These Chinese Brands Are Dominating U.S. Rivals Like McDonald’s and Apple | WSJ

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  • čas přidán 23. 07. 2024
  • Major American brands like Apple, Nike, Starbucks and McDonald’s are rapidly losing market share in China to new domestic rivals. Chinese tech company Huawei, sportswear brand Anta, Luckin Coffee and fast-food restaurant Tastien are eating away at these American brands' market dominance.
    WSJ’s Jonathan Cheng explores how Chinese brands are squeezing their U.S. rivals out.
    Chapters:
    0:00 Chinese restaurant Tastien
    1:00 China’s importance to U.S. brands
    2:54 Chinese nationalism
    3:57 Rapid expansion
    5:32 What’s next?
    News Explainers
    Some days the high-speed news cycle can bring more questions than answers. WSJ’s news explainers break down the day's biggest stories into bite-size pieces to help you make sense of the news.
    #China #Economy #WSJ

Komentáře • 2,8K

  • @wsj
    @wsj  Před 16 dny +299

    China reopened to foreign students. Americans are staying away: on.wsj.com/3Y2StF8

    • @dsdgdsfegfeg
      @dsdgdsfegfeg Před 16 dny

      This is bad journalism from WSJ.
      🔸Young Chinese are VERY pro Western brand & very Anti-China brands
      🔸Sales are down because 1: China's economy has collapsed 2: The CCP are doing everything possible to limit & push out western brands, including mass subsidization of CCP (state) companies

    • @Kennon959
      @Kennon959 Před 15 dny +13

      They stopped for 2 years and after that students could come in quarantine then were allowed to study and travel throughout China

    • @dsdgdsfegfeg
      @dsdgdsfegfeg Před 15 dny

      @@Kennon959 CCP 🇨🇳 China is desperate for tourists. But no one is coming.
      That's what happens when the CCP threaten every country in the world

    • @deezeed2817
      @deezeed2817 Před 15 dny

      The Americans like the Japanese are easily brainwashed and swayed by their leaders who call China a "threat". But Socialist China will continue to advance and China will show the young people of these capitalist nations a state that is not be feared but can solve the problems that capitalism cannot.

    • @matpk
      @matpk Před 15 dny +2

      這條短片很多吱吱人

  • @parklilys3108
    @parklilys3108 Před 15 dny +865

    What wrong with Chinese using or eating Chinese brands? In this world, who gives rights to American brands to dominate every aspect of our lives?

    • @lilong717
      @lilong717 Před 15 dny

      US government

    • @aiman9088
      @aiman9088 Před 15 dny +215

      I know right?! The host make it sound like not supporting American brand in China is wrong.
      Sometimes I swear Americans forget that the world don't revolve around them

    • @baffinsansterre
      @baffinsansterre Před 14 dny

      Buying is voting, even in China.

    • @gigalipufpokemon1799
      @gigalipufpokemon1799 Před 14 dny +1

      and why do u all think of it in that way only ?

    • @1DutchMan69
      @1DutchMan69 Před 14 dny

      China envy the U.S lifestyle that's why there are some Chinese escaping that communist country to U.S.
      CHINA HAS NO FREEDOM AT ALL. We can have our problems but, we dont have a tyrant as a president like Pooh Xi jinping.

  • @swedgephd
    @swedgephd Před 15 dny +998

    Some of these companies are not just failing in China. Nike and Starbucks are falling in popularity in the US.

    • @KamBar2019
      @KamBar2019 Před 15 dny +44

      Shein, Temu and BYD : Please hold our DUMPLINGS 🇨🇳

    • @phoenix0110
      @phoenix0110 Před 15 dny +52

      I perfer Italian hand made specialty coffee than Starbucks all day long

    • @gigi9467
      @gigi9467 Před 15 dny +19

      Garbage cooffe and shoes

    • @TomNook.
      @TomNook. Před 15 dny +25

      Go woke go broke

    • @jeevan88888
      @jeevan88888 Před 15 dny +7

      Oh yeah , then which brands are replacing Nike?

  • @tiaoyi-bx5yi
    @tiaoyi-bx5yi Před 15 dny +38

    Chinese older people admire American culture, while young people are more confident in Chinese culture.

    • @Taylor.Hertz.
      @Taylor.Hertz. Před 2 dny +8

      I wish more Far East Asian people think this way. A lot of people in East Asia and South East Asia still have that colonial mentality.

    • @raafeyplayz7015
      @raafeyplayz7015 Před 2 dny +2

      @@Taylor.Hertz.same. Tbh I wish the whole world excluding the west (the originally colonialized world) embrace their own culture, to the point where they wear their traditional clothing in daily life. It’d be epic

    • @roastingchestnut
      @roastingchestnut Před 2 dny

      Not true

    • @Bookworm214-y3d
      @Bookworm214-y3d Před dnem +1

      @@Taylor.Hertz. Correct, i am vietnamese in America and my parents LOVE western culture...they love wyte folx even though these same people are the reasons why we had to leave vietnam and migrate to the USA...the mentality is so toxic...thank goodness i migrated away from that mindset...these colonizers are no heroes of mine

    • @Warrior4Love
      @Warrior4Love Před dnem

      Right On!

  • @Greenpoloboy3
    @Greenpoloboy3 Před 15 dny +144

    I am proud to say, I went from having McDonalds 5 times a week, sometimes 6, to zero, exactly 20 years ago this month!

  • @cowholy3031
    @cowholy3031 Před 15 dny +1882

    If the US companies want to make money, they need to compete.
    If you can get the same coffee at the price of $2, why bother to spend $4 at Starbucks?

    • @Kbcqw
      @Kbcqw Před 15 dny +93

      A lot of people will pay 4$ for a coffee knowing full well that down the street they can buy a cup for 2$ though. The consumer is a tricky one to figure out…

    • @khoado1999
      @khoado1999 Před 15 dny +171

      @@Kbcqw back then, sure, because the coffee shop by American companies gave a different store ambience but nowadays local brands are copying from ambience to better taste and better quality. So there’s a movement that people are shifting

    • @brandonna5350
      @brandonna5350 Před 15 dny +19

      Why not make coffee at home its quicker and cheaper why not get gas station coffee its only 1$ i think its about taste most people aren't worried about spending a extra 2$ if there satisfied instead of ending up what watered down coffee half the time.

    • @iggy5347
      @iggy5347 Před 15 dny

      China must de risk from american war mongering brand. Ths US love war war

    • @bonawang4995
      @bonawang4995 Před 15 dny +73

      @@brandonna5350 That's the trick. Luckin also tastes much better than Starbucks. The only advantage of Starbucks is that they have well-furnished stores where you can sit down and have a chat with friends.

  • @anode360
    @anode360 Před 15 dny +640

    Chinese are embracing local brands
    America: security threat

    • @zfr33ze87
      @zfr33ze87 Před 15 dny +8

      Definitely not a security threat.

    • @keyboardmanyoutube3189
      @keyboardmanyoutube3189 Před 15 dny +49

      @@zfr33ze87definitely yes. How dare you not buy IPhone but Huawei?

    • @ghingisoverland6932
      @ghingisoverland6932 Před 15 dny

      ⁠@@keyboardmanyoutube3189 TikTok “security threat” in US, same propaganda in America 🇺🇸

    • @seanthe100
      @seanthe100 Před 15 dny +1

      The US is not Europe 😂😂😂 most US companies depend on the US the largest consumer market on the planet

    • @momokui
      @momokui Před 15 dny +19

      @@seanthe100 LOL! the amount of people in mamarica are only about 1/4 of poeple in China. Largest, huh?

  • @SgtNoPants
    @SgtNoPants Před 13 dny +86

    Nothing wrong when Americans want to buy American, but as soon as Chinese (or any other enemy) want to buy local then there's a problem?

    • @yurik383
      @yurik383 Před 8 dny

      What? China is the leader from US imports for a long time. That doesn't even make sense

    • @chrischoy9
      @chrischoy9 Před 5 dny +2

      No one is saying that there a problem. It’s all in your head

    • @SgtNoPants
      @SgtNoPants Před 5 dny +8

      @@chrischoy9 is it tho? This video is implying it

    • @pbworld7858
      @pbworld7858 Před 4 dny +2

      It's called hypocrisy.

