Grade: F — Major Red Flags
Framework: Schilit *Financial Shenanigans* + Beneish M-Score + forensic accounting principles
Data: SEC EDGAR 10-K (Filed November 14, 2025) + Yahoo Finance
Auditor: Deloitte & Touche LLP — Unqualified opinion (1 critical audit matter: China goodwill impairment assessment)
One-line verdict: Starbucks' F grade reflects a company in the midst of a painful strategic reset. Revenue grew a modest 3% to $37.2B, but operating income was cut nearly in half from $5.4B to $2.9B — driven by $892M in restructuring charges (including 584 North America store closures), 830 basis points of operating margin contraction in North America, and investments in the "Back to Starbucks" strategy. The balance sheet is deeply negative: shareholders' equity is ($8.1B), the Z-Score is in distress territory at -0.99, and cash covers just 13% of $26.6B in debt. Deloitte flagged China goodwill as their sole critical audit matter, questioning whether the $2.8B allocated to the International segment (inclusive of the China reporting unit) is impaired. The M-Score of -2.78 is clean. This is a turnaround story, not a fraud story — but the financial structure is fragile.
| Metric | Result |
|---|---|
| Red Flags | **2** (AR vs revenue, cash vs debt) |
| Watch Items | **2** (leverage, soft asset growth) |
| Checks Completed | **17/18** |
| Beneish M-Score | **-2.78** (clean — unlikely manipulator) |
| Auditor | Deloitte & Touche LLP — Unqualified opinion |
The Coffee Giant's Numbers
Starbucks operates three reportable segments: North America (73.6% of revenue), International (21.0%), and Channel Development (5.3%), with Corporate and Other absorbing unallocated costs. The fiscal year ends on the Sunday closest to September 30; FY2025 ended September 28, 2025.
| Metric | FY2022 | FY2023 | FY2024 | FY2025 | Trend |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Revenue | $32.3B | $36.0B | $36.2B | $37.2B | +2.8% |
| Net Income | $3.3B | $4.1B | $3.8B | $1.9B | -51% |
| Gross Margin | 26.0% | 27.4% | 26.8% | 22.8% | -4.1pp |
| Net Margin | 10.2% | 11.5% | 10.4% | 5.0% | -5.4pp |
| ROE | N/M | N/M | N/M | N/M | Negative equity |
| CFFO | $4.4B | $6.0B | $6.1B | $4.7B | -22% |
| FCF | $2.6B | $3.7B | $3.3B | $2.4B | -26% |
From the 10-K: "Consolidated net revenues increased 3% to $37.2 billion in fiscal 2025 compared to $36.2 billion in fiscal 2024, primarily driven by incremental revenues from net new company-operated stores over the past 12 months, an increase in revenue in the Global Coffee Alliance, and incremental revenue from the acquisition of 23.5 Degrees Topco Limited."
Operating income collapsed from $5,408.8M to $2,936.6M, a 46% decline. The 10-K details: "Operating margin contracted 830 basis points to 11.5% [in North America], primarily driven by deleverage (approximately 310 basis points), restructuring costs associated with the closure of coffeehouses and simplification of our support organization (approximately 240 basis points) and investments in support of Back to Starbucks, which were largely in labor hours (approximately 180 basis points)."
Total operating expenses of $34.5B consumed 92.8% of revenue, up from 85.9% in FY2024. Restructuring and impairments alone were $892.0M vs just $2.4M in FY2024.
The Back to Starbucks Restructuring
Starbucks is executing a major strategic reset under new leadership. From the 10-K: "In support of our Back to Starbucks strategy, we completed our assessment of our coffeehouse portfolio late in the fourth quarter and made decisions to close stores that did not demonstrate a viable path to profitability, or meet our standards of delivering a warm, welcoming space for our customers and partners."
Key restructuring actions:
The 10-K projects: "we expect a fiscal 2026 reduction in our baseline North America company-operated revenues, partially offset by sales transfer to nearby coffeehouses that remain open. We also expect the future impact to operating margins to be slightly accretive."
Negative Equity and the Debt Structure
Starbucks has negative shareholders' equity of approximately ($8.1B), meaning total liabilities exceed total assets. This is a deliberate capital structure choice driven by aggressive share repurchases over many years, not an indicator of insolvency. But it creates genuine financial fragility.
| Debt Metric | FY2025 |
|---|---|
| Total Debt | $26.6B |
| Cash + Investments | $3.5B |
| Cash / Debt Ratio | 13% |
| Debt/EBITDA | 5.5x |
| Interest Coverage | 6.6x |
| Z-Score | -0.99 (distress) |
The 10-K discloses: "During the third quarter of fiscal 2025, we replaced our $3.0 billion unsecured five-year revolving credit facility" — indicating continued access to credit markets. Long-term debt was approximately $15.0B.
