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IKEA

Ikea to revamp stores as online business grows

The company that controls most Ikea branches is repurposing its stores to adapt to soaring online business.

Ikea to revamp stores as online business grows
Photo: Lise Åserud/NTB/TT/Scanpix

Ingka Group said on Monday it was investing three billion euros ($3.2 billion) by the end of 2023 to open new shops and modernise existing ones.

“The investment will allow us to renovate and repurpose already existing stores”, Tolga Öncü, retail operations manager at Ingka Group, which manages over 400 of Ikea’s 500 or so stores worldwide, told AFP.

As more and more businesses focus on online shopping, the company noted in a statement that “our stores remain one of our biggest strengths”.
But Öncü also stressed that physical stores were being revamped to support online purchases.

He cited the example of a branch in Kuopio, Finland, which has been upgraded to support shipping online orders.

The expenditure of three billion euros by the end of next year marks a step up for Ingka, which invested 2.1 billion euros in its new and existing shops between 2019 and 2021.

Major investments of almost 1.2 billion euros are planned in London, and Ingka will also continue investing in markets which are considered mature, such as Spain and Germany.

Founded and headquartered in Sweden, Ikea is owned by a complex structure of companies and foundations based mainly in the Netherlands, Switzerland and Liechtenstein.

Traditionally, massive Ikea stores have been placed in suburbs or on the outskirts of towns, but the furniture giant started a change in strategy by opening its first city centre shop in Hamburg in 2014, and a new model with a smaller offering in Paris in 2019.

It is also planning to open new stores in or near city centres, notably in Nice this week and in Stockholm this summer.

The pioneer of flat-pack furniture to be assembled at home was founded by Ingvar Kamprad in 1943, and has grown into a multinational giant present in some thirty countries.

At the beginning of March, Ikea announced the suspension of its major activities in Russia and Belarus following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

The move affected nearly 15,000 employees, 17 stores and three production sites as well as 47 suppliers in Russia and 10 in Belarus. “Our business will remain paused until further notice,” Öncü told AFP.

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HEALTH

Swedish convenience stores to stub out sale of cigarettes

Sweden's two most well-known convenience store chains, Pressbyrån and 7-Eleven, plan to completely remove cigarettes from their shelves in the long run.

Swedish convenience stores to stub out sale of cigarettes

Reitan Convenience, the company that owns the chains, is set to phase out their sale of cigarettes and ultimately stop selling them, it said in a press statement.

“The risks of smoking tobacco are well known, both when it comes to health risks but also the impact on the environment and labour conditions in the production chain. We’re also seeing that some countries are introducing various forms of bans on smoking, for example progressive age bans,” Reitan’s CEO for the Swedish market, Anna Wallenberg, told Swedish news agency TT.

The UK and New Zealand have both spoken of introducing laws to ban young people from buying tobacco.

Just over half of the chains’ tobacco sales today comes from cigarettes, and the rest is made up of other nicotine and smoke-free products as well as snus, Sweden’s moist tobacco pouches which may be part of the reason why the use of cigarettes is dropping in Sweden.

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Reitan Convenience also said it aims to phase out the sale of products containing palm oil, a controversial oil criticised by environmental and human rights groups for causing deforestation and human rights violations in the tropics where the palms are grown.

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