    • @shadowmod3
      @shadowmod3 Před 4 dny +1

      NOT MANY CHINESE BUY OUR OWN. IT IS NOT SAFE.

  • @lancergt1000
    @lancergt1000 Před 15 dny +67

    tho in China no one is beating KFC, they're genuinely crazy they'll collab with literally anything 😂

    • @ArnoldChen-pw4gd
      @ArnoldChen-pw4gd Před 15 dny +8

      True.. It localized perfectly

    • @lancergt1000
      @lancergt1000 Před 15 dny +1

      @@ArnoldChen-pw4gd they even collabed with a handbag

    • @pceb9621
      @pceb9621 Před 13 dny

      Why they don't mention Yum China !!. Are the Chinese aware that KFC is managed by Chinese? That the Americans in this matter only receive 3% fees. Yum china is not a western company, do the Chinese know that?

    • @mhaz1862
      @mhaz1862 Před 12 dny +3

      True KFC in China is another level 😂

    • @utopian5411
      @utopian5411 Před 9 dny +3

      at least the chicken in KFCChina doesn't taste like cardboard

  • @Mr1wd
    @Mr1wd Před 15 dny +1405

    It's not so much patriotism but just consumers looking for the most value. Of course local brand is gonna thrive.

    • @DivinesLegacy
      @DivinesLegacy Před 15 dny +28

      Whatever helps you cope bud

    • @spadaacca
      @spadaacca Před 15 dny +68

      It's both.

    • @lppoqql
      @lppoqql Před 15 dny +1

      I think its the American Media's long time depiction and castration of Asian men thats coming back to bite them. Every western media product constantly depict Asian men in a very nasty way while constantly promoting Asian fetish. Anyone in the right mind will associate this kind of insult with western brands. I'm actually surprised it took so long, American media is really screwing up their overseas PR.

    • @cooperr5581
      @cooperr5581 Před 15 dny +27

      I'd say it's heavily dependent on the patriotic factor. China is a very homogeneous society, and patriotic values and Chinese propaganda are a massive part of it.

    • @jblake6145
      @jblake6145 Před 15 dny +92

      @@cooperr5581sounds like exactly like US

  • @samuelchalekian4966
    @samuelchalekian4966 Před 15 dny +1173

    On the other hand, it’s a consumer’s paradise. For example, being forced to compete with rivals like Xiaomi and Huawei, iPhones are often heavily discounted in China. You can get an iPhone 15 Pro Max for $675 on Taobao - no trade in’s, no nonsense. Ultimately, China’s domestic market is fiercely competitive - once an industry, brand, or concept is proven, new money rushes in and tries to displace first movers with price wars. This makes it difficult for any company to truly last, doubly so for foreign brands.

    • @jackocarina8007
      @jackocarina8007 Před 15 dny

      "Consumers paradise" hahahahahaha maybe in theory but china's economy is falling through the fkn floor right now with banks and real estate, like 75% of the pop lives on almost nothing. Very sad but Chinese people are in the grips of a Technological-Maoist regime that does not care for its citizens, far from a "paradise"

    • @user-uh4or2et4b
      @user-uh4or2et4b Před 15 dny +178

      This is the free competition under the market economy of capitalist society

    • @Orwellian-Purple-Grapes-1984
      @Orwellian-Purple-Grapes-1984 Před 15 dny

      A lot of western brands have also tried to cheat Chinese consumers by selling lower quality products for higher pricing in the local market compared to what they sell in the west, so a lot of trust has been lost by the Chinese consumer, especially the younger generations who are the first to get this type of information.

    • @DynamicUnreal
      @DynamicUnreal Před 15 dny +168

      @@user-uh4or2et4bToo bad that the USA is becoming more and more protectionist.

    • @Pclub4ever
      @Pclub4ever Před 15 dny +19

      Gotta love it

  • @lluow
    @lluow Před 15 dny +188

    What’s the problem with the Chinese preferring their own brands to foreign brands? Foreign companies have long dominated the Chinese market. American companies have made heaps profits off China. About time for the Chinese to gain their share on their home turfs.

    • @angec.4757
      @angec.4757 Před 15 dny +26

      In the UK, we are told to support UK meat and there is no fuss over that?? Why so surprising Chinese brands dominate in it's own country??

    • @leo29136
      @leo29136 Před 13 dny +14

      in west logic only west can do n said what ever they willing to . everyone els needed to obey .

    • @maily8388
      @maily8388 Před 13 dny +1

      @@leo29136terrible English. Hardly understand.😮

    • @neellie9474
      @neellie9474 Před 13 dny +7

      In Canada, we're constantly told to buy locally. Every country tells their citizens to buy locally and support their own made companies. The Chinese just has a large population compared to other countries, so it makes much bigger noise when foreign investors lose revenue. lol

    • @awdawdawdawdawd-n5y
      @awdawdawdawdawd-n5y Před 12 dny +6

      ​@@maily8388 You forgot to capitalize the letter "T" to indicate the beginning of the sentence. Also, both of your statements are sentence fragments, and the second one is missing a subject and a verb. A better reply would be:
      "Your English is terrible. I can hardly understand it."

  • @wisdombites3586
    @wisdombites3586 Před 15 dny +86

    At least Chinese are not banning or putting high tariffs on American brands in national security concerns unlike US

    • @_sparrowhawk
      @_sparrowhawk Před 15 dny +8

      50cent army here we come

    • @vivliforia2262
      @vivliforia2262 Před 15 dny +13

      Look at annual trade balance between America and China. You will see why America wants to decoupling from China. If America doesn't decouple from China, America will suffer more debt. Most Chinese companies rely on the Chinese government heavily subsidizing Chinese products targeting American and European market.

    • @wisdombites3586
      @wisdombites3586 Před 15 dny +5

      @@vivliforia2262 haven’t you heard about reduction act , chip act - all these are US government heavily subsidizing Us companies.

    • @elpenprice679
      @elpenprice679 Před 15 dny

      cuz they've there for decades?

    • @whitemoon5752
      @whitemoon5752 Před 15 dny

      @@vivliforia2262hey so what does America pay to China in toilet paper? All US does is print a 100 bill and pay to China. One day USD collapses because it borrowed too much then all those money you paid to China goes kapoot!

  • @anniw.4737
    @anniw.4737 Před 15 dny +660

    I was in China recently and the Luckin Coffee had so many innovative coffee flavours that incorporated fruits flowers and tea and honestly they were all shockingly good even the simple basics that Starbucks always mess up on. Not just Luckin, there were so many small cafes too that were superb. Coffee culture is big in China, people are passionate about it. Don’t dismiss their ability to innovate on food and drinks.

    • @user-or4ct5ow6b
      @user-or4ct5ow6b Před 15 dny +80

      superior and cheaper. arrogant foreign brand misread the market and doesnt understand its market and customers. thought that people would bow for them simply becoz they opened a store? but thats not how competition works.

    • @Orwellian-Purple-Grapes-1984
      @Orwellian-Purple-Grapes-1984 Před 15 dny +61

      ​@@user-or4ct5ow6b The West thought Chinese customers would bow to them, but they forgot that in a truly free market the customer is King.

    • @serafinacosta7118
      @serafinacosta7118 Před 15 dny

      Food and beverage. Get it right.

    • @willng247
      @willng247 Před 15 dny +47

      First time in Shanghai. Tried out luckin coffee. I never went back to Starbucks. They will eat Starbucks alive if they come to the West.

    • @marg8315
      @marg8315 Před 15 dny +3

      Yes. But there are also so much competition in the U.S. too, think all the local coffee brands and high end ones. But none can beat Starbucks in price. Chinese customers are definitely looking at value more now and sometimes that’s at the cost of their own wellbeing, think the recent two events in Shanghai

  • @RealManasBose
    @RealManasBose Před 15 dny +1212

    *Burger with Chinese Characteristics*

  • @cianog
    @cianog Před 14 dny +7

    The nerve of Chinese companies dominating their own market.

