Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

ICA Gruppen

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Type
  
Private Aktiebolag

Key people
  
Per Strömberg (CEO)

Owner
  
Hakon Invest (100%)

Parent organization
  
Hakon Invest

Genre
  
Retailing, banking

Revenue
  
96,863 MSEK (2012)

Founded
  
1938

ICA Gruppen httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaenthumb2

Area served
  
Sweden, Denmark, Estonia, Norway, Lithuania and Latvia

CEO
  
Per Stromberg (16 Apr 2012–)

Headquarters
  
Solna Municipality, Sweden

Subsidiaries
  
ICA Banken, ICA Norge AS, Rimi Baltic

Founders
  
Hakon Swenson, Karl-Erik Karlsson-Kyhlstedt, Emil Clemedtson, John Rudolf Liwendahl

Profiles

ICA Gruppen AB (publ) ("ICA Group"; Inköpscentralernas aktiebolag, lit. the Purchasing Centres' Corporation) is a Swedish retailer with a focus on food and health. The group also owns a bank, real estate division, a pharmacy chain and the Hemtex soft furnishings chain.

Contents

The company was started in 1938, based on a business model which was introduced by Hakonbolagen in 1917. Most of its operations are based in Scandinavia, and the company is the largest retail company in the Nordic countries.

The company was owned by the participating retailers until 2000 when half of the company was sold to the Dutch retailer Ahold. It acquired a further 10% in 2004. Ahold is prevented by contractual obligation from exercising majority control over ICA. In 2013 Ahold sold its shares to Hakon for $3.1bn.

An approximation of the usual pronunciation of the name in Sweden for an English speaker would be 'ee-kah'.

Sweden

In Sweden, ICA Sverige AB operates about 1,350 retail stores as of 2009. The stores have different profiles, depending on location, range of products and size:

  • ICA Nära ("ICA Nearby") — Convenience-type stores for daily retail needs.
  • ICA Supermarket — Mid-size supermarkets, located near where customers dwell or work carrying a wide range of products.
  • ICA Kvantum — Superstores for large, planned purchases. Large spaces allocated for traffic and parking. Typically located outside of the cities.
  • MAXI ICA Stormarknad — Hypermarkets with a full range of groceries as well as fashions, homewares, entertainment and electrical. Smaller stores do not offer the fashion and electrical ranges while the largest stores also have a DIY and gardening department.
  • Each store is owned and operated separately, but operations are coordinated within the group. All feature ICA brand products.

    During 2009, ICA Sverige AB had sales of 59 billion SEK (excluding VAT). A major ICA location is in Västerås, where they have a logistics center.

    Since December 2001, ICA has run a series of television commercials featuring the staff and customers of a fictional ICA store. As of Mid January 2015 512 commercials have aired. Since 2007 it is listed at the Guinness World Records as the longest running television advertising drama.

    ICA meat repackaging controversy

    In December 2007, a meat repackaging fraud scheme was made known to the public. Hans Hallén, a former quality control manager for supermarket chain ICA has revealed that the company knew that meat was being illegally repackaged as early as 2003. Hans Hallén, who monitored ICA stores in southern Sweden from 2003–2005, said he had informed the company's managers of the exact practices that were exposed on 5 December 2007 by the Sveriges Television in its weekly investigative television programme Uppdrag granskning. According to Hallén, many stores engaged in practices such as repackaging meat in order to change the expiry date.

    Norway

    ICA Norge AS runs about 600 stores in Norway as of 2009. Store sales were at approximately 21 billion SEK (excluding VAT). Formerly known as Hakongruppen and owned by Stein Erik Hagen, it operated solely RIMI discount stores until ICA bought the chain, and transformed many of the stores to the ICA brand. After the take-over ICA has been losing market shares in Norway. ICA Norway is divided into four different stores:

  • Matkroken
  • ICA Nær (closing 2012-2014)
  • ICA Supermarked
  • ICA Maxi (closed 2012)
  • RIMI (a chain of food stores)
  • In 2014 ICA stores was sold to Coop Norge. ICA Supermarked was changed to Coop Xtra and Coop Prix.

    Rimi Baltic

    ICA's wholly owned subsidiary Rimi Baltic operates discount stores, supermarkets and hypermarkets across Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania.

    In 2010, Rimi Baltic's net sales was 10,352 MSEK.

    ICA Bank

    ICA Bank operates in Sweden and has agency agreements with nearly all ICA stores in the country. The basic idea is to offer banking services that build loyalty among ICA's customers, as well as to increase the share of store transactions executed with ICA's own cards instead of more expensive cards from other banks. Sales amounted to 612 MSEK in 2010.

    ICA Real Estate

    ICA Real Estate's mission is to satisfy the Group's need for the right properties in the right locations in Sweden and Norway. This is currently done by owning, renting and strategically developing marketplaces. The Group currently owns around 180 store properties.

    Statoil

    Until the mid-1990s, Statoil and ICA jointly operated Statoil Detaljhandel AB (Statoil Retail Ltd) which ran approximately 1,300 petrol stations in Scandinavia, many branded under the name ICA Express. ICA has since sold its 50 percent share of the business back to Statoil and the ICA name was removed from the petrol stations during 2007.

    Denmark

    ICA previously had a 50 percent stake in the ISO chain of supermarkets in the Copenhagen region, Denmark. In 2004, ICA sold its entire holding in ISO.

    Netto Sweden

    The Swedish operation of Danish supermarket chain Netto was founded in 2002 as a joint venture between Dansk Supermarked and ICA. The joint venture was named Netto Marknad AB. At the end of 2006, ICA announced it was pulling out of the joint venture, reducing its stake from 50 to 5 percent. Twenty-one of the Netto stores in the Stockholm and Västmanland regions were transferred to ICA's ownership and rebranded to ICA's own formats or closed during 2007.

    References

    ICA Gruppen Wikipedia


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