NewsCafés Legal shuts down after 173 years amid coffee crisis

Cafés Legal shuts down after 173 years amid coffee crisis

The popular coffee brand Cafés Legal has declared bankruptcy after 173 years of operation. On 17 December, the commercial court in Paris ordered the company's liquidation. Over 100 employees are set to lose their jobs.

A French coffee roastery goes down in history
A French coffee roastery goes down in history
Images source: © Getty Images | 2019 Matthew Horwood

According to the French daily "Le Figaro", the decision by the Paris commercial court to declare Cafés Legal bankrupt came after they could not find an investor to save the company. 

The French coffee roastery becomes part of history

Cafés Legal was established in 1851 in Le Havre, Normandy, and was one of the oldest coffee roasteries in France. In 2022, the company was taken over by Michel Ohayon, a businessman from Morocco, but just a year later it was sold to the FnB Private Equity fund. Despite the change in ownership, the company's problems only worsened.

As noted by "Le Figaro", the main reason for the bankruptcy was the sharply rising prices of coffee beans. The company planned to achieve €60 million in revenue in 2023, but ended the year with €45 million and a debt reaching €50 million.

On the day before the verdict issued on 17 December, Cafés Legal employed 105 people. All individuals will lose their jobs.

Beans are the most expensive in almost half a century

The prices of Arabica coffee increased by 80 per cent this year. As we wrote in WP Finanse, beans are currently more expensive than in the record year of 1977, when snowfall destroyed plantations in Brazil.

The main reason for the price increase is unfavourable weather. In Vietnam, droughts and heavy rains threaten the Robusta crop. Meanwhile, Brazil experienced the worst drought in 70 years in August and September, followed by heavy rains in October.

For several months, coffee producers have been absorbing the rising production costs. However, these increases are so severe that soon, they will have to pass them on to consumers. Consumers can expect coffee prices to rise at the beginning of 2025. 

This trend is expected to continue "for a while" because bean stocks are low, and their prices are rising. In November, the portal money.pl reported that Nestlé intends to raise coffee prices and reduce product size to protect margins.

Related content
© Daily Wrap
·

Downloading, reproduction, storage, or any other use of content available on this website—regardless of its nature and form of expression (in particular, but not limited to verbal, verbal-musical, musical, audiovisual, audio, textual, graphic, and the data and information contained therein, databases and the data contained therein) and its form (e.g., literary, journalistic, scientific, cartographic, computer programs, visual arts, photographic)—requires prior and explicit consent from Wirtualna Polska Media Spółka Akcyjna, headquartered in Warsaw, the owner of this website, regardless of the method of exploration and the technique used (manual or automated, including the use of machine learning or artificial intelligence programs). The above restriction does not apply solely to facilitate their search by internet search engines and uses within contractual relations or permitted use as specified by applicable law.Detailed information regarding this notice can be found  here.