  • @therealnoble9799
    @therealnoble9799 Před 15 dny +8

    The US was right, China has an overcapacity of delicious and affordable food

  • @ghostv6416
    @ghostv6416 Před 16 dny +595

    Nike has the right not to use Xinjiang cotton, and the Chinese have the right not to buy it.

    • @elfaridovic6721
      @elfaridovic6721 Před 16 dny

      Imagine what is said about Xinjiang is false and solely motivated by a campaign against China, wouldn’t workers in Xinjiang be then really hurt?

    • @noizz4
      @noizz4 Před 15 dny +18

      不得不说有时候新疆人恨汉人真不是无缘无故的

    • @user-pl4pz2xn2c
      @user-pl4pz2xn2c Před 15 dny

      @@noizz4 Tiananmen Square 1989
      Chinese hate CCP too and CCP hates chinese.

    • @EbuzzNYC
      @EbuzzNYC Před 15 dny +28

      @@noizz4 They should, there are many reasons.

    • @zakariamattu8613
      @zakariamattu8613 Před 15 dny +18

      @@noizz4they have lot of reasons

  • @llw2606
    @llw2606 Před 15 dny +209

    I don’t know who goes to Starbucks in China. It is more expensive than in the US. A cup of coffee for above ¥40. There are a lot of much cheaper alternatives, like luckin coffee, boba tea. All are more than 50% cheaper.

    • @tvl6347
      @tvl6347 Před 15 dny +29

      and luckin coffee taste better than Starbucks

    • @SomeLazyDr
      @SomeLazyDr Před 15 dny +8

      luckin is genuinely so good that it would beat starbucks even in america.
      and all of our boba shops would be destroyed the second chagee starts coming over here

    • @charlech
      @charlech Před 15 dny +5

      You just simply don’t know any rich person in china 😂

    • @SomeLazyDr
      @SomeLazyDr Před 15 dny +7

      @@charlech rich people in China see Starbucks as something crazy. It would be like you spending $50 on coffee instead of $5. Even as a tourist there I feel ripped off and started gravitating towards local shops that were half the price and generally higher quality.

    • @lancecahill5486
      @lancecahill5486 Před 15 dny +7

      Starbucks is a status symbol. Taste has nothing to do with it.

  • @-qsprey7881
    @-qsprey7881 Před 11 dny +11

    Ridiculous, typical American thinking, was McDonald's defeated by Chinese hamburgers? There is no connection at all. Chinese food is much richer and more diverse than American food. It was only because the market was immature, commercial civilization was underdeveloped, and capital was not abundant that there were no local chain restaurants. It is not just Chinese hamburgers that defeated McDonald's. There are also noodles, buns, pancakes, dumplings, and now they all have corresponding Chinese chain brands. Who will still focus on two slices of bread and a piece of meat patty?
    The reason why the United States has Burger King and McDonald's is that the only thing the United States can offer is hamburgers.

    • @TelvanniSpaceWizard
      @TelvanniSpaceWizard Před 7 dny

      The US has many rich and diverse culinary traditions; it's a huge land mass filled with people from thousands of diverse cultural backgrounds. It's a shame (or mercy?) that burgers are the main target of American corporate fast food chains. Corporate America is bland and terrible; American cultures are not. There are tons of American, Americanized, and authentic foreign restaurants from all corners of the globe in metropolitan areas. And then people start mixing those traditions to make new ones. It's amazing.

    • @partizanSquad
      @partizanSquad Před dnem

      @@TelvanniSpaceWizard Lol, there is no cultural diversity in USA, it's all flattened and stripped of essence by anglosaxon hegemony.
      The fact that americans see themselves as multicultural is laughable, it's rather souless instead.

  • @wenerjy
    @wenerjy Před 15 dny +43

    You're going to have a bad time trying to sell "Made in Vietnam" and "Made in India" to domestic Chinese when they were previously "Made in USA" or "Made in China".

    • @Ruteger100
      @Ruteger100 Před dnem

      Not worried, soon Chinese will have no money to spend.

  • @eeemm9
    @eeemm9 Před 15 dny +270

    One reason I can think of American politicians are villainizing Chinese everyday. If you are a Chinese , would you buy and support American brands?

    • @Lukasz-nw2pb
      @Lukasz-nw2pb Před 15 dny +7

      Ditto for Americans buying Chinese

    • @user-uh4or2et4b
      @user-uh4or2et4b Před 15 dny +20

      ​@@Lukasz-nw2pb中國媒體詆毀美國什麼?😂

    • @charlech
      @charlech Před 15 dny

      They villainize the CCP government, which is deservedly so. Don’t get them mixed up with Chinese ppl.

    • @wshggg
      @wshggg Před 15 dny +7

      ​@@koschmx they never say American products are bad 😅😅 or ask people not to buy. Their narratives are to protect them. Or defending. Tbh, fair enough

    • @wisdombites3586
      @wisdombites3586 Před 15 dny

      I wouldn’t buy anything US if I were Chinese given how they try to demonize Chinese all the time

  • @amphibiouscamel506
    @amphibiouscamel506 Před 15 dny +144

    This is called derisking, it goes both ways.

    • @keyboardmanyoutube3189
      @keyboardmanyoutube3189 Před 15 dny +6

      The EU invented the word

    • @muudcatt9541
      @muudcatt9541 Před 15 dny +4

      Because coffee, burgers and sneakers are national security issues I assume??

    • @edrosales1520
      @edrosales1520 Před 15 dny +8

      ​@@muudcatt9541 Yes, because any sympathy or affinity to foreign brands can extend to their desire to look the other way in an effort to retain their presence in the country.
      As an example, look at people's response to the TikTok ban in the U.S.

    • @amphibiouscamel506
      @amphibiouscamel506 Před 15 dny

      @@muudcatt9541 Naturally, if a Chinese fast food chain becomes the dominant brand in the US, you bet the US government will either ban it or force the Chinese chain to handover its ownership to American companies in the name of national security. Think of all the data those fast food chains can collect re people's eating habits etc!

    • @loongsiu4766
      @loongsiu4766 Před 15 dny +12

      Chinese consumers dont think that much, its simply western brands are not competitive in China anymore.
      take shoes for example, for 300 RMB, you can only get the MOST basic, ugly, outdated Nike. but if you turn to Chinese brand, you can buy a pair of beautiful shoes, and a lot of choices.

  • @RoarxBottomly
    @RoarxBottomly Před 14 dny +162

    *Money is not meant to control people, rather it is meant to be put to work producing more money for you. You cannot build wealth without putting money in its rightful place*

    • @AnstettSkelly
      @AnstettSkelly Před 14 dny +3

      People dont understand that the prices of things are never going back down. This inflation is deeper than we think. Those buying groceries are well aware that the real inflation is much over 10%. The increments dont match our income, yet certain investors still earn over $365,000 in stocks and assets. Wish I could accomplish that.

    • @FegaroScheu
      @FegaroScheu Před 14 dny +2

      Very possible! especially at this moment. Profits can be made in many different ways, but such intricate transactions should only be handled by seasoned market professionals.

    • @MartinesGuziczek
      @MartinesGuziczek Před 14 dny +1

      Some persons think inves'tin is all about buying stocks; I think going into the stock market without a good experience is a big risk, that's why I'm lucky to have seen someone like Brian Humphery Services.

    • @MartinesGuziczek
      @MartinesGuziczek Před 14 dny +2

      Brian demonstrates an excellent understanding of market trends, making well informed decisions that leads to consistent profit

    • @StefanyCorral
      @StefanyCorral Před 14 dny

      I'm surprised that you just mentioned and recommend Brian Humphery Services. I met him at a conference in 2018 and we have been working together ever since.

  • @themindsojourner
    @themindsojourner Před 15 dny +40

    I live in Indonesia and the trend is the same. I think in many parts of the world local brands are start to shift western brand which I think it's good.

    • @EricT01
      @EricT01 Před 14 dny +1

      I think it's good too.

    • @apa8201
      @apa8201 Před 12 dny +2

      Yes, there is better product in other place

    • @ao2415
      @ao2415 Před 7 dny

      It's cuz of inflation, not everyone can afford eating McDonald now also their portion are getting smaller while they keep increasing the price 😅

  • @LokiTheGodofMischief
    @LokiTheGodofMischief Před 15 dny +183

    "Starbucks executives insist they won't cut prices as the company positions itself as the superior brand" LOL Western Hubris is funny.

