
Ikea appoints former store manager as first non-Swedish boss
has appointed the first non-Swedish chief executive of the most important company in its flat-pack furniture empire.
Juvencio Maeztu, a Spaniard who is deputy chief executive and chief financial officer of Ingka, will take over as boss of the group running nearly all Ikea stores from Jesper Brodin on November 5th.
Mr Brodin has led the world's largest furniture retailer for the past eight years through a particularly turbulent time, including the death of founder Ingvar Kamprad, a big business transformation including a push into city centres and online sales, and the Covid-19 and supply chain crises.
'I feel butterflies, but also humble, thankful and excited,' said Mr Maeztu, who started as a store manager for Ikea in Spain in 2001 and ran the Wembley store in London and the retailer's business in India.
READ MORE
'Ikea is always based on self-renewal – making things every day a bit better. I still see many opportunities to make Ikea more relevant and keep growing all around the world,' he told the Financial Times.
Ikea is moving away from only having big edge-of-town warehouses where customers must collect flat-packs and build furniture themselves by offering services such as delivery and assembly as well as opening city-centre stores in locations including London, Paris and Copenhagen.
Mr Brodin said on Wednesday that Ikea's transformation was 'late due to our own success' but it was now a full 'omnichannel' retailer serving customers both in stores and online, as well as using its vast warehouses to fulfil online orders.
Ingka, which operates 88 per cent of all Ikea stores, last year suffered a 5 per cent drop in revenues to €42 billion and a near-halving of net profit to €800 million as it prioritised price cuts after several years of increases because of supply chain issues.
Lars-Johan Jarnheimer, Ingka's chairman, said Ikea needed to continue addressing its biggest challenge of 'further reducing our prices'.
He added: 'When there is a CEO change in a listed company, it comes very often with a strategy change. It's not the case in Ikea where the strategy is already set by Ingvar [Kamprad].'
Mr Maeztu is only the second Ikea chief executive not to have been an assistant to Kamprad, who died in 2018 aged 91 having started the group as a teenager in rural Småland in Sweden.
'I have been dozens of times with Ingvar on the shop floor starting at five in the morning in the loading area and finishing at 10 in the evening with a hot dog. The important thing is that we all carry Ingvar's spirit, and this I feel very loyal to,' said Mr Maeztu.
Mr Brodin will work for Ikea until February when he will become a senior adviser to its charity and owner, the Ikea Foundation. A keen musician who recently released his debut album, Mr Brodin said he would seek to work with 'business and sustainability transformation as long as I can walk and talk'. – Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2025
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Irish Times
28 minutes ago
- Irish Times
European markets fall back as they await outcome of summit on Ukraine
European shares came off multi-month highs on Friday, as declines in heavyweight tech and financial shares offset gains from some corporate earnings. Meanwhile, investors monitored a crucial summit between US president Donald Trump and his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin over Ukraine. Investors hope the meeting could pave the way for a resolution of the Ukraine war, which has raged since February 2022. Dublin The Dublin market ended the week on a positive note, closing up half a per cent. Financial stocks were mixed on the day, with AIB and Bank of Ireland both edging lower by almost half a per cent each, while Permanent TSB was flat and insurer FBD gained 2.5 per cent to close at €14.35. READ MORE Food groups Kerry and Glanbia were both marginally lower, with Kerry down 0.13 per cent and Glanbia shedding 0.14 per cent. Insulation specialist Kingspan ended the week 1.7 per cent higher. Travel stocks rose, with Ryanair up 1.7 per cent and closing the day at €26.75. Shares in ferries group Irish Continental gained 1.45 per cent, closing the week at €5.60. London The FTSE 100 fell back after hitting a new all-time high to close lower on Friday. This was amid caution ahead of the US-Russia peace summit, hints of more tariffs and weak US consumer sentiment. The index closed down 38.34 points, 0.4 per cent, at 9,138.90. It had earlier reached an all-time intra-day high of 9,222.07. The FTSE 250 ended down 43.43 points, 0.2 per cent, at 21,758.24, and the AIM All-Share finished 0.86 of a point higher, 0.1 per cent, at 759.80. On the FTSE 100, mining stocks rose despite weak data from China. Anglo American rose 2.1 per cent, Glencore climbed 1.8 per cent and Antofagasta 1.2 per cent on hopes the soft figures will spark action from Chinese authorities. On a quiet day for company news, Associated British Foods ended up 0.2 per cent after confirming the acquisition of Hovis Group from private equity firm Endless. AB Foods plans to combine Hovis with its existing Allied Bakeries division to create a 'profitable UK bread business that is sustainable over the long term'. Europe The pan-European STOXX 600 index closed 0.1 per cent lower, after hitting a near five-month high earlier in the session. Aerospace and defence stocks fell 0.8 per cent ahead of the US-Russia summit on Ukraine. Technology stocks fell 0.6 per cent, weighing on the STOXX 600 index. ASML, the world's biggest supplier of computer chip-making equipment, fell 1 per cent after US peer Applied Materials lowered its fourth-quarter earnings forecast due to weak demand in China and impacts from tariff uncertainty. The Dutch firm had issued a similar warning in mid-July, saying it might not achieve its 2026 growth forecast. Chip stocks BE Semiconductor and ASMI dropped 3.3 per cent and 2.8 per cent, respectively. Healthcare shares, which have taken a beating this year from uncertainty around Trump's pharma tariffs, were on track for a recovery. The healthcare index logged its seventh consecutive session of gains, its longest streak since late January. Regional bourses were mixed, with Germany's DAX and the UK's FTSE declining, while France's CAC and Spain's IBEX posted gains. New York The Dow hit a record high earlier in the session, becoming the last of Wall Street's main indexes to soar to a new peak. Benchmark S&P 500 and the Nasdaq were losing ground, dragged down by technology, utilities and financials stocks. The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 0.09 per cent, the S&P 500 fell 0.25 per cent and the Nasdaq Composite fell 0.36 per cent. Shares in Intel jumped more than 2 per cent by lunchtime on Friday, following a 7 per cent bounce the previous day, after reports that the Trump administration had discussed an unusual move to acquire an ownership stake as part of a plan to revive the troubled US chipmaker. Shares of UnitedHealth Group surged more than 13 per cent on Friday after billionaire Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway bought five-million shares of the company, providing a shot in the arm for investors who think the health conglomerate will turn around under its new CEO. - Additional reporting: Reuters, PA


