Business Standard

Why get all made up with nowhere to go?

- JULIE CRESWELL

Amie Wohrer reached her limit about three weeks into the shutdown.

Her hair had grown out, losing its shape and style. Worse, the gray strands she meticulous­ly hid through trips to her hairdresse­r every few weeks were becoming increasing­ly visible. So, desperate, Ms. Wohrer, a 40-year-old mother of five from Lancaster, Ohio, did something she hadn’t done in 20 years: She coloured her own hair. Then she went one step further and, with the help of some Youtube videos, gave herself a quarancut.

“My daughters were a little leery,” she said, “but after the fact, they were all really impressed.”

The coronaviru­s shutdowns have upended many daily routines, including those around beauty, skin care and hair care. Some people, like Ms. Wohrer, are taking matters into their own hands, sending sales of do-it-yourself hair colour kits, hair trimmers and nail polish soaring at retailers like Walmart and Hy-vee, a Midwest grocery store chain, in recent weeks.

But other people have simply stopped morning makeup regimens. For beauty companies and retailers, the combinatio­n of store closures and consumers who see little need to put on blush or mascara when they’re stuck at home is a serious issue.

In late March, E.L.F. Beauty said it saw a “significan­t decline” in retail sales in the last two weeks of that month. The company’s stock is down 40 percent since mid-february.

Sales at Estée Lauder

Companies dropped 11 percent in its fiscal third quarter, which ended March 31. Its stock is down 20 percent since midFebruar­y.

The retailers Ulta Beauty and Sephora, owned by LVMH, closed stores and furloughed tens of thousands of employees, although Sephora is paying its full-time employees through the end of May. LVMH said the business group that includes Sephora fell 26 percent in the first quarter as stores in China, then Europe and the United States were shut.

Sales of higher-end beauty products through department stores and retailers like Ulta Beauty and Sephora dropped about 14 percent in the first quarter, said Larissa Jensen, a vice president at the NPD Group, a research firm. Sales of mass beauty items at drugstores, which stayed open, slid 4 percent, according to other analysts.

In some ways, the trend away from makeup predated the pandemic.

For several years, cosmetic companies had experience­d boom times as people bought contouring kits and eyeshadow palettes in a rainbow of colours and watched hours of Youtube videos showing them how to achieve the pictureper­fect Instagram face.

But since peaking in 2017, sales of makeup have slowed. Many women instead embraced a more natural appearance with an increased emphasis on skin care.

Sales of skin-care products had been on the uptick for the last three years, Ms. Jensen said. And in recent weeks, sales of skin-care products surpassed makeup sales for the first time ever, she said.

The French company L’oréal, for instance, said gains in sales in brands that focus on skin care, like Kiehl’s or Cerave, had helped balance out declines in the makeup brands Maybelline New York and NYX Profession­al Makeup.

 ?? PHOTO: REUTERS ?? If people continue to wear masks, for instance, sales of products to enhance the eyes may increase while sales of lipsticks could slump, analysts say
PHOTO: REUTERS If people continue to wear masks, for instance, sales of products to enhance the eyes may increase while sales of lipsticks could slump, analysts say

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