7-Eleven and Circle K reduce tobacco prices
Leading chains of convenience stores cut the cost of cigarettes by HK$2 to match news-stand prices, reversing an increase that had been introduced at about the same time as the higher tobacco tax in last month's budget.
Both 7-Eleven and Circle K now sell cigarette packs at HK$50 each, on a par with news-stand prices.
The chains raised cigarette prices by HK$2 to HK$3 on top of the HK$10 rise in tobacco tax last month. Sales at one 7-Eleven store dropped by more than half, while business at news-stands was unaffected, the South China Morning Post reported on Monday.
A spokeswoman for 7-Eleven said: 'The price of tobacco has been adjusted after negotiation with major suppliers.'
At 7-Eleven, the reversal was announced through an internal memo on Saturday.
One shop manager said the company made the about-turn to win back lost business. 'As I understand it, the wholesale price of cigarettes remains unchanged,' he said.
Before the tax increase, his outlet sold about 400 packs of cigarettes a day. That fell to about 170 after the rise. He said that after the HK$2 increase was withdrawn on Saturday, sales improved 10 per cent.