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When panic buying at a Hong Kong bakery chain led to a 3-day run on cakes, as thousands cashed in vouchers

  • When rumours spread that popular Hong Kong cake shop chain Maria’s was closing down in 1984, customers holding cake vouchers started panic buying
  • Around 400 bakers worked to deal with the surge in demand, including some recalled from leave. The run on the cake shops ended after three days

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One of the branches of Hong Kong bakery chain Maria’s that were under siege for three days in 1984 after rumours spread that it was going out of business. Holders of vouchers for its cakes rushed to cash them in. Some 400 bakers worked to keep up with demand. Photo: Sunny Lee

“Hongkong’s first known ‘cake run’ was pronounced over yesterday,” reported the South China Morning Post on May 22, 1984. “The Maria’s cake shop chain was relieved to find business as usual yesterday and no queues.

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“The chain’s founder, Mrs Maria Lee, and her top aides will hold a ‘post-mortem’ today in a bid to analyse the cause of the mysterious run. Some 400 bakers had to cope with the sudden surge in demand from Thursday to Sunday. Bakers who were on leave were called back to tackle the cake crisis.

“‘The meeting will also touch on the aftermath of the incident,’ Maria’s company manager, Mr Tse Kwok-ying, said yesterday. He described the present state of the multi-million dollar bakery chain as ‘just like mopping up a battlefield.’

“At the height of the run on Friday, hundreds of $18 gift voucher holders, mainly housewives, feverishly withdrew cakes from Maria’s outlets on both sides of the harbour, when rumours suggested the chain was on the brink of collapse.

Workers deliver a fresh supply of cakes to a Maria’s cake shop in Wan Chai, Hong Kong, following the three-day “cake run”. Photo: Sunny Lee
Workers deliver a fresh supply of cakes to a Maria’s cake shop in Wan Chai, Hong Kong, following the three-day “cake run”. Photo: Sunny Lee

“The bewildered Mrs Lee had to call a press conference to deny the rumours. Official clarification notices were prominently displayed in both Chinese and English papers in a bid to regain customer confidence.

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