Press conference about Starbucks-Alibaba partnership on August 2, 2018, in Shanghai, China. (CGTN Photo)
Despite the rising China-U.S. trade tensions, America's biggest coffee brand Starbucks made a high-profile announcement in Shanghai, saying it was joining hands with China’s e-commerce giant Alibaba.
Part of the new deal is that Alibaba will build a fast delivery network and online payment system for Starbucks in China. More projects will be announced on Thursday.
To highlight its U.S. identity, Starbucks has long been resistant to China’s influence by, for example, having Apple pay as the only mobile payment app. But over the past few years, it has been learning to adapt to the fast changing Chinese market, including launching Starbucks tea and mooncakes, and embracing China’s new Internet technologies.
Starbucks' outgoing Executive Chairman Howard Schultz said China is projected to surpass the U.S. and Europe to be its biggest market in the world. The company has also voiced concerns over the escalation of the trade war, fearing it will hamper its business in China.
Starbucks opened its largest flagship store in Shanghai last December, and its second largest in Beijing last month.