Bangkok Post

IKEA to Raise Prices as Global Supply Costs Keep Rising

Furniture giant says transport and raw materials are getting more expensive

- JOSHUA KIRBY

IKEA said it would increase the prices of its products around the world as the furniture giant grapples with rising transport and rawmateria­ls costs.

Ingka Holding BV, the biggest owner and operator of IKEA stores, said it planned to raise prices across the group by around 9% on average, with variations depending on country and range, amid a global squeeze on supply chains and higher associated costs.

“IKEA continues to face significan­t transport and raw-material constraint­s driving up costs, with no anticipate­d break in the foreseeabl­e future,” Ingka said Thursday, adding that it expected disruption­s to continue well into 2022.

The Swedish company said the largest cost increases relate to transporta­tion and purchasing prices, and are particular­ly affecting North America and Europe.

“For the first time since higher costs have begun to affect the global economy, we have to pass parts of those increased costs onto our customers,” said Tolga Öncü, retail operations manager at Ingka’s core IKEA Retail division. He said the company needed to take the pricing action now to safeguard its competitiv­eness and resilience.

Mr. Öncü said the company planned to give back to customers any decrease in purchase prices it gets, and that IKEA was working to expand its lowestpric­e ranges as a proportion of its total.

To mitigate the impact of supplychai­n disruption­s and improve the availabili­ty of products, the company said different parts of the family-controlled retail empire had started chartering extra vessels and loaders, while working with partners to secure raw materials and logistics capabiliti­es.

Earlier this year, IKEA said a significan­t share of its products were missing from store shelves around the world because of transporta­tion strains in many of its biggest markets.

For example, at one point in the U.K. the company estimated that 10% of items — about 1,000 products among 10,000 — weren’t available in the country.

Still, IKEA has said shortages haven’t significan­tly impacted sales because it has a big enough range to offer shoppers alternativ­es.

In October, IKEA said revenue rose by 6.3% to 37.4 billion euros, equivalent to around $42.4 billion, in the financial year ended Aug. 31.

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