Estee Lauder to Cut 3% to 5% of Its Employees after Sales, Profit Slide in Its Most Recent Quarter

The Estee Lauder section of the Nordstrom flagship store is seen during a media preview in New York, US, October 21, 2019. (Reuters)
The Estee Lauder section of the Nordstrom flagship store is seen during a media preview in New York, US, October 21, 2019. (Reuters)
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Estee Lauder to Cut 3% to 5% of Its Employees after Sales, Profit Slide in Its Most Recent Quarter

The Estee Lauder section of the Nordstrom flagship store is seen during a media preview in New York, US, October 21, 2019. (Reuters)
The Estee Lauder section of the Nordstrom flagship store is seen during a media preview in New York, US, October 21, 2019. (Reuters)

Estee Lauder is cutting 3% to 5% of its global workforce as part of a restructuring program that aims to increase profits and become more nimble in a challenging international environment.

The layoffs were announced Monday as the New York cosmetic giant reported falling profits and revenue in the second quarter, and trimmed its annual profit forecast.

Business was dragged down by sluggish sales in China as well as disruptions in Israel and other parts of the Middle East.

The downsizing, which will affect as many as 3,100 workers, will be made by July, Estee Lauder said. The company employed 62,000 workers worldwide, according to its latest regulatory filing.

The company, whose brands include Clinique, Tom Ford and La Mer, said it expects to take restructuring and other charges of between $500 million and $700 million, before taxes, consisting of employee-related costs, contract terminations, asset write-offs and other costs associated with implementing the initiative.

Estee Lauder expects the restructuring program to deliver annual savings of between $350 million and $500 million, before taxes, Estee Lauder said.

The company now expects the job cuts and the broader restructuring plan to drive incremental operating profit of $1.1 billion to $1.4 billion over the next few years. That's an increase from the $800 million to $1 billion announced late last year.

The company posted sales of $4.28 billion during the quarter ended Dec. 31. That was down 7% from $4.62 billion in the year-ago period. It earned profits of $313 million, or 87 cents for the period, down from $394 million, or $1.09 per share, in the year-ago period. Adjusted profit per share results were 88 cents, which far exceeded the per-share earns of 54 cents that Wall Street was expecting, according to FactSet. It also topped revenue expectations.

Estee Lauder now sees adjusted earnings of $2.08 to $2.23 a share for the year, down from a prior forecast of $2.17 to $2.42. Analysts expected earnings per share for the current fiscal year to be $2.32 announced in November.

Estee Lauder joins a growing list of companies that have announced layoffs in recent weeks including some well-known household names like Amazon, Google and UPS. Yet American businesses and other employers added a blistering 353,000 jobs in January — the largest surge in hiring in a year even as the US Federal Reserve raised interest rates repeatedly to cool the US economy and tame inflation.

Estee Lauder's share rose $17.80, or more than 13%, to $151.92 per share in late morning trading.



Kering Posts 11% Drop in Q2 Sales, Sees Weak Second Half

The logo of luxury brand Gucci is seen in Tokyo on June 22, 2021. (AFP)
The logo of luxury brand Gucci is seen in Tokyo on June 22, 2021. (AFP)
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Kering Posts 11% Drop in Q2 Sales, Sees Weak Second Half

The logo of luxury brand Gucci is seen in Tokyo on June 22, 2021. (AFP)
The logo of luxury brand Gucci is seen in Tokyo on June 22, 2021. (AFP)

Kering reported a bigger-than-expected drop in second-quarter sales and forecast a weak second half, as the French luxury group struggles to revive its key label Gucci and worries grow about a prolonged downturn in high-end spending.

Sales at the French luxury group which owns labels Gucci, Boucheron and Balenciaga, fell to 4.5 billion euros ($4.9 billion), an 11% drop on an organic basis, which strips out currency effects and acquisitions.

The figure was below analyst expectations for a 9% drop, according to a Visible Alpha consensus.

It also said second-half operating income could fall by around 30%, following a 42% drop in the first half.

Sales at Gucci fell 19%, showing no improvement from the first quarter, and below analyst expectations for a 16% decline, according to a Visible Alpha consensus.

Kering has been revamping Gucci, the century-old Italian fashion house which accounts for half of group sales and two-thirds of profit.

Minimalist designs from new creative director Sabato de Sarno, which began trickling into stores earlier this year, are key to the design reset and push upmarket, in a bid to cater to wealthier clients who are more immune to economic headwinds.

Kering chief financial officer Armelle Poulou told reporters that the designs had been well received and the rollout was on track.

But the efforts have been complicated by a downturn in the global luxury market, while China's rebound - traditionally Gucci's most coveted market - was clouded by a property crisis and high youth unemployment as Western markets came down from a post-pandemic splurge.

Earnings from sector bellwether LVMH on Tuesday missed expectations as sales rose 1%, offering few signs that a pickup is around the corner, sending shares in luxury goods companies down on Wednesday. Kering traded at its lowest level since 2017.