National Post

Beauty industry thriving, but it’s not showing on the stock market.

- Tara LachapeLLe Comment Bloomberg

NEWS

The beauty industry is thriving like never before, but you wouldn’t know it by looking at the stock market.

Shares of the big beauty houses haven’t performed so well in recent months, even as trends like facial-sheet masks, serums and metallic makeup tones have exploded in popularity. Coty Inc., the parent of CoverGirl, the thirdlarge­st colour-cosmetics brand in the U.S., has seen its price tumble 50 per cent over the last six months, while Revlon Inc. is being choked by debt. And after strong runs into the first part of the year for larger conglomera­tes Estee Lauder Cos., L’Oreal SA and Shiseido Co., these stocks have all run out of steam.

The oldest, biggest beauty companies are running up against the same challenges upending other consumerfa­cing industries from packaged food to cleaning products: Shoppers are embracing upstart brands, more often the kind that contain the better-for-you ingredient­s that are so appealing to customers these days. Beauty lovers also are increasing­ly purchasing products online and using subscripti­on services, where data play a powerful role. In fact, in-store sales of cosmetic items dropped by up to 9.3 per cent in the four weeks through Dec. 2, a span that captures the Black Friday period, according to IRI scanner data reviewed by Bloomberg Intelligen­ce. And in the beauty realm especially, social media and YouTube have provided a way for people to feel connected to brands rather than as a faceless customer. Companies that were accustomed to relying on a retailer as a go-between are now struggling to make these direct-toconsumer connection­s feel organic instead of gimmicky.

The story of the changing beauty industry is a positive one — of women’s empowermen­t, entreprene­urship, inclusiven­ess and a better shopping experience, which should do more to enhance manufactur­ers’ profit and growth opportunit­ies than threaten them. Beauty and personal care was a US$465 billion global market in 2017 and is set to expand more than two per cent a year on a compound-annual basis through 2022, according to Euromonito­r Internatio­nal.

As the market leaders struggle to adapt, they may need to pursue more acquisitio­ns of up-and-comers, however tiny these labels may be now. Already, there’s been a boom of sorts in recent years in deals and investment­s for fast-growing brands, such as L’Oreal’s acquisitio­ns of IT Cosmetics and NYX Cosmetics, Estee Lauder’s purchases of Becca Cosmetics and Too Faced and Shiseido’s takeover of the Laura Mercier brand. The trick is picking the right transactio­ns and preserving what made them successful.

A recent convention I attended for beauty consumers was like a showcase of potential takeover candidates that are helping to drive this industry evolution. More than 7,000 people – women and girls of all ages, along with a rising number of male beauty aficionado­s – swarmed the halls of New York’s Jacob K. Javits Center one weekend in October for the Ipsy Gen Beauty event, eager to score samples from brands they love and discover new ones. Some of the most soughtafte­r products of the dozens on display included Eva NYC shampoo, TonyMoly bananascen­ted hand lotion and Belif eye cream. It cost US$99 for general admission, though plenty paid extra for early entry and didn’t hesitate to buy products at the event. Ten thousand others attended the San Francisco and Los Angeles convention­s this year.

At the New York showing, all around the room I heard from this modern beauty shopper: They expect brands to reward loyalty; they make fewer distinctio­ns between high-end and affordable lines; they like testing out products first; they aren’t inclined to drive to a store but share purchases with friends online; and they don’t want to conform to a narrow definition of beauty that was at one time decided by a group of mostly men who ran the industry.

Someday, beauty may be in the eye of the stockholde­r once again. Until then, the industry is getting a muchneeded refresh that should keep bankers busy.

THE STORY OF THE CHANGING BEAUTY INDUSTRY IS A POSITIVE ONE — OF WOMEN’S EMPOWERMEN­T, ENTREPRENE­URSHIP, INCLUSIVEN­ESS AND A BETTER SHOPPING EXPERIENCE, WHICH SHOULD DO MORE TO ENHANCE MANUFACTUR­ERS’ PROFIT. — TARA LACHAPELLE

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