Irish Times
an hour ago
- Irish Times
Laya Healthcare to increase prices by 4.5% from October
Laya Healthcare is to increase prices by an average of 4.5 per cent from the beginning of October. The Irish health insurance provider, which has more than 700,000 customers, blamed higher demand for private and high-tech healthcare and said that new advances in medical technology were increasing costs. The increase comes following a separate increase in premiums of 6.6 per cent at the beginning of April, and a 6.5 per cent increase in October 2024. Ten existing plans will be retired from the start of October, with customers on those plans to be contacted by the company. The insurer said it will be introducing a number of new plans in their place. READ MORE Laya said that some plans would see reduced premiums, such as its Signify plan where prices for adults are set to decrease by 1 per cent and 25 per cent for children. Its Core Connect plan has also decreased in cost. [ Laya to hike health insurance prices by 6.6% on average Opens in new window ] 'The cost of delivering healthcare is going up across the world, and Ireland is no exception,' the managing director of Laya Healthcare, DO O'Connor said. 'Demand for health services is at an all-time high, particularly in the private and high-tech hospital settings where we're seeing a 14.8 per cent increase in 2025 claim costs [year-to-date] when compared to last year.' The insurance company boss said that advances in medical technology, while 'welcome improvements' come at the 'highest cost we've seen in over 25 years'. 'Our product review aims to strike a careful balance between delivering fast access to healthcare while safeguarding affordability of cover for our members,' he said, reiterating the company's commitment to giving its members faster access to healthcare. Commenting on the increase, health insurance expert Dermot Goode said the increase was 'expected' in line with the company's 'previous trends of increasing rates twice per year', in April and in October. 'It appears that all insurers are still struggling to contain these costs especially as members want access to the new emerging treatments, drug therapies and technology,' he said. Mr Goode said that 'more increases are expected as insurers look to review their rates in advance of the peak renewal period when half the market or about 1.25 million members look to renew their cover.' 'Members need to be wary of these average figures as the actual increase on their plan may be significantly higher,' he said.


Irish Times
2 hours ago
- Irish Times
Planning refused for Airbnb operator with 10 apartments close to Dublin Castle
Dublin City Council has refused planning retention to a significant Airbnb operator close to Dublin Castle and Temple Bar to continue offering its apartments for short-term letting to tourists. Dublin Castle Suites advertises its 10 apartments on the Airbnb platform and can earn up to €350 per night, per apartment on busy weekends. The owner of the apartments facing on to Parliament Street and Dame Street would earn only a fraction of its current rental income if the apartments are to be rented for long-term letting only. A question mark has now been put over the lucrative enterprise following the council's decision to refuse planning retention to allow the apartments to continue as short-term lets. READ MORE The applicant, Olympia Real Estate Limited, now has the option of appealing to An Coimisiún Pleanála, which could reverse the council's planning refusal. [ 'We can't afford to live here': Westport housing crisis leaves no room for locals as homeowners turn to Airbnb Opens in new window ] In its decision, the council noted that there was a general presumption in the Dublin City Council Development Plan against the provision of dedicated short-term tourist rental accommodation in the city due to the impact on the availability of housing stock. The council stated that Olympia Real Estate Ltd has not provided a sufficient justification for the provision of short lease apartments at this location. It found that the proposal to continue the apartments for short-term letting 'would create an undesirable precedent for similar type development and would devalue property in the vicinity'. Olympia Real Estate Limited lodged the planning application after the council issued it with a warning letter over the use of the apartments for short-term letting. Planning consultants for the applicants, Cunnane Stratton Reynolds (CSR), stated that 'enabling housing as short-term let accommodation in this instance redirects such demand away from mainstream housing'. 'The proposed tourism accommodation will assist in the attractiveness of the area for tourists and will promote a continued busy and vibrant city centre,' the consultants added. CSR stated that its client's ability to acoustically meet the standards of normal accommodation was not available given the protected status of the premises in question. They state 'in a period of substantial housing crisis these units cannot remain vacant'. Objecting to the planned retention, Fiachra Brennan of Oakcourt Park, Dublin 20 and who works on Parliament Street said that 'these are high-quality urban apartments which should be available on the long-term rental market'. 'The applicant has pointed to issues with regard to soundproofing and insulation – this should not preclude the use of the property for its intended purpose,' he said.