Starbucks cuts 600 jobs amid stagnant U.S. growth
By Lisa Baertlein
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Starbucks Corp (SBUX.O: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz) said on Thursday it would eliminate 600 jobs as it works to turn around stagnating U.S. coffee shops in the face of a weak economy.
The coffee seller has been battered in recent months by slower consumer spending, higher milk and labor costs and concerns that it may have saturated its domestic market.
Sales at established U.S. outlets fell last quarter, and Seattle-based Starbucks has already announced plans to expand overseas and close underperforming U.S. stores.
UBS Equity Research analyst David Palmer called the move a visible step to remove bureaucracy and cost.
"We expect earnings to ramp through the year as unit growth slows, innovation improves (and) dairy pressures abate," Palmer said in a client note.
Chief Executive Howard Schultz, who made the announcement in an e-mail to employees, is slated to share details of the company's strategy at a shareholder meeting on March 19.
Shares in Starbucks, which were drifting lower prior to the announcement, fell 2.4 percent, or 43 cents, to $17.83 on the Nasdaq.
Schultz also said the company would double the number of its U.S. field organizations to four by March 24, in a bid to get closer to customers and employees -- which Starbucks refers to as partners. Continued...






