7-Eleven bets a Japanese makeover can fix its U.S. stores
Investment
CNBC

7-Eleven bets a Japanese makeover can fix its U.S. stores

Why This Matters

7-Eleven is revamping its U.S. stores with a Japanese fix, as it tries to spark more food sales at the convenience stores.

October 7, 2025
12:00 PM
3 min read
AI Enhanced

In this articleCASY your favorite stocksCREATE FREE ACCOUNT7-Eleven may have pioneered the convenience store concept in the U.S., but its lackluster reputation in the country is forcing a major transformation across its more than 12,000 stores there.

Nearly 70% of 7-Eleven parent company Seven & i's total revenue comes from North America, and the U.S. makes up the majority of that.

Even so, sluggish performance has made the Japan-based company rethink its stores in the U.S."The U.S.

side remains a huge question mark," said Lorraine Tan, director of equity re for Asia at Morningstar. "Revenue-wise, it's a huge contributor. But fit-wise it's not.

"In its full fiscal year 2024, Seven & i's net income in North America dropped 17%, and it closed 444 underperforming stores.

Same-store sales and year-over-year traffic were both down in its first quarter 2025."They were just very focused on expansion", said Neil Saunders, managing director at data analytics company Global Data's retail and consumer division.

"What doesn't always happen is that you don't evolve the store concept and format in a way that's suited to changing consumer needs.

And I think 7-Eleven fell into that trap."Seven & i changed up its leadership with a new CEO, Stephen Dacus, in March 2025.

Dacus announced in August that the company needed to make urgent changes and that "long-term success can breed a certain complacency in the ." "This is our opportunity to redefine and reinvent ourselves," said Dacus.

A major part of the plan is revamping the food in North America. That includes adding healthier options for its ready-to-eat meals and introducing some fan favorites to the U.S.

market, the egg-salad sandwiches found in its Japanese locations.The company is also adding more of its prietary restaurants to existing locations, its Laredo Taco Company — which it inherited from its acquisition of Stripes — and southern-inspired chicken chain Raise the Roost.

It's planning on opening 1,300 food-focused "new large format stores" by 2030. The company noted the locations it has already revamped der 45% higher sales per store.

Restaurants can bring more traffic to 7-Eleven stores, but there are additional costs."I have mixed views on the restaurant side," said Tan.

These come in preparation for a potential IPO of the 7-Eleven North America convenience store in 2026.

Seven & i is planning to spin off the but stay on as a majority holder.It is also dealing with the fallout of a failed $47 billion takeover attempt by rival, and No.

2 player, Alimentation Couche-Tard.Watch this to learn more.

FinancialBooklet Analysis

AI-powered insights based on this specific article

Key Insights

  • Merger activity often signals industry consolidation and potential valuation re-rating for similar companies
  • Consumer sector trends provide insights into economic health and discretionary spending patterns

Questions to Consider

  • Does this M&A activity signal industry consolidation or strategic repositioning?
  • What does this consumer sector news reveal about economic health and spending patterns?

Stay Ahead of the Market

Get weekly insights into market shifts, investment opportunities, and financial analysis delivered to your inbox.

No spam, unsubscribe anytime