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CHINA / Taiwan, HK, Macao

Krispy Kreme to open 1st shop in China
(AP)
Updated: 2006-08-08 17:20

HONGKONG - US doughnut maker Krispy Kreme began dipping into the massive Chinese-speaking market Tuesday by opening a shop in Hong Kong - China's richest city.

The initial response wasn't overwhelming. Several dozen people - a mix of Chinese and foreigners - lingered in the 2,000-square feet (180-square meter) shop tucked down a side street in the busy Causeway Bay shopping district.

One common complaint was that the doughnuts were too sweet.

"It's suitable for kids, but for adults, especially women, we're afraid of getting fat," insurance agent Moon Ip said.

Still, she predicted success for the doughnut chain, saying, "Hong Kong people like to try new things."

The Hong Kong shop marks Krispy Kreme's debut on Chinese soil and only its second foray into East Asia.

So far, Winston-Salem, North Carolina-based Krispy Kreme Doughnuts Corp. has nine shops in South Korea, but it's expanding aggressively in other parts of the region.

Other than Hong Kong, the company has signed franchise deals with groups in Japan, the Philippines and Indonesia, which plan to open stores by the end of the year. There are already more than 20 stores in Sydney, Australia. It's also signed up a franchisee in the Middle East.

But perhaps one of the most salivating prospects for any multinational business is China's 1.3 billion potential customers, and East-meets-West Hong Kong, already a hub for both Chinese and Western gourmet cuisine, may be an ideal testing ground.

While fast-food chains like McDonald's and KFC are common in China, doughnuts are generally rare in the Chinese-speaking community, even in Westernized Hong Kong.

Fellow US doughnut maker Dunkin' Donuts' big foreign markets are the Philippines, Indonesia, South Korea, and Thailand. The Japanese doughnut chain Mister Donut, though, has a foothold in Taiwan.


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