Ikea denies founder's retirement

Ikea denies founder's retirement

STOCKHOLM - Agence France-Presse

A file picture shows Sweden's Ingvar Kamprad, founder of furniture retail chain IKEA during a news conference in Lausanne, March 20, 2006. REUTERS photo

Swedish furniture giant Ikea denied today that its 86-year-old founder Ingvar Kamprad had formally handed over the running of the business to his three sons, as a company official told a Swedish daily.
 
"Ingvar will no longer be there to give his point of view, give advice or support," Goeran Grosskopf, chairman of Ingka Holding, the Dutch parent company that comprises all of the family-owned Ikea businesses, told the daily Expressen.
 
But Grosskopf later denied the report.
 
"With regard to the media reports about Ingvar Kamprad, I want to underline that we still have the pleasure of having him as Senior Advisor to the Supervisory Board for Ingka Holding BV," he said in a written statement to the online edition of newspaper Svenska Dagbladet.
 
Expressen also based its report on an interview with Kamprad's three sons Peter, Jonas and Mathias Kamprad in an internal Ikea newsletter.
 
But the company denied that Kamprad had passed the torch, stressing that he was still acting as an advisor, and said the interview with his sons did not imply that there had been any changes.
 
"There has been no news," Ikea spokeswoman Ylva Magnusson told AFP.
 
As an unlisted company with a complex ownership structure, gaining insight into the inner workings of Ikea is difficult.
 
The sons have maintained a low profile over the years as they slowly moved up through the company, and have rarely spoken out in the media.
 
In June, speculation that Ingvar Kamprad was preparing his departure from the unlisted group mounted when his three sons posed for a picture for Swedish financial daily Dagens Industri and a company spokesman detailed their individual responsibilities.
 
Peter, "who turns 48 this year", was described as "the economist" who has taken control over the conglomerate Ikano, the Luxembourg-based company that runs the family's financial, property, insurance, capital management and retail holdings.
 
Jonas, "who will be 46 this year", is "the creative designer and product developer" who sits on the board of Ingka Holding, Dagens Industri said.
 
And Mathias, "who turns 43 this year", is described as "the businessman and initiative-taker in the troika" who focuses on Inter Ikea Holding, which owns the Ikea concept and brand.
 
The Swiss magazine Bilan in June named Ingvar Kamprad Europe's richest man, with an estimated fortune of $37.5 billion including the holdings in the family-owned foundation.

Ingvar Kamprad founded Ikea in 1943 in his hometown of Aelmhult in southern Sweden.
 
He is known for being relentlessly frugal and has been harshly criticised for his ties to the Nazi youth movement during World War II, which he later described as the "folly of youth" and "greatest mistake of my life".