Maintaining consistency and not over-reacting on pricing is key for retailers as customers seek stability, the CEO of the biggest global IKEA franchisee told Reuters on Monday.
Deputy CEO and CFO of Ingka Group Juvencio Maeztu, visits an IKEA store in London, Britain November 28, 2023 – REUTERS/Maja Smiejkowska/File Photo
After hiking prices during the Covid-19 pandemic due to supply chain disruptions, the world’s biggest furniture retailer has cut prices over the past two years as high inflation and weak housing markets dented consumer demand.
“Companies want to have predictability and stability, but consumers also want to have stability in prices,” Ingka Group CEO Juvencio Maeztu said on the side-lines of the World Economic Forum annual meeting in Davos, Switzerland. “You have to secure stability as much as possible in the low prices,” he told the Reuters Global Markets Forum.
IKEA has been forced to increase prices again on some products in the United States, where it depends more on imports than elsewhere, to offset the impact of tariffs. Importers are braced for a Supreme Court ruling on the legality of President Donald Trump‘s sweeping global tariffs.
Asked about the ruling Maeztu, who became CEO in November last year, said he did not want to speculate. “What we are learning is we need to take things as they come, one by one,” he said.
“We cannot over-react, especially in pricing. We need to keep some kind of consistency,” he said, adding it was more important than ever to “zoom out” from short-term disruptions.
Ingka Group, which owns stores in 32 markets and accounts for 87% of IKEA sales, reported its lowest annual sales since 2021 in October, after cutting prices to attract consumers. Consumer sentiment across markets is now a “mix of being cautious and optimistic, both at the same time,” Maeztu said.
Great Portland Estates (GPE) has appointed a new chief financial officer, with Jayne Cottam joining the London-centric commercial property firm’s board from 16 March.
Great Portland Estates
She succeeds Nick Sanderson who is stepping down as GPE’s chief financial & operating officer to take up the position of chief financial officer at British real estate services company Savills from 30 January.
Cottam “brings significant financial leadership and operational experience” stock market-listed GPE said on announcing her appointment to the London Stock Exchange Monday (19 January).
Most recently, she served as CFO of healthcare property company Assura from September 2017 to December 2025.
GPE chair William Eccleshare said: “Jayne brings a wealth of skills, knowledge and experience which will be invaluable to the board and management team as we progress our growth agenda.” And CEO Toby Courtauld added: “Jayne brings an excellent blend of financial, operational and leadership qualities with the right values for GPE’s culture.”
She joins at a time when analysts are noting that GPE continues to outperform the broader UK property sector, boosted not only by slowly increasing demand for London offices but also via its catchment area of prime prime West End retail sites that continue to be in high demand as the company continues to capture the ‘flight to quality trend’.
The company’s most recent investor commentary reiterated “stable-to-improving” leasing momentum across its core West End and City portfolio.
Footasylum‘s busy store-opening strategy of 2025 has continued into the new year with the footwear/sportswear business now planing to open a “landmark” new store in the Trinity Leeds shopping centre in April.
Footaylum
The 12,000 sq ft store “builds on Footasylum’s long-standing presence in Leeds”, and follows the “strong performance” of its former store at The Core shopping centre and last year’s “successful” pop-up at Trinity Leeds, it said.
The new store will be located on the centre’s lower ground floor in the unit previously occupied by Superdry.
To celebrate the spring opening, Footasylum said will be “bringing its social media strategy from the screens to the streets” with a series of events in-store.
It will also be partnering with local businesses “to celebrate the incredible talent within the city and connect with consumers at a local level”, it added.
On the latest opening, Shannon Osman, head of Retail at Footasylum, added: “Leeds has always been a strong market for [us]. The response to our pop-up in the Trinity shopping centre last year and our previous store at The Core demonstrated clear demand for a bigger, permanent Footasylum presence in the city.
“This store represents an important step as we continue our rollout across the UK and beyond under Aurelius’ ownership. Investing in high-quality retail spaces remains central to our multi-brand, multi-channel strategy, and we look forward to further openings in the year ahead.”
Footasylum added that the Trinity Leeds opening forms part of its ongoing UK store rollout and follows a number of recent openings including Cornmill Centre, Darlington, Croft Retail and Leisure Park, Bromborough and Forster Square shopping centre, Bradford.
Separately, the company also noted that it continues to progress its international expansion programme having signed a distribution agreement with MAD agency across the DACH region of Germany, Austria and Switzerland in November.
In addition, a new strategic partnership with Apparel Group was signed in December, “setting in motion plans to open Footasylum stores across the Gulf Cooperation Council region”, including the United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Kuwait, Bahrain and Oman.
Landsec’s prime shopping destinations had a shining Golden Quarter in terms of both sales and footfall with health & beauty (+13%) and clothing (+5%) sales becoming “the strongest-performing categories” across its major retail destinations.
Bluewater
The key quarter, which includes Christmas trading, “maintained healthy consumer demand, exceeding last year’s impressive figures and pulling further ahead of market averages”, the commercial property giant said in a trading statement Monday (19 January).
With Liverpool One and Bluewater in Kent among its portfolio of key shopping/entertainment destinations, total Golden Quarter sales rose 4.9% year-on-year, “significantly outperforming the national retail benchmark”, which it notes fell by 0.2%. And during the three peak Christmas shopping weeks, sales were up 6.5% year-on-year, it added.
Footfall across Landsec’s major shopping centres and outlets also rose by 0.7% over the quarter, compared with the national benchmark of -0.3% across the wider market, “supported by strong seasonal momentum”.
Since FY22, its retail destinations have also seen cumulative sales growth of 20%, outperforming the UK national average by 17ppt, it also noted.
Performance-wise, health & beauty’s particularly strong showing was helped by four out of the six new Sephora stores opened in the UK over the past 12 months having been at Landsec destinations, it added.
And let’s not forget the rising importance of leisure and hospitality, with both also playing key roles in consumer engagement, seeing a 6.2% growth in sales.
“This category also played a key role in increasing dwell times across Landsec’s centres, reinforcing the importance of [our] experience-led strategy in supporting retail spend and repeat visits”, it noted.
Bruce Findlay, managing director of Retail at Landsec, added: “Consumers continue to seek out destinations which combine a wide selection of the best brands with best in class experiences. This was certainly true during the Golden Quarter with sales and footfall for prime retail once again ahead of the wider market.
“With a reach of one in four UK consumers, we offer brands more footfall than any other retail platform. By combining this reach with the powerful data insights available to us, we’re creating a self-reinforcing growth engine that delivers higher sales and attracts the world’s best brands.”
He added: “Alongside a strong leisure and hospitality offer, we provide compelling, experience-led retail environments, positioning us well for continued success as we look ahead to 2026.”