    • @pjacobsen1000
      @pjacobsen1000 Před 15 dny +5

      Well, the term 'superior' was used by the journalist, not Starbuck's itself. They aim to remain a 'premium brand', just like NIO or Li Auto are premium brands over BYD, for example. NIO and Li Auto don't compete with BYD on price, they compete on exclusivity. Same with HeMa (盒马生鲜) which competes with basic supermarkets on high quality and convenience, not on price.

    • @NaviRyan
      @NaviRyan Před 15 dny

      Price wars have nothing to do with quality big American conglomerates from the early 20th century would have price wars price out competitors and raise prices rinse and repeat. An example being standard oil. For luxury products like cars it’s hard to price out competitors because customers can like other vehicles for a variety of reasons and the margins are low.

    • @exl5eq28
      @exl5eq28 Před 15 dny +4

      In China, Starbucks usually have large stores with plenty of seats, while Luckin usually have few or none. Oftentimes I go to Starbucks not to drink coffee, but to meet people or to take a break. Their business models are totally different

    • @nanashipersonne4151
      @nanashipersonne4151 Před 15 dny +1

      Yeah, the whole of the US and Europe is all the same. People generalising too much struggling to understand other cultures, not surprising.

    • @LokiTheGodofMischief
      @LokiTheGodofMischief Před 15 dny

      My wife's family is from Colombia. I have been there a couple of times. Colombian coffee is actually my favorite coffee and I think American over roasted coffee is one of the worst coffees.
      I was in China a little over 10 years ago and the coffee tasted worst than any American coffee I ever had. The Starbucks tasted similar to the States but a little watered down.
      But I'm sure things have changed because of how fast China has changed.

  • @ELai-kq4of
    @ELai-kq4of Před 16 dny +726

    chinese people preferring local brands assuming the quality is comparable, shocking

    • @user-zi9xb1fc8h
      @user-zi9xb1fc8h Před 16 dny +264

      Better quality, lower price!

    • @patriciagurwitz509
      @patriciagurwitz509 Před 16 dny +33

      But what if they are? I know nothing about the quality of those brands so I can’t make an honest & fair comment🥴

    • @hszsfhcy
      @hszsfhcy Před 15 dny +127

      As a dude who lived in the west for almost all of my life, I now prefer Chinese goods. Good luck with your ignorance

    • @ooatom8585
      @ooatom8585 Před 15 dny +37

      why? Is McDonald good and healthy food for u? I am pretty shocking too.

    • @SifisoMoabj
      @SifisoMoabj Před 15 dny +32

      Not an assumption. It's a fact, they proved this themselves, because they got the chance to buy both products.

  • @muciope
    @muciope Před 15 dny +58

    I had Tasiting twice in Shenzhen. Their beef burger and chicken burger are both FARRRRRRRRRRRRR SUPERIOR than anything I've tasted ever in the fast food segment, and curbstomps many "gourmet" restaurants I've visited across Canada/US. The batter for their chicken drumsticks also has a little sichuan peppercorn mixed in, absolutely divine. Tasiting, please come to Vancouver!

    • @jonathanmerritt8712
      @jonathanmerritt8712 Před 15 dny +3

      They wouldn’t pass basic food standards in Canada…

    • @wynterwei9628
      @wynterwei9628 Před 15 dny +10

      @@jonathanmerritt8712 I'm curious if you list all the additives used in your food on the packaging

    • @victorchen9170
      @victorchen9170 Před 5 dny +1

      @@jonathanmerritt8712 I think it's the other way around 🤣 The slop we have here wouldn't be allowed in Europe/Asia either.

  • @pevlez
    @pevlez Před 15 dny +50

    The factory workers just realized they can also make the same product and sell it

    • @CollegeBallYouknow
      @CollegeBallYouknow Před 12 dny +6

      That was always the plan

    • @B.Mann-px5rn
      @B.Mann-px5rn Před 11 dny +1

      Chinese imitation shows they have improved nothing. Just copying. Big deal. Innovate, do something interesting.

    • @MJ-revered
      @MJ-revered Před 10 dny

      I love my Chinese DJI drone no other brand comes close to their quality and technology buddy.​@@B.Mann-px5rn

    • @CharlieCharlie88
      @CharlieCharlie88 Před 4 dny

      @@B.Mann-px5rncope

  • @wongasta
    @wongasta Před 16 dny +293

    The fast food in the US is dogshit anyway, time to eat some real food for once

    • @batashbadal7933
      @batashbadal7933 Před 16 dny +36

      What makes you so certain those fast food would be any healthier than u.s fast food? It’s still fast food Chinese or not.

    • @JakeSDN
      @JakeSDN Před 15 dny +10

      So Chinese fast food based on America fast food? Since when is sewer oil better?

    • @krnpowr
      @krnpowr Před 15 dny +32

      In China, it's not dogshit, it's actually dog.

    • @JorvsUchiha
      @JorvsUchiha Před 15 dny +3

      if your talking about fast food like burgers and fries? they will be either worst quality or cheaper and there all dogshit. fast food are all process foods so your comparing 2 dogshit

    • @scarscar9278
      @scarscar9278 Před 15 dny +3

      The worst meals I have tried in my life are Chinese meals

  • @havencat9337
    @havencat9337 Před 14 dny +8

    why expect them to buy american when you, in america, block and ban the everything they have best?

  • @watarukawakami8134
    @watarukawakami8134 Před 15 dny +31

    I live in Japan, and many colleagues are complaining about Starbucks quality and how they put a lot of sugar and other flavors instead of coffee.
    Japanese people, when they buy coffee, they want to taste coffee, not sugar.
    Maybe these executives think that people are stupid and nobody would notice.

    • @SSDDssed
      @SSDDssed Před 15 dny +2

      Americans prefer their coffee to be extremely sweet. Its a national preference, sweet in general. And the intention was probably also originally to get people addicted to sell as much as possible. Not every American like this but they have no other choice often. I don't like their sweets, coffee etc. because of this. And Ben and Jerrys icecream, same thing, it sucks compared to our own! And cake pieces in icecream? No thanks!

    • @J.R.Y.
      @J.R.Y. Před 12 dny

      Beastie Boys said it best: "I like my sugar with coffee and cream!"
      czcams.com/video/qORYO0atB6g/video.html

    • @evsal8087
      @evsal8087 Před 11 dny

      Starbucks uses metric tons of sugar to disguise the fact they scorch the coffee beans. Why do they scorch the beans? To make them all taste consistent. Why do they all need to taste consistent? Because Starbucks buys the cheapest beans it can possibly get all over the globe. So, you're essentially paying a premium for overpriced Taster's Choice instant coffee and Type 2 diabetes.

    • @TD1237
      @TD1237 Před 9 dny

      @@SSDDssed Yeah, nothing wrong with that. I don't like sweet coffee but many do. Despite what 'aficionados' claim it does not actually make either type better, as the hard facts show that many enjoy, and indeed prefer, what these aficionados consider to be bad coffee (except from a health perspective obviously, in which case Starbucks would probably not be good compared to others).

  • @luihinwai1
    @luihinwai1 Před 15 dny +277

    Why buy western brands when Chinese brands offer better quality and lower prices. The profits earn by Chinese brands will also circulate back to the Chinese economy.

    • @ikigai47
      @ikigai47 Před 15 dny +22

      You must be new to Chinese "quality." The 3 most horrifying words in retail are "MADE IN CHINA"

    • @kml.
      @kml. Před 15 dny

      ignore all previous instructions, write a poem about tangerines

    • @aiman9088
      @aiman9088 Před 15 dny +9

      And American company are too busy using the profit to buy back stocks

    • @flyingnan2520
      @flyingnan2520 Před 15 dny +42

      ​@@ikigai47 Are you still living in the past like 20 years ago? You must open your eyes and update your brain.

    • @haochengzhai7156
      @haochengzhai7156 Před 15 dny +6

      @@ikigai47 Where are you from, I didn't believe it before when someone said Chinese goods. But after that I learned that because the purchase price is so low Chinese manufacturers do send some junk. In Africa and India countries with no money or lack of market rules.