Interest coverage of 6.6x is adequate but declining — as operating income halved, this ratio will continue to compress if margins don't recover. The Debt/EBITDA of 5.5x exceeds the 4x threshold, triggering a watch flag.
Lease obligations compound the picture. As a retailer with 40,000+ stores, Starbucks has enormous off-balance-sheet commitments through operating leases, now capitalized as right-of-use assets and lease liabilities under ASC 842.
China Goodwill: The Critical Audit Matter
Deloitte flagged "Goodwill Impairment Assessments for China Reporting Unit" as their sole Critical Audit Matter.
From the auditor's report: "The goodwill balance was $3,368.9 million as of September 28, 2025, of which $2,842.6 million was allocated to the international segment, inclusive of the China reporting unit."
Deloitte noted: "We identified the goodwill impairment assessment of the China reporting unit as a critical audit matter because of the significant estimates and assumptions management made to determine the fair value. The audit of these estimates and assumptions required a high degree of auditor judgment when performing audit procedures to evaluate the reasonableness of management's estimates and assumptions related to revenue and expense projections, and the selection of significant valuation assumptions such as comparable company valuation multiples and discount rates."
Management concluded "the fair value of the China reporting unit was greater than its carrying value as of the measurement date" — no impairment recorded. But the fact that Deloitte singled this out suggests the margin between fair value and carrying value may be narrow.
Why this matters: China is Starbucks' second-largest market and has faced intense competitive pressure from domestic rivals like Luckin Coffee. If China same-store sales continue to deteriorate, the $2.8B+ in China-allocated goodwill could face impairment risk. The 10-K policy states: "If the carrying amount of the reporting unit exceeds the estimated fair value, an impairment charge is recorded to reduce the carrying value to the estimated fair value."
The 18-Point Screening
Revenue Quality
| # | Check | Result | Detail |
|---|---|---|---|
| A1 | DSO | Pass | DSO 13 days, +0 days YoY |
| A2 | AR vs Revenue | Fail | AR outpaced revenue for 2 consecutive years |
| A3 | Revenue vs CFFO | Pass | Revenue +2.8%, CFFO -22.1% |
A1: DSO of 13 days is excellent and reflects the nature of the business — predominantly cash and card transactions at point of sale.
A2: AR growth outpacing revenue for two years is technically a fail. With DSO of only 13 days and minimal absolute change, this is likely noise in a low-growth environment rather than a revenue recognition concern. Licensed store receivables and the Global Coffee Alliance are the primary AR components.
Expense Quality
| # | Check | Result | Detail |
|---|---|---|---|
| B1 | Inventory | Pass | Inventory +23.0% vs COGS +8.5% |
| B2 | CapEx | Pass | CapEx growth -17.0% vs revenue +2.8% |
| B3 | SG&A Ratio | Pass | SG&A/Gross Profit = 30.9% |
| B4 | Gross Margin | Pass | 22.8%, -4.1pp YoY |
B4: Gross margin declined from 26.8% to 22.8%. While the engine rates this as a "pass" (within its tolerance), a 4.1pp decline is material. From the 10-K, the drivers include: "Product and distribution costs" rising to 31.4% of revenue from 30.9%, and "Store operating expenses" surging to 45.9% from 42.3% — reflecting the labor investments in Back to Starbucks. The company is deliberately spending more on store labor, which compresses near-term margins but is intended to improve customer experience.
Cash Flow Quality
| # | Check | Result | Detail |
|---|---|---|---|
| C1 | CFFO vs NI | Pass | CFFO/NI = 2.56 |
| C2 | FCF | Pass | FCF $2.4B, FCF/NI = 1.32 |
| C3 | Accruals | Pass | Accruals ratio -9.0% |
| C4 | Cash vs Debt | Fail | Cash $3.5B covers only 13% of debt $26.6B |
C1: CFFO/NI of 2.56 is high because net income includes large non-cash restructuring charges. Stripping out the $892M restructuring, the ratio would be lower but still healthy.
C4: 13% cash-to-debt ratio is the lowest in this batch and reflects the aggressive capital return program. Starbucks has systematically returned cash to shareholders through buybacks, creating negative equity. The bet is that predictable cash flows from 40,000+ stores make the leverage sustainable.
