Skip to content
  • KOSPI 2696.63 +22.27 +0.83%
  • KOSDAQ 787.44 +9.97 +1.28%
  • KOSPI200 368.99 +3.47 +0.95%
  • USD/KRW 1337 23.00 -1.72%
View Market Snapshot
Retail

BGF Retail’s CU looks beyond Kazakhstan deep into Central Asia

CU Central Asia chief Alina Shin aims to open 500 outlets in Kazakhstan by 2029 before expanding into neighboring nations

By 3 HOURS AGO

3 Min read

CU's first Kazakhstan convenience store outlet in Almaty
CU's first Kazakhstan convenience store outlet in Almaty

Kazakhstan, a Central Asian country 27 times the size of South Korea, did not have a modernized convenience store until early this year.

The country only had large marts and supermarkets, where people would drop by once in a while to buy groceries and daily necessities in bulk.

In March, BGF Retail Co., the operator of Korea’s top convenience store CU, opened its first Kazakh convenience store in Almaty, the country’s largest city, to meet the Kazakhs’ growing itch to buy daily stuff right near their homes at any time.

“Despite fast-growing shopping demand for daily necessities in the neighborhood, there was no small retail channel in the country. That’s why we’ve brought in CU,” Alina Shin, chief executive of CU Central Asia (CUCA), said in a recent interview with The Korea Economic Daily.

Alina Shin, CEO of CU Central Asia (CACU), a joint venture between Kazakhstan's Shin-Line and Korean retail giant BGF Retail's CU
Alina Shin, CEO of CU Central Asia (CACU), a joint venture between Kazakhstan's Shin-Line and Korean retail giant BGF Retail's CU

Shin, 29, is a fourth-generation ethnic Korean who runs Shin-Line Co., Kazakhstan’s largest ice cream maker and distributor.

With its master franchise agreement signed with BGF Retail earlier this year, CUCA now operates seven CU outlets in Almaty.

“Young people here are already exposed to the CU brand through K-drama. They show a keen interest in K-food,” she said.

ONE OF FASTEST GROWING ECONOMIES

Kazakhstan is one of the countries with the fastest economic growth rates.

Last year, the Central Asian country posted a gross domestic product growth rate of 5.1%, double the global average.

It is also a “young country” with more than half of its population under the age of 30.

(Graphics by Dongbeom Yun)
(Graphics by Dongbeom Yun)

Shin said CU is changing the local shopping culture with its Korean business practice of “open 24 hours a day, 365 days a year.”

“In Kazakhstan, it was common to visit a large mart or a supermarket once or twice a week to buy groceries and daily necessities in bulk. Since the opening of CU outlets here, however, people have been visiting our stores multiple times a day to enjoy food and shopping. They buy coffee on their way to work, eat kimbap and ramen for lunch and buy daily stuff on the way home,” she said.

CHANGE IN LOGISTICS

The CUCA chief said CU has also brought innovation to the country’s logistics and distribution system.

She said it is common in Kazakhstan for each product seller to directly deliver products to stores. As a result, there have been many cases where stores could not sell products if the seller failed to make it to the stores in time.

A CU employee at CU's first Kazakhstan convenience store outlet in Almaty makes tteokbokki inside the store
A CU employee at CU's first Kazakhstan convenience store outlet in Almaty makes tteokbokki inside the store

With its entry into Almaty, BGF Retail set up a logistics center on a 3,000-square-meter plot of land to systematically manage the product supply and inventory at its CU outlets in Almaty.

“CU’s Improved service quality is elevating the overall service level of Kazakhstan’s distribution industry,” Shin said.

READY-TO-EAT FOOD INSIDE STORE

The popularity of K-culture and K-food in Kazakhstan has made CU quickly establish a foothold in the country.

CU outlets in Almaty not only put dried food such as instant noodle ramen and triangle-shaped kimbap on shelves but also sell ready-to-eat products such as tteokbokki and fried chicken.

CU's first Kazakhstan convenience store outlet in Almaty has tables and chairs for snacks inside the store
CU's first Kazakhstan convenience store outlet in Almaty has tables and chairs for snacks inside the store

Tables and chairs are placed inside the stores to make eating easy.

The usual convenience store goods and ready-to-eat food account for over 30% of CU Kazakhstan’s total sales.

“Many people visit our stores to taste Korean food and buy Korean goods that appeared in K-drama,” Shin said.

BUSINESS BEYOND KAZAKHSTAN

BGF Retail aims to use Kazakhstan as an outpost to advance into other Central Asian countries.

CU's convenience store outlet in Almaty, Kazakhstan 
CU's convenience store outlet in Almaty, Kazakhstan 

“We aim to open 500 CU outlets in Kazakhstan by 2029. We’re also planning to enter other countries using Shin-Line’s sales infrastructure,” Shin said.

Shin-Line's broad distribution network throughout Central Asia, particularly its comprehensive cold chain infrastructure, will be a boon for the convenience store chain's operations, enabling effective handling of temperature-sensitive goods, she said.

“Among the 100 ethnic groups in Kazakhstan, Koreans or ‘Koryoins’ are a relatively small group of people. As a fourth-generation Koryoin, I am very proud that we are introducing Korean culture here and upgrading Kazakhstan’s distribution industry through Korean convenience stores,” she said.

Write to Sun-A Lee at suna@hankyung.com
In-Soo Nam edited this article.
More to Read
Comment 0
0/300