Starbucks to cut 6,700 jobs, close 300 stores

Above: Starbucks barista Alex Igarta hands a drink to a
customer at a store near the company’s corporate
headquarters in Seattle. Starbucks announced that
its quarterly profits dropped 69 percent. (Elaine
Thompson / AP)

msnbc.com staff and news service reports
Wed., Jan. 28, 2009

Starbucks Corp. said Wednesday that it would cut as many as 6,700 jobs as it closes hundreds more stores and eliminates more positions at its corporate headquarters.

Faced with slowing demand for lattes and cappuccinos because of the recession, Starbucks plans to close 300 stores, including 200 in the United States, and eliminate about 6,000 store jobs. The company also plans to eliminate about 700 corporate jobs, including about 350 at its corporate headquarters in Seattle.

It also has reduced the number of new stores it plans to open.

The cuts and changes will result in about $500 million in savings in fiscal 2009, the company said.

Edward Jones analyst Jack Russo said the cuts make sense given the decline in Starbucks’ sales in recent quarters.

“This is going to be a transition year,” Russo said. He said the company will have to “claw their way back.”

Wall Street had largely expected Starbucks to report dismal performance for the quarter, which ended Dec. 28, because it had warned last month that slow sales likely would cause it to miss analysts’ estimates.

Heeding the company’s warning, analysts lowered their average expectation from 22 cents per share to 17 cents per share.

But the company still fell short, with net income of $64.3 million, or 9 cents per share, down from $208.1 million, or 28 cents per share a year earlier.

Excluding charges from closing the 600 U.S. stores and 61 stores in Australia, the company said it earned 15 cents per share in its first quarter. Read more.