IKEA’s annual sales fell for a second consecutive year, it reported on Thursday, as the budget furniture retailer stuck to a strategy of cutting prices to attract cash-strapped consumers and gain market share in a fiercely competitive market.
A worker walks past the façade of an IKEA store in Barcelona, Spain, April 26, 2024 – REUTERS/ Nacho Doce/ File Photo
Having hiked prices during the pandemic due to supply chain disruptions, the world’s biggest furniture retailer has cut prices by 10% on average over the past two years as high inflation and weak housing markets worldwide dented consumers’ demand for furniture and homeware.
Global IKEA retail sales in the 2025 financial year- which ended on August 31- fell 1%, or 0.3% adjusted for currency effects, to 44.6 billion euros ($51.9 billion). The total number of products sold, however, was up 3%, with customer numbers and store visits also up.
“One of the reasons we could take that decision was the fact that we are not on the stock exchange- we can be very long term together with our franchisees and decide that it’s most important right now to have better prices,” Jon Abrahamsson Ring, CEO of IKEA franchisor Inter IKEA, told Reuters. “We do that because we see that people in all our 63 markets, their wallets are thinner right now and we see that consumer confidence for many years has gone down.”
IKEA has not yet raised prices in the US despite higher tariffs on imports increasing its costs, Abrahamsson Ring said. IKEA is trying to absorb the extra cost, he added, though he left the door open to possible future price increases. “We have not come to that point yet, but it will maybe eventually come,” he said.
IKEA competes in the US with Wayfair and Walmart, but more of its furniture is made in factories in Europe, giving it a slight advantage over retailers relying on imports from China which face a higher tariff rate.
“The agreement that today exists between the European Union and the US… that at least gives us good predictability and we want that to stay consistent,” said Abrahamsson Ring.
Ingka Group, the biggest IKEA franchisee which owns stores in 31 markets, also reported on Thursday its lowest annual sales since 2021, down 1.6% at 39 billion euros due to price cuts, but said quantities sold were up 1.6%.
Ingka CEO Jesper Brodin told Reuters he was cautiously optimistic about consumer spending picking up again. “The impact of falling inflation and falling interest rates… it usually takes a while before people open their wallets. We are starting to see the tendencies towards that,” he said, adding that uncertainty over trade and conflict around the world made it difficult to predict.
Louis Vuitton has named Grammy Award–winning artist Future as its newest ambassador, deepening the maison’s ongoing commitment to celebrating talent across cultural landscapes.
Louis Vuitton names Future as its newest ambassador. – Louis Vuitton
The Atlanta-born rapper, producer and composer continues to dominate the global music landscape. Most recently, he released back-to-back chart-topping albums, “We Don’t Trust You” and “We Still Don’t Trust You”, which became an international phenomenon and further cemented Future’s status as a cultural trailblazer. Over the course of his career, Future has earned 11 number-one albums and multiple chart-leading singles.
“Future embodies the core values of Louis Vuitton, including creativity, artistry, and a pioneering spirit that resonates with international audiences,” the maison said in a statement. “His unique style and creative vision make him an invaluable addition to the Louis Vuitton family.”
It’s not the first time Future collaborates with Louis Vuitton. He attended Louis Vuitton’s Men’s Spring–Summer 2026 show in Paris at the invitation of Pharrell Williams, a longtime friend and creative collaborator. Earlier this year, Future also appeared at the 2025 Met Gala, themed “Superfine: Tailoring Black Style,” wearing a custom Louis Vuitton grey quarter-zip ensemble layered with a tie, designed by Williams.
Rent the Runway announced on Monday sales for the third quarter rose 15.4% to $87.6 million, with the U.S. rental platform clocking growth across its subscriber base.
Rent the Runway
The New York-based firm said ending active subscribers grew 12.4% to 148,916 during the three months, and average active subscribers totalled 147,645, up 12.9% on the prior-year period.
Meanwhile, total subscriber numbers lifted 6.1% to 185,166 during the quarter ending October 31.
In line with strong sales growth, the company reported a net income of $76.5 million, as compared to a loss of $18.9 million in the third quarter last year.
“This year we’ve repositioned ourselves for sustained growth in the category,” said Jennifer Hyman, co-founder and CEO of Rent the Runway.
“Not only did we execute operationally on our stated goals to return to our customer-obsessed origins, reinvigorate our brand, and drive double-digit growth in subscribers; but we also restructured our balance sheet, closing the recapitalization transactions in October that offer improved financial flexibility to better position us for continued growth.”
Earlier this year, Rent the Runway said it will hand over a controlling stake in the company as part of a plan to cut debt and grow.
The deal, with lender Aranda Principal Strategies and other partners, will wipe more than $240 million of debt from Rent the Runway’s balance sheet, according to an emailed statement released in August.
Looking ahead, Rent the Runway said it forecasts revenue of between $323.1 million and $325.1 million for the full-year.
Elisabetta Caldera, 55, has been named global chief people and organization officer for Chanel Ltd., succeeding Claire Isnard, 64, starting next month, the company told Bloomberg News in a statement.
Isnard is retiring after more than 17 years at the group, which had a workforce of around 38,400 employees last year. Caldera will join Chanel’s leadership team, reporting to Chief Executive Officer Leena Nair, and be based in London.
Caldera spent more than four years as global chief human resources officer at Aegon Ltd. where she was also part of the insurer’s executive committee. The Italian executive previously spent 17 years at Vodafone Group Plc in various HR roles until 2021 when she joined Aegon.
Under CEO Nair, the former head of HR at Unilever Plc, Chanel has been rebuilding the roster of top managers at the company as an older guard retires.
Chanel, known for its No. 5 fragrance, is privately owned by the billionaire brothers Alain and Gerard Wertheimer whose fortunes are estimated at about $43 billion each, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index.
The company, founded in Paris but headquartered in London, reports its financial performance once a year, generally around late May. Revenue fell 4.3% to $18.7 billion in 2024 on a comparative basis with operating profit sliding by almost a third partly due to heavy advertising spending and a rise in hiring.