L’Oreal 2Q sales grow 5.3%, slower than forecast
2024.07.30 12:55
PARIS (Reuters) – French cosmetics giant L’Oreal reported a 5.3% rise in second-quarter sales, below expectations and likely further rattling investors already worried about the lack of rebound in the important Chinese market.
The Paris-based company, which owns the Maybelline and Lancome brands, said on Tuesday that sales in the quarter reached 10.88 billion euros ($11.75 billion), up 5.3% on a like-for-like basis from a year earlier, but undershooting the 5.9% growth seen in a consensus compiled by Visible Alpha.
The company reported negative growth in the North Asia region, hit by weak consumer confidence in China and compared with the strong surge in demand at the same time a year ago.
L’Oreal CEO Nicolas Hieronimus had said last month that the global beauty market was growing more slowly than earlier predicted, at about 4.5%-5%, largely due to a lack of rebound in the Chinese market.
Shoppers in China, which has been one of the world’s fastest growing beauty markets, are cutting back on spending over worries about job insecurity and a prolonged real estate slump.
The world’s No. 2 economy grew less than expected in the second quarter, prompting consumers to buy fewer creams and lipsticks, both online and in stores.
L’Oreal, whose products span the mass market to the high-end luxury segment, had been expected to outpace its peers, but still see the impact of broadly slower growth.
Its sales in North Asia, which come mostly from mainland China, were down 2.4% like-for-like, compared with a decline of 1.1% in the first quarter.
“In mainland China, the beauty market was negative in the second quarter on a tough comparison base, exacerbated by lasting low consumer confidence,” said the company in a statement.
Luxury bellwether LVMH last week said its perfumes and cosmetics sales grew 4% in the second quarter, slowing from 7% in the first three months of the year.
Shares in L’Oreal, Europe’s 6th most valuable listed company, with a market capitalisation of about 211 billion euros, have lost 12% so far this year, compared to a 31% fall at U.S. peer Estee Lauder (NYSE:).
($1 = 0.9257 euros)