Starbucks Corporation (NASDAQ: SBUX) is the world’s largest coffeehouse chain, operating over 38,000 stores globally with a market capitalisation of approximately $120 billion. For Muslim investors asking “is Starbucks ethical-trading/” style=”color:#D8AF44;text-decoration:underline” title=”Ethical Trading”>halal?”, the financial screening result is a clear fail. Despite an overwhelmingly permissible product (coffee), Starbucks’ extreme leverage places it well beyond Shariah compliance thresholds.
What We Screen For
Shariah-compliant equity screening examines three core financial ratios:
- Debt Purity — Measures interest-bearing debt relative to market capitalisation. Higher scores indicate lower debt dependency.
- Liquidity Purity — Assesses whether a company’s assets are predominantly productive. Scores above 50% are preferred.
- Revenue Purity — Evaluates what share of revenue derives from permissible activities. Scores above 67% indicate compliance.
The Numbers
| Screening Ratio | Starbucks Score | Threshold | Status |
|---|---|---|---|
| Debt Purity | 0.00% | >50% | ✗ Fail |
| Liquidity Purity | 97.66% | >50% | ✓ Pass |
| Revenue Purity | 93.91% | >67% | ✓ Pass |
| Overall Ethical Score | 56.34% | — | Avoid Tier |
Detailed Assessment
Starbucks joins a pattern common among large consumer franchise companies — an entirely permissible business buried under extreme leverage.
The debt purity score of 0% is the critical failure. Starbucks carries over $14 billion in long-term debt whilst maintaining deeply negative shareholders’ equity. The company has deliberately borrowed to fund its aggressive share buyback programme, returning more capital to shareholders than the business generates. This has created a balance sheet where liabilities far exceed assets — the most severe possible result on the debt purity screen.
The liquidity purity at 97.66% is excellent. Starbucks’ assets are predominantly productive — store leasehold improvements, roasting facilities, equipment, and inventory. The company’s physical infrastructure scores very well on this metric.
The revenue purity at 93.91% passes comfortably. Starbucks’ revenue comes from coffee, tea, food, and merchandise sales — all permissible. The slight discount may reflect minor income from stored value card interest (Starbucks holds billions in customer prepayments on gift cards) or ancillary sources.
Like Home Depot and McDonald’s, Starbucks demonstrates that a perfectly halal business can become non-compliant purely through financial engineering decisions. The Avoid Tier designation reflects both this compliance failure and broader business challenges.
Shariah-Compliant Alternatives in Consumer
Investors seeking consumer sector exposure may consider:
- Costco (COST) — Watch Tier, 84.40% ethical score. Passes all three screens with strong margins.
- ExxonMobil (XOM) — 87.85% ethical score. Different sector, strong compliance profile.
Explore the full list on our Ethical Trading Screener.
Further Research
View the full Starbucks profile on our SBUX Ticker Page.
Explore Shariah-screened equities on our Ethical Trading Screener.
Deepen Your Understanding
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