Anders Holch Povlsen (born 4 November 1972)[1] is a Danish billionaire, CEO and sole owner of the international retail clothing chain Bestseller (which includes Vero Moda and Jack & Jones), a company founded by his parents. He is the largest shareholder in the British internet fashion retailer ASOS and second-largest in German internet clothing retailer Zalando. He is also the largest individual private landowner in the UK.[2]
As of September 2022, Povlsen was listed as the richest Dane with a net worth estimated at US$11.3 billion.[3]
Anders Holch Povlsen was born in 1972 to Troels Holch Povlsen and Merete Bech Povlsen.[3] The family's first clothing store opened in 1975 in the small Danish town of Brande, with a population of 7,000.[4]
Other outlets soon followed. Povlsen was only 28 when his father made him the sole owner of Bestseller.[4] The family also has an interest, along with two Danish partners, in Bestseller Fashion Group China, a company that designs its own collections for 5,000 stores in China.[4]
Povlsen has a BA degree from Anglia Ruskin University, and his alma mater gave him an honorary doctorate in 2015.[5]
In 2013, Povlsen bought a 10% stake in the German internet clothing retailer Zalando, becoming its third largest shareholder. Povlsen already had a 27% stake in ASOS.com, the largest UK internet-only fashion retailer.[6]
In October 2019, Povlsen's net worth was estimated as US$8.0 billion, making him the wealthiest person in Scotland.[3][7]
In 2018/2019 it was reported that Povlsen owns 221,000 acres (890 km2; 345 sq mi) of land in Scotland, making him its largest landowner.[2][8]
This has risen from a 2012 level of 120,000 acres (490 km2; 190 sq mi), when he had bought two further large estates, the 24,000-acre Ben Loyal, and 18,000-acre Kinloch Lodge, both in Sutherland, in addition to a 47,000-acre estate he bought in Inverness-shire in 2006 and a 30,000-acre estate near Fort William that he bought in 2008.[9]
In 2013, it was reported that Povlsen had bought the 20,000 acres (81 km2; 31 sq mi) Gaick Estate in Inverness-shire earlier that year, bringing his total to 150,000 acres (61,000 ha), second only to the Buccleuch Estates as Scotland's largest private landowner. In addition, Povlsen had bought land in the Borders specifically to trade it with the Forestry Commission, in return for 1,000 acres (400 ha) of woodland to add to his 43,000 acres (17,000 ha) Glenfeshie Estate, south of Aviemore. Povlsen bought Glenfeshie in 2006, and expanded it by buying the 4,000 acres (1,600 ha) neighbouring farm of Killiehuntly.[10]
In 2014, he bought Aldourie Castle on the banks of Loch Ness for £15 million.[11]
He also bought the Eriboll estate in Sutherland.[12]
In 2017, Povlsen bought the Jenners building on Princes Street in Edinburgh, reportedly for £53 million. He announced plans to renovate the building, including a hotel and rooftop restaurant.[13]
He plans to combine his adjoining estates and re-wild them.[14]
Aggressive techniques to facilitate tree growth were adopted after 2004[15] and into the 2020s[16] in Glenfeshie within the Cairngorms National Park.
Povlsen is married to Anne Holch Povlsen (formerly Anne Storm-Pedersen[19]), and the couple had four children: Alma, Agnes, Astrid and Alfred.[20] Alma, Agnes and Alfred were killed at the Shangri-La Colombo hotel during the 2019 Sri Lanka Easter bombings,[21] when the family was on holiday there.[22][23][24] They had twin girls less than a year later on 11 March 2020,[25] and another son on 29 September 2021.[26]
^Middleton, Christopher (13 May 2012). "The new viking invasion". The Daily Telegraph. Archived from the original on 15 May 2012. Retrieved 12 January 2015.
^Gram, Kasper Duncan (26 April 2019). "VIDEO Præst læser besked fra Holch Povlsen-familien til fakkeltog: Tabet er ubegribeligt" [VIDEO Priest reads message from the Holch Povlsen family at torchlight procession: The loss is inconceivable]. DR (in Danish). Retrieved 26 April 2019. The loss of our beloved children, Alma, Agnes and Alfred is totally inconceivable.