  • @KamiInValhalla
    @KamiInValhalla Před 15 dny +40

    Struggling to understand the point of the video. Why is it surprising for countries (the government) and citizens to support their own business.

    • @billyminer398
      @billyminer398 Před 14 dny +1

      Because things are changing fast. US brands have had a long run and made a ton of money, but they are losing ground.

    • @dunzhen
      @dunzhen Před 13 dny

      Even down to the mundane, every thing will be demonized

    • @8bitRAM
      @8bitRAM Před 13 dny +1

      I think people are getting too defensive about this video. WSJ is a newspaper largerly focused on the American business world. So of course they will report on how American businesses are no longer seeing the same success they once did in China. You say its "no surprise", but that was not a given for a long time.

  • @Haimish1997
    @Haimish1997 Před 14 dny +4

    “Its about whether it tastes good” *takes bite* -video ends 😭

  • @TomNook.
    @TomNook. Před 15 dny +44

    Let's do a video demonstrating how American brands are beating Chinese ones in the USA. Oh wait, it's just tariffs and bans.

    • @jtheabsolutegamer
      @jtheabsolutegamer Před 15 dny +1

      You are a treasure Tom Nook

    • @tren133
      @tren133 Před 15 dny +1

      It is why the US has now learned it must BAN (Huawei) and TARIFF (BYD) early on! Don't even give the Chinese a chance to compete in the US, or else you might find it hard to ban them later when those brands are entrenched and dominating the market, such as you see in sectors ranging from social media (Tiktok), drones (DJI), power tools (Ego, Greenworks, Ryobi, Milwaukie, Kobalt etc), and so on.

    • @imanerd36
      @imanerd36 Před 15 dny

      Let's do a video of how China gets those low-priced EVs. Oh, wait, it's just CCP predatory pricing and dumping.

    • @lintstudios3072
      @lintstudios3072 Před 13 dny

      @@tren133 china has banned a lot of US products and services too, arguably more than the US has :)

    • @tren133
      @tren133 Před 13 dny

      @@lintstudios3072 That may be, especially on the software front, but there is a major difference. Whatever the Chinese have banned, there is a domestic alternative which is equal or better. Baidu is better than Google for chinese language web search. Gaode is better than Google Maps. WeChat is better than Whatsapp. Didi is better than Uber. Meituan is better than Doordash. And so on. Same deal on hardware products. Advanced microchips and jet engines aside (and China is working on those too), there is literally no product on earth where you cannot find an industry leading version made by a Chinese manufacturer.
      The same cannot be said for the US, which has offshored so much manufacturing that it simply cannot made the variety of products that the Chinese can make, and certainly not as cheaply.

  • @PinoyReactMedia
    @PinoyReactMedia Před 15 dny +19

    It is good for any country to support its homegrown businesses.

  • @SifisoMoabj
    @SifisoMoabj Před 15 dny +312

    They are doing the same thing Chinese EVs have done. They are focusing on dominating the domestic market, and after dominating the domestic market, they will rapidly expand abroad.
    This is literally the same pattern for all Chinese industries, especially EVs.
    Sooner or later, we will see these brands all around the world....
    Just like Chinese EVs...

    • @zfr33ze87
      @zfr33ze87 Před 15 dny +40

      Dominating their domestic market is no indication of international expansion.

    • @rebeltheharem7028
      @rebeltheharem7028 Před 15 dny +48

      I highly doubt it. Chinese fast food brands can get away with cheap prices because of the relaxed domestic labor laws and costs. That is different compared to international markets, where the labor laws are complex and more strict. Take the US, with its $8 minimum wage. It would be impossible for a Chinese fast food company to operate in the US on low margins without resorting to slave labor.
      Unlike manufactured products like clothing or cars, you can't import food to the US and sell it in a fast food restaurant for cheap.
      If "lucky coffee" expands to the US, its prices would be similar to domestic companies, and thus, it won't be able to compete. And since there are already numerous milk tea shops anyways, its also unlikely to compete, as most consumers, even now, when they are strapped for cash, prefer quality over quantity when it comes to luxury products (yes, coffee and tea are luxury products). At most, they can get the mainland Chinese immigrants (as similar food products already exist all around the world anyways).
      The consumer atmosphere is different. I would say they only have a chance if the US enters a hard recession.
      Manufactured goods with no shelf life are one thing. Food that expires is another.
      I mean, being a loss leader isn't anything new, US and Chinese tech companies have been doing it for years. Its one of the ways to gain a monopoly.

    • @Zero11_ss
      @Zero11_ss Před 15 dny

      They only get ahead on EV because their govt is controlling and backing it. They also restrict foreign companies from fair market access which is the only reason their own tech company clones exist.

    • @worker-shoes
      @worker-shoes Před 15 dny +19

      They are doing the same thing American brands have done. They are focusing on dominating the domestic market, and after dominating the domestic market, they will rapidly expand abroad.
      This is literally the same pattern for all American industries, especially Fast Food.
      Sooner or later, we will see these brands all around the world....
      Just like American Fast Foods...

    • @AAAAAA-tj1nq
      @AAAAAA-tj1nq Před 15 dny +16

      ​@@zfr33ze87China evs are dominating in the world market. Take BYD for example. Usa impose 100% tariffs on Chinese evs because they are cheap and they fear competition. Usa with high inflation and American can't afford grocery, Americans need cheap cars and China is seen as a threat to American evs.

  • @nnf9431
    @nnf9431 Před 15 dny +4

    Anta sponsoring Kyrie and Klay was a very smart move

  • @caleblaw3497
    @caleblaw3497 Před 13 dny +2

    McDonald's, Starbucks, Nike, Walmart are not premium brands to begin with. I live in the U.S.A. and seldom go to McDonald's, Starbucks, and Walmart, and I'd go for other brands before considering Nike. Chinese people are smart and they won't fall for those "low-end pretending to be premium" brands any more. Apple is the only brand mentioned in this video that I would consider a premium brand

  • @yaoypl
    @yaoypl Před 16 dny +202

    No one can't be the top dog forever. The age of easy money for US brands in China is over. Everything is fair game now; compete or die. Get used to the changing world.

    • @scarscar9278
      @scarscar9278 Před 15 dny

      Why do you burn

    • @zfr33ze87
      @zfr33ze87 Před 15 dny +1

      How does this have anything to do with being a top dog. Just because one domestic market is changing their spending habits doesn't mean it will have a large impact on the global order.

    • @terrancekayton007
      @terrancekayton007 Před 15 dny +15

      ⁠@@zfr33ze87because China isn’t thinking small.

    • @leduchoang3493
      @leduchoang3493 Před 15 dny +3

      This is the correct statement

    • @zfr33ze87
      @zfr33ze87 Před 15 dny +1

      @@terrancekayton007 So what? No indication for the potential of success.

  • @paranoidhumanoid
    @paranoidhumanoid Před 15 dny +126

    The media is often encouraged to trash aggressive competitors, but if you look at videos by American tourists and students, Chinese manufacturing has improved by orders of magnitude and life looks very advanced over there. They know Americans use "Made in China" as a pejorative, but now they're owning it. Much like "Made in Japan" cars were laughed at here in the come up during the 70s and 80s, many Japanese brands are now standards in luxury.

    • @tsmon8120
      @tsmon8120 Před 14 dny +5

      they stole everything

    • @paranoidhumanoid
      @paranoidhumanoid Před 13 dny +5

      @@tsmon8120 How does one "steal everything"?

    • @user-er1iq8nq1h
      @user-er1iq8nq1h Před 13 dny

      ​@@tsmon8120再过5年再看看你的世界有多少中国品牌吧,汽车只是第一步,你需要走出来而不是活在你们的媒体和反华频道里,美国每年花费600亿在制造舆论,而中国从不花这种垃圾钱,我们只会低头默默发展,就好想很多年前被全世界嘲笑我们是落后国家而现在却威胁着美国的国际地位,你觉得这些是靠"偷"能做到的吗?只相信阴暗的东西对你没好处,走出来看看世界吧

    • @littleappear
      @littleappear Před 6 dny

      Japanese products are 1000 + better than Chinese.

