesday, June 12, 2007

SOME of the world's top doughnut chains have come rolling into China, Taiwan, South Korea and Japan and elsewhere in the region as Asians embrace the Western fast-food fad.

Chains like Krispy Kreme, Dunkin' Donuts and Mister Donut are setting up shop in a region not known for its sweet tooth, reflecting a growing openness to foreign foods and rising living standards, according to the chains and consumers who sometimes wait in line for hours for the treats.

In a twist on the common snack in the West, the chains say they are filling a growing demand for high-end treats that can double as gifts as well as snacks.

"They're pretty good. They're okay for you if you don't eat too many," said Ting, a teenage school girl scanning the showcase at the first Dunkin' Donuts in Taipei on a recent afternoon.

Following its arrival in Taiwan late last year, the United States chain now has five stores in Taiwan, and is aiming for 10 by year-end and T$200 million ($9.3 million) in sales this year.

"Our first store exceeded our targets, with average sales of 15,000 to 20,000 doughnuts a day," said spokeswoman Ivy Pai of Mercuries and Associates, Dunkin's Taiwan partner.

Dunkin' Donuts joins Japanese chain Mister Donut, a unit of Duskin Co Ltd, which entered Taiwan in late 2004 and plans to boost its store count there to 100 by the end of 2009, said Tadashi Kitami, president of the Taiwan operation.

Six months after entering Japan late last year, Krispy Kreme still draws crowds to its stores, following an early rush that saw hundreds of people sometimes waiting up to two hours to buy doughnuts, said spokeswoman Mayumi Jinji.

"We expected queues for about a month," she said. "We didn't expect there to be queues for this long."

Krispy Kreme is also making waves in nearby South Korea and Hong Kong, entering the former in late 2004 and the latter late last year. The Korean chain posted 30 billion won (US$32.4 million) in sales last year, said spokesman Lee Heon Ho.

"I've read in the papers that the donut market is growing by 20 to 30 per cent every year," Lee said.

"I think our 'open kitchen' appeals to customers the most."

The rise of the donut in Asia reflects not only a growing openness to Western food in the region, but also rising affluence of consumers willing to spend a little more for extra treats beyond the daily rice box.

At the equivalent of about 90 US cents, doughnuts in Taiwan from Dunkin' Donut and Mister Donut are about 50 per cent more expensive than those available in local bakeries, and three times the price of similar fare from street vendors.

"The market for gourmet foods here is becoming more mature," said Tadashi Kitami, head of Mister Donut in Taiwan. "This is definitely related to people's living standards."

He added that doughnuts in Taiwan are not only a one-off snack for many, but have also become a gift item, hence people's willingness to pay a little more. Reuters