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Estée Lauder Forecasts Annual Results Below Estimates as Marketing Costs Increase

The US cosmetics giant projected annual sales and profit slightly below estimates on Thursday, as it navigates a brand reset with increased marketing spend while it navigates tariff-related headwinds.
A slew of Wall Street analysts have downgraded Estée Lauder Cos. ahead of the beauty company’s quarterly earnings report.
The company, which is undergoing a turnaround under its CEO Stephane de La Faverie, flagged a $100 million tariff hit on ‍annual profit. (Shutterstock)

Estée Lauder forecast annual sales and profit slightly below estimates on Thursday, as the cosmetics maker navigates a brand reset with increased marketing spend while it navigates tariff-related pressures.

Shares fell about ⁠9 percent in premarket trading after it forecast third-quarter margins to contract ⁠50 basis points due to stepped-up investments in product innovation and tariff pressures.

The company, which is undergoing a turnaround under its CEO Stephane de La Faverie, flagged a $100 million tariff hit on ‍annual profit, reiterating its forecast ​from October 2025. It said it has been reducing inventory ‍and promotions, among other actions, to mitigate rising costs.

Estée’s ‘Beauty Reimagined’ strategy ⁠has been accelerating launches in ‍categories such as skincare, rolling out new luxury price tiers, and boosting innovation and marketing efforts to attract more consumers.

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The ‍cosmetics maker expects annual net sales to ‍be ‌in the range of 3 percent to 5 percent, the midpoint of ‌which is below analysts’ estimates ​of ‍4.3 percent rise, according to data compiled by LSEG.

The midpoint of its full-year adjusted earnings per share target of $2.05 to $2.25 also came in below estimates of $2.16 per share.

The ‌company posted quarterly sales of $4.23 billion, in line with analysts’ ‌estimates.

By Anuja Bharat Mistry

Learn more:

Estée Lauder Is Growing Again. Now Comes the Hard Part.

The US giant handily beat expectations and its own guidance in its latest earnings, but softness in the US and its hair and makeup businesses show it can’t take its foot off the gas yet.

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