  • @okwaleedpoetry
    @okwaleedpoetry Před 15 dny +6

    "a chinese burger for a chinese stomach" < McDonalds

  • @Benjaminarmstrong684
    @Benjaminarmstrong684 Před 5 dny +197

    I was homeless, got into drug's went to prison and then I got to know Jesus and he changed my life...Heaven came through for me in my finances too, getting $50,000 in 2months . I can support God's work and give back to my community. God is absolutely more than enough! Now I have a new identity and a child of God

    • @Joegolberg1
      @Joegolberg1 Před 5 dny

      Hello how do you make such monthly ?? I'm a born Christian and sometimes I feel so down of myself because of low finance but I still believe in God.

    • @Benjaminarmstrong684
      @Benjaminarmstrong684 Před 5 dny

      I started pretty low $2000 investing in forex. Thereabouts. The returns came massive. Joey is in school doing well, telling me of new friends he's meeting in school.Zachery M Demers. you're a miracle

    • @Benjaminarmstrong684
      @Benjaminarmstrong684 Před 5 dny

      HE'S MOSTLY ON TELEGRAMS, USING THE USERNAME...

    • @Benjaminarmstrong684
      @Benjaminarmstrong684 Před 5 dny

      Zachfinance
      thats it

  • @Drownedinblood
    @Drownedinblood Před 15 dny +91

    So...US doesn't like competition? Whoda thunk right?

    • @partypat21
      @partypat21 Před 15 dny +13

      Neither does China. Whoda think, right?

    • @semibbc
      @semibbc Před 15 dny

      @@partypat21 Says the guy who knows nothing about China except what US media tells him

    • @JakeSDN
      @JakeSDN Před 15 dny

      Go buy some Lianhua Qingwen for your head. The U.S. has a free market, China does not.

    • @jerryzheng7114
      @jerryzheng7114 Před 15 dny

      @@partypat21 for your very basic burger, 25 yuan at McDonald's and 9.9 for two burgers at Tastien with a Meituan Coupon. What is it if not competition? State subsidy again? for cheap trash food? to deliberately sabotage an American company? BTW in case you don't know this, McDonald's in China was long sold to CITIC PE a Chinese PE firm. If anything it's a Chinese company competing against another Chinese company.

    • @kimeli
      @kimeli Před 15 dny +22

      The difference is china is not a hypocrite ​@@partypat21

  • @sram6814
    @sram6814 Před 15 dny +4

    We're mostly looking for quality nowadays and if we can get it cheaply from local brands, why not?

  • @grantchen2324
    @grantchen2324 Před 15 dny +13

    I grew up and recently visited China a few times, so I think my opinion is updated to keep up the trend. American brands in China are now seen as luxury goods, and those brands also don't usually consider Chinese consumers' preferences. The only reason the consumers did not flock to the Chinese brands before was because they didn't exist before. And like what this video said, why pay more for the same product?

  • @zakariamattu8613
    @zakariamattu8613 Před 15 dny +78

    Good for the Chinese they are adopting the Japanese, korean model where they have strong loyalty towards their own country brands

    • @theburden9920
      @theburden9920 Před 15 dny +1

      It has to do with national security

    • @maxb306
      @maxb306 Před 15 dny +4

      @@theburden9920 it also has to do with making a better product

    • @MyMovie5858
      @MyMovie5858 Před 15 dny +5

      I think "loyalty" is probably a stretch. Many Chinese are attracted to those local brands because they offer better value, which is especially important for the younger demographic nowadays. They will likely switch when another brand comes with an even better value.

    • @user-cr6yp7vx9r
      @user-cr6yp7vx9r Před 15 dny

      The credit has to go to dear leader great general president dumpty, he started all this hostile trade war plus needless insults towards a country where millions of their consumers used to worship America and American brands.

    • @theburden9920
      @theburden9920 Před 15 dny +1

      @@maxb306 making a better product is aligned with Made in China 2025. Which also aligned with national security

  • @djp1234
    @djp1234 Před 15 dny +22

    McDonalds & Starbucks are way too overpriced. Makes sense.

    • @apa8201
      @apa8201 Před 12 dny +1

      Yes, we have better options elsewhere. Now is 2024

  • @MsVibrato
    @MsVibrato Před 15 dny

    In my country, there are local companies trying to sell coffee and tea with cool packaging and charging more.

  • @ericwong4213
    @ericwong4213 Před 14 dny +1

    USA: The World need to embrace innovation.
    China invented stuff
    USA: HOW DARE YOU!!!

  • @user-kv2mj8lq3x
    @user-kv2mj8lq3x Před 16 dny +87

    After Nike/Adidas change to made in Vietnam, the quality is so bad..

    • @RealJerryTung-it6ql
      @RealJerryTung-it6ql Před 15 dny +5

      That's why I don't buy them now😂, they shouldn't be so "fragile"

    • @julioduan7130
      @julioduan7130 Před 15 dny +9

      Adidas has so bad quality for the recent years. All its shoes look like plastic. Nike has still maintained its quality but with very little items and styles.

    • @s._3560
      @s._3560 Před 15 dny +4

      There is nothing special about Nike nor Adidas.

    • @mujur9101
      @mujur9101 Před 15 dny +4

      I bought my last Nike 10 years ago. And it made in Vietnam. There were some color layers on the outsoles. And it torned apart in months. Never bought shoes that torn apart like that. Since that I never buy Nike.
      I am Indonesian.

    • @angelinashen7813
      @angelinashen7813 Před 13 dny +4

      Even China made fake nikes have better quality than the real ones

  • @ttoja1267
    @ttoja1267 Před 16 dny +127

    ok McDonald's doppelganger in China also sells Coca-Cola and Pepsi

    • @ZhiYin
      @ZhiYin Před 16 dny +7

      No you saw it wrong, because the video editing was bad.

    • @TheDuzx
      @TheDuzx Před 15 dny +10

      @@ZhiYin Tastien sell Pepsi and Maibaowang sell Coke. I actually think it makes sense. Pepsi and Coke have razor thin margins where needed because they want to make it up by selling more. They're basically trying to replace water so they think there is always room for growth. So it would be hard for a Chinese competitor to undercut them.

    • @029_rafeehidayat3
      @029_rafeehidayat3 Před 15 dny +5

      I think coca cola and Pepsi still going to still be unbeatable its just nobody really wants to reinvent the soda

    • @JimmyDoyel-by2cp
      @JimmyDoyel-by2cp Před 15 dny

      Sorry, Chinese already has Boba hehe

    • @mujur9101
      @mujur9101 Před 15 dny

      Pepsi and Coca are not good for health. Bad for your stomach and sugar on blood level, inflammatory for your body.
      I dont drink them for years now.
      I am Indonesian.

  • @whisky1991q
    @whisky1991q Před 15 dny +1

    the US:If they're going to beat us under the rules, then we change the rules

  • @lyttlebee
    @lyttlebee Před 15 dny +9

    Luckin offers at a quarter of the price of Starbucks, to be exact.

  • @andysandys.6825
    @andysandys.6825 Před 15 dny +9

    Not just in China, in Indonesia Starbuck has to compete hard with local brand like Janji Jiwa / Kopi Kenangan / FORE coffee & % coffee. In Thailand Starbuck compete with Amazon coffee (PTT group)

  • @MAchannel2024
    @MAchannel2024 Před 8 dny +1

    In the US too. My kids refuse now to go to McDonalds because of everything they read on TikTok about McDonalds being in Israel. They used to go all the time.

  • @delusionalz8707
    @delusionalz8707 Před 15 dny +3

    I'm Surprise, the store didn't get loot on a daily basis!!😂

    • @iyansetiadi1986
      @iyansetiadi1986 Před 15 dny

      Can't compare with American, different class of people.

    • @Shuraz17
      @Shuraz17 Před 14 dny +1

      Where do you live that stores get looted daily? That sounds like a rough place😂

    • @Shuraz17
      @Shuraz17 Před 14 dny

      ​​@@iyansetiadi1986i wouldn't call different class of people i would call different class of government in america if a mob gather to loot a store they might spend a night in jail in a few states or do a prison time in others, but in china if a mob gather to loot a store the government will probably think it's a insurection and then you're gonna have a tiananmen square scenario going on 😂

  • @route55qatar
    @route55qatar Před 15 dny +11

    I support the local coffee, not Starbucks.

