Weekend Herald

Cosmetics firm Revlon files for bankruptcy

- Judith Evans

United States cosmetics group Revlon has filed for bankruptcy protection after battling supply chain problems and failing to compete with celebrity-backed and social mediasavvy upstarts.

The 90-year-old group, majority owned by billionair­e Ron Perelman, on Thursday (US time) filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection, which enables the company to continue trading while it works out a creditor repayment plan.

The company, which also owns brands including Elizabeth Arden, Almay and Cutex along with fragrances fronted by Christina Aguilera and Britney Spears, faces delisting from the New York Stock Exchange following its filing with the bankruptcy court for the Southern District of New York.

The collapse of Revlon’s finances follows a downturn for the beauty sector during the height of the coronaviru­s pandemic, while the group has been hit this year by ingredient­s shortages and steep cost rises. Sales had continued to lag pre-pandemic levels.

The company has also faced longer-term pressure from brands such as Rihanna’s Fenty Beauty and Kylie Jenner-backed Kylie Cosmetics.

Traditiona­l beauty brands have also struggled to fight back against online start-ups such as Glossier, although more recently the start-up brand has itself faltered, laying off a third of its corporate employees this year.

“Revlon has gradually lost its US market share since

2018, but the pandemic dealt a further blow to the firm on top of existing financial challenges,” said Lia Neophytou, senior consumer analyst at GlobalData, ahead of the filing.

“Furthermor­e, its mass market and affordably priced Revlon beauty brand has faced competitio­n from more trend-led brands leveraging TikTok — a key source of inspiratio­n for beauty and grooming purchases — to entice a younger consumer base.”

The company, a household name since World War II, expects to receive US$575 million ($901m) in funding from its existing lenders to support day-to-day operations, Revlon said in a release.

It said it was battling with “liquidity constraint­s brought on by continued global challenges, including supply chain disruption and rising inflation”.

The supply chain disruption had led to shortages of its own products, Revlon said in March.

The company had US$3.3 billion of longterm debt at the end of March, while reports of impending bankruptcy last week caused a steep drop in its share price. The filing includes overseas units in Canada and Britain.

Chief executive Debra Perelman, daughter of Ron, said: “Consumer demand for our products remains strong. People love our brands and we continue to have a healthy market position.

“But our challengin­g capital structure has limited our ability to navigate macroecono­mic issues in order to meet this demand.” She said addressing the “complex legacy debt constraint­s “would “[enable] us to unlock the full potential of our globally recognised brands”.

Revlon narrowly avoided bankruptcy in

2021 following a stand-off between its owners and lender Carl Icahn.

Revlon has gradually lost its US market share since 2018, but the pandemic dealt a further blow to the firm on topof existing financial challenges. Lia Neophytou analyst

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand