Aldi wants to add 700 European stores by 2026
German discounter Aldi Nord is speeding up its foreign expansion. After implementing a new corporate structure for its European branch a few days ago, it is now embarking on a multi-billion-dollar plan to create 700 new outlets over the next three years.
Aldi hit the headlines twice in the past two weeks with operational measures: in mid-September the company created a separate holding company for its non-German European operations, and last Monday there was a reshuffle in the board with the last member of the founding family Albrecht closing the door of operational management behind him.
That new structure serves an ambitious goal: CEO Torsten Hufnagel wants to have as many as 6,000 European branches under his belt by 2026, which is 700 more than today. The biggest growth should come in France, Poland and Spain, Lebensmittel Zeitung reports.
The ambition is remarkable, as recently Aldi was mostly looking closely to its German shop network and even pulled out of Denmark altogether, dropping the number of European Aldi shops below 5,300.
The money for the expansion has already been found within the Albrecht family, LZ reports. More money is also going into optimising logistics. Once these economies of scale bear fruit, the discounter promises, the extra profits will be invested in lower prices, paying dividends to customers.
Related news
Related news
GKI Analysis: Without EU funds, the domestic economy would just flounder
On May 1, Hungary marks the 21st anniversary of joining…
Read more >Csökkentette az élelmiszerárakat az árrésstop és az online Árfigyelő bővítése
2025 áprilisában csökkent az infláció és az élelmiszerárak növekedési üteme…
Read more >NGM: we always take action against unjustified price increases, inflation may decrease further in the coming months
The government is successfully fighting price increases. In April, inflation…
Read more >