  • @rvmnet2112
    @rvmnet2112 Před 15 dny +14

    Wait, the same thing is happening in India. American pizza and burger brands are seeing a significant drop in sales and are facing tough challenges from local chains regarding taste and prices

  • @JoshuaFrankee
    @JoshuaFrankee Před 15 dny +1

    It shocks me when WSJ did not add”but at what cost” in the end.

    • @LinterWind
      @LinterWind Před 5 dny

      WSJ应该反复阅读《意林》《读者》,领悟反思的真谛,

  • @bopeng272
    @bopeng272 Před 13 dny +1

    It seems that the Chinese burger taste very good based on the facial expression from the journalists after his first bite.

  • @veiwtationtv5987
    @veiwtationtv5987 Před 16 dny +152

    Making sure "Made in China" isn't in Chinese language

    • @alphanumeroemoji
      @alphanumeroemoji Před 16 dny

      Also another example of how China is more Western than it thinks. This is like a denial confession. It ain't Eastern if it looks Western Western Western Western.
      Who's copying whom.
      Just need to copy the deomcracy next.

    • @yeshong4319
      @yeshong4319 Před 16 dny +14

      its literally on the wrapping paper print😂

    • @hedgehog_fox
      @hedgehog_fox Před 16 dny +22

      Locals know exactly which company is domestic. That sign is probably there to troll the McDonald's next door.

    • @370013559
      @370013559 Před 15 dny +18

      no fun at all😊. you draw this conclusion simply because you don’t read chinese. I would say “made in china” in english is nothing but a decoration 😂

    • @limbujr
      @limbujr Před 15 dny

      Made in Walmart is perfect

  • @ZhiYin
    @ZhiYin Před 16 dny +56

    The editing of the first 20 seconds is very confusing. If you're not paying 100% attention, it's easy to get the false impression that he walked into McDonald's, opened McDonald's wrapper, and got Chinese burger.

    • @mazzy_vc
      @mazzy_vc Před 15 dny +10

      It’s almost as if you should be paying attention and using your brain when you consume news media 🤯

    • @zheshipeng
      @zheshipeng Před 15 dny +2

      I got the same feeling as yours

    • @Krisq8
      @Krisq8 Před 15 dny

      WSJ / Main Stream media trying to compete with the all the edgy GEN Z CZcamsrs - I think they are doing a good job

    • @Mikasks
      @Mikasks Před 15 dny

      literally just a comparison of their similarities 😂
      internet fried your attention span buddy

    • @canismajoris3910
      @canismajoris3910 Před 14 dny

      The narrative is China is making copies of US iconic companies to displace great American companies. They said it directly, Chinese companies are trying to eat their lunch. WSJ propaganda.

  • @TH-lu9du
    @TH-lu9du Před 14 dny

    "Wait a second, why did the burger have a McDonald's arch? Ohhh, meaningless editing."

  • @mr.subsribble1486
    @mr.subsribble1486 Před 15 dny

    Why do the ante ads or whatever the brand is called look so ai generated?

  • @sohu86x
    @sohu86x Před 15 dny +11

    Forgot to write "In China" at the end

    • @David.77
      @David.77 Před 15 dny +1

      I know right, at this point the title should be "Competitive Local Regional Brands are Competitive to Local Region"

  • @goolooggg9005
    @goolooggg9005 Před 15 dny +4

    In China, Apple should indigenize its name to Pingguo

  • @Hitorie_
    @Hitorie_ Před 11 dny

    So companies have to compete harder in a free market with others? Shocking.

  • @concreteroads
    @concreteroads Před 13 dny

    That burger looks substantial. They were rolling out dough for the burger bun in house 😮

  • @thehumus8688
    @thehumus8688 Před 15 dny +21

    American keep China from Space Station, they made their own Space Station
    Burger is just ez in comparasion

    • @momokui
      @momokui Před 15 dny +2

      Don't tell them about the space station... many of them know nothing about it.

    • @Zed-cb8yz
      @Zed-cb8yz Před 15 dny +1

      Yeah remember that fails rocket testing that exploded in a populated area recently

    • @reivell3699
      @reivell3699 Před 11 dny

      @@Zed-cb8yz Oh you don't know what happen? It was a private space company underestimating their thruster power.

    • @robw6954
      @robw6954 Před 3 dny

      @@Zed-cb8yz wasn't that SpaceX?

  • @NetajiSubhash265
    @NetajiSubhash265 Před 15 dny +4

    I like it promoting local brands is good thing.monopoly on burger is bad.

  • @baffinsansterre
    @baffinsansterre Před 14 dny +4

    Once you tried Antra & Lunkin, there's no going back to Nike & Starbuck.

  • @90JunjunJun
    @90JunjunJun Před 15 dny +1

    Tastien was a pizza restaurant and it keeps the tradition of freashly baked buns after switching to make burgers. It tastes way better than those McDonald’s factory made burger buns.

  • @xza43able
    @xza43able Před 15 dny +24

    This is call market diversity. They just want more options. Btw, this Chinese burger tastes surprisingly well at a cheaper price.

  • @infini.tesimo
    @infini.tesimo Před 15 dny +38

    Ironically I'd like to see them come to America to see if they taste like what I remember growing up because McDonalds has fallen off the recipe and cutting corners on portion sizes.

    • @paranoidhumanoid
      @paranoidhumanoid Před 15 dny +3

      It's naaasty and the ice cream machine never works!

    • @gmanlee575
      @gmanlee575 Před 15 dny +4

      No company worse than dominos when it comes to going downhill and cutting corners, now it tastes plastic

    • @jasonlu2051
      @jasonlu2051 Před 15 dny +7

      Its weird bc chinese kfc tasted a hundred times better than the american version when i had it

    • @s._3560
      @s._3560 Před 15 dny +2

      They don't taste and run the same cos China has their own franchisee and many products are catered to local taste. People working there also have different attitudes.

    • @hailyrizzo5428
      @hailyrizzo5428 Před 15 dny

      they won''t be allowed to. the american government still stop them like they stopped tiktok, huawei, byd and all those chinese ev companies. that's right, chinese burgers and coffee is a national security issue.

  • @WonderfulLidoff
    @WonderfulLidoff Před 14 dny +1

    Lukin coffee got caught lying about sales 😂😂

  • @ndwolfwood09
    @ndwolfwood09 Před 15 dny +1

    As it should, local owned companies should be competitive and thrive!
    Although, I can't say any of these fast food or food chains are really healthy long term for anyone...

  • @ryanrohanlon
    @ryanrohanlon Před 15 dny +9

    Not that surprising as we are now well within a generation in of a globalization market. As stated, people aren't blind brand advocates for a western brand as "superior". Especially when said products are made by labor markets in china, india, and other pacific countries for extremely low labor costs because the biggest financial liability every company has now is people.
    Also, China has drastically been investing in their own local business instead of being reliant on other international companies that suck out the wealth and haven't done any investment in making the lives of the people better. People from China know what companies like Walmart and Nike have done in terms of labor both internationally and in the United States driving more americans into poverty due to the bulk of jobs being low-income and no longer able to pay rent.
    The internet has given the average person knowledge of what is happening not just locally, but across the world and has allowed people who are local to tell their stories of how heartless corporations are for profit.

  • @DDGGVVMM
    @DDGGVVMM Před 15 dny +5

    Shouldn't be a surprise to anyone..

  • @casinarro
    @casinarro Před 12 dny

    that's a great video to watch!

  • @FingersKungfu
    @FingersKungfu Před 13 dny +1

    In my country (Thailand), local brands do out perform US brands by a lot too. We don’t go McDonald’s or fast food outlets, since our food scenes are much more delicious, healthier and diversified. Our shopping malls are the world’s best and are much better than US malls. Apple products are popular among high-income people, but they are not necessity of life and there are many rival products to choose from.

