|
SILANG,
CAVITE—Gourmet Farms Inc. (GFI), the largest local
supplier of freshly roasted coffee to premier hotels and
restaurants in the country, is unfazed by the rising
inflation and strengthening peso. Its officials are
projecting a 23-percent growth in the company this year,
with a multimillion-peso expansion plan in place for the
Visayas, starting in Cebu.
In an
interview with select reporters, Ernest Escaler, chairman
and president of GFI, said: “No [we’re not affected by
higher inflation, higher peso rate], because we’re
practically domestic. We’re not dependent on anything
imported. That’s the whole concept of Gourmet Farms,
[which] is to provide world-class products from a purely
domestic source. So from Day One, the whole concept of
Gourmet Farms is that we can prepare gourmet products
without having to resort to imported materials. So the
higher the dollar is, the higher prices rise, we become
more competitive.”

GOURMET Farms Inc. chairman
and president Ernest Escaler is all smiles as his company
continues its growth and expansion despite higher
inflation and an unstable peso; (inset) an array of
products from his farms.
Aside from
its seven types of premium ground coffee blends, including
pure arabica and barako (Excelsa), GFI also has three
other product lines: six different herbal teas using
indigenous herbs and vegetables such as ginger, sambong,
banaba, ampalaya, pito-pito and lagundi; 13 kinds of pasta
sauces, dips and salad dressings under its Kitchen
Exclusives line; and 14 varieties of organically grown
lettuce and culinary herbs and spices.
In 2007
the company posted P90 million in sales from its three
main lines: roasted coffee and herbal teas (P45 million),
dips and dressings (P20 million), and fresh produce (P25
million). This year GFI projects sales hitting P111
million from its gourmet coffee and teas (P60 million),
bottled products under Kitchen Exclusives (P23 million),
and fresh produce (P28 million).
According
to Ronaldo Rizal Pablo, sales and marketing manager for
GFI, “The majority of our coffee sales in 2008 will come
from
Cebu and the Visayas.” In the second quarter of the year, GFI
already opened its office in
Cebu and has begun making its way into the local supermarkets,
such as the Gaisano chain.
About 50
percent of the annual company turnover comes from the
sales of its produce and bottled products in premier
supermarkets, said Pablo, while the rest comes from food
services, which include major fast-food chains, premier
restaurants and hotels, which the company supplies with
customized coffee blends.
Escaler
also disclosed that the company recently signed an
agreement with the L’Opera Group of Italian restaurants,
“which asked us to supply all their coffee requirements.”
He sees
this as proof that there is a market for premium coffee
blends created in the Philippines. “The Italians are the
world’s coffee connoisseurs. Why should they pay P1,200
per kilo for an Italian coffee, when they can pay P700 per
kilo for Philippine superior coffee?”
Escaler
also encouraged more local restaurants to offer
Philippine-produced coffee, rather than the foreign brands
now flooding the market, to help boost farmers’ incomes.
“You buy the Lavazza and Illy at P1,200 per kilo, you’re
supporting the farmers in
Colombia,
in Brazil. You buy our coffee, you’re supporting our local
economy. Pero itatapat ko, our premium coffee with
Lavazza or Illy, we are better than them! Don’t forget
they were roasted a year ago, eight months ago. Our coffee
was roasted just days ago.”
While it
doesn’t grow coffee on its own farm, the company sources
100 percent of its coffee beans from farmers in Benguet
and Batangas. GFI also owns the largest coffee roaster in
the Philippines, with the capacity to roast 60 tons of
beans every day on an eight-hour shift, five times a week.
Other coffee companies and food-service companies tap GFI
to roast their beans.
While
officials declined to reveal the company’s budget for
capital expenditures this year, they said much of it will
go into its expansion to Cebu and “developing new
products.”
According
to its web site, Gourmet Farms was incorporated in
December 1987 as a wholly owned subsidiary of ECI Trading
Corp. (ECITC), then a Philippine Board of
Investments-registered exporter of Philippine green coffee
beans. ECITC is the flagship of Ernest Escaler Group of
Companies, and was once one of the top 1,000 corporations
in the country.
In the
19th century, the
Philippines
was one of four top coffee-producing countries in the
world. A blight in the 1890s wiped out local coffee crops,
giving way to South American countries to enter and
eventually dominate the world market. At its peak in 1986,
Philippine coffee exports reached $186 million. The
scrapping of world coffee quotas and the Philippines’
lifting of quantitative restrictions on foreign coffee in
2004 have led to low coffee prices in the country, thus
discouraging local farmers from planting the crop.
According
to the Bureau of Agricultural Statistics, ground coffee
imports amounted to $63,283 (FOB) in 2006, while exports
of the same amounted only to $37,676. Local coffee
production dipped 1 percent to 104,000 metric in 2006. |