L’Oreal Shares Fall after Asian Sales Disappoint

This photo taken on February 16, 2018 shows a board with the L'Oreal logo outside of the L'Oreal plant, in Lassigny. (AFP)
This photo taken on February 16, 2018 shows a board with the L'Oreal logo outside of the L'Oreal plant, in Lassigny. (AFP)
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L’Oreal Shares Fall after Asian Sales Disappoint

This photo taken on February 16, 2018 shows a board with the L'Oreal logo outside of the L'Oreal plant, in Lassigny. (AFP)
This photo taken on February 16, 2018 shows a board with the L'Oreal logo outside of the L'Oreal plant, in Lassigny. (AFP)

Shares in L'Oreal fell 7.5% in early trading on Friday after the French cosmetics company reported fourth quarter sales growth that fell short of market expectations, reflecting a disappointing performance in Asia.

L'Oreal reported a 6.9% rise in fourth quarter sales after the market closed on Thursday, slower growth than in the previous quarter. Sales totaled 10.6 billion euros ($11.4 billion), shy of expectations for 10.9 billion euros, according to consensus estimates cited by Barclays

L'Oreal's travel retail business suffered from tighter control by the Chinese government of resellers known as "daigou". The resellers purchase inventory at lower prices in other markets and resell them at a discount in the mainland.

Analysts at Barclays said that they had expected Asia travel retail issues to take longer to be resolved than the market expected. They added that L'Oreal's top-line sales performance represented a "rare headline miss".

Analysts at Deutsche Bank said L'Oreal's performance in North Asia was "well below expectations."

"We are of the view that headwinds in China are structural not just cyclical," they said in a note.

L'Oreal nevertheless outperformed its main rival Estee Lauder. Sales at Estee Lauder declined 8% overall in the same quarter.

The company also said on Friday it had signed a licensing agreement with high end fashion label Miu Miu for beauty products.

L'Oreal expects to launch the first fragrances in 2025 under the agreement, which encompasses the creation, development, and distribution of beauty products.



H&M Abandons 2024 Earnings Margin Target, Q3 Profit Lags

People walk past a closed H&M clothing store in Omsk, Russia, March 3, 2022. REUTERS/Alexey Malgavko
People walk past a closed H&M clothing store in Omsk, Russia, March 3, 2022. REUTERS/Alexey Malgavko
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H&M Abandons 2024 Earnings Margin Target, Q3 Profit Lags

People walk past a closed H&M clothing store in Omsk, Russia, March 3, 2022. REUTERS/Alexey Malgavko
People walk past a closed H&M clothing store in Omsk, Russia, March 3, 2022. REUTERS/Alexey Malgavko

H&M, the world's second-largest listed fashion retailer, said on Thursday it no longer expected to reach its full-year earnings margin goal, while reporting a lower-than-expected operating profit for the June-August period.

H&M has struggled to boost its profitability amid high inflation and stiff competition from its bigger Spanish rival Zara, owned by Inditex, and the rapid growth of cut-price online fast-fashion retailer Shein.

"At present we estimate that this year's operating margin will be lower than 10%," Chief Executive Daniel Erver said in a statement.

The accumulated margin stood 7.4% for the first three quarters.

The full-year operating margins for 2022 and 2023 were 3.2% and 6.2% respectively, and H&M had cautioned in June that factors such as materials costs and foreign currency had made the 2024 target more difficult to reach.