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In 1986 Dairy Farm was relisted on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange after it was demerged from Hong Kong Land. Dairy Farm acquired a 50% interest in Maxim's at the same time from Hong Kong Land. The 7-Eleven convenience store chain in Hong Kong and Singapore was acquired from Jardine Matheson in 1989.
As of 2012, 7-Eleven had 964 stores in Hong Kong, of which 563 were operated by franchisees. [47] Hong Kong reportedly has the second-highest density of 7-Eleven stores, after Macao. All 7-Eleven stores in Hong Kong accept the ubiquitous Octopus card as a method of payment. [48] They also accept payments for utility bills and public housing ...
Convenience Retail Asia Limited (CRA) (SEHK: 831) is a Hong Kong retailer which owns bakeries (Saint Honore Cake Shop, Bread Boutique) in Hong Kong, Macau and Mainland China. [ 2 ] [ 3 ] [ 4 ] It previously owned the Hong Kong franchise for convenience store chain Circle K , but sold the chain to the franchise owner in late 2020.
[1] [10] In Hong Kong and Macau, the stores are called OK in reference to the circle around the K. Circle K Hong Kong was founded in 1985 by Li & Fung Retailing (later Fung Retailing) as licensee of the name; [12] however, it was sold back to Couche-Tard in 2020. [13] [14] Circle K had 387 franchised locations throughout Hong Kong as of May ...
The retail conglomerate aims to focus on its mainstay 7-Eleven convenience store operation by having the supermarket business listed, Kyodo said. Seven & i will likely announce its plan to list ...
With this new name came a new logo: a large red “7” with “Eleven” spelled out and running through the numeral (visually similar to Tote’m’s totem pole T, but 7-Eleven, Inc. doesn’t ...
Daily Stop – based in Hong Kong, merged into 7-Eleven in 2004; Hess – based in New York City; sold its gas station/convenience store network to Marathon Petroleum in 2014; Jacksons Stores – became Sainsbury's at Jacksons in 2004; replaced with the Sainsbury's Local brand in 2008; Local Plus – based in the UK, bought by the Co-operative ...
The FamilyMart Company, Ltd. (Japanese: 株式会社ファミリーマート, Hepburn: Kabushikigaisha Famirīmāto) is a Japanese convenience store franchise chain, and a subsidiary of Itochu, a Japanese trading company. It is Japan's second largest convenience store chain, behind Seven-Eleven Japan.