Starbucks’ Chinese competitor Luckin Coffee files for bankruptcy

Starbucks’ Chinese competitor Luckin Coffee files for bankruptcy

It caps a spectacular fall from grace since the coffee chain's debut on the Nasdaq in 2019.

NEW YORK:
Chinese cafe chain Luckin Coffee on Friday announced it had filed for bankruptcy protection in the US, months after it had been booted from Wall Street indices over a fraud scandal.

The decision won’t affect the day-to-day operations of its stores, which will remain open, while Luckin will continue paying employees and suppliers, the company said in a statement.

“The company is negotiating with its stakeholders regarding the restructuring of the company’s financial obligations,” Luckin said.

Created in 2017 and billing itself as China’s answer to iconic US coffee chain Starbucks, Luckin has grown at a rapid pace thanks to foreign investors.

But revelations last year that a manager inflated sales figures in 2019 caused a scandal, sending its shares plunging on the Nasdaq, where it traded from May 2019 before it was delisted from the index last July.

Luckin agreed to pay the US Securities and Exchange Commission US$180 million last December to resolve fraud charges.

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