Karl Albrecht Jr Biography
Karl Albrecht Jr. is a German billionaire, and the son of Karl Albrecht, who founded the discount supermarket chain Aldi with his brother Theo. Albrecht worked for Aldi Süd in various roles until his resignation due to a cancer diagnosis (from which he subsequently recovered).
He and his sister Beate Heister control the family trust, the Siepmann Stiftung (named for their mother), which, in turn, controls Aldi Süd, the source of their joint fortune. Together with Heister, he has a net worth of US$30.1 billion, as of 2017. He is married to Gabriele Mertes, and they have no children.
Karl Albrecht Jr Age
He was born in 1948. He is 70 years old as of 2018.
Karl Albrecht Jr Family | Karl Albrecht Jr Beate Heister
He is son to Karl Albrecht his father and Anna Siepmann his mother. He is also brother to Beate Heister. He is husband to Gabriele Mertes.
Karl Albrecht Jr Wife
He is husband to Gabriele Mertes.
Karl Albrecht Jr Children
He has no children as of 2018.
Karl Albrecht Jr Net Worth
He has an estimated net worth of $25.5 billion as of 2018.
Karl Albrecht Jr. & Beate Heister
He and his sister Beate Heister control the family trust, the Siepmann Stiftung (named for their mother), which, in turn, controls Aldi Süd, the source of their joint fortune.
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The frugality feud tearing apart the Aldi family
Intriguing tales of kidnapping, paranoia and obsessive frugality have emerged during a bitter feud that continues to engulf Germany’s richest family. The notoriously private Albrecht family behind supermarket behemoth Aldi has been thrust into the spotlight courtesy of the ongoing fight over one family member’s spending habits.
Furious over his sister-in-law’s refusal to reign in her spending, family patriarch Theo Albrecht Jr broke his family’s obsessive code of secrecy earlier this year when we went to the press, declaring: “The name Albrecht requires a modest lifestyle”.
Founded when brothers Theo and Karl Albrecht took over their mother’s grocery store in 1946, Aldi (Albrecht Discount) has an annual turnover of $77 billion – thanks largely to its penny-pinching policies.
But that ethos is now allegedly being threatened by the widow of Theo’s son, who is accused squandering millions of dollars a year on art and vintage cars.
The Aldi story
Theo and Karl Albrecht split the company into Aldi Sud and Aldi Nord in 1960 after a dispute over whether to start selling cigarettes.
Theo took Aldi Nord, which now operates in former East Germany and European countries such as France and Belgium. Aldi Sud is responsible for Australia. For those playing at home, Australian Aldi stores still don’t sell cigarettes.
Theo Albrecht, who died a recluse in his hometown Essen in 2010, was known for two things: intense privacy and extreme frugality. His privacy concerns are often traced back to 1971, when he was kidnapped and held for a ransom of $7 million. Incredibly, Albrecht managed to convince the German tax man to deduct the ransom as a business expense.
Clearly disturbed by the incident, Albrecht shut-up shop as far as the media was concerned. The last image released of him was the day after the kidnapping, to help with the search. After returning from his kidnapping, Albrecht was said to become extremely paranoid about being followed, and reportedly asked his armoured vehicle to take a different route to work everyday.
Stinginess was ‘unsustainable’
It might have been thriftiness that helped the brothers build the company to what it is today, but what happens to your spending habits once you’re worth billions of dollars? The public spat between Theo Albrecht’s son Theo Jr and his dead brother’s wife, Babette Albrecht, examines just that.
When Theo’s brother Berthold died of cancer in 2013, Theo began trying to remove Babette and her five children (including quadruplets) from their controlling role in the trust. According to Bloomberg, Babette and the kids receive $36 million every year from the trust.
Theo Jr thinks that’s too much, and has publicly admonished his sister in law for spending millions on vintage cars and art. In a 2014 letter to Babette, Theo Jr wrote that she was “a burden on our company” for refusing to “subordinate [her] private lifestyle to the interest of our group”.
A former Aldi employee noted that Babette’s spending was hardly surprising – it was just at odds with the older generation’s extreme frugality.
“It’s totally natural that the younger generation would react against the excessive thriftiness,” said Eberhard Fedtke, a former Aldi Nord manager and author of a 2011 company history called Aldi Stories.
“The parsimony was so extreme, it was unsustainable.”
Adopted from: thenewdaily.com.au
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