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Kering agrees to sell beauty unit to L’Oreal for $4.7 billion

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A woman view skin care products at L’Oreal booth during the 7th China International Import Expo (CIIE) at the National Exhibition and Convention Center (Shanghai) on November 5, 2024 in Shanghai, China.

China News Service | China News Service | Getty Images

Gucci owner Kering said on Sunday it has agreed to sell its beauty business to L’Oreal for 4 billion euros ($4.66 billion), in a major shift in strategy by new CEO Luca de Meo as he moves to tackle the luxury group’s high debt and refocus on its core fashion business.

Under the deal, French beauty giant L’Oreal will acquire Kering’s fragrance line Creed, as well as rights to develop fragrance and beauty products under Kering’s fashion labels Gucci, Bottega Veneta and Balenciaga under a 50-year exclusive license.

The licence for Gucci fragrances is currently held by Coty and the new 50-year deal with L’Oreal will commence when that expires, believed by analysts to be in 2028.

The sale is a significant step towards reducing Kering’s net debt, which stood at 9.5 billion euros at the end of June, on top of 6 billion euros in long-term lease liabilities, sparking investor concern.

It is also a major shift in direction by De Meo less than two months after taking the helm, as he unwinds one of the biggest strategic pivots made by his predecessor Francois-Henri Pinault, whose family controls the group, in recent years.

A bottle of L'Oreal Paris Elseve is displayed in a store in Krakow, Poland, on Oct. 2, 2024.
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Kering set up its beauty business in 2023 after acquiring perfume maker Creed for 3.5 billion euros in an effort to diversify and reduce its reliance on its Gucci brand, which accounts for most of its profits. But the group has struggled to ramp up the business, posting a 60 million euro operating loss for the first half of the year.

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The company is also battling declining growth at its largest brand Gucci, which was hit hard by slowing demand in the key Chinese market. Gucci’s revenue year-on-year in the last reported quarter, increasing the pressure on Kering to deleverage to avoid further credit downgrades.

“We believe selling Kering Beauté at around the same price paid for Creed two years ago is bitter but necessary medicine,” said analysts at Bernstein.

A move back to beauty licensing would be “less capital intensive, less operationally geared, and arguably higher margin”, said analysts at RBC, ahead of the deal, even if it has to share revenues with L’Oreal.

“We also believe it indicates a strategic re-focus towards its core competencies in soft luxury and any beauty divestment may free up investment headroom towards these priorities, ” they wrote in a note to investors.

De Meo, who took over as CEO in September, had told shareholders he planned to take some difficult decisions to reduce debt at the group, including rationalising and reorganising where necessary.

The company has also postponed a plan to fully acquire Italian fashion brand Valentino, and is aiming to sell stakes in its real estate to raise cash.

L’Oreal, the world’s biggest dedicated cosmetics and beauty player, already produces blockbuster perfumes under the Yves Saint Laurent label after acquiring rights to the brand from Kering for 1.15 billion euros in 2008. The two companies also said they were setting up a joint venture to provide experiences and services for luxury clients.

The deal for Kering beauty will be L’Oreal’s largest to date, bigger than its purchase of Australian brand Aesop for $2.5 billion in 2023. It is expected to close in the first half of 2026.

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“L’Oreal enjoys strong momentum in the Luxe division and they must be looking forward to getting hold of the perfume and beauty licences associated with Kering’s prestigious yet relatively underdeveloped brands,” said Bruno-Roland Bernard, a consultant and adjunct professor for corporate finance and luxury management at Paris-based Institut Francais de la Mode.

“It’s also possible they are taking advantage of a favourable bargaining position – with limited competition: who has the credentials and the firepower to deal with a Kering under time pressure?”

L’Oreal, which has said there were “plenty” of acquisitions being looked at this year, has also been approached by representatives of Armani Group, Reuters reported this month, after the beauty conglomerate was named in the will of late designer Giorgio Armani as one of the preferred buyers for a minority stake in his fashion house.

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