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L’Oréal Reports 6 Percent Jump in Fourth-Quarter Sales

The French cosmetics giant typically outperforms rivals, but growth has slowed in recent quarters due to fierce competition and challenges in China and the US.
a L'Oreal corporate cmapus
L'Oreal launched a "beauty stimulus" plan in 2025 to speed up bringing new products to market and drive sales. (L'Oréal)

L’Oreal’s fourth-quarter sales grew 6 percent, it said on Thursday, as strong demand for the group’s haircare and perfumes in Europe and North America compensated for barely any growth in North Asia.

The Paris-based owner of Maybelline make-up and Kérastase shampoo said sales for the three months to end-December came to 11.3 billion euros ($13.42 billion), up 6 percent on a like-for-like basis, versus expectations for a 6.3 percent rise in an analysts’ consensus compiled by Visible Alpha.

The French cosmetics group typically outperforms rivals thanks to its global presence and wide range of products spanning mass market makeup to luxury perfumes and skincare sold in clinics. But growth has slowed in recent quarters, with consumers in China opting for cheaper local brands, cautious shoppers in the US curbing spending, while independent brands have been taking market share.

Purchases of creams and makeup, however, have picked up in recent months in the top cosmetics market of the US, with L’Oreal executives previously pointing to strong sales during Black Friday. L’Oréal said its sales in North America rose 8.6 percent in the fourth quarter, above market forecasts, thanks to new product launches like L’Oreal Paris Plump Ambition lip oil.

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L’Oréal launched a “beauty stimulus” plan last year to speed up bringing new products to market and drive sales. The company has taken market share in conditioners and shampoo as well as face creams, said JP Morgan analysts citing NielsenIQ data earlier this month.

In North Asia, however, sales grew just 0.6 percent, well below an expected 5.6 percent. L’Oréal said travel retail remained “challenging”, though the mainland Chinese market was “gradually stabilising.”

Shares in L’Oreal are up about 7 percent year to date, while beauty-to-hygiene products maker Unilever is up 10 percent and smaller peer Beiersdorf has gained 12 percent.

By Dominique Patton

Learn more:

L’Oréal Names New Americas CEO, Appoints Chairman

Alexis Perakis-Valat, currently president of its consumer products division, will accede to the role, replacing David Greenberg who will become the company’s US chairman.

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