Balance Sheet
| # | Check | Result | Detail |
|---|---|---|---|
| D1 | Goodwill + Intangibles | Pass | $3.5B, negative equity distorts ratio |
| D2 | Leverage | Watch | Debt/EBITDA = 5.5x (>4x) |
| D3 | Soft Asset Growth | Watch | Other assets grew 22.0% vs revenue 2.8% |
| D4 | Impairment | N/A | No write-off data |
D1: The engine shows -44% of equity because equity is negative. In absolute terms, $3.4B in goodwill against $37.2B in revenue is manageable — goodwill is only 9% of revenue. The China exposure ($2.8B) is the concentration risk.
D3: 22% soft asset growth vs 2.8% revenue growth warrants monitoring. This includes the UK acquisition (23.5 Degrees Topco Limited) which added operating lease right-of-use assets, intangible assets, and other liabilities.
M&A Risk
| # | Check | Result | Detail |
|---|---|---|---|
| E1 | Post-Acquisition FCF | Pass | FCF after acquisitions positive |
| E2 | Goodwill Surge | Pass | Goodwill change +3% YoY |
Beneish M-Score
| # | Check | Result | Detail |
|---|---|---|---|
| F1 | M-Score | Pass | -2.78 (< -2.22). Unlikely manipulator |
The M-Score is clean. The GMI of 1.179 reflects the gross margin decline (higher GMI means prior year had better margins) — but all other components are benign.
Key Risks from Item 1A
1. Brand erosion and consumer boycotts. The 10-K warns: "Negative commentary about Starbucks, even if inaccurate or malicious, has in the past, and could in the future, damage the value of our brand." It also notes: "developments affecting the value of our brands have in the past, and may in the future, trigger boycotts of our stores, products, and brand."
2. China competitive pressure. Deloitte flagged China goodwill as their sole CAM. Starbucks faces intense competition from Luckin Coffee and other domestic players. International segment operating income fell from $1,045M to $950M despite 7% revenue growth.
3. Coffee commodity prices. The 10-K states: "we expect commodity prices, particularly coffee, to continue to impact future results of operations." Green coffee prices have surged, and "the price and availability of these commodities... directly impact our results of operations."
4. Turnaround execution risk. The Back to Starbucks strategy requires sustained investment in labor, store renovations, and portfolio optimization. If comparable store sales don't recover, the company faces a "value trap" scenario: spending more while revenues stagnate.
Altman Z-Score and F-Score
| Model | Score | Interpretation |
|---|---|---|
| Altman Z-Score | **-0.99** | Distress zone (<1.81) |
| F-Score (Dechow) | **0.60** | Very low fraud probability (0.22%) |
The Z-Score of -0.99 is deeply in the distress zone, driven entirely by negative equity. The Altman model was designed for manufacturing companies and penalizes negative retained earnings heavily. For a franchise-like business with $4.7B annual CFFO, the Z-Score overstates bankruptcy risk. However, it correctly identifies that the capital structure leaves zero margin for error.
The F-Score's extremely low fraud probability (0.22%) is reassuring.
Summary
| # | Check | Result |
|---|---|---|
| A1-A3 | Revenue Quality | Pass-Fail-Pass |
| B1-B4 | Expense Quality | Pass-Pass-Pass-Pass |
| C1-C4 | Cash Flow Quality | Pass-Pass-Pass-Fail |
| D1-D4 | Balance Sheet | Pass-Watch-Watch-N/A |
| E1-E2 | M&A Risk | Pass-Pass |
| F1 | Beneish M-Score | Pass |
Grade: F. A company in strategic transition with a fragile balance sheet.
Starbucks is executing a high-stakes turnaround. The Back to Starbucks strategy is deliberately depressing near-term earnings (operating income down 46%, net income down 51%) to invest in store quality, labor, and brand recovery. The 584 store closures and $892M restructuring charge are one-time costs designed to right-size the portfolio.
But the financial structure amplifies the risk:
The M-Score (-2.78) and F-Score (0.22% fraud probability) provide clean signals — there is no evidence of earnings manipulation. This is a turnaround execution risk, not an accounting risk.
**Disclaimer**: This report is based on Starbucks' FY2025 10-K (SEC EDGAR) and public financial data. This is NOT investment advice.
Data: SEC EDGAR 10-K (Filed November 14, 2025) + Yahoo Finance
Auditor: Deloitte & Touche LLP (Unqualified opinion, 1 critical audit matter)
