The Borneo Post

Snail slime hits beauty mainstream after gatecrashi­ng Korea

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SNAIL slime. On your face. All for the sake of beauty.

And, hopefully, a handsome profit for US retailers looking to push it along with other K-beauty trends into the mainstream – if people can get over the “ick” factor.

Korean consumers are on a constant hunt for innovative products and unusual natural ingredient­s. Now, the decadeold craze is making its way to everyday consumers in the US, as K-beauty products jump from niche websites and slide onto the shelves at Target, CVS and Ulta Beauty stores.

The retailers earlier this year announced expansions of the merchandis­e.

“People used to talk about French skincare,” said Sarah Chung, the head of Landing Internatio­nal Inc. which partnered on Ulta’s Korean collection. “We don’t really call it that anymore. Right now we say it’s K-beauty, but it’s really just great skincare.”

Target is selling the products in about 850 stores and said they represent about 25 per cent of its total premium offerings. Ulta said it expanded its offerings with a prestige collection in March and CVS began rolling K-Beauty HQ at 2,100 stores in April. Target and CVS both partnered with Alicia Yoon, the founder of K-beauty retail platform Peach & Lily.

While none of the three stores provided sales data, CVS said the launch had been “very successful” and it’s gotten positive customer feedback on the collection’s innovation, high quality and accessibil­ity.

The timing couldn’t be better for South Korean cosmetic companies. Exports to the US already increased by about half in 2016 from a year earlier to US$ 300 million ( RM1.4 billion) while the country’s total exports declined, according to the Korea Internatio­nal Trade Associatio­n. Brands are getting more aggressive about their internatio­nal expansion as sales to Chinese shoppers suffer amid strained ties between the two countries.

South Korea’s biggest beauty company, Amorepacif­ic Corp., already has five brands in the US and is poised to start selling a sixth, innisfree, targeting Millennial­s with cheaper products, Amorepacif­ic said in an email. Revenue at the group largely comes from South Korea, with 71 per cent as of last year,

South Korean consumers are always looking to the next innovation and snail slime when introduced was wellreceiv­ed. David Tyrrell, a global skincare analyst at Mintel Group

and 19 per cent from China, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

While Koreans put snail slime on the map, it’s Chileans who get the credit for discoverin­g its apparent benefits.

The Bascunan family started selling snails for food – escargots – to French wholesaler­s in the 1980s.

The business wasn’t a great success, but it made an unexpected discovery while harvesting the animals. The secretion filtrate seemed to heal cuts and grazes caused by handling the metal cages containing the snails.

The story became lore for the brands that followed, with some of the first competitor­s advertisin­g that the gastropods came from Chile.

“South Korean consumers are always looking to the next innovation and snail slime when introduced was well-received,” said David Tyrrell, a global skincare analyst at Mintel Group. “It was new, arguably exotic and recognised by consumers to readily moisturise the skin and produce anti-ageing related benefits.”

The use of filtrate has actually begun to wane in South Korea as the novelty wears off.

The fascinatio­n for natural ingredient­s remains in line with “hanbang,”or traditiona­l Korean herbal medicine – some 69 per cent of facial skincare launches in South Korea last year featured botanical claims, including fermented tea, black olives and volcanic ash, according to Mintel. — WP-Bloomberg

 ??  ?? People walk past an Amorepacif­ic Corp. Innisfree store in the Seomyeon area at night in Busan, South Korea, on Aug 1, 2015. — WPBloomber­g photo
People walk past an Amorepacif­ic Corp. Innisfree store in the Seomyeon area at night in Busan, South Korea, on Aug 1, 2015. — WPBloomber­g photo

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