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Ikea to expand China mall development plans

Swedish furniture giant Ikea is looking to expand further into China, its shopping centre development arm said Thursday, beyond three new malls already announced in major Chinese cities.

Ikea to expand China mall development plans

Inter Ikea Centre Group, or IICG, said Ikea would partner with French supermarket Auchan, Chinese appliance retailer Suning and cinema operator Jin Yi Film for the three malls in Beijing, central Wuhan and eastern Wuxi.

“Ikea is eyeing first and second tier cities for more stores and we are looking for suitable cities and locations along with them,” Ding Hui, managing director of IICG China, told a news conference.

“Shanghai is certainly one of our targets,” he said.

Ikea has said it plans to more than double its number of stores in China from the current eight by 2015.

IICG, based in Denmark, currently owns and operates 30 shopping centres in 14 countries, mostly in Europe, and China is its first stop in its foray into Asia.

It announced last year it would invest $1.2 billion in the next five years to build the three regional shopping centres in Beijing, Wuxi, and Wuhan.

But the final investment for the three projects, which have a combined gross leasable area of 500,000 square metres could exceed that, Ding said.

The combined retail space of its current 30 shopping centres totals 1.85 million square metres.

The Wuxi shopping mall is scheduled to open in late 2013, followed by Beijing in 2014 and Wuhan in 2015.

Ikea and the malls’ three other anchor tenants will fill around half of the leasable areas.

China’s rapid urbanisation would support Ikea’s ambitious expansion plans, Ding said, adding he was not worried about the outlook for the shopping centres, which are much larger than most of its European malls.

The planned Beijing shopping centre, located in the capital’s less-populous southern outskirts, has 7,000 parking spaces and cost IICG at least five billion yuan ($758 million).

“You have to take into account the urbanisation trend and be very forward thinking,” Ding said.

“We had thought the 1,500 parking lots at the Beijing Ikea store was enough but it turned out cars had to park outside in the second month since opening,” said Ding, who was previously vice president and chief financial officer of Ikea China.

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SHOPPING

Danish stores to remove MobilePay from payment options

Over 500 shops in Denmark will no longer offer the popular app MobilePay as a payment option after the platform ordered merchants to purchase new hardware.

Danish stores to remove MobilePay from payment options

The Dagrofa corporation, which owns chains including the Meny and Spar supermarkets, has announced it will remove MobilePay as a payment option in its stores, business media Finans reports.

The decision could impact less than 1 percent of payments in the store which are currently made using MobilePay, the company said.

READ ALSO: 17 essential phone apps to make your life in Denmark easier

“The primary reason is that MobilePay will from now on demand a technical setup for the payment system in stores and with the investment that will neee, we have concluded that’s not the way we want to go,” Dagrofa’s head of communications Morten Vestberg told Finans.

Dagrofa owns the Let-Køb and Min Købmand convenience store chains in addition to Meny and Spar.

The decision will mean MobilePay is removed from some 530 stores altogether, although individual stores may choose to retain the payment app.

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