Shinsegae to Spend 300 Bln won in Loss-making Convenience Store Business | Be Korea-savvy

Shinsegae to Spend 300 Bln won in Loss-making Convenience Store Business


Shinsegae said it will change the name of its convenience store brand from Withme to emart24 to attract more customers familiar with the country's largest discount chain E-Mart operated by the retailer. (image: Shinsegae)

Shinsegae said it will change the name of its convenience store brand from Withme to emart24 to attract more customers familiar with the country’s largest discount chain E-Mart operated by the retailer. (image: Shinsegae)

SEOUL, Jul. 13 (Korea Bizwire)Retail giant Shinsegae said Thursday it will invest 300 billion won (US$263 million) over the next three years to help its loss-making convenience store business cope with the rapidly growing market.

Shinsegae, which tapped into the convenience store market in 2014 with an acquisition, has been suffering from losses as a relative newcomer in the crowded industry, which first emerged in the country in the 1980s.

Shinsegae said it will change the name of its convenience store brand from With Me to emart24 to attract more customers familiar with the country’s largest discount chain E-Mart operated by the retailer.

“The rebranding was decided in desperation that we will be weeded out of the fast-changing market if we do not innovate,” said Shinsegae Vice Chairman Chung Yong-jin, the de facto leader of the retailer.

“The investment will be for building more distribution centers and developing new operating systems for the next generation,” Kim Song-yong, chief of the With Me operator, said during a press conference held in Seoul.

The convenience store operator aims to run 2,700 stores and reach 700 billion won in sales this year, nearly double from the 378.3 billion won recorded last year. It currently runs 2,174 stores nationwide.

With Me logged 135 billion won in sales in 2015, a sharp increase from 29.1 billion won in 2014, but its operating loss widened from 14 billion won in 2014 to 26 billion won in 2015 and 35 billion won last year.

“With our current business model, we need some 5,000 to 6,000 stores to record profits,” Kim said. “We will push to open 1,000 new stores every year until we reach the level.”

The local convenience store industry has been dominated by top three chains — CU, GS25 and 7-Eleven — with competition heating up due to the increased number of outlets.

The market size for convenience stores in South Korea surpassed 20 trillion won last year, up 18.6 percent from 17.2 trillion won the previous year, according to industry data.

Fast growth of single-person households and an aging society led to rising demand for quick foods and daily necessities that are best found at convenience stores.

(Yonhap)

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