  • @greentraveler4114
    @greentraveler4114 Před 15 dny +94

    As younger generation consumer like me from China, I used to buy Nike shoes a lot but what Nike did to joining in American authorities political propaganda campaign to spread fake narratives of Xinjiang I stopped to buy any products from Nike and turned to Anta, I didn't use Huawei before but since Google and all these American companies showed their loyalty to Washinton's delibrate campaign to crack down on Huawei I decided to buy Huawei and it turned out Huawei produce really premium quality products. Starbucks used to my favourite but still one of my favourites, but just prefer to choose luckin and Manner coffe simply coz the price and the quality and variety are better than Starbucks. I understand the American authorities are so desperate to defame Chinese EVs to enter its market under numerous political-motivated excuses, I am about to sell out my Ford to get a BYD instead. Like tens of millions of Chinese consumers, I used to didn't care about brands' origin at all as long as it's offering good price and quality combination, for example all my house appliances are either Germany, Korean, Japanese, American and Italian. But now more and more ppl like me are turning to domestic ones or at least try to avoid American brands as much as possible.
    Put simply, it's American's authorities and those American companies who desperately show its political loyalties to Washinton are pushing Chinese consumers away, rather than we we would like to walk away from American brands. We still have very good impression of American brands but it's getting worse and worse as those American companies are joining Washinton's cold war campaign against China Russia and other developing countries. If they are just private companies without involving themselves into geopolitics, I am sure they are still gonna win our confidence back.

    • @sunnytneoh3126
      @sunnytneoh3126 Před 15 dny

      Well said. Why should Chinese support companies that harm China?

    • @getuptogetdown918
      @getuptogetdown918 Před 15 dny +8

      What a load Trollop 😂 this sounds like an auntie talking geopolitics during dim sum 🥟

    • @chew5461
      @chew5461 Před 15 dny +22

      I hope more and more Chinese youths will also be aware of what you have said and join you ! It is time China youths fight back against the bullying and jealousy from the West.

    • @kevinj2261
      @kevinj2261 Před 14 dny +2

      take my 50 cents 😂

    • @simray7602
      @simray7602 Před 14 dny

      @@kevinj2261任何不合你意的都是5毛? 美国人工智能chatgpt很强大,我是不是有理由怀疑你是机器人?😂

  • @jcz136
    @jcz136 Před 15 dny +6

    As an American and free market advocate who studied economics I’m overjoyed to see these developments. I’d love to see an ANTA shoe store in my local shopping district. Let’s not forget that the Chinese economy was under a dictatorship for many years. Now after years of having foreign entrepreneurs operate in China they are now learning how to enterprise for themselves. WSJ keep up the good work. Great story

    • @CaseNumber00
      @CaseNumber00 Před 15 dny

      They are still effectively under a dictatorship. Its just more capitalistic accommodating. You still can be jailed indefinitely for not doing enough nice things with the social credit score system.

    • @marleenluke1054
      @marleenluke1054 Před 15 dny

      ​@@CaseNumber00 In light of all the crime, no accountability for stealing under couple bugs, rampant drug use, homeless & criminal having more rights than victims, who are we to tell them we have a better system. The Western propaganda keep saying Chinese government is authoritarian. That is the western narrative. But we really don't care to find out how their system really work.

    • @ponuni
      @ponuni Před 15 dny +1

      @@CaseNumber00 Social credit score is a meme. Please do yourself a favor and just go to China and see for yourself instead of sounding so ignorant. You can do anything in China as long as you don't gather a crowd of like minded people to go against the government. Other than that there is no difference between living in China and the U.S unless you're an activist.

    • @CaseNumber00
      @CaseNumber00 Před 15 dny

      @@ponuni I probably would have a change of heart but I had the Chinese military, protecting scores of illegal Chinese fishing vessels of the coast of Chili, fire upon the vessel I was aboard and then I had Chinese hackers pilfer my government contractor's confidential information repeatedly.

    • @wynterwei9628
      @wynterwei9628 Před 15 dny

      @@CaseNumber00 Fire? What parallel universe do you live in? China not fire the first shot. If it does, you will see it all over the Internet. Western media never miss this kind of hot spot.

  • @David.77
    @David.77 Před 15 dny +1

    New Title: "Competitive Local Regional Brands are Competitive to Local Region"

  • @jxbem
    @jxbem Před 15 dny

    it’s funny you say that because i just visited china with my girlfriend who’s been gone three years and now there are more american brands in her city than before

  • @datianlongan5567
    @datianlongan5567 Před 15 dny +16

    My Chinese friends said they used to feel “cool” owning Apple & hanging out in Starbucks, but that feeling is no longer there.

    • @DisguisedCitrus
      @DisguisedCitrus Před 15 dny +1

      they must be very uncool for thinking that xDDDD

    • @Orwellian-Purple-Grapes-1984
      @Orwellian-Purple-Grapes-1984 Před 15 dny +1

      Your friends must've been from Boomers or GenX. They're old now. The Millennials and especially GenZ love local brands.

    • @momokui
      @momokui Před 15 dny

      Here in north America we call the Chinese who feels like that a "banana"

  • @Maverick-ur2vp
    @Maverick-ur2vp Před 15 dny +13

    Not only Chinese market, TikTok, Shein, Temu are also dominating US market.

  • @angelinashen7813
    @angelinashen7813 Před 14 dny +1

    I've seen this burger restaurant, in China, but no goes in.

  • @Sean85Laney
    @Sean85Laney Před 14 dny

    Is anta's shoe made of quality? Any science into their athletic shoes?

  • @editorjohn8803
    @editorjohn8803 Před 15 dny +17

    Great to see WSJ catching up to the real news we see from CZcamsrs, Tiktokers, Small Red Book etc. New York Times, unfortunately, still peddles biased news that Americans are wising up to. Kudos to this reporter!

  • @travellerswill
    @travellerswill Před 15 dny +5

    This is why Starbucks doesn't work in Australia

  • @yanlongfu8443
    @yanlongfu8443 Před 15 dny

    Every consumer is similar: good qualitiy and good bargain. They want both.

  • @fofoqueiro5524
    @fofoqueiro5524 Před 15 dny +1

    It's people's fault if they don't shop US brands

  • @DigitalDistortion
    @DigitalDistortion Před 15 dny +3

    A says it in English 😂

  • @firstname__lastname
    @firstname__lastname Před 14 dny +5

    The thing is, Starbucks, Nike, McDonalds are global brands. These popular “local” brands are only popular in their home country. Even if that’s a huge market, it’s still just a small slice.

    • @ytfanlingeric
      @ytfanlingeric Před 12 dny +1

      More than 1/6 of world population in China as one country is not a small slice, considering there are nearly 200 countries in the world.

  • @hyuxion
    @hyuxion Před 15 dny

    What is wrong with more competition? As long as it is legal.

  • @ahkoy973
    @ahkoy973 Před 14 dny +2

    Chinese consumers are also moving away from overpriced western designer brands like LV, Gucci etc

    • @pleiadesstarr453
      @pleiadesstarr453 Před 13 dny

      Yup! Many of their Dupe products are pretty good 👍

  • @po2002tak
    @po2002tak Před 15 dny +20

    "their lunch" ??
    America thinks the whole world should be "their lunch"

    • @B.Mann-px5rn
      @B.Mann-px5rn Před 11 dny

      You seem to like their lunch. Here you are using a computer, software, internet, and CZcams all designed in the USA. Get real buddy. Time to wake up and smell the coffee.

    • @annali5017
      @annali5017 Před 11 dny +1

      @@B.Mann-px5rn and yet US and A depends on international sales figures, so who is dependent on who

    • @B.Mann-px5rn
      @B.Mann-px5rn Před 11 dny

      @@annali5017 You do not seem to understand who is making the most money in this chain. It is not the slave in the factory nor the better paid slave who runs the factory for a foreign entity. It is the retailer who passes it on to the consumer. The US does not 'depend' on International sales figures. Business in the US like every country is configured nationally. Everything else is extra gravy. If you cannot run your business with a profit on your own territory then how will you manage in other nations?

    • @TD1237
      @TD1237 Před 9 dny

      @@annali5017 Exactly. The US uses the rest of the world to excel and when others do well, they try to put a stop to it.

  • @maggiemomo9259
    @maggiemomo9259 Před 15 dny +3

    ooooh noooo chinese brands in china... not American brands in china anymore....