Burger King eyes Africa for expansion

Photo: Carlo Allegri

Photo: Carlo Allegri

Published Mar 9, 2015

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Johannesburg - Burger King Worldwide plans to enter new African counties before the end of the year as it follows Yum! Brands’ KFC chain in tapping demand from the continent’s middle class.

“Our African expansion plans are progressing at a very vigorous rate,” Jaye Sinclair, chief executive officer of Burger King South Africa, said by phone from Cape Town, where the Miami-based fast-food chain opened the first outlet in the country in May, 2013.

The maker of the Whopper burger operates the South African unit with Johannesburg-based leisure company Grand Parade Investments Ltd and has rights to open outlets in Zambia, Botswana, Zimbabwe, Mozambique, Namibia and Mauritius, Sinclair said. The company has also asked for permission to open stores in Angola, Africa’s second-biggest oil producer.

Restaurant chains, retailers and consumer-goods companies are expanding in sub-Saharan Africa, where the number of middle- class households has tripled since 2010, according to Johannesburg-based Standard Bank Group Ltd. The lender classifies as middle class those who consume $15 to $115 a day. Bentonville, Arkansas-based Wal-Mart Stores, the world’s biggest retailer, plans to increase African store space outside South Africa by 45 percent over the next two years.

McDonald’s., the world’s biggest restaurant chain, is also looking at potential new African markets to build on its growth in South Africa, CEO Don Thompson said on February 10. Pizza Hut, owned by Yum! Brands, plans outlets in Zambia and Angola in the first half of this year.

Burger King’s target countries in sub-Saharan Africa may get their first restaurants by the end of 2015 or early next year, according to Sinclair, depending on how quickly supply chains and distribution centres can be set up. In South Africa, the chain will almost double the number of outlets to 60 by mid-year, he said.

“Our focus is on opening big-format drive-through units,” Sinclair said. “We need to really populate the South African landscape with our drive-throughs and then after that we will start doing in-fills of smaller stores.”

While “there is potential” to open as many as 200 to 250 outlets in South Africa within two years, the company will probably move slower than that, Sinclair said, without giving a specific target.

Burger King South Africa is talking to shopping-centre owners about building drive-throughs in parking lots and there are “quite a few of those under construction at the moment”, he said. The company is also considering whether to add breakfasts, home delivery and extend trading to 24 hours.

The company has outlets in three of South Africa’s nine provinces and plans to open stores in at least four more, including the Eastern Cape, in early 2016.

Bloomberg

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